Full Text of SB1785
BILL NUMBER: SB 1785 CHAPTERED
BILL TEXT
CHAPTER 752
FILED WITH SECRETARY OF STATE SEPTEMBER 23, 1998
APPROVED BY GOVERNOR SEPTEMBER 22, 1998
PASSED THE SENATE AUGUST 30, 1998
PASSED THE ASSEMBLY AUGUST 26, 1998
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY AUGUST 24, 1998
AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY JUNE 18, 1998
AMENDED IN SENATE APRIL 29, 1998
AMENDED IN SENATE APRIL 14, 1998
INTRODUCED BY Senator Hayden
(Coauthor: Senator O'Connell)
FEBRUARY 18, 1998
An act to amend Sections 1815, 1816,
1834, 1845, 1846, 1847, and 2080 of, and to add Section 1834.4 to, the
Civil Code, to amend Sections 31108, 31752, and 32001 of, to add
Sections 17005, 17006, 31752.5, 31753, and 32003 to, and to add, repeal,
and add Section 31754 of, the Food and Agricultural Code, and to amend
Section 597.1 of, and to add Section 599d to, the Penal Code, relating
to stray animals.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 1785, Hayden. Stray animals: duties
of pounds and shelters. Existing law specifies the rights and duties of
persons who find lost property of another or who, either voluntarily or
involuntarily, are the depositaries of the property of another. Existing
law provides that involuntary depositaries are entitled to no reward for
the thing deposited; however, finders are entitled to reasonable
compensation for saving and taking care of the property. This bill would
set forth the findings of the Legislature with respect to animal
shelters, humane organizations, lost or stray animals, and neuter
programs, declare the policy of the state with respect to adoptable and
treatable animals, as specified, and set forth the intent of the bill.
The bill would (1) provide that (a) a person or public or private entity
that holds a stray, live animal shall be deemed an involuntary
depositary; and (b) all depositaries of live animals have a duty to
provide them with necessary and prompt veterinary care, nutrition, and
shelter, and to treat them humanely and failure to do so may subject the
depositary to liability for civil damages; (2) authorize involuntary
depositaries of live animals to accept rewards, as specified; and (3)
require a public depositary of a stray live animal to take charge of it,
as specified. Existing law provides that no dog or cat impounded by a
public pound or specified shelter shall be killed before 72 hours have
elapsed from the time of impounding. This bill would, effective July 1,
1999, expand this minimum impound time to 4 or 6 business days, as
specified, and would require that the animal be released to a nonprofit
animal rescue or adoption organization in certain circumstances, subject
to specified exceptions. The bill would also provide impounding time
periods, and care, redemption, and adoption requirements applicable to
other specified animals.
Existing law requires public pounds
and specified shelters to provide owners and finders of lost animals
with specified services to restore the lost animals to their owners.
Existing law specifies that these requirements are not mandatory duties
and do not create a cause of action against public entities or
employees. This bill would declare that the duty to provide these
services is a mandatory duty for public entities and their contractors.
The bill would also require pounds and shelters to keep specified
records regarding impounded animals for 3 years after the animal's
impoundment ends. Because this bill would impose new duties on local
officials, it would create a state-mandated local program. The
California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies
and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory
provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement, including
the creation of a State Mandates Claims Fund to pay the costs of
mandates that do not exceed $1,000,000 statewide and other procedures
for claims whose statewide costs exceed $1,000,000. This bill would
provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the
bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs
shall be made pursuant to these statutory provisions.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1.
(a) The Legislature finds and declares the following:
(1) Public and private shelters and humane organizations share a common
purpose in saving animals' lives, preventing animal suffering, and
eliminating animal abandonment.
(2) Public and private shelters and humane groups should work together
to end euthanasia of adoptable and treatable animals by 2010.
(b) The Legislature finds and declares the following:
(1) Redemption of owned pets and adoption of lost or stray adoptable
animals is preferable to incurring social and economic costs of
euthanasia.
(2) Shelters should be open during hours that permit working pet owners
to redeem pets during nonworking hours.
(3) Shelters should aggressively promote spay and neuter programs to
reduce pet overpopulation.
(4) Shelters should not adopt out animals that are not spayed or
neutered.
(5) Public shelters should work with humane animal adoption
organizations to the fullest extent possible to promote the adoption of
animals and to reduce the rate of killing.
(c) The intent of this act is to do all of the following:
(1) Increase the focus of shelters to owner redemption and adoption by
making recordkeeping mandatory to aid in owner redemption, providing
owner relinquished pets the same holding period as stray animals to
allow for adoption, and providing for an explicit adoption period.
