If one person extends their hand across a domain boundary with an object, and a second person removes it — which person bears Torah liability?
Synopsis
When one person performs the akirah (uprooting) and another performs the hanahah (placement), neither is liable by Torah law but both are rabbinically forbidden.
More in Carrying in a Karmelit
If one person standing outside a domain extends their hand in and takes an object from a person standing inside, completing both uprooting and placement alone — is the outsider liable by Torah law?
1 opinions
When one person's hand is extended across a domain boundary and is below three tefachim from the ground — is the hand considered to be 'placed on the ground' for liability purposes?
2 opinions
Is it forbidden to hand an object to another person's hand if that hand is above ten tefachim (a makom patur)?
2 opinions
Is the person who holds the object while someone else takes it from them (the 'passive' person) guilty of assisting a transgression (lifnei iver)?
2 opinions
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Discussion
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