Court Opinion

ID: 9622125
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 06:12:22.026267+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:05:13.753003
License: Public Domain

URBIGKIT, Chief Justice,
specially concurring.
I specially concur. Although well aware of the current national dialogue on the subject of statutory construction, including specifically one approach characterized to be a literalistic implementation, I do not agree with a closed-end and cramped adaptation just like I do not agree that because jurists may differ in the interpretation of a contract, such disagreement necessarily makes the contract ambiguous. We may be the ambiguity.
I have no problem with the application of “legislative intent,” whatever it may be, but the difficulty is introduced by attempted segmentation of an amorphous intent which had been created as the composite result of a multiplexed, many faceted process. Intent is normally a question of fact. First Nat. Bank v. Swan, 3 Wyo. 356, 23 P. 743 (1890). This court in Spriggs v. Cheyenne Newspapers, 63 Wyo. 416, 449, 182 P.2d 801, 814 (1947) (quoting Edie v. Coleman, 235 Mo.App. 1289, 141 S.W.2d 238 (1940)) said:
“ ‘The intent of a person cannot be proven by direct and positive evidence. It is a question of fact, to be proven, like any other fact, by acts, conduct, and circumstances’. People v. Johnson, 131 Cal. 511, 514, 63 P. 842, 843.”
See Williams v. State, 807 P.2d 271 (Okla. Cr.1991). Justice White in McCormick v. United States, — U.S. -, -, 111 S.Ct. 1807, 1815, 114 L.Ed.2d 307 (1991) (citing Cheek v. United States, — U.S. -, 111 S.Ct. 604, 112 L.Ed.2d 617 (1991)) stated the rule with simplicity: “It goes without saying that matters of intent are for the jury to consider.” Construction of statutes is, however, a determination to be made by the court as a question of law, McGuire v. McGuire, 608 P.2d 1278 (Wyo. 1980), since the construction or interpretation defines what the law actually is. Shepperd v. Boettcher & Co., Inc., 756 P.2d 182 (Wyo.1988); Dowdell v. Bell, 477 P.2d 170 (Wyo.1970); 73 Am.Jur.2d Statutes §§ 143 and 145 (1974).
*224I specially concur because of an unwillingness to join in the preclusive and overstated language that addresses rules of statutory construction following analysis that this court’s approach becomes both overreaching and insufficient. For example, Wyo. Const, art. 1, § 10 guarantees that the accused shall have the right “to be confronted with the witnesses against him * * Yet in Jandro v. State, 781 P.2d 512, 523 (Wyo.1989), we fashioned an exception to the literal meaning of that amendment when we adopted the construction furnished by Bourjaily v. United States, 483 U.S. 171, 107 S.Ct. 2775, 2782, 97 L.Ed.2d 144 (1987). In Bourjaily, it was said that “[wjhile a literal interpretation of the Confrontation Clause could bar the use of any out-of-court statements when the declarant is unavailable * * id., the literal meaning would be rejected as too extreme. See likewise Dowdell, 477 P.2d 170, where this court added an unstated “intentionally” as a statutory criterion. I cannot find that our constitutional and statutory construction concepts apprehend a system as absolute as is now suggested by the majority in this rather clear decision without need for conceptualization of this literalistic language overlay.
Certainly, the literal meaning of constitutional provisions or statutory language should be given effect when we search for intent when in fact probably no one intent ever existed at the time of of enactment. Texas Co. v. Siefried, 60 Wyo. 142, 147 P.2d 837, reh’g denied 60 Wyo. 142, 150 P.2d 99 (1944). Additionally, there are times in which the literal meaning of a text is rejected or superseded because the result is undesirable and a clear violation of the probable purpose would otherwise be achieved. Deherrera v. Herrera, 565 P.2d 479 (Wyo.1977); Hecht v. Carey, 13 Wyo. 154, 78 P. 705 (1904). Any concept that indicates our rules of construction do not afford flexibility is, in my conclusion, highly inaccurate. State ex rel. Benham v. Cheever, 71 Wyo. 303, 257 P.2d 337 (1953). Cf. McArtor v. State, 699 P.2d 288 (Wyo.1985), where this court used the very widest brush to paint the defendant into a valid criminal charge by abject statutory construction.
Among the multitude of texts, there are variant explanations and alternative approaches. Perhaps from a programmatic analysis, several are easily defined.
1. Legislators do not know how to define their desired intent with complete certainty with the language furnished to them by the drafting service.
2. Statutes do not exist like electrons and neutrons motionless at absolute zero in a glass bottle. There are other statutes, historical events and accidents of enactment that relate to the linguistically created and individually cultivated “legislative intent.”