(2) Consolidate and list clear guidelines for care and treatment for
animals held in shelters.
(3) Extend public shelter responsibilities from dogs and cats to other
legal pets.
(4) Make shelters accountable to pet owners and the public for records
and the care of animals in their possession.
(5) Make clear that shelter responsibilities are the same as those
legally assumed by a person who voluntarily picks up an animal.
(d) The Legislature finds and declares that statutory law prescribes the
type of treatment that private citizens must extend to stray animals
they voluntarily pick up and that public and private animal shelters
should be held to the same legal duties as those that exist for private
citizens.
(e) The Legislature finds and declares that it is better to have public
and private shelters pick up or take in animals than private citizens.
The Legislature further finds that the taking in of animals is important
for public health and safety, to aid in the return of the animal to its
owner, and to prevent inhumane conditions for lost or free roaming
animals.
(f) The Legislature finds and declares that shelters should be required
by law to take in lost animals and properly care for them with prompt
veterinary care, adequate nutrition, shelter, exercise, and water.
(g) The Legislature finds and declares that shelters receiving animals
that have identification should make reasonable attempts to notify the
owner of the animal's location.
(h) The Legislature finds and declares that the duties of shelters to
properly care for an animal do not cease if the owner of a lost animal
does not claim the animal, and the shelter should have the duty to make
the animal available for adoption for a reasonable period of time and to
care properly for the animal during this period.
(i) The Legislature finds and declares that lost animals should be held
for a period of time to ensure that the owner has proper access to
redeem the animal.
SEC. 2. Section 1815 of the Civil Code
is amended to read:
1815. An involuntary deposit is made:
(a) By the accidental leaving or placing of personal property in the
possession of any person, without negligence on the part of its owner.
(b) In cases of fire, shipwreck, inundation, insurrection, riot, or like
extraordinary emergencies, by the owner of personal property committing
it, out of necessity, to the care of any person.
(c) By the delivery to, or pick up by, and the holding of, a stray live
animal by any person, or public or private entity.
SEC. 3. Section 1816 of the Civil Code
is amended to read:
1816. (a) The person or private entity with whom a thing is deposited in
the manner described in Section 1815 is bound to take charge of it, if
able to do so.
(b) A public agency or shelter with whom a thing is deposited in the
manner described in Section 1815 is bound to take charge of it, as
provided in Section 597.1 of the Penal Code.
SEC. 4. Section 1834 of the Civil Code
is amended to read:
1834. A depositary of living animals shall provide the animals with
necessary and prompt veterinary care, nutrition, and shelter, and treat
them kindly. Any depositary that fails to perform these duties may be
liable for civil damages as provided by law.
SEC. 5. Section 1834.4 is added to the
Civil Code, to read:
1834.4. (a) It is the policy of the state that no adoptable animal
should be euthanized if it can be adopted into a suitable home.
Adoptable animals include only those animals eight weeks of age or older
that, at or subsequent to the time the animal is impounded or otherwise
taken into possession, have manifested no sign of a behavioral or
temperamental defect that could pose a health or safety risk or
otherwise make the animal unsuitable for placement as a pet, and have
manifested no sign of disease, injury, or congenital or hereditary
condition that adversely affects the health of the animal or that is
likely to adversely affect the animal's health in the future.
(b) It is the policy of the state that no treatable animal should be
euthanized. A treatable animal shall include any animal that is not
adoptable but that could become adoptable with reasonable efforts. This
subdivision, by itself, shall not be the basis of liability for damages
regarding euthanasia.
SEC. 6. Section 1845 of the Civil Code
is amended to read:
1845. An involuntary deposit is gratuitous, the depositary being
entitled to no reward. However, an involuntary depositary of any live
animal may accept advertised rewards or rewards freely offered
by the owner of the animal.
SEC. 7. Section 1846 of the Civil Code
is amended to read:
1846. (a) A gratuitous depositary must use, at least, slight care for
the preservation of the thing deposited.
(b) A gratuitous depositary of a living animal shall provide the animal
with necessary and prompt veterinary care, adequate nutrition and water,
and shelter, and shall treat it humanely and, if the animal has any
identification, make reasonable attempts to notify the owner of the
animal's location. Any gratuitous depositary that does not have
sufficient resources or desire to provide that care shall promptly turn
the animal over to an appropriate care facility.
