So it's a clear cut open and shut case? Doubtful. Depends on the lawyer(s), depends on the judge and his or her interpretation of the law and his or her view of gun control. There's a reason why good and bad lawyers exist...some schmuck like this who took this case will get destroyed by a big name firm that places like Dicks hire to represent them.
Who knows what contractual clauses Dicks has in place with Troy to cover their butts in cases like this, or for that matter, all their vendors. For all we know, they have an exit clause to sell back unused merchandise back to the original vendor at will, therefore making Dicks unable to deliver/fulfill existing orders. Still doesn't change the fact that the OP is grasping at straws.
To throw out the contract law crap, which is what the UCC covers and Dicks most certainly broke, we are using DTPA which is consumer laws and carries FAR more protections in Texas. Even if there was a sign at the time, DPTA doesn't allow that in Texas unless I physically sign a waiver to that effect.
So DSG broke both contract and consumer laws in Texas here over this deal. The consumer laws are far more broad in scope and protections though which is why my lawyer and I will be using those to settle this case. I've already linked the Texas DTPA laws for anyone to read through if they want.
As for those claiming to be lawyers on the internet. You certainly may be a lawyer, but arguing from a position of authority as if you know everything about this case as a armchair quarterback lawyer is a massive logic fallacy. Any lawyer in this thread claiming they already "know" the outcome is an awful lawyer. Because first rule of litigation is NOTHING is 100% certain. However, I'm fairly confident in my case having a favorable outcome for myself because of the facts and details I know about the case. Is there a small chance I could lose this? Sure, but it's a chance I'm willing to take. Why? Because the odds in heavily in my favor or getting what I want.
To the lawyers that think they are the smartest people in this thread. I highly doubt it. Being a lawyer doesn't automatically make you smarter than average. Not when it doesn't take more than a 2.5 GPA from an average student to get into a low tier law school, and pass the bar exam barely on the 2nd or 3rd time. Cause you know what? That is the AVERAGE lawyer right there. Sure there are smarter and more capable lawyers, but not every lawyer was a 4.0 Summa Cum Laude, aced the LSAT, got into Harvard or another tier 1 school, aced law school, aced the bar exam, and is now sitting armchair quarterback in these forums. For reference I did get Summa Cum Laude and did read through the same law material most law school student go through as I helped a family member get their law degree and later their PHd in it. So I have a bit of knowledge on this subject. I know I don't know everything about every law out there either. But I know how to investigate, look up laws, look up detail, look up precedents, and derive a logical conclusion from the evidence I have access to. The difference between the work I do with that and a "lawyer" is that I'm not trying to bill someone an outrageous sum of money for having some paralegal do the leg work and put face time into a court room.
In other words, there is a reason there are a lot of disparaging jokes regarding lawyers. Not all lawyers embody the sleazy, or intellectually deficient, false sense of mental superiority that seems to be trade mark characteristics of an average lawyer. Those I lawyers I respect and admire. Those, like many in this thread trying to armchair quarterback my case like they know what the hell they are talking about when it is in evidence they do not are very shameful.