3. Separate jurists do not derive exactly the same “communication” from the identical statutory provision. Any listener or reader in the communicative process “understands” only within the concept of the combination of understanding and beliefs into which the communication is embedded.1
Competing with the literalistic, common sense, and observed purpose is the legislative history interpretive reliance. The wide divergence is definitively illustrated by the almost opposite views of Retired Justice William J. Brennan, Jr., who is a staunch supporter, compared to Justice Antonin Scalia, who is a caustic opponent of the application and utilization of legislative history. A case of note is Public Citizen v. United States Dept. of Justice, 491 U.S. 440, 109 S.Ct. 2558, 105 L.Ed.2d 377 (1989). See Comment, The Role of Legislative His*225tory in Statutory Interpretation: A New Era After the Resignation of Justice William Brennan?, 56 Mo.L.Rev. 121 (1991). See also Comment, The Value of Nonlegis-lators’ Contributions to Legislative History, 79 Geo.L.J. 359 (1990).
It is recognized that intent must be presumed or otherwise the legislature has no purpose. “If there is no ascertainable legislative intent, what then is the part played by the legislature in our system of government?” E. Crawford, Statutory Construction: Interpretation of Laws § 163 at 255 (1940). That author further recognized:
After all, in most instances, the real difficulty lies in determining what is the legislative intent rather than in determining whether one exists. Generally, such an intent may be presumed to exist, for it is not a common occurrence to find legislation which is wholly meaningless. More often the statute may appear to have more than one meaning. Such a condition may be due to the inability of the interpreter to grasp the legislative meaning rather than to the lack of a definite meaning on the part of the lawmakers. It is likely that the legislators at the time the statute was passed had a pretty exact idea of what the statute meant. At least, they were in a position to have a clear knowledge of the statute’s meaning, which is generally more than can be said with reference to those called upon to interpret the law months or years later, especially where resort to the debates and committee reports is not allowed. Words which later seem ambiguous, at the time the law was enacted most likely were understood to be used in a certain sense. Legislatures are composed of men with various views. One may properly assume that each member sought to promote and to protect his belief, and consequently watched the language employed carefully. Surely, the resulting legislation represents the composite views of all the members of the legislature — or at least, the views of those voting in favor of the statute — particularly where the statute involves a question of great public interest. The language of the statute is, of course, the reservoir of the legislative intent. But the difficulty in ascertaining, this intent in many cases with any convincing assurance of its existence, has undoubtedly led to the assertion or belief that it does not exist. But whether a collective legislative intent exists or not, we must recognize or assume its existence as a matter of fact. Such an assumption or existence is necessary in order for a statute to express the legislative will. After all, a statute is more than a group of words, phrases and sentences. It has a meaning. And the meaning must be one intended by the law-makers or the lawmakers do not legislate.
Id. at 255-56 (footnotes omitted).
We sometimes fail to recognize, in the science of adaptation and application, that it is necessary to distinguish between ascertaining the legislative intent, Matter of Foss’ Adoption, 550 P.2d 481 (Wyo.1976), and in applying the statute, Reliance Ins. Co. v. Chevron U.S.A., Inc., 713 P.2d 766 (Wyo.1986). “The former consists in ascertaining the legislative meaning, while the latter is the determination of whether the facts of a given case are within and without the legislative meaning previously ascertained.” E. Crawford, supra, § 173 at 274.
E. Crawford, supra, § 173 at 274 n. 134, quotes the early case of Breashears v. Norman, 176 Ark. 26, 2 S.W.2d 53, 54 (1928), which states most appropriately the rationale or composite approach: “ ‘The intention of the legislature in framing a statute is to be collected from the words used, the subject-matter, the effect and consequences, and the spirit and reason for the law.’ ”
Since the ascertainment of the legislative intent or meaning and the application of the statute to the facts are closely connected and often seem inseparable, the separation into two distinct processes may seem artificial. The division into two processes, however, may be justified by the fact that a statute cannot be applied until the legislative intent has been ascertained. That the separation is not *226purely artificial is also further indicated when we realize that even an unambiguous statute must also be applied.
E. Crawford, supra, § 173 at 275.
Wyoming cases, a number of which are cited in the majority, can be found advancing almost any concept when then immediately directed to the purpose of the court to either achieve the result desired, McArtor, 699 P.2d 288, or more nearly fit the assumed purpose into the assumptions of result and intent attributed to the legislature. Halliburton Co. v. McAdams, Roux and Associates, Inc., 773 P.2d 153 (Wyo.1989). Clearly, textual inconsistencies and substance ambiguity are not synonymous terms.2 Cf. Halliburton Co. and Attletweedt v. State, 684 P.2d 812 (Wyo.1984), involving inconsistency, with Sanches v. Sanches, 626 P.2d 61 (Wyo.1981), involving ambiguity.
