Presented By Rav Dovid Grossman
Answer: No. Although Dina D'malchusa does create monetary halacha in many cases, it cannot allow anything that is prohibited in the Torah. For example, usury laws do not replace the halachos of ribbis, because you are dealing with a prohibition, not a monetary halacha. Likewise, the Torah does not allow using a secular court system as a way of adjudicating between Jews. The pasuk says in Parshas Mishpatim ואלה המפשטים אשר תשים לפניהם, these are the laws which shall be placed in front of them. The Gemara [Gittin 88b] tells us this is to exclude bringing your dispute in front of non-Jews to adjudicate. Therefore, Dina D'malchusa cannot be used to allow going to secular court. Even if the other party agrees to go to court, it is still prohibited to do so.
There is one scenario where a Jew may go to a secular court. The Gemara in Bava Kama [92b] quotes an expression קרית חברך ולא ענך רמי גודא רבה שדי עלויה If you call upon your friend and he does not respond, you may throw down a wall upon him. The Rosh [ibid] explains it to mean that if you called your friend to a kosher bais din and he refuses to come or follow their directives, the bais din shall issue a "heter arkaos" i.e. permission to bring his case to secular court. |
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