Keith B wrote:KC5AV wrote:They may have jumped the gun on the map, but a bill was recently sent to the TN governor that would allow restaurant carry with a prohibition against any consumption while carrying. I haven't heard whether the bill has been, or is likely to be signed.
Bills are still going through the house and senate, so still off-limits. Even their Tennessee page outlining the gun laws says they are 'researching' off-limits locations. I am not sure how up-to-date their data even is across the board; apparently not very.
It was legal to carry in a Tennesse restaraunt until some judge made a ill informed decision. The bills currently in work are to fix what the judge ruled was unconstitutional.
Judge shoots down Tennessee's guns-in-bars law as unconstitutional
After ruling, lawyers disagree whether it's effective immediately
NASHVILLE -- A Nashville judge ruled Friday that Tennessee's new law allowing handgun-carry permit holders to go armed into bars and restaurants that serve alcohol was unconstitutionally vague.
But because Chancellor Claudia Bonnyman likely won't file her written order until at least Monday, lawyers disagreed on whether the 257,000 Tennessee gun-permit holders -- and those from other states whose permits are legally recognized in Tennessee -- are violating the law if they carry guns this weekend into places serving alcohol that have not opted to ban guns.
State Atty. Gen. Robert Cooper's office, which defended the statute in court, declined to provide firm guidance to permit holders or restaurants on when the ruling is effective -- but indicated through spokeswoman Sharon Curtis-Flair that it would not be enforced at least until the written order is filed.
But Nashville lawyer David Randolph Smith, who represented Nashville restaurant owners and citizens opposed to the law, said he believes the judge's verbal ruling was effective immediately.
"She ruled from the bench that it was unconstitutional and she didn't stay it. It is no longer a law. If somebody out there tonight walks into a bar with a handgun, they would be violating the law because the law has been ruled unconstitutional. As a practical matter though, I don't think anyone will enforce it until she issues the written order," Smith said.
The "guns in bars" issue was one of the hardest-fought battles in the legislature this year, after years of failure by gun advocates.
Tennessee previously banned guns in all places where alcohol is sold, but the bill attempted to carve out an exception for gun-carry permit holders as long as they are not consuming alcohol. It also allowed restaurant owners to maintain gun bans in their businesses by posting signs at the entrance.
Gov. Phil Bredesen vetoed the bill, but lawmakers overrode the veto.
The bill's tortured wording, which attempts to differentiate between "bars" and restaurants even though Tennessee law does not recognize bars, left it open to the challenge by opponents that it is too vague to clearly put permit holders on notice about which establishments are legal or not.
Smith's co-counsel, David Raybin, argued in a one-hour hearing Friday that it would be difficult for patrons to know which restaurants met the definition.
But State Asst. Atty. Gen. Lyndsay Fuller Sanders said customers with permits "can just ask."
The ruling, assuming it stands, sets up another extended battle in the next legislature, which convenes in January.
State Rep. Curry Todd, R-Collierville, vowed Friday to sponsor the bill again and Bredesen said he could veto it again if a new bill doesn't address his concerns about safety.
"I thought the statute was very clear. I just think the judge was looking for something to make it unconstitutional," Todd said. "We patterned it after other states' laws and I think she's done a disservice to gun-permit holders of Tennessee. I do hope the state attorney general, who I will talk with next week, will appeal this ruling.
"And if in fact it still remains unconstitutionally vague as she ruled, then I will come back with tenacity next session to pass the bill again. I hope that the folks who have handgun permits rise up and get on the bandwagon again if this thing has to go back before the legislature."
Todd did say, however, that permit holders should obey the judge's ruling.
Senate Democratic Minority Leader Jim Kyle of Memphis predicted another fight in the legislature.
"I'm happy that common sense as well as the rule of law has won the day. I have always believed in the Second Amendment and will continue to fight to protect it, but I fought against guns in bars because alcohol and firearms do not mix," Kyle said.
Greater Memphis reacts
Mike Miller, president of the Memphis Restaurant Association, said he and others have tried to clarify the "guns in bars" bill since it became law July 14.
"It was poorly written," said Miller, owner of Patrick's Steaks and Spirits. "If it's going to be the law, it needs to be concise about how we're to apply the law."
Larkin Grisanti, who operates Frank Grisanti's Restaurant in East Memphis, said he didn't like having to worry about the safety of customers and employees.
"We know that there are people who have the right to carry and have the proper training. But we're in an environment where we serve alcohol," he said. "It could be a big liability."
Danny Sumrall, owner of The Half Shell, said the chancellor's decision even though it could be appealed or the law rewritten was a victory for restaurant owners.
"At least it makes a statement," he added. "To me, guns and restaurants have never mixed. A restaurant is just not a good environment for guns."
-- Ryan Poe
Contact Nashville Bureau chief Richard Locker at (615) 255-4923.
http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/20 ... itutional/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
“Some people spend an entire lifetime wondering if they made a difference in the world. But, an American Soldier doesn't have that problem". — President Ronald Reagan, 1985