Recently, several decisions have been released by the Appellate Division concerning when, where, how, and when a Court compel parties to submit to the authority of the Bais Din on
Continue Reading Compliance with Agreement to Submit to Bais Din’s Jurisdiction on the Issue of Get Not Optional, Appellate Division RulesBeis Din
From Dog Bites to Divorce: Differing Interpretations of Jewish Law Cannot Defeat a Motion for Summary Judgment
By Eliana Baer on
While not my usual blogging fare, a recent case dealing with a discrete issue of Jewish law arising in the context of a dog bite case caught my eye because…
Continue Reading From Dog Bites to Divorce: Differing Interpretations of Jewish Law Cannot Defeat a Motion for Summary JudgmentNew Bill – A1475 – Offers a Potential Avenue for Legal Relief to Victims of Get Refusal
By Eliana Baer on
My recent blog post, Appellate Division Rules That A Court Cannot Compel Arbitration on Get Issue Absent Agreement, discussed the constraints faced by secular courts in the context of…
Continue Reading New Bill – A1475 – Offers a Potential Avenue for Legal Relief to Victims of Get RefusalAppellate Division Rules That A Court Cannot Compel Arbitration on Get Issue Absent Agreement
By Eliana Baer on
Get refusal is an issue to which secular courts have yet to find an adequate solution because of constraints implicating freedom of religion and the state’s prohibition against entanglement with…
Continue Reading Appellate Division Rules That A Court Cannot Compel Arbitration on Get Issue Absent AgreementReligious Coercion is Legal Duress
By Eliana Baer on
Duress has long been considered by New Jersey courts as a cognizable defense where the provision of a Get – defined as a Jewish ecclesiastical divorce – is conditioned upon a…
Continue Reading Religious Coercion is Legal Duress