Hmm, never thought of it that way. HOWEVER, if thats the way you read it, then the "entitled by law" part is redundant and meaningless. Most interpretations would require the statement to be interpreted such that all clauses are meaningful.baldeagle wrote:Keith is correct. Here's why.Keith B wrote:You can carry IF you have a letter in writting from the CSO. The and/or has to be met.SecedeTX wrote:I made the assumption that my company banned carrying at work, so I did not even look through the employee handbook because I assumed I would be prohibited. I found it today, and wanted input on what I found:
> Possessing weapons on company presises, in company vehicles or while on company business, except and only to the extent that you are entitled to possess such a weapon under applicable state or federal law and/or authorized in writing by the Chief Security Officer. Weapons include but are not limited to, firearms and dangerous or deadly weapons, including explosive devices,, stun gun or any other item a reasonable person might consider a dangerous weapon.
Am I reading this right? I am not a lawyer, so I don't know if "entitled" = "licensed"? The "and/or" would lead me to believe that "licensed" would make it not necessary to get writen authorization by the "cheif security officer"
Am I off base here, or is this saying I can carry at work?
except and only to the extent that you are entitled to possess such a weapon under applicable state or federal law and authorized in writing by the Chief Security Officer
or
authorized in writing by the Chief Security Officer.
The and/or creates two conditions. 1) You are entitled by law and you are authorized in writing or 2) You are not entitled by law but you are authorized in writing.
The more logical way to read it is that the "and/or" conjunction creates two logical combinations between the clauses on either side of if. Thus reading 1) "entitled by law OR authorized by CSO -- or -- 2) "entitled by law AND authorized by CSO". (Which makes the CSO clause irrelevant.)
Looks like all that can be determined from this statement is that it's ambiguous. Ambiguous statements are interpreted AGAINST the interests of the party that authored the statement.
(Yeah, yeah, IANAL and all that)