The same way you cannot state, stating only true premises, the falsehood that some racing tracks are not routes of transport.
I have not stated that, I have said that we cannot decide as we are not furnished with enough information in the two given conditions.
The conclusion is not logically false based on the two given conditions.
It may be absolutely false based on a patent truth, but that is not relevant to the aim of the problem, to determine if a statement is logically correct or not according to two given conditions.
You could have a similar problem with two conditions whereby you could not logically decide if the sky was green or not as they did not provide the relevant information.
a. Water is not green.
b. The sky is not water.
Conc. The sky is green.
Clearly the sky is not green but logically we could not deduce that given only the two conditions above. Equally, that logic does not dictate that the sky is green either, we just don't have enough information there to conclude either way unless we add further knowledge/patent truth/whatever.
(my emphasis)Wrong can be Right Logically
Within logical reasoning it can sometimes happen that the premises and conclusion seem obviously wrong, but are logically speaking correct when applying one of the logical reasoning types mentioned above. Be aware that conclusions are drawn based on logical reasoning and not on the validity of the context of certain premises or conclusions.