Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

September 18, 1951 Hon. Homer Garrison, Jr., Director Texas Department of Public Safety Camp Mabry Austin, Texas Opinion No. V-1285 Re: Interpretation of Senate BiII 57. Acts 52nd Leg., R.S. 1951, relating to the gross’ weight of commercial ve- Dear Sir: hicles. Your request for an opinion reads in part as follows: “Senate Bill 57, Acts 52nd Legislature, Regular Session, 1951, relating to the gross weight of commer- cial motor vehicles provides that no axle shall carry a load in excess of 18,000 pounds. The Act defines an axle load as ‘the total load transmitted to the road by all wheels whose centers may be included between two par- allel tFkrXv’arsevertics1 Plkie~s,.fonty ihohes apart, exe. - tending across the full width of the vehicle.’ The Act then provides a table limiting the maximum load in pounds carried on any group of axles and this table is based upon the distance in feet between the extremes ~of any group of axles. “It is further provided in the Act that the total gross weight concentrated on the highway surface from any tandem axle group shall not exceed 32,000 pounds for each such tandem axle group and then proceeds to define a tandem axle group to be ‘two or more axles spaced forty inches or more apart from center to cen- ter having at least one common point of weight suspen- sion.’ “In connection with the above Act we desire your opinion on the following questions: Hon. Homer Garrison, Jr., page 2 (V-1285) “1. Under Senate Bill 57, what would be the max- imum gross weight allowed a combination of vehicles con- sisting of a single driving axle truck-tractor and tandem axle semi-trailer wherein it is thirty-seven feet from the front truck axle (Axle “A”) to the extreme axle (Axle “D”) of the tandem axle group (Axles ‘C” and “D”), and is twenty feet from the rear truck-tractor driving axle (Axle “B”) to the extreme axle of the tandem axle group (Axle *D”). The axles of the tandem axle group (Axles “C” and “D”) on the frailer are spaced four feet apart.. “2. What.is the legal maximum weight allowance for semi-trailer axles spaced four feet apart with no common point of weight suspension. “3. What is the maximum legal gross weight al- lowed under Senate Bill 57 for a tandem truck used to transport ready mixed cement wherein the distance in feet between the extreme axles is twelve feet. ‘4. What is the legal maximum gross weight allowed under Senate Bill 57 on a group of axles formed on a truck- tract& by the use of a ‘jeep assembly.‘” Article 827a. Section 5. Vernon’s Penal Code. as amended by Senate Bill 57. Acts 52nd Leg., 1951. ch. 146. p. 248, provides in part as follows: “Section 5. Except as otherwise provided by law, no commercial motor vehicle, truck-tractor, trailer or semi-trailer, nor combination of such vehicles, shall be operated over, on, or upon the public highways outside the limits of an incorporated city or town, where the to- tal, weight on a s$ngle axle or any group of axles exceeds the weight limitations adopted April 1, 1846. by the “Amer- ican Association of State Highway Officials,” set forth be- low in subsections (a) and (b): “(a) Permissible Loads -- No axle shall carry a load in excess of eighteen thousand (18,000) pounds. a . . . “(b) No group of axles shall carry a load in pounds in excess of the ,value given in the following table corres- . . Hon. Homer Garrison, Jr., page 3 (V-1285) ponding to the. distance in feet between the extreme axles of the group, measured longitudinally to the nearest foot: “Distance in feet Maximum load in between the ex- pounds carried on tremes of any any group of axles group of axles 4 32,000 32,000 2 32,000 7 32,000 32.610 9” 33,580 10 34.550 11 35.510 i2 36,470 13 37.420 14 38.360 39,300 :z 40,230 17 41,160 18 42.080 19 42,990 20 43.900 21 44,800 45,700 z 46.590 47,470 z 48.350 26 49,220 27 50,090 50,950 2”; 1 51,800 30 52,650 31 y”o 32 33 55: 160 55,980 :; 56,800 36 57,610 37 58,420 58,420 :; 58.420 40 58,420 41 58.420 Hon. Homer Garrison. Jr.. page 4 (V-1285) “The weights set forth in column two of the above table shall constitute the maximum permissible gross weight for any such vehicle or combination of such ve- hicles.” The act does not define ‘“group of axles” or “axles of the group.” We must therefore first ascertain