'Legal rulings') is a condensed rabbinic work attributed to Yehudai Gaon in the Geonic Era, containing chapters on common Jewish halachic themes.
Hai Gaon, one of the later Geonim and head of the Pumbedita Academy, noted that "anything that the sages did not hear from his mouth they do not attribute to him when it contains a difficulty, nor do we rely on it, because we say that the scribe was the one who made the mistake or that someone else wrote in his name".
[1] In his 1998 book The Geonim of Babylonia and the Shaping of Medieval Jewish Culture, Robert Brody, a professor at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, concluded that the Halachot Pesukot was written outside of Iraq.
In 1911, David Solomon Sassoon purchased a handwritten manuscript of the work while visiting Yemen, which based on its style, appears to have been written in Babylon or Persia in the ninth or tenth century.
Conversely, Sassoon's copy contains 2 additions not found in Schlossberg's edition: Berakhot and the defects of slaughtered animals in the Land of Israel.