No I don't think that would meet the definition of brandishing but IANAL!I like the idea of openly carrying when you answer the door. That should definitely let them know to keep moving if they are casing the place out. I may start doing that myself, but it just occurred to me as I was reading you post, could someone call the police and try to get you for branishing? I know it seems ridiculous, but we live in such a touchy society.
Brandishing [Webster Dictionary]
1 : to shake or wave (as a weapon) menacingly
2 : to exhibit in an ostentatious or aggressive manner
I don't think the mere presence of a gun (intentional or unintentional) meets the definition of brandishing unless one or both of the above is true. At least that's my interpretation
However your question brings the following story to mind...
>>>Sunday, December 20, 2009 foxnews.com
A Virginia man has been convicted of indecent exposure after prosecutors said he stood naked inside his house as a 7-year-old boy and his mother walked by.
The mother and child allegedly observed the defendant, 29-year-old Erick Williamson, first through a doorway and again through a window that had no drapes, MyFoxDC reported.
Williamson, the father of a 5-year-old, argued in court Friday that he should be free to go au naturel inside his home. But a judge agreed with prosecutors who argued Williamson's actions showed he intended to make himself visible to the pair as they walked to school along a path outside his home in October.
Williamson's arrest received national attention and spurred debate about whether someone should be subject to arrest for exposure from inside his own home.
He received only a suspended jail sentence and no fine, but still intends to appeal.<<<