(c) If the gratuitous depositary of a living animal is a public pound,
shelter operated by a society for the prevention of cruelty to animals,
or humane shelter, the depositary shall comply with all other
requirements of the Food and Agricultural Code regarding the impounding
of live animals.
SEC. 8. Section 1847 of the Civil Code
is amended to read:
1847. The duties of a gratuitous depositary cease:
(a) Upon restoration by the depositary of the thing deposited to its
owner.
(b) Upon reasonable notice given by the depositary to the owner to
remove it, and the owner failing to do so within a reasonable time. But
an involuntary depositary, under subdivision (b) of Section 1815, may
not give notice until the emergency that gave rise to the deposit is
past. This subdivision shall not apply to a public pound, a shelter
operated by a society for the prevention of cruelty to animals, or a
humane shelter. The duty to provide care, as required by Section 1846,
continues until the public pound or private shelter is lawfully relieved
of responsibility for the animal.
SEC. 9. Section 2080 of the Civil Code
is amended to read:
2080. Any person who finds a thing lost is not bound to take charge of
it, unless the person is otherwise required to do so by contract or law,
but when the person does take charge of it he or she is thenceforward a
depositary for the owner, with the rights and obligations of a
depositary for hire. Any person or any public or private entity that
finds and takes possession of any money, goods, things in action, or
other personal property, or saves any domestic animal from harm,
neglect, drowning, or starvation, shall, within a reasonable time,
inform the owner, if known, and make restitution without compensation,
except a reasonable charge for saving and taking care of the property.
Any person who takes possession of a live domestic animal shall provide
for humane treatment of the animal.
SEC. 10. Section 17005 is added to the
Food and Agricultural Code, to read:
17005. (a) It is the policy of the state that no adoptable animal should
be euthanized if it can be adopted into a suitable home. Adoptable
animals include only those animals eight weeks of age or older that, at
or subsequent to the time the animal is impounded or otherwise taken
into possession, have manifested no sign of a behavioral or
temperamental defect that could pose a health or safety risk or
otherwise make the animal unsuitable for placement as a pet, and have
manifested no sign of disease, injury, or congenital or hereditary
condition that adversely affects the health of the animal or that is
likely to adversely affect the animal's health in the future.
(b) It is the policy of the state that no treatable animal should be
euthanized. A treatable animal shall include any animal that is not
adoptable but that could become adoptable with reasonable efforts. This
subdivision, by itself, shall not be the basis of liability for damages
regarding euthanasia.
SEC. 11. Section 17006 is added to the
Food and Agricultural Code, to read:
17006. Animals that are irremediably suffering from a serious illness or
severe injury shall not be held for owner redemption or adoption.
Newborn animals that need maternal care and have been impounded without
their mothers may be euthanized without being held for owner redemption
or adoption.
SEC. 12. Section 31108 of the Food and
Agricultural Code is amended to read:
31108. (a) The required holding period for a stray dog impounded
pursuant to this division shall be six business days, not including the
day of impoundment, except as follows:
(1) If the pound or shelter has made the dog available for owner
redemption on one weekday evening until at least 7:00 p.m. or one
weekend day, the holding period shall be four business days, not
including the day of impoundment.
(2) If the pound or shelter has fewer than three full-time employees or
is not open during all regular weekday business hours, and if it has
established a procedure to enable owners to reclaim their dogs by
appointment at a mutually agreeable time when the pound or shelter would
otherwise be closed, the holding period shall be four business days, not
including the day of impoundment. Except as provided in Section 17006,
stray dogs shall be held for owner redemption during the first three
days of the holding period, not including the day of impoundment, and
shall be available for owner redemption or adoption for the remainder of
the holding period.
(b) Any stray dog that is impounded pursuant to this division shall,
prior to the killing of that animal for any reason other than
irremediable suffering, be released to a nonprofit, as defined in
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, animal rescue or
adoption organization if requested by the organization prior to the
scheduled killing of that animal. In addition to any required spay or
neuter deposit, the pound or shelter, at its discretion, may assess a
fee, not to exceed the standard adoption fee, for animals released.
SEC. 13. Section 31752 of the Food and
Agricultural Code is amended to read:
31752. (a) The required holding period for a stray cat impounded
pursuant to this division shall be six business days, not including the
day of impoundment, except as follows:
(1) If the pound or shelter has made the cat available for owner
redemption on one weekday evening until at least 7:00 p.m. or one
weekend day, the holding period shall be four business days, not
including the day of impoundment.