One of the most decisive and thoughtful analyses was provided by District Judge Parker in Kelsey v. Taft, 72 Wyo. 210, 263 P.2d 135, 137-38 (1953) (emphasis in original):
We agree that the literal meaning of any wording of law — be it statute or otherwise — is unjustified, and interpretations should be made in accordance with the drafters’ intention, particularly in the case of legislation. However, there is a limitation upon this rule, i.e., before a statute may be interpreted according to the spirit or intention of the legislature, the portion of the statute so interpreted must be free and clear from ambiguity.
District Judge Tidball, writing for the Wyoming Supreme Court in the early case of Houghton Bros. v. Yocum, 40 Wyo. 57, 61, 274 P. 10, 11 (1929), recognized the non-literal practical adaptation concept:
In construing the above sections of the statute, some general rules of construction should be borne in mind. Statutes should, of course, be construed with a view to effecting the legislative intent, and such intent must be ascertained from the statute or statutes. However, a literal construction of the words used will not be sanctioned, when such construction would defeat the evident purpose of the Legislature. * * * And a construction producing unjust or absurd results will not be adopted, unless the terms of the statute preclude any other construction.
For an identical concept of construction to recognize the “obvious purpose for which [the statute is] enacted,” see Mapes v. Foster, 38 Wyo. 244, 266 P. 109, 116 (1928).
A literalistic or absolutist adaptation of statutory construction simply ignores the multi-faceted, quite different participants in the legislative process including sponsors, staff, leadership and concurrent outside influences.3 For example, a major intent in much legislation is to get it passed with something akin to the initial direction envisioned at introduction. That challenge is to cross the goal line by litigative enactment. The composite effort of all active participants is what determines passage and that result should be applied in accord with the language used with reason, recognition of historical purpose and anticipation of intended emplacement as a part of the composite societal rules the jurisdiction’s statutory laws. Sometimes the statute simply cannot be enforced because it lacks sense and is beyond the power of the judiciary to correctly remedy by any interpretation. State ex rel. Fawcett v. Board of County Com’rs of Albany County, 73 Wyo. 69, 273 P.2d 188 (1954).
*227It is recognized that there is no legislative intent since the composite group cannot speak from one person’s undisclosed or indeterminate “purpose.” MacCallum, Legislative Intent, 75 Yale L.J. 754 (1966).4 What we really do to apply statutes in case resolution by analysis of the composite purpose with assumption of first search in the words provided is to add the context existent for a conglomeration into the broad standards of society created by required application. In pragmatic distillation, finding “pure intent” from “plain provisions” is antithetical if not oxymoronic. More nearly reaching reason is determination of purpose to establish effect by application of a reasonable result to the provisions which have been enacted in accord with history and causalities. Stauffer Chemical Co. v. Curry, 778 P.2d 1083 (Wyo.1989).
In this effort to define a “purpose” rule for statutory construction, it is quickly apparent that there are a multitude of rules each correct to a degree and frequently competing. Professor Karl N. Llewellyn provides a point-counterpoint observation: “If language is plain and unambiguous it must be given effect” (citing among other authorities Newhall v. Sanger, 92 U.S. 761, 23 L.Ed. 769 (1875)) and counterpoint, “[n]ot when literal interpretation would lead to absurd or mischievous consequences or thwart manifest purpose” (also citing among other authorities Clark v. Murray, 141 Kan. 533, 41 P.2d 1042 (1935)). K. Llewellyn, Remarks on the Theory of Appellate Decision and the Rules or Canons About How Statutes Are To Be Constructed, 3A Sutherland Stat. Const. 203, 208 (4th ed. 1986) (quoting Llewellyn, Remarks on the Theory of Appellate Decision and the Rules or Canons About How Statutes Are to be Construed, 3 Vand.L.Rev. 395 (1950)). The quoted items are only number twelve of a total of twenty-eight statutory rules of construction with each then compared to the adverse well-recognized countervailing principle.
