Quick question about an event
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Quick question about an event
I have a question from my boss.
He owns a private business here and was told by the local police that he cannot carry a handgun on his property while it is open to the public. I'm not sure how the logistics work out, because he both lives and works on the property. We have customers in his back yard, basically.
The LEO said something about the fact that being open to the public somehow nullifies the right to carry on the property, but I couldn't find that in the Texas Penal Code. The only thing I could find was the section where it talked about property that a person owns, or controls, but no subsection that limited the right to carry.
Yes, I know the right answer is for him to get a CHL, which I've convinced him of, but both of us were curious about what statute the LEO was talking about. It can't be a city ordinance as we are outside city limits.
Thanks in advance.
He owns a private business here and was told by the local police that he cannot carry a handgun on his property while it is open to the public. I'm not sure how the logistics work out, because he both lives and works on the property. We have customers in his back yard, basically.
The LEO said something about the fact that being open to the public somehow nullifies the right to carry on the property, but I couldn't find that in the Texas Penal Code. The only thing I could find was the section where it talked about property that a person owns, or controls, but no subsection that limited the right to carry.
Yes, I know the right answer is for him to get a CHL, which I've convinced him of, but both of us were curious about what statute the LEO was talking about. It can't be a city ordinance as we are outside city limits.
Thanks in advance.
I am Jack's teen spirit.
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Re: Quick question about an event
The police who told him that are wrong. He can carry, open or concealed, on his own premises or premises under his control. Period. There is no "open to the public" exception.BlakeTyner wrote:I have a question from my boss.
He owns a private business here and was told by the local police that he cannot carry a handgun on his property while it is open to the public. I'm not sure how the logistics work out, because he both lives and works on the property. We have customers in his back yard, basically.
The LEO said something about the fact that being open to the public somehow nullifies the right to carry on the property, but I couldn't find that in the Texas Penal Code. The only thing I could find was the section where it talked about property that a person owns, or controls, but no subsection that limited the right to carry.
Yes, I know the right answer is for him to get a CHL, which I've convinced him of, but both of us were curious about what statute the LEO was talking about. It can't be a city ordinance as we are outside city limits.
Thanks in advance.
He should ask the LEO who misinformed him to please tell him chapter and verse where that law is, "so he can be sure he understands it and follows it completely."
*CHL Instructor*
"Speed is Fine, but accuracy is final"- Bill Jordan
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"Speed is Fine, but accuracy is final"- Bill Jordan
Remember those who died, remember those who killed them.
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Re: Quick question about an event
Ditto.txinvestigator wrote:The police who told him that are wrong.
Or just forget he heard it and not bring up the subject again with that person.txinvestigator wrote:He should ask the LEO who misinformed him to please tell him chapter and verse where that law is, "so he can be sure he understands it and follows it completely."
I can't remember how many times "experts" have told me something was illegal when it wasn't.
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It would seem to me to be quite an abrogation of private property rights for the state to tell a person they cannot allow other people to carry on their property. Besides, if they are an employee, could it not be argued that they are given some amount of "control" over the property during their work hours?
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IMO, that's where it would become a legal mess if anyone were ever dragged into court over such a situation; there's no definition of "property under the actor's control" to say whether it must be complete control, or just how much control would be needed to qualify. A LE friend once told me that the rule of thumb he used was that anyone who could give notice of criminal trespass for the property could carry on it. That would seem to make sense as a good baseline for "control," but I'd like to see a test case.AG-EE wrote:It would seem to me to be quite an abrogation of private property rights for the state to tell a person they cannot allow other people to carry on their property. Besides, if they are an employee, could it not be argued that they are given some amount of "control" over the property during their work hours?
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A property owner (business owner renting space) can allow anyone he/she wants to carry on their property.KBCraig wrote:Actually, we've discussed that here on the forum. Technically speaking, those employees are UCW, because only the person who "owns or controls" the property is exempt.Glockamolie wrote:I guess that cop has never been to a gun store or a pawn shop where the employees open carry.
Kevin
If guns kill people, then I can blame mispelled words on my pencil
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
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OK KB, what am I missing here? What is the Statute that prohibits an authorized person from carrying?KBCraig wrote:Simply not true, when you're talking about open carry.Roger Howard wrote:A property owner (business owner renting space) can allow anyone he/she wants to carry on their property.
Kevin
If guns kill people, then I can blame mispelled words on my pencil
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
You're approaching it from the wrong angle. You have to find a statute that authorizes them to carry, not the other way around.Roger Howard wrote:OK KB, what am I missing here? What is the Statute that prohibits an authorized person from carrying?
Texas law is restrictive when it comes to handguns. The law says that it is unlawful to have a handgun "on or about" one's person. Everything that allows you to have a handgun is an exception to that basic premise.
The basic exceptions are:
- Being a LEO
- Having a CHL
- Being a licensed security guard
- Being in/on property that you own or control
- Engaging in, or traveling to or from, sporting activities requiring use of the handgun
- Traveling
There is no exception for "having permission" when you're on someone else's property. The property owner can't just designate you as "security", because armed security guards have their own set of strict requirements. I'm sure txinvestigator can elaborate on that.
This is one of those things that will never be enforced, but gun shop employees who openly carry are violating the law.
Kevin
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Ok i get all that but couldn't an employee be under control of a property and still carry. I have had control of property that an owner of the business was there only 2 or 3 times a year. Not saying your wrong, just trying to learn here.
If guns kill people, then I can blame mispelled words on my pencil
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.