(2) If the pound or shelter has fewer than three full-time employees or
is not open during all regular weekday business hours, and if it has
established a procedure to enable owners to reclaim their cats by
appointment at a mutually agreeable time when the pound or shelter would
otherwise be closed, the holding period shall be four business days, not
including the day of impoundment. Except as provided in Sections 17006
and 31752.5, stray cats shall be held for owner redemption during the
first three days of the holding period, not including the day of
impoundment, and shall be available for owner redemption or adoption for
the remainder of the holding period.
(b) Any stray cat that is impounded pursuant to this division shall,
prior to the killing of that animal for any reason other than
irremediable suffering, be released to a nonprofit, as defined in
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, animal rescue or
adoption organization if requested by the organization prior to the
scheduled killing of that animal. In addition to any required spay or
neuter deposit, the pound or shelter, at its discretion, may assess a
fee, not to exceed the standard adoption fee, for animals released.
SEC. 14. Section 31752.5 is added to
the Food and Agricultural Code, to read:
31752.5. (a) The Legislature finds and declares the following:
(1) Domestic cats' temperaments range from completely docile indoor pets
to completely unsocialized outdoor cats that avoid all contact with
humans.
(2) "Feral cats" are cats with temperaments that are completely
unsocialized, although frightened or injured tame pet cats may appear to
be feral.
(3) Some people care for or own feral cats.
(4) Feral cats pose particular safety hazards for shelter employees.
(5) It is cruel to keep feral cats caged for long periods of time;
however, it is not always easy to distinguish a feral cat from a
frightened tame cat.
(b) For the purposes of this section, a "feral cat" is defined as a cat
without owner identification of any kind whose usual and consistent
temperament is extreme fear and resistance to contact with people. A
feral cat is totally unsocialized to people.
(c) Notwithstanding Section 31752, if an apparently feral cat has not
been reclaimed by its owner or caretaker within the first three days of
the required holding period, shelter personnel qualified to verify the
temperament of the animal shall verify whether it is feral or tame by
using a standardized protocol. If the cat is determined to be docile or
a frightened or difficult tame cat, the cat shall be held for the entire
required holding period specified in Section 31752. If the cat is
determined to be truly feral, the cat may be euthanized or relinquished
to a nonprofit, as defined in Section 501 (c)(3) of the Internal Revenue
Code, animal adoption organization that agrees to the spaying or
neutering of the cat if it has not already been spayed or neutered. In
addition to any required spay or neuter deposit, the pound or shelter,
at its discretion, may assess a fee, not to exceed the standard adoption
fee, for the animal released.
SEC. 15. Section 31753 is added to the
Food and Agricultural Code, to read:
31753. Any rabbit, guinea pig, hamster, pot-bellied pig, bird, lizard,
snake, turtle, or tortoise legally allowed as personal property
impounded in a public or private shelter shall be held for the same
period of time, under the same requirements of care, and with the same
opportunities for redemption and adoption by new owners or nonprofit, as
defined in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, animal rescue
or adoption organizations as cats and dogs. Section 17006 shall also
apply to these animals. In addition to any required spay or neuter
deposit, the pound or shelter, at its discretion, may assess a fee, not
to exceed the standard adoption fee, for animals released to nonprofit
animal rescue or adoption organizations pursuant to this section.
SEC. 16. Section 31754 is added to the
Food and Agricultural Code, to read:
31754. (a) Except as provided in Section 17006, any animal relinquished
by the purported owner that is of a species impounded by pounds or
shelters shall be held for two full business days, not including the day
of impoundment. The animal shall be available for owner redemption for
the first day, not including the day of impoundment, and shall be
available for owner redemption or adoption for the second day. After the
second required day, the animal may be held longer, killed, or
relinquished to a nonprofit, as defined in Section 501(c)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code, animal adoption organization under the same
conditions and circumstances provided for stray dogs and cats in
Sections 31108 and 31752.
(b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 1999. This section
shall become inoperative on July 1, 2001, and, as of January 1, 2002, is
repealed, unless a later enacted statute that is enacted before January
1, 2002, deletes or extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative
and is repealed.
SEC. 16.5. Section 31754 is added to
the Food and Agricultural Code, to read:
31754. (a) Except as provided in Section 17006, any animal relinquished
by the purported owner that is of a species impounded by pounds or
shelters shall be held for the same holding periods, with the same
requirements of care, applicable to stray dogs and cats in Sections
31108 and 31755, except that the period for owner redemption shall be
one day, not including the day of impoundment, and the period for owner
redemption or adoption shall be the remainder of the holding period.
(b) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2001.
