Study Bava Batra folio 157B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
Rather, in accordance with whose opinion is this Mishnah? This Mishnah is in accordance with the opinion of R' Meir, who says: A person can transfer ownership of an entity that has not yet come into the world. Similarly, R' Meir maintains that one can place a lien on property that the borrower wil
Rav Yaakov from Nehar Pekod says in the name of Ravina: Come and hear proof from a Mishnah (Shevi’it 10:5): Promissory notes that are antedated, i.e., that are dated prior to the date on which the loan actually was given, are invalid. This is because the promissory note places a lien on the borrow
The Talmud explains: And if it enters your mind to say that property that the borrower acquires after receiving the loan is not liened even when he writes: The property that I will acquire shall be liened, and he acquires property and sells it to others, or when he writes: The property that I will a
The Talmud answers: In accordance with whose opinion is this Mishnah? This Mishnah is in accordance with the opinion of R' Meir, who says: A person can transfer ownership of an entity that has not yet come into the world.
Rav Mesharshiyya says in the name of Rava: Come and hear proof from a baraita: With regard to collecting a debt in a case of enhancement of land, how does it happen that the debt cannot be collected from liened property that has been sold? This question arises in a case where a debtor sold a field t