andgigag04 wrote:Landlord can technically do anything until a judge restricts that or the AG (or other Texas Peace Officer) enforces the real estate codes (good luck).
The Annoyed Man wrote:Concealed is concealed.
These two quotes sum up the spot you are in. The mgmt company doesn't really care if you stay there or not. It is just a business to them. Somewhere they made a decision to discourage possesion of guns on their properties. We dont know why, nor does it really matter. It is their property and when all the dust settles they will over time usually get their way. If you are willing to try to argue it out in the legal arena, you may prevail. However if they are a mgmt company of any size you can bet they have attorneys by the bucket-full to engage in the contest. So you gotta ask yourself, do you feel lucky or wealthy enough to outlast them? As has been suggested moving, even with all the hassle it entails may be the lesser pain. Further thought on this comes to the question of why would ( all other things being equal) we want to live where people like us are not wanted, and where an extra level of concealment is necessary to avoid ongoing conflict?