SEC. 17. Section 32001 of the Food and
Agricultural Code is amended to read:
32001. All public pounds, shelters operated by societies for the
prevention of cruelty to animals, and humane shelters, that contract to
perform public animal control services, shall provide the owners of lost
animals and those who find lost animals with all of the following:
(a) Ability to list the animals they have lost or found on "Lost and
Found" lists maintained by the pound or shelter.
(b) Referrals to animals listed that may be the animals the owners or
finders have lost or found.
(c) The telephone numbers and addresses of other pounds and shelters in
the same vicinity.
(d) Advice as to means of publishing and disseminating information
regarding lost animals.
(e) The telephone numbers and addresses of volunteer groups that may be
of assistance in locating lost animals.
The duties imposed by this section are mandatory duties for public
entities for all purposes of the Government Code and for all private
entities with which a public entity has contracted to perform those
duties.
SEC. 18. Section 32003 is added to the
Food and Agricultural Code, to read:
32003. All public pounds and private shelters shall keep accurate
records on each animal taken up, medically treated, or impounded. The
records shall include all of the following information and any other
information required by the California Veterinary Medical Board:
(a) The date the animal was taken up, medically treated, euthanized, or
impounded.
(b) The circumstances under which the animal was taken up, medically
treated, euthanized, or impounded.
(c) The names of the personnel who took up, medically treated,
euthanized, or impounded the animal.
(d) A description of any medical treatment provided to the animal and
the name of the veterinarian of record.
(e) The final disposition of the animal, including the name of the
person who euthanized the animal or the name and address of the adopting
party. These records shall be maintained for three years after the date
the animal's impoundment ends.
SEC. 19. Section 597.1 of the Penal
Code is amended to read:
597.1. (a) Every owner, driver, or keeper of any animal who permits the
animal to be in any building, enclosure, lane, street, square, or lot of
any city, county, city and county, or judicial district without proper
care and attention is guilty of a misdemeanor. Any peace officer, humane
society officer, or animal control officer shall take possession of the
stray or abandoned animal and shall provide care and treatment for the
animal until the animal is deemed to be in suitable condition to be
returned to the owner. When the officer has reasonable grounds to
believe that very prompt action is required to protect the health or
safety of the animal or the health or safety of others, the officer
shall immediately seize the animal and comply with subdivision (f). In
all other cases, the officer shall comply with the provisions of
subdivision (g). The cost of caring for and treating any animal properly
seized under this subdivision shall constitute a lien on the animal and
the animal shall not be returned to its owner until the charges are
paid, if the seizure is upheld pursuant to this section.
(b) Every sick, disabled, infirm, or crippled animal, except a dog or
cat, that is abandoned in any city, county, city and county, or judicial
district may be killed by the officer if, after a reasonable search, no
owner of the animal can be found. It shall be the duty of all peace
officers, humane society officers, and animal control officers to cause
the animal to be killed or rehabilitated and placed in a suitable home
on information that the animal is stray or abandoned. The officer may
likewise take charge of any animal, including a dog or cat, that by
reason of lameness, sickness, feebleness, or neglect, is unfit for the
labor it is performing, or that in any other manner is being cruelly
treated, and provide care and treatment for the animal until it is
deemed to be in a suitable condition to be returned to the owner. When
the officer has reasonable grounds to believe that very prompt action is
required to protect the health or safety of an animal or the health or
safety of others, the officer shall immediately seize the animal and
comply with subdivision (f). In all other cases, the officer shall
comply with subdivision (g). The cost of caring for and treating any
animal properly seized under this subdivision shall constitute a lien on
the animal and the animal shall not be returned to its owner until the
charges are paid.
(c) Any peace officer, humane society officer, or animal control officer
shall convey all injured cats and dogs found without their owners in a
public place directly to a veterinarian known by the officer to be a
veterinarian who ordinarily treats dogs and cats for a determination of
whether the animal shall be immediately and humanely destroyed or shall
be hospitalized under proper care and given emergency treatment. If the
owner does not redeem the animal within the locally prescribed waiting
period, the veterinarian may personally perform euthanasia on the
animal. If the animal is treated and recovers from its injuries, the
veterinarian may keep the animal for purposes of adoption, provided the
responsible animal control agency has first been contacted and has
refused to take possession of the animal. Whenever any animal is
transferred to a veterinarian in a clinic, such as an emergency clinic
that is not in continuous operation, the veterinarian may, in turn,
transfer the animal to an appropriate facility. If the veterinarian
determines that the animal shall be hospitalized under proper care and
given emergency treatment, the costs of any services that are provided
pending the owner's inquiry to the responsible agency, department, or
society shall be paid from the dog license fees, fines, and fees for
impounding dogs in the city, county, or city and county in which the
animal was licensed or, if the animal is unlicensed, shall be paid by
the jurisdiction in which the animal was found, subject to the provision
that this cost be repaid by the animal's owner. The cost of caring for
and treating any animal seized under this subdivision shall constitute a
lien on the animal and the animal shall not be returned to the owner
until the charges are paid. No veterinarian shall be criminally or
civilly liable for any decision that he or she makes or for services
that he or she provides pursuant to this subdivision.
