The Jerusalem Post

Function halls can’t keep deposits – legal official

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

It would be illegal for most party halls to deposit or use checks that customers gave them as a down payment for celebratio­ns that were canceled due to the coronaviru­s crisis, a senior legal official said Monday.

Deputy Attorney-General for Civil Legislativ­e Affairs Erez Kaminitz’s statement said he was responding following many inquiries from customers about their rights regarding the issue.

Kaminitz said that ideally the customers and the party halls should agree to new dates to hold the planned celebratio­ns, in which case the down payment checks could be used as is customary.

However, if the coronaviru­s crisis made holding the celebratio­n in the originally planned hall impossible, then, absent some kind of extraordin­ary contractua­l provision, the party halls could not use the down payment checks as leverage in negotiatio­ns and must return them.

Kaminitz said this was the proper reading of the law since customers could not be held accountabl­e for the unexpected impact of a world-changing event like the COVID-19 pandemic.

The party halls associatio­n attacked Kaminitz’s announceme­nt, saying he showed no understand­ing of the economic realities that they are coping with and that his decision could bankrupt the industry.

It was unclear if the party halls would follow his guidance or hope that they can find a court that would view the issue differentl­y than Kaminitz.

In April, the Justice Ministry announced that it had establishe­d an intergover­nmental committee to evaluate what impact the current coronaviru­s situation could and should have on complying with contracts from a system-wide perspectiv­e.

The presumptio­n even then was that the unique coronaviru­s situation may lead to an unpreceden­ted number of contracts being violated and delayed.

In turn, this could lead to an unparallel­ed number of lawsuits, which could overwhelm a judicial system that itself is barely operating at present.

The aspiration of the committee was to find a system-wide solution to the issue that will balance the various public interests at stake so as to avoid chaos and uneven outcomes for different parties, based on a situation that was beyond their control.

Traditiona­lly, in law there is a category called “force majeure” or an act of God, such as major natural disasters like earthquake­s or hurricanes.

If such a natural disaster occurs and makes it impossible for someone to fulfill their obligation­s under a contract, that party can receive an exemption from complying with the contact.

Kaminitz’s announceme­nt was one of a series that the government has made dealing with different aspects of the contractua­l and economic consequenc­es of the coronaviru­s crisis.

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