185 A. 417 | Conn. | 1936
The questions determinative of this appeal are confined to: claimed errors in the court's finding; whether the printing press and other chattels in question of the plaintiff are exempt from attachment under 5791 of the General Statutes as concluded by the court; and if so, whether the plaintiff waived this right of exemption or is estopped from asserting it, as to which the court held in the negative.
The court did not err in refusing to find the facts complained of as, in so far as material, they were either sufficiently covered by the finding or were not admitted or undisputed facts, and the facts found assigned as error are wholly supported by the evidence.
The finding discloses these material facts: On February 6th, 1935, and for some time prior thereto, the plaintiff, whose occupation for the preceding nineteen years had been that of a printer, which was the only business in which he had ever engaged, conducted a printing business at 284 Asylum Street in Hartford, *425 which was his sole means of earning a livelihood for the support of himself, wife, and two children. It consisted of doing printing upon order only, for his customers, and he manufactured no printed matter for stock. Most of the work he did himself, a small part only being done by a single part-time employee. In the course of the business he used a 12" x 18" printing press driven by an electric motor with connecting belt; a paper cutter and a lead cutter, both operated by hand; and two type cabinets, fifty-two cases of type, two brass galleys, two composing sticks, three line gauges, a stone and stand, a rack of riglets, and a rack of wood furniture; all used in conjunction with the various printing operations and applied largely by hand. All of these articles were necessary and indispensable to the conduct of the business, and were of the moderate total value of $579, none of them being of an expensive type.
On February 6th, 1935, the named defendant, through its attorney, delivered a duly issued writ of attachment, in which $150 damages was claimed of the plaintiff, to the defendant Harger, a deputy sheriff under the defendant Dewey, sheriff of Hartford County, with instructions either to collect its claim of $75 or attach all of the property located at the plaintiff's place of business. The defendant Harger demanded payment of the plaintiff at his place of business, or in lieu thereof a bond, threatening otherwise to remove the plaintiff's property. The officer put a keeper in the place at the plaintiff's request and expense, to permit him to get a bond, but on February 11th, 1935, was notified that the plaintiff could not raise a bond, and the next day took all of the articles above enumerated into his custody and removed them, the plaintiff making no claim that they were exempt from attachment, and making no demand *426 subsequently for their return, other than may be inferred from the institution of this action.
Whether these articles are exempt from attachment, depends upon the interpretation of the words "implements of the debtor's trade" which are declared by 5791 of the General Statutes to be exempt from such process. There is a conflict of authority as to whether a printing press and its accessories as here, are exempt under statutes similar in import if not identical in wording with our own. This originated with the decision by this court in 1823 of the case of Patten v. Smith,
In later decisions we have discussed this exemption and pointed out certain requisites pertaining thereto, but in none of them have we departed from the liberal rule of interpretation therein laid down. In Atwood v. DeForest,
Of primary significance in the determination of this question is the apparent similarity of the articles in that case and this, in their nature, their value, the owner's part in their use, and the kind and extent of the business where utilized. While the subordinate facts are not fully detailed in the report of Patten v. Smith, it may fairly be inferred that there, as here, the business in question was job printing to supply local orders, most if not all of which was produced by the labor of the owner himself. But here the further facts appear that this was the only business in which the plaintiff had ever engaged, that he carried it on right up to its interruption by the attachment complained of, that he depended upon it to support his family, and that all of these articles were indispensable to the conduct of it. These facts, in the light of some of the other cases above referred to, suggest further reason for concluding that these articles are exempt. Nor does the fact that the press in this case was electrically driven instead of by man-power, as in Patten v. Smith, require a different result. Harris v. Townley (Tex.Civ.App.)
The cases relied upon by the defendants in support of their contention to the contrary, do not call for extended discussion. As already suggested, the case of Patten v. Smith gave rise to a conflict of authority. The decisions of Maine, Mississippi, South Carolina and Vermont, have followed the Massachusetts case of Buckingham v. Billings, above cited, while those of Alabama, California, Kansas and Louisiana, have followed Patten v. Smith. The former line of decisions, however, all relate to the interpretation of statutes in which the word "tools" and not "implements" with its broader signification (11 R.C.L. 513, 23) is used, and no case has come to our attention where the words "implements of trade" appearing in the statute, were not construed to exempt a printer's press and equipment. Among cases holding such equipment to be exempt are Sallee v. Waters,
Since the plaintiff's property was exempt from attachment, the original taking of it by the defendant Harger was wrongful and the attachment void. State v. Hartley,
So much of the defendants' claim that the plaintiff is estopped by conduct from asserting the exemption as is predicated upon alleged remarks by him to the officer before the property was taken, is futile, for, as suggested earlier in this opinion, the court's finding against the defendants' contention upon this question of fact is conclusive. This issue is therefore narrowed to the sole question of whether the plaintiff's silence under the circumstances amounted to such estoppel. In a case where, as here, silence is the conduct relied upon to give rise to the estoppel, the existence of circumstances which impose a duty upon the one claimed to be estopped to disclose the fact which is known is essential. Taylor v. Ely,
In view of what we have said as to the effect of a duty to disclose upon the plaintiff's part, evidence as to whether Harger would have attached the property if the plaintiff had claimed that it was exempt, was immaterial.
There is no error.