A typical statement of a plain meaning rule is “ ‘where the language is plain and admits of no more than one meaning, the duty of interpretation does not arise and the rules which are to aid doubtful meanings need no discussion.’ ” J. Kernochan, Statutory Interpretation: An Outline of Method, 3A Sutherland Stat.Const. 165,170 (4th ed. 1986) (quoting Caminetti v. United States, 242 U.S. 470, 485, 37 S.Ct. 192, 194, 61 L.Ed. 442 (1917)). “The uncertain possibility of an exception to the plain meaning rule in the event its application leads to ‘absurd or wholly impractical results’ is also referred to in the American cases.” J. Kernochan, supra, 3A Sutherland Stat.Const, at 170 (quoting Caminetti, 242 U.S. at 490, 37 S.Ct. at 196). See likewise Stauffer Chemical Co., 778 P.2d 1083.5
It is further amplified:
*228A major change of attitude has, however, overtaken the plain meaning rule in the United States. After a long period in which the plain meaning rule coexisted with rules based on legislative intent and the use of legislative history, the United States Supreme Court in 1940 in United States v. American Trucking Associations [310 U.S. 534, 60 S.Ct. 1059, 84 L.Ed. 1345 (1940) ] used forceful language to repudiate the plain meaning rule as a rule excluding resort to sources of interpretive aid beyond the words of the statute. The Court stated: “When aid to construction of the meaning of words, as used in the statute, is available, there certainly can be no ‘rule of law’ which forbids its use, however clear the words may appear on ‘superficial examination’.” [Id. at 544, 60 S.Ct. at 1064.] Since that time, the Supreme Court has seemed to mean what it said so forcefully. Although references to plain meaning or literal meaning appear from time to time in the cases, they are not used by the court to support exclusion from judicial consideration of relevant statutory or non-statutory materials bearing on the intent or purpose of the measure in question. And in 1974 in Cass v. United States, [417 U.S. 72, 94 S.Ct. 2167, 40 L.Ed.2d 668 (1974)] the Supreme Court, when urged anew by a litigant to apply the old exclusionary plain meaning rule, reaffirmed in express terms the language of the American Trucking case quoted earlier. But notwithstanding all this, the rule dies hard, if it dies at all. * * *
There are many reasons why the literal or plain meaning approach should be abandoned, along with the golden rule that builds on it. Not least is the fact that the literal rule runs counter to the findings of students of the symbolic aspects of language. Pitched as it is in terms of the plain meaning of statutory words, it assumes that words may have a single necessary meaning independent of their full context, without regard to how those words were used. This is dangerous and unwise. At root, the literal approach puts the wrong question. The question in human interchanges is not what the words mean but what the user of the words meant by them. Given the inexactness and imperfection of words as symbols in a world of endlessly varied and shifting facts, to put the right question is crucial. Words are means not ends. They are vehicles for the transfer of thought from one human agency to another. A statute, made up of these words, these vehicles, these means, is in significant part a communication from the legislature to the courts and other addresses. If the communication is to work well, the task must be in the first instance to ascertain not what the words as words mean abstractly or to the court or as a matter of common usage but what the legislature sought to convey when it employed them. * * *
The need for asking the right question in interpretation is underlined when one reflects on the difficulties a statutory draftsman faces when he must generalize with imperfect words in framing a statutory rule to deal with an uncertain future. * * *
If the literal rule ignores the limits of language and the teachings of semantics and assumes unattainable perfection in drafting, it also conflicts with the fundamental principle of legislative supremacy. Curiously, it is argued by some scholars that deference to the legislature and the avoidance of judicial lawmaking are reasons for adopting the literal rule. It is assumed in some of these cases that the only alternative is the exercise of an unwarranted discretion. But the risk is that the meaning which seems plain or ordinary to the deciding judge is not the one attached to the statute by its en-actors.
J. Kernochan, supra, 3A Sutherland Stat. Const, at 170-73 (footnotes omitted).
*229Any individual statute is a single strand within the woven law. See State v. Sodergren, 715 P.2d 170 (Wyo.1986) and State v. Sodergren, 686 P.2d 521 (Wyo.1984). The use to which it is actually put is dependent upon the surrounding statutes and the societal environment within which it is used. Like all things where change is inevitable, the environment into which the. statutory provision in its specific language is applied will, from time to time, change. The responsibility of the judiciary is to assure reasonable workability of the entire law and faithfully distribute the legislators’ intended burden upon that strand. Like man, no statute can totally exist in separate isolation.
Additionally, the equipment the judiciary is provided for decision is confined to that communicative power of language, an inexpert science or system as it is,6 and even more so when it is the product of the push-pull and countervailing factors which are implicit in legislative action ultimately resulting in enactment. Judge Learned Hand, in the well-considered case of Cabell v. Markham, 148 F.2d 737, 739 (2d Cir.), cert. granted 325 U.S. 847, 65 S.Ct. 1415, 89 L.Ed. 1969, aff'd 326 U.S. 404, 66 S.Ct. 193, 90 L.Ed. 165 (1945), addressed a literalistic view:
The defendants have no answer except to say that we are not free to depart from the literal meaning of the words, however transparent may be the resulting stultification of the scheme or plan as a whole.
Courts have not stood helpless in such situations; the decisions are legion in which they have refused to be bound by the letter, when it frustrates the patent purpose of the whole statute. * * * Of course it is true that the words used, even in their literal sense, are the primary, and ordinarily the most reliable, source of interpreting the meaning of any writing: be it a statute, a contract, or anything else. But it is one of the surest indexes of a mature and developed jurisprudence not to make a fortress out of the dictionary; but to remember that statutes always have some purpose or object to accomplish, whose sympathetic and imaginative discovery is the surest guide to their meaning.
In K. Llewellyn, supra, 3A Sutherland Stat.Const, at 205-06 (emphasis in original), it is noted:
If a statute is to make sense, it must be read in the light of some assumed purpose. A statute merely declaring a rule, with no purpose or objective, is nonsense.
