No Texas court has ever NOT upheld a website as not being valid 30.06 notice, just to be fair.Solaris wrote:Lets see how many ways you are wrong.JP171 wrote:keep on thinkin that and be a guest of the gray bar hotel, good luck with thatSolaris wrote:No it is not legal notice as in 30.06. HB333 only requires they tell you up front their gun policy on their website. Gun policy could have nothing to do with lawful carry, could be as simple as saying no big game rifles allowed in rooms.JP171 wrote:yes it is legal notice, the law for hotels was changed and requires that if they don't want weapons then it has to be done at the time of the online reservation. so yep its legal notice
http://www.legis.state.tx.us/tlodocs/83 ... 00333F.htm
1) Class C Misdemeanor - nobody is going to the "gray bar hotel".
2) 30.06 only applies if you are carrying under LTC. Transporting a firearm to/from your car does not require a LTC.
3) If websites counted, nobody would post signs. Everyone would put notice on their website.
Again read the law, they are only required to post their policy, nowhere in the law does it say the web posted policy is effective notice. Sign, Card, or written document is required. Websites are electronic documents. No court in Texas has ever upheld a website as valid 30.06 notice.
Search found 2 matches
- Fri Feb 12, 2016 10:27 am
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: Hotel question
- Replies: 84
- Views: 18223
Re: Hotel question
- Thu Feb 11, 2016 11:52 pm
- Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
- Topic: Hotel question
- Replies: 84
- Views: 18223
Re: Hotel question
If they post the hotel, and it was on their website, you've been given effective notice.cyphertext wrote:My wife and I will be staying in a hotel this weekend. She made the reservation through Priceline.com. I have no clue what hotel it even is... never did the paperwork, never signed a thing. So, my point is, they will have to have signage, or otherwise I will not have been given effective notice.