Statutes are only revised, in express provisions, by the Legislature. Those can be interpreted or voided by the judiciary in interpreting their meaning and effect. If the statutory definition of "bowie knife" has been changed, it would have been by the Lege. A court, probably the highest court in the state, could flesh it out, or void it, by interpretation, although this would not appear in the statute. Sometimes appellate courts in different parts of a state have interpretations which conflict. If you read only the statute, you have no idea.joe817 wrote:I think that is now the "bible" of the legal profession, is it not? Just asking, as I'm not a student of law. And if that were the case would we not see a re-definition of the "bowie knife"? Not trying to stir up anything but just curious. I honestly don't know.JALLEN wrote:I believe the statutes have been reorganized maybe a couple of times, but am not familiar with that.
When I worked for a law firm here, in high school and college, there was VATS, Vernon's Annotated Texas Statutes.b. That seems to have been redone somehow.
I guess I will ask the lawyer I worked for ~50 years ago. He's still alive.