Yes.
The oral notification version of the 30.06 notification can be anything as long as it is from the owner or one with apparent authority to act for the owner. Basically the oral notification is a verbal expression of the owner's lack of consent.
The one you have to be careful of is the written notification on a card or document. In a hotel it might be printed on the registration form. But it must be "provided" to you according to the language of 30.06. I take that to mean a positive action rather than a passive action. For example, I read that to mean that simply leaving cards or written notices laying around at the registration desk, or at the foyer coffee table is not "providing" you notice. But I have never found case law where that was an issue. However, there are plenty of other cases where the use of the phrase "provides notice" (not dealing with guns, such as banking law, etc) can give us a glimpse into the legislature's understanding and intention in using the phrase.
tex
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Return to “Proper Hotel Notification”
- Mon Oct 19, 2015 10:36 am
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: Proper Hotel Notification
- Replies: 22
- Views: 3639
- Sun Oct 18, 2015 10:04 pm
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: Proper Hotel Notification
- Replies: 22
- Views: 3639
Re: Proper Hotel Notification
We're giving the hotel a place among the enumerated prohibited locations when it is not. There are 13 places you can not carry. The rest...the rest....t-h-e r-e-s-t....everybody else....THE REST OF THE TEXAS UNIVERSE MUST USE 30.06 NOTIFICATION (I'm looking for some other way to emphasis the words and I can't find any!!)
You do not even need to consider 46.02 (if you have a CHL).
Policy without 30.06 notification is of no prohibitive concern.
tex
You do not even need to consider 46.02 (if you have a CHL).
Policy without 30.06 notification is of no prohibitive concern.
tex