If a statute is to be merged into a going system of law, moreover, the court must do the merging, and must in so doing take account of the policy of the statute — or else substitute its own version of such policy. Creative reshaping of the net result is thus inevitable.
But the policy of a statute is of two wholly different kinds — each kind somewhat limited in effect by the statute’s choice of measures, and by the statute’s choice of fixed language. On the one hand there are the ideas consciously before the draftsmen, the committee, the legislature: a known evil to be cured, a known goal to be attained, a deliberate choice of one line of approach rather than another. Here talk of “intent” is reasonably realistic; committee reports, legislative debate, historical knowledge of contemporary thinking or campaigning which points up the evil or the goal can have significance.
*230But on the other hand — and increasingly as a statute gains in age — its language is called upon to deal with circumstances utterly uncontemplated at the time of its passage. Here the quest is not properly for the sense originally intended by the statute, for the sense sought originally to be put into it, but rather for the sense which can be quarried out of it in the light of the new situation. Broad purposes can indeed reach far beyond details known or knowable at the time of drafting. A “dangerous weapon” statute of 1840 can include tommy guns, tear gas or atomic bombs. “Vehicle,” in a statute of 1840, can properly be read, when sense so suggests, to include an automobile, or a hydroplane that lacks wheels. But for all that, the sound quest does not run primarily in terms of historical intent. It runs in terms of what the words can be made to bear, in making sense in the light of the unforeseen.
Professor Reed Dickerson initiates the inquiry about there being a problem by quoting H. Hart, Jr. and A. Sacks, The Legal Process 1201 (tentative edition 1958): “ ‘The hard truth of the matter is that American Courts have no intelligible, generally accepted, and consistently applied theory of statutory interpretation.’ ” R. Dickerson, The Interpretation and Application of Statutes 1, 1 (1975) (emphasis in original).
He then recognized:
The inadequacies of terminology also plague such other basic terms as “meaning,” “plain meaning,” “intent,” “purpose,” “express,” “implied,” “strict interpretation,” “liberal interpretation,” “equitable interpretation,” “ambiguity,” “vagueness,” “generality,” “remedial,” “penal,” “retroactive,” and “context.” There are others.
* * * * * *
If one of the two basic steps in reading and applying statutes is to solve the relevant problems of meaning, surely a court should pay appropriate deference to the established principles of communication.
The inadequate attention paid to matters of communication is reflected in many ways, most basically in the typical lawyer’s imperfect understanding of the respective roles played by express language, on the one hand, and by context, on the other. Although context is now universally recognized as a vital conditioning element in all forms of communication, little has been done to make clear what it consists of and how it operates.
R. Dickerson, supra, at 2-3.
The diverse natures to which even a term such as “strict interpretation” is actually applied in totally different contexts is illustrated by the list of five rules provided by Dickerson, each of which has come to denote a character of strict construction. Dickerson includes in an appendix a cat-alogue of forty popular misconceptions, as he said, “all of which have been causing trouble, [and] are nominated for quick oblivion.” Id. at 288. He includes as examples:
The problems of applying statutes in the context of specific controversies are exclusively those of ascertaining legislative meaning.
* * * * * *
The express meaning of a statute is all important.
* * * ⅜5 *
The interpretation of a statute and its application are the same thing. Consequently, the interpretation of a statute is a one-stage, monolithic process.
* * * * * *
Legislative intent is useful in resolving uncertainties of meaning,
and finally,
The legislature’s actual intent, however ascertained, should never be frustrated by the court.
Id. at 288-89.
The California Supreme Court, in the recent case of Woods v. Young, 53 Cal.3d 315, 279 Cal.Rptr. 613, 807 P.2d 455, 459 (1991), provided simple rules which are similar to what this majority now does, but certainly without the adamancy and empirical certainty:
*231In construing statutes, we must determine and effectuate legislative intent. * * * To ascertain intent, we look first to the words of the statutes. * * * “Words must be construed in context, and statutes must be harmonized, both internally and with each other, to the extent possible.” (California Mfrs. Assn. v. Public Utilities Com. (1979) 24 Cal.3d 836, 844, 157 Cal.Rptr. 676, 598 P.2d 836.) Interpretations that lead to absurd results or render words surplusage are to be avoided. (Ibid.)
