Plaintiff, a judgment creditor, levied execution on the automobile owned by Eussell Shipp, the judgment debtor. The levy was made under the provisions of rule 260(b), Iowa Pules of Civil Procedure. The defendant Shipp gave notice to the effect that he was a laborer and head of a family and the automobile seized was a vehicle by the use of which he habitually earned his living, and therefore exempt from execution. The matter was set for hearing and testimony was introduced showing defendant Shipp was married, head of a family, and a laborer; that he was employed as a car-man’s helper at the Illinois Central Railroad shops in Waterloo, which place of employment is about a mile and a quarter from his home; and that he uses his automobile to transport himself to and from his work. There was also testimony that Shipp resides on a bus line that runs past his place of employment.
Section 627.6, subsection 18, Code, 1950, provides the debtor who is head of a family may hold exempt from execution “if [he] is a * * * laborer, a * * * vehicle * * * by the use of which he habitually earns his living.”
It is admitted the only question before the trial court was whether Shipp’s automobile was such a vehicle by the use of which Shipp habitually earns his living. The trial court found that: “Other than an occasional gratuitous act, the defendant *875 uses his automobile for no other purpose connected with his employment than to transport himself to and from work.”
The trial court’s ruling goes on to state: “Giving the statute the liberal construction required, it is the conclusion and opinion of this court that as a matter of fact and law the * * '* automobile of the defendant is exempt to him under the facts presented.”
I. The only question argued on this appeal is whether the use of an automobile for no other purpose than to transport the debtor to and from his place of employment entitles the debtor to claim an exemption of the automobile under the quoted statute, as such a vehicle “by the use of which he habitually earns his living.” Plaintiff admits Shipp is the head of a family and a laborer and that the automobile is, as we have held, a “vehicle” within section 627.6, subsection 18, Code of 1950. See Lames v. Armstrong,
In Blair v. Fritz,
The word “habitually” in the statute “does not mean exclusively, but customarily.” 35 C. J. S., Exemptions, section 24b. The only question here is whether evidence of the use of the car to transport Shipp to and from the railroad shop where he worked was evidence of using the car for the purpose of earning his living. We hold it was. It is well settled that exemption statutes must have a liberal construction. Shepard v. Findley,
In Waterhouse v. Johnson,
*876 “He bad to be transported daily back and forth between bis place of work and bis borne. He lives on a 5-acre tract of ground, about 5 miles from tbe town of Urbana. Tbe distance between bis borne and tbe usual places of work varied from 2 or 3 miles to 10 or 12 miles. Tbe exigencies of bis work required bim to board and lodge at borne. He usually drove back and forth every night and morning. We infer from tbe record that it was not safe for bim to leave his tools upon tbe ground when he left bis work, and it was not practicable to convey them back and forth, except by conveyance. In Roberts v. Parker,117 Iowa 389 , we held that a bicycle was exempt to a painter, who used tbe same in going to and from bis work as a painter. We held that a bicycle came within tbe meaning of the term ‘vehicle’, as used in tbe statute. We held, also, that its use by tbe painter in conveying bim to and from bis work was a use within tbe provisions of tbe exemption statute.”
In Shepard v. Findley,
Plaintiff distinguishes tbe above decisions on tbe ground that in each something more than use of the automobile as a mere conveyance for transporting the laborer to and from bis work is shown. That distinction would not bold for Roberts v. Parker,
In the last part of the Waterhouse opinion Justice Evans, the writer of the opinion, comments upon the contrary argument which he states is “in substance, that the use of an automobile as a mere conveyance for transporting a laborer to and from his work is not a part of his work, within the statutory meaning, and is not a use thereof by the owner for the purpose of making a living * * Justice Evans goes on to say “there is much force in the argument”, and he is skeptical whether our previous decisions are “correct in principle.” But he holds the question is foreclosed by our prior decisions and he states those decisions “respond to the spirit of the statute” for “the automobile of modest value has become a substantial aid to the efficiency of all persons engaged in the occupations defined by the exemption statute.” He pointed out that it was within the power of the legislature to fix a limitation of value on automobile exemptions.
The point is that our prior decisions do hold that evidence of use as a conveyance for transporting a laborer to and from work is evidence of use for the purpose of earning a living. The fact that in the cited cases the laborers also on occasions transported their tools along with their persons is incidental. If the transportation of the tools to the scene of employment is part of the laborer’s work then surely transportation of the laborer who uses them would be part of his work.
In Lames v. Armstrong,
The evidence of such use is not defeated as a matter of law by showing the debtor lives on a bus line that passes his place of employment and that he could, as plaintiff argues, “conveniently ride a bus to work.” Perhaps a good case could be made out that many laborer-debtors would not be inconvenienced and would be better off financially if they did not own a car and rode taxicabs to work. But questions of the balance of convenience and economic necessity are unimportant. The sole and only question is whether the laborer does habitually use his automobile as a part of his work. As stated, we hold evidence of use to transport the laborer to and from work supports the ruling of exemption. The conclusion finds support in Julius v. Druckrey,
