REQUESTED BY: David O. Coolidge, Director-State Engineer, Nebraska Department of Roads, P.O. Box 94759, Lincoln, Nebraska, 68509.
1. Legislative Bill 285 of the 1981 Legislature, in Section 3, paragraph 1(c) inserted gross between the words maximum and weight dealing with up to 25% greater loads for seasonally harvested products. How does the inclusions ofgross affect the axle limitation of 20,000 pounds in Neb.Rev.Stat. §
2. The existing statute allows up to 25% greater than the maximum weight specified by law on single axle weights, as well as the loads in the tables of section
3. Are the table values in Neb.Rev.Stat. §
1. The axle weight limitations of Neb.Rev.Stat. 39-6, 180 (Supp. 1980) are not affected by the inclusion of the word gross in paragraph 1(c) of Section 3 of Legislative Bill 285.
2. Yes. Neb.Rev.Stat. §
3. Yes.
L.B. 285 of the Eighty-Seventh Legislature, First Session, provides in pertinent part as follows:
`Sec. 3. That section
39-6,181 , Revised Statutes Supplement, 1980, be amended to read as follows:
39-6,181 . (1) The Department of Roads or the Nebraska State Patrol with respect to highways under their jurisdiction including the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways, and county authorities with respect to highways under their jurisdiction may in their discretion upon application and good cause being shown therefor, issue a special permit in writing authorizing the applicant . . . (c) to operate vehicles loaded up to twenty-five per cent greater than the maximum gross weight specified by law, or up to ten per cent greater than the maximum length specified by law, or both, when carrying grain or other seasonally harvested products from the field where they are harvested to storage, market, or stockpile in the field, or from storage or stockpile to market or factory when failure to move in abundant quantities would cause an economic loss to the person or persons whose product or products are being transported or when failure to move such product or products in as large quantities as possible would not be in the best interests of the national defense or general welfare, . . .'
In our opinion, the addition of the word `gross' by L.B. 285 to the phrase `maximum weight specified by law' in section
"There is a general rule of statutory construction that interpretation of a statute given by an administrative agency to which the statute is directed is entitled to great weight." ATS Mobile Telephone, Inc. v. Curtin Call Communications, Inc.,
194 Neb. 404 ,232 N.W.2d 248 (1975).
It is presumed that the Legislature has full knowledge and information of the subject matter of a statute, as well as relevant facts relating to prior law. Sanitary and ImprovementDist. No. 222 v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
"In the construction of a statute, no sentence, clause, or word should be rejected as meaningless or superfluous and the plain and ordinary meaning of all language employed should be taken into account in order to determine the legislative will." Weiss v. Union Ins. Co.,
202 Neb. 469 ,276 N.W.2d 88 (1979).
The interpretation that we have given the word `gross' in Section 3, paragraph 1(c) of L.B. 285 is, in our opinion, the only logical, consistent interpretation that may be given the word without rejecting it as superfluous.
Very truly yours, PAUL L. DOUGLAS Attorney General John E. Brown Assistant Attorney General Approved:Paul L. Douglas Attorney General
