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December 17, 2024 Clouds | 44°F
The 193rd General Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts

Section 34: Property exempt from execution

Section 34. The following property of the debtor shall be exempt from seizure on execution:

First, The necessary wearing apparel, beds and bedding for the debtor and the debtor's family, 1 heating unit used for warming the dwelling house, 1 stove, 1 refrigerator, 1 freezer and 1 hot water heater used primarily for the personal, family or household use of the debtor or a debtor's family and the amount each month, not exceeding $500, reasonably necessary to pay for fuel, heat, refrigeration, water, hot water and light for the debtor and the debtor's family;

Second, Other household furniture necessary for the debtor and the debtor's family, not exceeding $15,000 in value;

Third, The bibles, schoolbooks and library used by the debtor or the debtor's family, not exceeding $500 in value;

Fourth, 2 cows, 12 sheep, 2 swine and 4 tons of hay;

Fifth, Tools, implements and fixtures necessary for carrying on the trade or business of the debtor, not exceeding $5,000 in value;

Sixth, Materials and stock designed and procured by the debtor which is necessary for carrying on the trade or business of the debtor and intended to be used or wrought therein, not exceeding $5,000 in value;

Seventh, Provisions necessary and procured and intended for the use of the debtor's family or the money necessary therefor, not exceeding $600 in value;

Eighth, 1 pew occupied by the debtor or the debtor's family in a house of public worship; provided, however, that nothing herein shall prevent the sale of a pew for the nonpayment of a tax legally imposed thereon;

Ninth, Boats, fishing tackle and nets of a debtor who is a fisherman and actually used by the debtor in the course of the debtor's business, not exceeding $1,500 in value;

Tenth, The uniform of an officer or soldier in the militia and the arms and accoutrements required by law to be kept by the officer or soldier;

Eleventh, The rights of burial and tombs in use as repositories for the dead;

Twelfth, 1 sewing machine in actual use by each debtor or by his family, not exceeding $300 each in resale value, and 1 computer and 1 television, in actual use by each debtor's family;

Thirteenth, Shares in co-operative associations subject to chapter 157, not exceeding $100 in value in the aggregate;

Fourteenth, Estates of homestead as defined in chapter 188 or, in lieu thereof, the amount of money each rental period, not exceeding $2,500 per month, necessary to pay the rent for the dwelling unit occupied by the debtor and the debtor's family;

Fifteenth, $2,500 in cash or savings or other deposits in a banking or investment institution, wages equal to the greater of 85 per cent of the debtor's gross wages or 50 times the greater of the federal or the Massachusetts hourly minimum wage for each week or portion thereof and the full amount owing or paid to a person as public assistance;

Sixteenth, An automobile necessary for the debtor's personal transportation or to secure or maintain employment, not exceeding $7,500 of wholesale resale value; provided, however, that the equitable value of a vehicle owned or substantially used by debtor who is either a handicapped person or a person 60 years of age or older shall be exempt up to $15,000 in wholesale resale value;

Seventeenth, The debtor's aggregate interest in any personal property, not to exceed $1,000 in value, plus up to $5,000 of any unused dollar amount of the aggregate exemptions provided under clauses Second, Fifth and Sixteenth; and

Eighteenth, The debtor's aggregate interest, not to exceed $1,225 in value, in jewelry held primarily for the personal, family or household use of the debtor or the debtor's spouse or dependent.