When two courtyards with two intermediate houses each make separate eruvin, and each courtyard places its eruv in the house adjacent to the other courtyard, have valid eruvin been acquired?
Synopsis
Two courtyards with two intermediate houses, each making its own eruv and each placing that eruv in the house adjacent to the other courtyard — the eruvin are invalid.
More in Eruv for Connected Buildings
When two courtyards have three houses between them (all opening into one another) and wish to make a joint eruv, where should the eruv be placed, and must each of the three houses contribute bread?
4 opinions
If the eruv is placed in a house other than the middle house (e.g., a flanking house or a house elsewhere in one of the courtyards), are the three intermediate houses still exempt from contributing bread?
3 opinions
Do residents of towns with a communal eruv cause the eruv to be invalidated when non-eruv-covered outsiders enter (e.g., come to pray at a synagogue)?
1 opinions
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