Deadline Extended for Appeal in Ponevezh Arbitration Dispute After Both Sides Agree
In an unexpected development in the long-running dispute over control of the Ponevezh Yeshiva, the faction led by Rav Shmuel Markowitz has received the consent of Yeshiva nosi Rav Eliezer Kahaneman to extend the deadline for filing a motion to annul the dramatic arbitration ruling issued two weeks ago.
The extension was granted after the Markowitz camp brought in a new legal team and requested additional time to thoroughly review the extensive arbitration decision. Leaders of the Vaad HaHatzalah, which has been supporting Rav Markowitz’s yeshiva, said Monday night that they are still “examining the implications of the ruling.”
The request for an extension was submitted Monday to the Tel Aviv–Jaffa District Court, before Judge Yechezkel Eliyahu. The petition seeks to push the deadline for filing a motion to overturn the arbitration ruling to next month, allowing the Markovitz faction to make full use of the 45-day period provided by law from the time the arbitration decision was issued.
A notable detail in Monday’s filing was that the request came with the agreement of both sides. Attorney Ehud Arzi, representing the Rav Kahaneman side, gave what was described as his “friendly consent” to the extension.
The ruling in question, issued by retired judge Dovid Cheshin about two weeks ago, determined the Ponevezh dispute in favor of Rav Kahaneman. It ordered the Rav Markowitz-led yeshiva to vacate the yeshiva hill and pay millions of shekels in damages.
The Rav Markowitz camp recently added prominent attorneys Eyal Rozovsky and Yossi Ettinger to its legal team. According to the motion, the new attorneys only assumed representation on Sunday, and given the complexity of the case and the volume of material, they require additional time to prepare a proper petition.
The legal maneuver indicates that the Rav Markowitz faction is seriously weighing the option of asking the court to overturn the arbitration ruling. Still, the Vaad HaHatzalah — which organized Sunday’s massive VaHakimosi gathering in support of Rav Markowitz’s yeshiva — clarified that, “As of this moment, no decision has been made regarding filing a motion to annul the arbitration ruling. The parties mutually agreed to grant an additional 45 days solely to examine the ruling’s implications.”
{Matzav.com}
