Oklahoma Code § 47-1-125

Title 47. Motor Vehicles: Implement of husbandry
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Implement of Husbandry.  Every device, whether it is self-
propelled, designed and adapted so as to be used exclusively for
agricultural, horticultural or livestock-raising operations or for
lifting or carrying an implement of husbandry and, in either case,
not subject to registration if operated upon the highways.
1.  Farm wagon type tank trailers of not over one thousand two
hundred (1,200) gallons capacity, used during the liquid fertilizer
season as field storage "nurse tanks" supplying the fertilizer to a
field applicator and moved on highways only for bringing the
fertilizer from a local source of supply to farms or field or from
one farm or field to another, shall be considered implements of
husbandry for purposes of this title.
2.  Trailers or semitrailers owned by a person engaged in the
business of farming and used exclusively for the purpose of
transporting farm products to market or for the purpose of
transporting to the farm material or things to be used thereon shall
also be considered implements of husbandry for purposes of this
title.  Provided, no truck or semitrailer with an axle weight of
twenty thousand (20,000) pounds or more, which is used to haul
manure and operated on the public roads or highways of this state
shall be considered an implement of husbandry for the purposes of
this title.
3.  Utility-type, all-terrain vehicles with a maximum curb
weight of one thousand five hundred (1,500) pounds which are
equipped with metal front or rear carrying racks when used for
agricultural, horticultural or livestock-raising operations shall be
considered implements of husbandry for purposes of this title.
Added by Laws 1961, p. 317, § 1-125, eff. Sept. 1, 1961.  Amended by
Laws 1970, c. 163, § 1, emerg. eff. April 9, 1970; Laws 1993, c.
211, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1993; Laws 1995, c. 27, § 1, eff. July 1,
1995; Laws 2001, c. 112, § 1, emerg. eff. April 18, 2001.

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