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Yes, if you argue the modern catch-all definition of "chattel." Here is the quote from Cornell University Law School's Legal Information Institute:

A catch-all category of property mostly associated with movable goods. At common law, chattel included all property that was not real estate and not attached to real estate. Examples included everything from leases, to cows, to clothes. In modern usage, chattel often merely refers to tangible movable personal property.

http://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/chattel

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13y ago

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