To what do I then object to in the literalistic application now presented for the first time by this court? First, since legislative intent is a first stage action and an ephemeral concept not defined in certainties, I find no justified premise that it is absolute and controlling. The syllogism follows as a question: What does the court do if it cannot, with a defined certainty, determine what the legislative intent may be? Further: How do you determine legislative intent with this certainty without a comprehensive analysis of the history, purpose, personalities and maneuvering involved in the creation of the product? The next problem presented is the supposition that what the particular jurist considers to be clear and unambiguous language may not have any necessary relation to the intent of the sponsor, co-sponsor or predominate group involved in enactment. To say that any rule is absolute completely destroys the validity of saying that intent is absolute, since intent may be ill-expressed or ill-determined. As a syllogism, the conclusion simply does not follow that these inhibitions upon statutory construction assure that the legislative efforts as a determination that the intent of elected representatives will be made effective without judicial adjustment or gloss. What we have in the absolutist application of statutory interpretation and application is a considerably greater result-oriented, judicially-defined legislative process than would ever be the case if a reasonable standard using all factors had been equally applied. I believe that literalists or originalists are essentially result-oriented adjudicators by characterizations to be provided excuse for predetermination.
I suggest we step back and seek satisfaction in the generalists’ principles of reason and realism addressed by this court in Kelsey, 263 P.2d 135 and Houghton Bros., 274 P. 10. The act I from language context and history is as it may be the apparent intent to be developed as the effectuation of the purpose for which the enactment occurred. With purpose in mind, construction for any particular case as act II should be pursued with recognition that a rule of reason should be applied since intent in the explicit attribution to the multi-participants in result can never be actually determined with certainty in regard to all events of humanity where post-enactment utilization may be challenged in enforcement.
This case illustrates statutory construction by characterization. The basic business transaction presented here was a tax-free exchange or corporate reorganization normally tailored by the careful business planner to minimize or exclude tax obligations under the purview of the Internal Revenue Code by operation of 26 U.S.C.S. § 351 (1990). The history provided by this record is that in the earlier stages of the Wyoming law application, the § 351 type transaction was also considered to be tax free by administrative interpretation of the original Wyoming statute.
In 1985, regulations of the Wyoming State Tax Commission were changed in order that personal property transfers included within these kinds of § 351 exchanges could be taxed as a sale under Wyoming law. No statutory change is presented to authenticate the “modernized” tax department approach, since the 1985 department construction addressed what was considered to be an “ambiguous” statute. The broad sweep of the problem in business organization and reorganization, not including the $2,838,767 tax bite created here, prompted early legislative attention. Wyo. Sess.Laws. ch. 166 (1987) was enacted which, by imposition into W.S. 39-6-402, clearly adopted the federal tax free status for state sales tax liability. See W.S. 39-6-402(a)(iii)(B), (E), (F), (K) and (M) and the *232comparable provisions of the state use tax, W.S. 39-6-502.7 This tax claim probably caused that legislative change.
Any anatomical assessment of the pre-1987 statute suggests potential ambiguity existed about taxability of the § 351 exchange and advanced further question about W.S. 39-6-402(a)(iv), which remained unchanged for defining sale price:
“Sales price” means the consideration paid by the purchaser of tangible personal property excluding the actual trade-in value allowed on tangible personal property exchanged at the time of transaction, admissions or services which are subject to taxation as provided by this article and excluding any taxes imposed by the federal government or this arti-de[.]
The State, in presentation of this case upon facing the refund claim of the reorganized corporate entity after the tax had been initially paid upon billing, first argued that the law was clear and unambiguous and must be applied to create the tax by interpretation of the legislative intent. The trial court accepted that characterization, applied W.S. 39 — 6—402(a)(iii) and confirmed the tax obligation. The trial court held that for the purpose of the unambiguous statute, the transaction was a transfer for consideration of tangible personal property. The trial court further found that the exchange stock had value as measured by what it bought — a very significant trona mining and manufacturing company with all of its equipment and general assets.
As we now search for a characterization of either ambiguous or unambiguous rather than reasonably determined legislative intent and purpose, further contentions of the litigants before this court becomes interesting. Appellant taxpayer looked at the refund and argued that the law was ambiguous and a further search for legislative intent should be pursued. The company also argued that the stock value was minimal since it was a corporate reorganization transaction where in effect no real money in a buy/sell transaction actually passed hands. The State continues in response by brief and argument that the statute was not ambiguous and that W.S. 39 — 6—402(a)(iii) covers the transaction for imposition of the tax liability. It is further contended that consideration existed and substantial evidence sustained the agency decision. The taxpayer then summarized the parties’ contrasting views in reply brief:
The principal issue presented by this appeal is whether a 1986 contribution of assets from a parent corporation to its newly-formed, wholly-owned subsidiary, in exchange for the first issue of stock of the subsidiary, constituted a “sale” within the meaning of W.S. 39-6-402(a)(iii). At the time of the subject transaction, W.S. 39 — 6—402(a)(iii) defined a “sale” simply as a transfer of tangible personal property for a consideration. In its brief, Appellee maintains that this terse definition so clearly and unambiguously encompassed such incorporation transfers that construction of the statute is inappropriate. However, a careful review of this portion of Appellee’s brief * * * reveals that the only basis for Ap-pellee’s position is its own unsupported, conclusory statements that the statute is unambiguous.
