In Texas, once a bottle of wine has been opened, it cannot be re-corked and sold for on-premises consumption. However, if the wine is opened and partially consumed at a restaurant or bar, the establishment can seal the bottle and allow the customer to take it home, provided it is in a secure container. This law aims to encourage responsible consumption while minimizing waste. Always check local regulations for any specific requirements.
Why can't you return a bottle of wine in Indiana grocery stores after opening? It was a bad bottle.
Clutching a law degree and a bottle of wine, lying passed out in a gutter
Yes it can. There are plenty of wine clubs in US and Canada that will mail according to your preferences, and based on the shipping laws. Search for wine clubs in your area first. It may cost you less for shipping.
I'm not aware of any law saying they can't, though it seems kind of silly for them to do so instead of just including it in the cost of the bottle.
If the sugar content is given as a concentration, then the size of the bottle should not matter. If the residual sugar, for example, is 0.5 mg/mL, then it's 0.5 mg/mL regardless of the size of the bottle. If, however, the sugar content is reported as the total sugar present in the bottle, then the two figures can be different, because of rounding error. If the smaller bottle contains 0.45 mg of sugar, that can be reported as zero (which is permitted by law). The larger bottle will have 0.90 mg of sugar, and that can be rounded to 1.0.
Newton's third law
Texas Law Review was created in 1922.
Yes, common law is recognized in Texas.
To transport it across country, yes, as long as the seal on the bottle remains unbroken. However - NY state may have a law (tax law usually) that prohibits the importation of alcoholic beverages into the state.
Yes, the University of Texas at Austin School of Law: http://www.utexas.edu/law/
No, common law marriage is not recognized in Texas.
In Texas, a couple must live together for a continuous period of two years to be considered in a common law marriage according to Texas law.