what constitutes the “group of axles” to be used in determining the maximum gross weight allowed for any motor vehicle or combination of vehicles traversing the highways of this State outside the corporate limits of any incorporated city or town. In order that our discussion of the question may be more clearly understood, we have reproduced below a photograph of the combination of motor vehicles accompanying the request. It is contended by some interested parties that by the use of the language “no group of axles shall carry a load in excess of the value given in the . . . table corresponding to the distance in feet between the extreme axles of the group” the Legislature in- tended in the above example to group the axles as follows: “A” to Hon. Homer Garrison, Jr., page 5 (V-1285) “B”, “A” to “D”, “B” to “D”, and “C” to “D”. Thus, it is said that the weights given in the table for the corresponding distances in feet between each of these axle groups is the maximum gross weight per- missible on any such axle group. In other words, applying the dis- tances given above to the table, the total gross weight permissible on the axle group “B” to “D” would be 43,900 pounds, and on the axle group “A” to “D ” it would be 58,420 pounds. Under this theory, an operator of a motor vehicle or combination of motor vehicles would be in violation of the gross load limit if the gross weight on any one group of axles was in excess of that shown by the table. There is authority for this contention. The Supreme Court of Iowa in the recent case of State v. Balsley, 48 N.W.2d 287 (Iowa Sup. June 5, 1951) held under the Iowa act’ providing for “distance in feet between the extremes of any group of axles or the extreme axles of the vehicle or combination” that axles “B”, “C”, and “D” together constitute a group of axles and that “consideration can and must be given to the distance between the extreme axles of this particular group and the weight that was on them.” The Attorney General9 Nebraska reached a like result in an opinion dated May 13, 1949. On the other hand, the Attorney General of vming, con- struing a statute similar to those in Iowa and Nebraska, in an opin- ion dated July 22, 1950, concluded that the meaning intended by the Legislature in using the terms “axles of the group” and “group of axles” was that “all axles under a vehicle should be considered as a group.” It was further said that the distance to be measured in l/ The Iowa act, Sec. 321.463, Iowa Code (1950), provides: “No grouiiof axles of any vehicle, or any combination of vehicles, shall carry-a load in pounds in excess of the value given in the . , . table corresponding to the distance in feet between the extreme axles of the group,measured longitudinally to the nearestfoot.” 2/ The Nebraska act, Section~39-722. Neb. Rev. Stat. (Supp. 1949r provides: “No group of axles shall carry a load in pounds in excess-of the maximum loads given in the . . . table corresponding to the distance in feet between the extreme axles of the .group. meas- ured longitudinally to the nearest foot.” 3/ The Wyoming act, Ch. 87, Wyo. Laws. 1949. provides ” . . . no vehicle or combination of vehicles shall be operated on the high- ways where the total gross weight, with load, exceeds that given by the . . . table, corresponding to the distance in feet between the ex- treme axles of the group measured longitudinally to the nearest foot.* . . Hon. Homer Garrison, Jr.., page 6 (V-1285) order properly to apply the table or formula4 was “the distance from the extreme front axle of the vehicle to the extreme rear axle of the vehicle without regard to the number of axles that mightintervene between such front and rear axle.” Thus, there has been a division of opinion as to the con- struction to be placed upon the term “group of axles” even though the statutes construed are similar, each being modeled in part on the uniform act suggested by the American Association of State Highway Officials, as is Senate Bill 57. However, in determining the construction’to be placed upon the Texas act it is necessary to consider une very important difference between Senate Bill 57 and the statutes of the other States. Immediately following the statutory weight formula it is provided: “The weights set forth in column two of the above table shall constitute