The question of whether an ambiguity exists is to be determined, in this case, with the application of the principles established by this Court in State Board of Equalization v. Tenneco Oil Co., 694 P.2d 97 (Wyo.1985). Appellee asserts that Tenneco Oil has no bearing in this appeal because the ambiguity of the statute has not been established * * *. In other words, Appellee states that Tenne-co Oil becomes applicable only after it is determined that an ambiguity exists. This statement overlooks a very significant portion of the Tenneco Oil decision, *233for Tenneco Oil not only guides us in the proper construction of statutes, it also addresses the threshold question of when an ambiguity exists. As discussed in Appellant’s initial brief * * *, Tenneco Oil clearly establishes, on the basis of Appellee’s long-standing, contrary interpretation of W.S. 39-6-402(a)(iii), and the divergent views of the parties, that the statute is ambiguous and that the question of its meaning must be addressed.
(Emphasis in original.)
The majority, by characterization in agreement with the State, now determines that the statute was not ambiguous even before corrective amendment by the legislature, but then concludes that no consideration was paid by the newly organized One Newco, Inc. in its acquisition of the business in exchange for its newly issued treasury corporate stock.
I agree in special concurrence that the tax should not be assessed. This conclusion comes by application of reasonable rules of interpretation to an ambiguous statute as the goal for applying legislative purpose and implied intent. Nothing suggests that the legislature ever expected that the sales tax under the Wyoming statute should be applied to the no-cash-consideration type of business organization and reorganization included within the Internal Revenue Code tax for exchange provisions of § 351.
I could conversely say that corporate stock creates its own “value” by capacity to acquire property of significant value. However, for the purposes of addressing legislative purpose and intent in statutory construction, by application of the language that can provide variant ambiguities in plain word text, I superimpose purpose and reasonable construction.
One of the fundamental principles of statutory construction is to attempt to ascertain the legislative intent and to give its effect. * * * Also, in construing a statute, this court must look at the statutory objective to be accomplished, the problem to be remedied, or the purpose to be served, and then place on the statute a reasonable construction which best achieves the purpose of the statute, rather than a construction defeating the statutory purpose. * * * To further ascertain the intent of the Legislature, the Supreme Court may examine the legislative history and the record of floor explanations or debate of the act in question.
State v. Burnett, 227 Neb. 351, 417 N.W.2d 355, 357 (1988).
In analysis of the intrinsic character of the corporate reorganization transaction where no actual money is paid and no real change in finite ownership is created, I specially concur in concluding that the legislature, both before and after 1987, did not statutorily propose a tax on this transactional activity. Plainly, I could have, as did the trial court, find to the contrary. Saffels v. Bennett, 630 P.2d 505 (Wyo.1981) (see, however, Wetering v. Eisele, 682 P.2d 1055 (Wyo.1984) which “disapproved” the Saffels interpretation and Butler v. Halstead By and Through Colley, 770 P.2d 698 (Wyo.1989) which superseded both in statutory construction); Sanches, 626 P.2d 61. The clarity of the subject or absence thereof is illustrated by an introductory segment in Weisberg, The Calabresian Judicial Artist: Statutes and the New Legal Process, 35 Stan.L.Rev. 213, 213-15 (1983) (footnotes omitted) which, although somewhat overblown in rhetoric, combines much of what is logically obvious and currently recited by many commentators on the law:
Nineteenth-century judges often purported to follow very specific and binding rules for reading statutes, but in this century those rules have weakened into quaint and naive homilies, few of which have survived Karl Llewellyn’s fiendishly deconstructive achievement of placing them in mutually cancelling pairs. Although modern judges probably spend more time heeding the commands of legislators than the commands of either earlier courts or the constitutional framers, they do not seriously believe themselves bound or even guided by general principles of interpretation beyond the vaguest adages about respect for legislative intent.
*234Undisturbed by the very sophisticated (and mainly academic) debate over the distinction between the meaning of enacted words and the intent of the enacting legislature, most judges readily claim to be bound by “plain” statutory language. Where there is neither statutory language that is plain nor legislative history that is unambiguous, courts often infer a provision’s meaning or intent from the larger purpose of the statute, discovering this purpose by examining the context of the statute as a whole, its legislative history, the scheme of earlier or parallel statutes, or some loose mixture of social and political history.
Although courts rarely express concern that there is nothing very systematic or even coherent about these principles of statutory analysis, hard cases demonstrate how quickly the principles collapse. Even if modern analytic philosophy permits us to speak coherently of the formal meaning of words, it takes only the slightest semantic dexterity to find particular words ambiguous or vague in context. Even if logic permits us to speak sensibly of the intent of a large and diffuse group of legislators, as a practical matter the search for legislative intent is often hopeless.
