ELB wrote:The laws of the US, the state of Texas, or whoever, are not Holy Writ handed down like the Ten Commandments. They are a hodge podge of thought, thoughtlessness, compromise, and balancing among various power centers. Someone may start out with the holiest of intents, but the law that is produced is still a man-made sausage. This is one reason why trying to go by "legislative intent" is not only hard, but a positively bad idea. It makes the text of the law irrelevant, and subjects the alleged violator to the whims of whoever gets chosen to decide "intent."
I think you are contradicting yourself within one paragraph.
Laws admittedly are imperfect. I will give a clear example:
According to the literal text of the Texas statutes (PC 46.02) it is legal to have a handgun, "illegal" knife, or club in your home, place of business, or motor vehicle.
However, there is no legal way to transport such an item from the place of purchase to a place where you can legally possess it (keep in mind this law was originally codified before motor vehicles were invented).
Decades ago, some people were prosecuted for possession of handguns in places other than their home or business (not having CHL or MPA as options at the time). Appeals courts ruled that because it is legal to have an item in a certain place, it must be legal to get the item to that place. Otherwise the text of the law would be absurd.
Legislatures are aware of this problem, and for that reason they archive their debates and other background material ancillary to the actual text of the bill that eventually becomes law.
I am not saying that if the legislature did not intend Texans to be able to carry in Texas on a non-resident license from another state, therefore Texans should not be allowed to do so. The present law is clear. If the legislature wants to change the law, they must pass a bill (and possibly override a veto, BTW.)
- Jim