Later, p. 194, s. 34-36, p. 195, s. 1-8:
"The Honorable Judge Gurevich: So I only ask if you told them about the gift agreement. That's all.
The witness, the defendant: I told them clearly,
The Honorable Judge Gurevich: So I want to hear your version.
The witness, the defendant: I did tell them. The husband of plaintiff 1 did not want in any way,
The Honorable Judge Gurevich: Okay.
The witness, the defendant: They didn't agree and that too came and my husband told me I don't agree, I don't want responsibility for the child, no. That's not how it was and that's it."
- The defendant was asked in the cross-examination why her undertaking to care for the disabled daughter was not written in the waiting agreement.A, to which she replied: "I promised that the child would be at home with the caregiver and we would live with her. That's what I committed. In other words, no one wanted it, absolutely not" (p. 195, 18-19).
- The defendant testified that the brothers were aware of the existence of the gift agreement and that the deceased had transferred the rights in the house to the defendants. According to her, not only did they not protest this in real time or asked to appeal the transfer, but they even referred her again and again to help take care of their father, claiming that "you got the apartment." She further noted that when claims arose on the part of her brother, they focused on the claim that their mother, who was defined as confidential, was entitled to half of the rights by virtue of the partnership rule, but no claim was made against her in principle regarding a defect in the agreement itself or an objection to the transfer of the apartment to her.
"The defendant: and behind her back is (plaintiff 1 - R.G.) She started snorting and would call me, she would tell me that Dad gave you the apartment, you deserve the apartment, the only thing Mom deserves half a house. I told her OK, if my mother deserves half a house, then the court decided to accept her. They kept claiming that Mom deserved half a house. They never claimed anything about my father to me anyway. They always told Mom that half a house deserves. Mom deserves half a house. I said, OK, I'm willing to swear about it wherever you want them to tell me that. They knew that my father gave it to me, they knew. He kept telling her, and she came to me on Shabbat and told me I had decided to respect my father's decision."