the maximum permissible gross we> - hicles. “-I (J&mphasis added throughout.) . The above provision must be construed in connection with that portion of the act immediately preceding the statutory weight formula wherein it is provided: “No group of axles shall carry a load in pounds in excess gf the value given in the followmg table cor- responding to the distance in feet between the extreme axles of the group, measured longihidmally to the near- est foot.” It is thus to be observed that this portion of the act deals with a “load in pounds” in relation to a “group of axles,” while that portion of the actimmediatelyfollowing the weight formula desig- nates the.weights &tf’nrtb in the table as the “maximum . . . gross weight” for the “vehicle or combination of . . . vehicles.” sunless the second provision is explanatory of the meaning which the Legis- lature intended to attach to the first provision, the two provisions 4/ The statutory tables of distances and weights in Iowa, Ne- bra&a, Wyoming. and Texas are the same. 5/ This provision is neither included in the uniform act sug- gest&d by the American Association of State Highway Officials nor the acts of the several States whose acts have been modeled after the suggested uniform act. , . Hon. Homer Garrison, Jr., page 7 (V-1285) prescribe conflicting methods for determining maximum permis- sible gross load. In keeping with the rule of statutory construc- tion that all parts of a statute will be harmonized, if possible, so as to.give effect to every provision in the act, we think it is obvious that the Legislature, by the insertion of the provision relating to the maximum gross weight for a vehicle or combination of vehicles, in- tended that all axles under a vehicle or combinationof vehicles be considered as, the “group” without regard to intervening axles. Other- wise, we must attribute to the Legislature the doing of a meaningless and useless thing-in expressly providing in the act that the weights given in the table should constitute the maximum permissible gross weight for a vehicle. This we should not do. Southwestern Gas & Electric Co. v. State, 190 S.W.Zd 132 (Tex. Civ. App. 1945), atfirmed 145 Tex. 24, 193 S . W. 2 d 675 (1946). But assuming that this is not the proper construction to be given this last provision and further assuming that the arrangement of axles in the above example results in more than one group of axles, 6 then obviously the two paragraphs are in conflict and we must therefore determine which of the two provisions should prevail. If the provision which deals with “group of axles ” is to prevail, then undoubtedly the r,ule announced by the Iowa Supreme Court in State v. Balsley, supra, should be applied. On the other hand, if the provision of the actrelat- in&to permissible weights for “vehicles” and “combination of vehicles” is controlling, then the total permissible gross weight for the vehicle or combination of vehicles would be determined by the figure set out in the table corresponding to the distance from the extreme front axle to the extreme rear axle without regard to intervening axles. In considering conflicting provisions in a statute, the primary object is, to ascertain the legislative intent. In accordance with the principle that the last expression of the legislative will is the law, the prevailing view is that, in case of conflicting provisions in the same act, the last provision in order of arrangement prevails. United States v. Updike, 25 F.2d 746 (D. Neb. 1928), affirmed 281 U.S. mUI; tireat wrn Rye. v. United States, 155 Fkd. 945 (C.C.A. 8th 1907). afffi- 6/ Suchgrouping of axles accords with the interpretation which the Highway Research Board has placed on~that part of the act provid- ing that “no group of axles shall carry a load in pounds in excess of the value given in the . . . table:” See Bulletin No. 26, Highway Re- search Board, Washington, D.C., July 1950, p. 11. See also, “Policy Concerning Maximum Dimensions, Weights and Speeds of Motor Ve- hicles” adopted by American Association of State Highway Gfficials on April 1. 1946. . . Hon. Homer Garrison, Jr., page 8 (V-1285) 208 U.S. 452 (1908); State v. Burchfield Bros., 211 Ala. 30, 99 So. 198 (1924); Spreckels v. Graham, 194 C 1 516 228 Pac. 1040 (1924); Lamar v. Allen;T(TS Ga.m3 S . E . 958 (l”s