Can a courtyard (chatzer) that forgot to participate in the shituf of a mavoi (alleyway eruv) perform bitul reshut to the other residents of the mavoi, even though multiple people live in that courtyard?
Synopsis
When one chatzer failed to participate in the mavoi's shituf, it may perform bitul reshut to the other mavo residents. The question is whether this bitul is effective even though the chatzer contains multiple residents (who ordinarily cannot perform bitul as a group).
More in Who May Place Eruv Techumin
In a city or mavoi containing Jewish and non-Jewish courtyards, how many Jewish courtyards must be present before the non-Jew's presence prohibits carrying?
3 opinions
When Jews must rent domain rights from non-Jews in a city or mavoi, is it sufficient to rent from the city's ruling official (the 'sar'), or must they rent from each non-Jewish household individually?
8 opinions
Do Jewish guests (orchim) who arrive in a walled city on Shabbat and stay in a separate courtyard prohibit the permanent Jewish residents from carrying throughout the city?
4 opinions
Up to what point does a visiting Jew retain 'guest' (orach) status that exempts him from being counted as a domain-holder — and does frequency of visits affect this?
3 opinions
Related from other topics
Who has the right to hand the Torah covers to the person performing gelilah — may another person purchase this privilege separately?
Aliyah Priority and Honor
May residents of a city compel one another to build a synagogue?
Synagogue Sanctity
When multiple people are dining together, in what order should they wash their hands — does the most distinguished person wash first or last?
Bread Cooked or Fried
When do multiple people eating together require one blessing for all?
HaMotzi Blessing
Who should break the bread when multiple people are eating together?
HaMotzi Blessing
May a shamash who is serving two people join their meal to participate in a zimun (grace after meals quorum of three) without being explicitly invited?
Blessings on Bread-Like Foods
Discussion
Discussion coming soon.
The Daily Law
One question. Every opinion. Every morning.
A new halakhic question and the full spectrum of rabbinic thought, delivered daily.