It's illegal to pick up roadkill. Texas Parks and Wildlife has told me (direct quote from correspondence)
"It has been killed by an illegal means (vehicles are not a legal means &
method to hunt in Texas using that vehicle) and it was taken on a public
road right-of-way (highway, street, avenue, county road, farm market rd,
etc.)."
I pointed out I was in possession of a valid hunting license the last time a deer ran into the side of my vehicle, it hit me, not I it...and I quote:
"A hunting or fishing license is used to take, harvest, catch, kill
wildlife species by legal means & methods listed for that species on
private property or public hunting lands."
No u skrub
What you are describing is considered a terroristic threat which is a misdemeanor under Texas law (TPC 22.07(a)(2)) and also harassment which is also a misdemeanor under Texas law (TPC 42.07(a)(1-2)).
16.4 miles by road.
West Texas Road Hogs was created in 2010.
East Texas Road Hogs was created in 2010.
Mansfield, Texas has a road with the name Xavier Drive. Mission, Texas has a road with the name Xanthia Street. Xavier Court is a road in Dallas.
The only Timber Ridge Road I know of is in Rowlett, Texas.
Texas Law Review was created in 1922.
Yes, common law is recognized in Texas.
A translation for Road kill in French could be 'du gibier écrasé'.
Ranch Road
West Virginia has been identified as the state with the highest number of reported road kills per mile of road. This is due to the abundant wildlife in the region and the significant number of vehicles on the roads.