73 Iowa 111 | Iowa | 1887
'The defendant showed, in support of his .motion, that he is the head of a family, and is an attorney at law, and engaged in the practice; that the property was in use by him as such attorney, and necessary to enable him to carry on his law business, and was purchased before the debt sued on was contracted.
Under section 3072 of the Code, the proper tools, instruments and books of a lawyer, if the head of a family, are exempt from execution. The question presented is as to whether the ordinary office furniture of a lawyer necessary to enable him to carry on his business can, within the meaning of the statute, be deemed his instruments. We observe, for instance, that one of the articles attached is the defendant’s office table. Strictly speakiug, perhaps a table is not an instrument. Its general use is such that the word “ instrument” seems inapplicable. But it should be borne in mind that a lawyer’s table is used specifically in his employment; it is one of the things which he employs as a means in the accomplishment of his work. The fact that a table, in its general use, is not an instrument, is not important. It appears quite different when it is adopted specifically as a means in an employment. It then fulfills all the essential ideas of an instrument, and that unquestionably is the important consideration. It is the policy of the law that every man who is the head of a family shall be allowed, as far as possible, to follow his chosen vocation. It is better ordinarily, we presume, even for the creditor, that the debtor should