The following property of a debtor used primarily for personal, family or household
purposes shall be exempt from process:
1. All wearing apparel not in excess of a fair market value of
five hundred dollars.
2. All musical instruments provided for the debtor's individual
or family use not in excess of an aggregate fair market value of two hundred fifty
dollars.
3. Domestic pets, horses, milk cows and poultry not in excess of
an aggregate fair market value of five hundred dollars.
4. All engagement and wedding rings not in excess of an aggregate
fair market value of one thousand dollars.
5. The library of a debtor, including books, manuals, published
materials and personal documents not in excess of an aggregate fair market value of two
hundred fifty dollars.
6. One watch not in excess of a fair market value of one hundred
dollars.
7. One typewriter, one bicycle, one sewing machine, a family bible, a
lot in any burial ground, one shotgun or one rifle or one pistol, not in excess of an
aggregate fair market value of five hundred dollars.
8. One motor vehicle not in excess of a fair market value of one
thousand five hundred dollars. If the debtor is maimed or crippled, the fair market value
of the motor vehicle shall not exceed four thousand dollars.
9. Professionally prescribed prostheses for the debtor or a
dependent of the debtor, including a wheelchair.
Text current through end of 1998.