Kilburn v. Demming
This text of 2 Vt. 404 (Kilburn v. Demming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by.
The statute, directing the levying and serving of executions, exempts from execution, “ one cow, and such suitable apparel, bedding, tools, arms, and articles of household furniture, as may be necessary for upholding life.” — (Comp. Stat. p. 20S. s. 1.) — Though the exemption, in terms, is confined to executions, yet as the object of an attachment is to take property to be sold on execution in satisfaction of the judgment which may be recovered, chattels, which cannot lawfully be seized and sold on execution, cannot lawfully be attached.
Whether or not the machine in question was exempt from attachment, depends upon the meaning and construction of the word tools in the statute. A provision, substantially the same as the one contained in the statute of this state, exists in several of the other states ; and in some of them, adjudications are to be found, fixing the meaning and extent of the provisions. In Massachusetts, the statute exempts the tools of any debtor, necessary for his trade or occupation, from attachment and execution j and it appears to have been there decided, that neither implements of husbandry, necessary for tilling land, nor a printing press, types, and other implements of a printing office, are tools within the meaning of the statute. — (Daily vs. May, 5 Mass. 313. — Buckingham vs. Billings, 13 Mass. 82.) In the last mentioned case, the court said, that the statute, being in derogation of the common rights of creditors, ought to have a strict construction, ac[406]*406cording to the intent of the legislature ; and that the term tools in the statute must be understood to designate those simple instru- - ments, which are commonly used by the hand of one man in some manual labour necessary for his subsistence, and did not comprehend complicated machinery and expensive utensils, which may be of themselves of great value. Although a different doctrine is laid down in the case of Patten vs. Shepard, (4 Con. Rep. 450,) yet the reasons and principles on which the former case proceeded, appear to us to be sound, and the doctrine of it to be more agreeable to the general policy of our laws for the security of debts, and to what we believe to have been the common understanding in the state. Indeed, this doctrine was recognized and adopted by the Supreme Court of this state several years ago. I remember to have been counsel in a case,
Judgment affirmed.
Burbank vs. Reed, Washington County, July Term, 1822.
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