Nachum was doing a research project on the Rambam for one of his shiurim. He borrowed a number of sefarim from his yeshiva’s library for a month. When he completed the assignment, he gathered the sefarim to return them, but noticed that one sefer was missing.
“Where could it be?” Nachum asked himself. He asked his family whether they had seen the sefer anywhere, but no one had seen it.
“I’m returning the sefarim I borrowed a month ago,” Nachum said to the librarian. “I seem to have lost one sefer, though.”
“You’ll have to pay for it,” said the librarian. “Which one was lost?”
“It was a new, precise edition of the Yad Hachazakah,” replied Nachum. “How much does it cost?”
“That sefer runs about $50,” said the librarian. “It was a bit expensive.”
Nachum thought for a moment. “I can get an almost brand-new copy,” he said. “I have a relative who mentioned that he has a spare copy and once offered it to me.”
“Actually, we have three other copies of that sefer,” said the librarian. “We don’t really need a fourth copy of that particular edition and would like the cash.”
“But why should I do that?” replied Nachum. “I can get the book for free from my relative!”
“When you lost the book, you became obligated to pay for it,” the librarian stated. “You owe us money and can’t give a book instead of payment.”
“Why do I owe you money?” argued Nachum. “I borrowed a sefer. Had I not lost it, I would have simply returned it. What’s the difference whether I return that, or a comparable copy?”
“If you were returning the original, fine!” insisted the librarian. “However, now that you lost it, you need to pay, and we’ll do with the money as we see fit!”
“That doesn’t seem logical,” responded Nachum. “I’d like to discuss the case with Rabbi Dayan.”
“Fine with me,” said the librarian. “Let’s go!”
The two went to Rabbi Dayan.
“l borrowed a special edition of Yad Hachazakah from the library and lost it,” explained Nachum. “The library wants me to pay cash for it, but I can get a free copy from my relative. Can’t I just give back that copy and not pay cash as the librarian demands?”
“You can return another copy of the book,” ruled Rabbi Dayan, “provided that it is in comparable condition to the one you borrowed.”
“Why is that?” asked the librarian.
“There is a significant discussion in a case of damage whether the primary responsibility is to repair the damage or to pay compensation for the monetary loss,” explained Rabbi Dayan. “We’ll leave that particular discussion for another occasion, but it seems clear that a borrower’s primary liability is to return the borrowed item or its replacement.
“Furthermore, the Shulchan Aruch and most authorities rule that even a thief or one who damages can pay with movable items (metaltelin) in lieu of cash,” added Rabbi Dayan. “The logic is that such items can easily be sold and converted to cash. We evaluate the item according to how much it can be sold for at that time and place (B.K. 7b; C.M. 419:1, 101:9).
“Nonetheless,” concluded Rabbi Dayan, “if a library has clear terms that lost books must be paid for by cash value, those terms would be binding, as any other monetary agreement.”
“I’m wondering about another point,” Nachum said. “What if the borrowed item changed price between the time it was borrowed and when it was lost? Which price would you pay?”
“On this point, there is a difference between a thief and a borrower,” answered Rabbi Dayan. “A thief pays the item’s value at the time of the theft, unless he returns it intact. A borrower, however, pays the item’s value at the time that it was lost. This is because the item remained the owner’s until then and also because the borrower committed to pay the item’s value at the time he becomes liable (C.M. 362:1; Ketzos and Nesivos 291:1).”