Khross wrote:
If you are informed that I'm refusing to do business with you, the reasonable expectation is that you leave my property. It's really quite that simple. More to the point, you don't actually have a right to enter my business. You have the privilege to do so, which I can revoke at any time I choose.
No, not at all. If you have a sign out saying "open", with no other limitations or strictures, and the person in question has never been informed not to come to that business, then any person
has a right to come in there. Not a privilege.
Remaining there is a privilege. You can't revoke that privilege unless I come in there to do so, or do you intend to stand outside your establishment telling people at random not to come in there whether they intended to or not? You have no right whatsoever to demand that people who have not yet entered your buisness be aware of whether you want them there or not unless you post a sign indicating what limits are in place. If the nature of your business is such that passersby would be normally expected to stop there and do business, and it is an hour when you are open then the obligation is on you to inform anyone you don't want present that they are not welcome. Until you do, they
have a right to be there.
If you post a sign outside limiting who can come in (such as "No one under 21") then your buisness is no longer "open to the public" it's limited to certain sectors of the public by duly informing them with a sign. Even then, those people that fit into the category you want to do business with
have a right to come in there and attempt to do business with you until and unless you ask them to leave.
No one is disagreeing that the reasonable expectation if you tell someone to leave is that they leave. I just got done saying that. Your reasonable expectation, however, does not extend to either accusing them of trespassing if they are, in fact, attempting to leave in a timely fashion, nor does it extend to demanding that they leave so quickly that they are unable to collect their posessions or do so safely. If you demand someone leave your establishment, he is not trespassing if he stops to put on his raincoat.