Professor Weisberg additionally writes:
Even judges who recognize the theoretical possibility of plain meaning concede that it must yield where it produces an absurd result. The uncertain boundaries of absurdity counsel against ever finding language “plain,” and the impossibility of a formal definition of absurdity casts doubt on even the logical possibility of any formal plain meaning.
Id. at 214 n. 8.
In purposeful conclusion, defining a reasonable construction, Attletweedt, 684 P.2d 812, and constituting a “logical inference of the legislative intent,” State v. Stovall, 648 P.2d 543, 545 (Wyo.1982), I specially concur.

. There are three generic dispositive principles, somewhat sarcastically phrased (and slightly restated), for a legislator's understanding of debate which may promote equal relevance (or irreverence) within the specialty of determining intent from the resulting product:
a.To understand what you communicate, I do not care what you say — I want to know
why. When I know why, then I learn what. (Your benefit rule.)
b. I want to know what you intend to do to my constituents. (Detriment rule.)
c. Disregarding this flood of words, what is in it for my constituents. (Greed rule.)

. Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary 77 (1986) defines “ambiguous" as "doubtful or uncertain esp. from obscurity or indistinctness
* * * inexplicable * * * capable of being understood in two or more possible senses or ways." “Inconsistent" is quite differently defined as “not compatible with another fact or claim * * * containing incompatible elements
* * * incoherent or illogical in thought or actions * * * not satisfiable by the same set of values for the unknowns.” Id. at 610.

. This court in State v. Sodergren, 686 P.2d 521, 525 n. 6 (Wyo.1984) in quotation from a case note on the earlier case of Thomas v. State, 562 P.2d 1287 (Wyo.1977) related:
“ * * * Determining the specific legislative intent behind a particular law is somewhat akin to searching for the Loch Ness monster; submerged, lurking beneath the surface of the statute, the intent might be there — but then again, probably not. * * * ” Case Notes, 13 Land & Water L.Rev. 595, 601 (1978).

. The history of difficulty with the notion of legislative intent is not of current vintage. See Radin, Statutory Interpretation, 43 Harv.L.Rev. 863 (1930). See also Bruncken, Interpretation of the Written Law, 25 Yale LJ. 129 (1915); Kocourek, An Introduction to the Science of Law 201 (1930); and T. Sedgwick, The Interpretation and Construction of Statutory and Constitutional Law 327-28 (2d ed. 1874), as cited by MacCallum, supra, 75 Yale L.J. at 754 n. 1. The countervailing argument is presented likewise in Landis, A Note on “Statutory Interpretation", 43 Harv.L.Rev. 886 (1930). The 1930 writings are the source of what is called the Radin/Landis dispute. Innumerable authors followed, taking variant views, most of which attributed the intent as intended purpose. See MacCallum, supra, 75 Yale L.J. at 754.

. The full rule stated in Stauffer Chemical Co., 778 P.2d at 1093 is:
We agree with Stauffer that this statute does not specifically mention a requirement that the limitation of liability be conspicuous. * * * We conclude that the appropriate rule is that a limitation of liability statement, like a disclaimer of an implied warranty, must be conspicuous in order to become a basis for the bargain. * * *
Our rules for statutory construction lead us to this result. One of those rules is that an absurd result, whenever apparent, is to be avoided. * * * We also followed the rule that the legislature is presumed to intend to adopt legislation that is reasonable and logical and does not intend to adopt statutes that are futile. * * * The presumption in statutory construction is that the legislature does not intend to adopt statutes that are futile. * * * We also invoke the concept, as we reiterated it in Gerstell [v. State of Wyoming, ex rel. Department of Revenue and Taxation], 769 P.2d [389] at 394 [ (Wyo. 1989) ], that “statutes that *228relate to the same subject matter should be harmonized wherever that is possible." * * * The application of these rules makes it evident that the legislature, in this instance, intended an implicit requirement that a limitation of liability be conspicuous, similar to that expressed in § 34-21-233(b), be engrafted upon the provisions of § 34-21-298.

. Chief Justice John Marshall said in McCulloch v. State of Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat) 316, 414-15, 4 L.Ed. 579 (1819):
Such is the character of human language, that no word conveys to the mind, in all situations, one single definite idea; and nothing is more common than to use words in a figurative sense. Almost all compositions contain words, which, taken in * * * their rigorous sense, would convey a meaning different from that which is obviously intended. It is essential to just construction, that many words which import something excessive, should be understood in a more mitigated sense — in that sense which common usage justifies. * * * This word, then, like others, is used in various senses; and, in its construction, the subject, the context, the intention of the person using them, are all to be taken into view.

. The bill title states:
AN ACT to amend W.S. 39-6-402(a)(iii) and 39 — 6—502(a)(ii) relating to the sales and use tax; modifying the definition of “sale" to exclude an exchange or transfer made between certain business entities or in the course of formation or dissolution of certain business entities; and providing for an effective date. Wyo.Sess.Laws. ch. 166 (1987).