19 Conn. 513 | Conn. | 1849
The question submitted to us, in this case, is, whether certain articles of personal property, which were attached by the defendant, DeForest, by virtue of process in favour of the defendant, Lathrop, were exempt from being taken on execution, on the ground that they were respectively implements of the trades of Atwood and Crouch, ns whose they were taken. Crouch was a blacksmith, working at his trade, a portion of the time ; but occasionally, at some branch of the manufacture of spectacles ; and Atwood was a spectacle-maker. None of the blacksmith tools were taken by the officer ; no question is raised, therefore, in regard to them; and as neither of them were engaged in making shears, and were neither of them shear-makers, it follows, that any article intended for that business, if there is any such in the list of articles taken, was as liable to attachment and execution, as any other property of the debtors.
In regard to such articles as belonged appropriately to the spectacle business, the facts agreed to are not as definite as
Trade, in its most extensive sense, means all sorts of dealing, by way of sale or exchange ; but, obviously, this is not the meaning of the word, as used in the statute regarding the exemption of mechanics’ implements. No one would contend, that the goods of a merchant are exempt from execution ; and yet, in a literal sense, they are implements of his trade. By the word trade, as used in this statute, we suppose is meant the business of a mechanic, strictly speaking ; as the business of a carpenter, blacksmith, silversmith, printer, or the like ; and that it was not intended to include the business of a manufacturer, any more than it was intended to extend to the business of a merchant or farmer. When the first statute exempting the tools of a debtor’s trade, “ necessary for upholding life,” was passed, there were but very few, if any, manufactories in the slate ; but then, as now, all the different trades, for supplying the community in which they were located with such articles as were necessary, were in full operation ; and it was in reference to the persons who were then engaged in these mechanical trades, that this exemption was introduced. Indeed, the word, as used in this statute, has now a more limited meaning, than the same word as used in the statute regarding apprentices.
Reference must be had, also, to the time during which the exemption exists, as well as to the character of the business. Merely because a man has learned some mechanical trade, if he is neither pursuing it, nor contemplating its pursuit, his
It is not intended, by any thing which is here said, that to be a mechanic, it is necessary to labour for a community or neighbourhood. In the large manufacturing establishments, there are, no doubt, many individuals labouring as mechanics for the manufacturer alone. The implements of such persons, we presume, are within the exemption, though their employers’ machinery and implements would not be.
We have not thought it necessary, in this case, to consider the question, whether the exemption extends beyond the implements for the personal use of the mechanic, to such as are necessary for his journeymen and apprentices. A rather liberal construction of the statute, in regard to the quantity of tools which would be proper and useful to a mechanic, would probably be given ; but whether this would extend so far as to protect several sets of the same implements for different individuals, it is unnecessary to determine. This decision also renders unimportant, the question as to La-throp's right as assignee of Pierce's mortgage.
For the reasons above stated, we advise the superior court, that the defendants had right to attach the articles taken by them : and therefore, that judgment be rendered in their favour.
Judgment to be rendered for the defendants.