G.A. Heath wrote:sjfcontrol wrote:I think the argument here is that PC46.15(b)(2) -- overrides ALL of section 46.02 if the person is traveling. Since it is 46.02(a-1)(1) that requires the handgun to be concealed, presumably, the "traveler" is not required to conceal the handgun.
I am NOT saying this is fact, just the way it appears when examining the wording of 46.15(b)(2)
I understand that, however where is traveling defined?
I have to point out that this is a different argument from whether or not traveling meets the exception. I have always read the traveling exception the same as the police exception. Nothing in 46.02 applies to a traveler.
How is it defined? Is there any valid case law on it's definition? Who will decide if your traveling? I travel 20 miles each way to work in the same county, would that qualify as traveling under this law? I need to travel 4 miles to cross a county line, is that traveling. Thats the problem with trying to use 46.15(b)(2) as it is open to interpretation, and what happens if the police, CA/DA, judge, and jury don't agree with your definition?
This has always been one of the problems with traveling. The Court of Criminal Appeals has been asking the legislature to define this for well over 100 years. We did have a sign on what is traveling for two years, when the MPA was first written as a presumption of traveling. If a new court case ever comes up, this may help or hurt when used for legislative intent.
But for now, there is a court case from 1909 (IIRC) that says that traveling is a fact to be determined by the trier of facts (jury if there is one, trial judge if no jury). This has the effect of making traveling whatever you can convince the jury it is. And, if I understand the legislative process correctly, it makes it very hard or impossible to appeal a definition of traveling from a jury. I am not up on all of the legal rules on appeals and I think Charles or one of the other attorneys will correct me, but something is determined as a fact by the jury, I don't think it can be appealed without significant new evidence. In a lot of ways, it is like appealing the credibility of a witness. The original trier gets to make the decision and you are stuck with it.