In Re Clifford

222 B.R. 8, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 738, 1998 WL 315127
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1998
Docket19-30349
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 222 B.R. 8 (In Re Clifford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Clifford, 222 B.R. 8, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 738, 1998 WL 315127 (Conn. 1998).

Opinion

*10 MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON OBJECTION TO EXEMPTIONS

ROBERT L. KRECHEVSKY, Bankruptcy Judge.

I.

William L. Clifford (“the debtor”) claims exemptions in two trucks, a crawler loader, and a fax machine as “tools of the trade,” pursuant to § 522(b)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code 1 and § 52-352b(b) of the Connecticut General Statutes. Anthony S. Novak (“the trustee”), trustee of the debtor’s estate, on January' 27, 1998 filed an objection to these exemptions on the grounds that they are not permitted, or exceed the amounts permitted, under state law. The court heard the trustee’s objections and the debtor’s testimony on March 10, 1998, after which both parties submitted briefs.

II.

BACKGROUND

The debtor is a licensed residential building contractor who builds and remodels homes. Tr. at 8-9. The debtor has been in the residential construction field since “approximately 1971 or 1972” and has done business as Clifford Contracting and Consulting, a sole proprietorship, “for eight or nine years.” Tr. at 8. In his- Chapter 7 petition, filed on November 19,1997, the debtor elected the following Connecticut exemptions pursuant to § 52-352b(b):

Value Property Exempt
1974 International Harvester 1700A Utility Truck $ 1,750
1992 Chevy)k Ton Silverado Truck 5,225
1986 John Deere 555B Crawler Loader 10,000
Brother Fax Machine 400

The debtor testified that he had purchased the International Harvester truck in 1995 to move building materials and lift trusses and large beams. Tr. at 14. Before purchasing the truck, he had accomplished the same tasks by hand but “not as efficiently and not as safely.” Id. at 22. The Chevy Silverado pickup truck, purchased in 1992, was used to “get in touch with clients” and to bring workers, tools, and materials to his jobs. Tr. at 18, 20. The debtor claimed that it would be impossible for him to work as a building contractor without a pickup truck. Tr. at 20. The debtor used the crawler loader, 2 acquired in 1994, for excavation, demolition, clearing land, digging cellar holes, and other tasks. The debtor had previously hired people to perform these tasks and had purchased the crawler loader because he wanted to do the work himself “to have more control over that aspect of the job.” Tr. at 9, 13. He further testified that owning the crawler loader allowed him to be “more competitive” in his building. Tr. at 14. The debtor had purchased the fax machine in 1996 “to be able to be competitive with bidding and keeping in touch with clients.” Tr. at 17. He stated that he could not use the U.S. mail and the telephone and be competitive. Tr. at 28. As to all four items, the debtor testified that he used them to generate income for his business, that they were necessary, useful, and convenient for his trade, and that he depreciated them on his business tax return, insured them on his business insurance policy, and paid property taxes on them. Tr. at 11,14-20.

III.

APPLICABLE LAW

Connecticut’s exemption statute provides, in pertinent part, that “[tjools, books, instruments, farm animals and livestock feed, which are necessary to the exemptioner in the course of his or her occupation, profession or farming operation” shall be exempt. Conn.Gen.Stat.Ann. § 52-352b(b) (West 1991). The statute also exempts one motor vehicle, to the value of $1,500. See id. § 52-352b(j).

*11 No recent decisions interpret Connecticut’s tools of the trade exemption, and none address whether a motor vehicle may qualify as a tool of the trade. The few rulings available interpret the statute liberally. See Patten v. Smith, 4 Conn. 450, 454 (1823) (“In relation to the natural description of the goods, of which an exemption is demanded, the exposition of the law ... ought to be liberal; but so far as respects their protection, in a given case, on the ground that they are necessary for the upholding of life, this is a strict enquiry of fact.” (emphasis in original)). See also Flaxman v. Capitol City Press, 121 Conn. 423, 427, 185 A. 417 (1936) (noting that decisions subsequent to Patten have not “departed from the liberal rule of interpretation therein laid down.”) Montague v. Richardson, 24 Conn. 338, 345-46 (1856) (holding, while interpreting a provision exempting “bedding and household furniture necessary for supporting life,” that “necessary” does not mean “indispensable”). The Connecticut Supreme Court has held that the tools of the trade exemption may include modern and expensive tools and machinery such as a motor driven printing press. See Flaxman v. Capitol City Press, 121 Conn. at 428-29, 185 A. 417 (“In this day, when the application of motive power to the operation of what formerly were such distinctively hand tools as the egg beater in the home or hair clipper in the barber shop is a matter of common everyday practice, it cannot be held that propulsion by power per se excludes an implement from the exemption which the statute would otherwise afford. Such implements fall within the principle as to ‘improved and more expensive tools’ enunciated in Seeley v. Gwillim .... ”); Seeley v. Gwillim, 40 Conn. 106, 110 (1873) (holding that the exemption covered “improved and more expensive tools” and “machinery [that] ... is comparatively of modern invention, and is often quite expensive, requiring in many eases considerable capital to carry on business successfully”).

The Second Circuit in In re Parrotte, 22 F.3d 472 (2d Cir.1994), interpreting Vermont’s undefined tools of the trade exemption, 3 for which no Vermont decisional law existed, stated that “in the absence of any indication that [the Vermont legislature] intended to limit the type of property that can qualify as [a tool of the trade], we will look to the function or use of the property to determine if it is, indeed, a tool of the debtor’s trade.” Id. at 475. The court held that the debtors, dairy farmers, could exempt three bulls as tools of their trade. See 'id. at 477. Guided by Vermont decisional law requiring a “liberal construction” of an exemption statute, the court rejected the bankruptcy court’s assertion that Vermont’s specific livestock exemption precluded use of the tools of the trade exemption for bulls. Id. at 476.

IV.

DISCUSSION

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Gaydos
441 B.R. 102 (N.D. Ohio, 2010)
In Re Beaudoin
427 B.R. 30 (D. Connecticut, 2010)
In Re Giles
340 B.R. 543 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2006)
In Re Gentry
297 B.R. 553 (C.D. Illinois, 2003)
Caraglior v. World Savings & Loan (In Re Caraglior)
251 B.R. 778 (D. Connecticut, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 B.R. 8, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 738, 1998 WL 315127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-clifford-ctb-1998.