(d) An animal control agency that takes possession of an animal pursuant
to subdivision (c) shall keep records of the whereabouts of the animal
from the time of possession to the end of the animal's impoundment, and
those records shall be available for inspection by the public upon
request for three years after the date the animal's impoundment ended.
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, any peace
officer, humane society officer, or any animal control officer may, with
the approval of his or her immediate superior, humanely destroy any
stray or abandoned animal in the field in any case where the animal is
too severely injured to move or where a veterinarian is not available
and it would be more humane to dispose of the animal.
(f) Whenever an officer authorized under this section seizes or impounds
an animal based on a reasonable belief that prompt action is required to
protect the health or safety of the animal or the health or safety of
others, the officer shall, prior to the commencement of any criminal
proceedings authorized by this section, provide the owner or keeper of
the animal, if known or ascertainable after reasonable investigation,
with the opportunity for a postseizure hearing to determine the validity
of the seizure or impoundment, or both.
(1) The agency shall cause a notice to be affixed to a conspicuous place
where the animal was situated or personally deliver a notice of the
seizure or impoundment, or both, to the owner or keeper within 48 hours,
excluding weekends and holidays. The notice shall include all of the
following:
(A) The name, business address, and telephone number of the officer
providing the notice.
(B) A description of the animal seized, including any identification
upon the animal.
(C) The authority and purpose for the seizure, or impoundment, including
the time, place, and circumstances under which the animal was seized.
(D) A statement that, in order to receive a postseizure hearing, the
owner or person authorized to keep the animal, or his or her agent,
shall request the hearing by signing and returning an enclosed
declaration of ownership or right to keep the animal to the agency
providing the notice within 10 days, including weekends and holidays, of
the date of the notice. The declaration may be returned by personal
delivery or mail.
(E) A statement that the cost of caring for and treating any animal
properly seized under this section is a lien on the animal and that the
animal shall not be returned to the owner until the charges are paid,
and that failure to request or to attend a scheduled hearing shall
result in liability for this cost.
(2) The postseizure hearing shall be conducted within 48 hours of the
request, excluding weekends and holidays. The seizing agency may
authorize its own officer or employee to conduct the hearing if the
hearing officer is not the same person who directed the seizure or
impoundment of the animal and is not junior in rank to that person. The
agency may utilize the services of a hearing officer from outside the
agency for the purposes of complying with this section.
(3) Failure of the owner or keeper, or of his or her agent, to request
or to attend a scheduled hearing shall result in a forfeiture of any
right to a postseizure hearing or right to challenge his or her
liability for costs incurred.
(4) The agency, department, or society employing the person who directed
the seizure shall be responsible for the costs incurred for caring and
treating the animal, if it is determined in the postseizure hearing that
the seizing officer did not have reasonable grounds to believe very
prompt action, including seizure of the animal, was required to protect
the health or safety of the animal or the health or safety of others. If
it is determined the seizure was justified, the owner or keeper shall be
personally liable to the seizing agency for the cost of the seizure and
care of the animal, the charges for the seizure and care of the animal
shall be a lien on the animal, and the animal shall not be returned to
its owner until the charges are paid and the seizing agency or hearing
officer has determined that the animal is physically fit or the owner
demonstrates to the seizing agency's or the hearing officer's
satisfaction that the owner can and will provide the necessary care.
(g) Where the need for immediate seizure is not present and prior to the
commencement of any criminal proceedings authorized by this section, the
agency shall provide the owner or keeper of the animal, if known or
ascertainable after reasonable investigation, with the opportunity for a
hearing prior to any seizure or impoundment of the animal. The owner
shall produce the animal at the time of the hearing unless, prior to the
hearing, the owner has made arrangements with the agency to view the
animal upon request of the agency, or unless the owner can provide
verification that the animal was humanely destroyed. Any person who
willfully fails to produce the animal or provide the verification is
guilty of an infraction, punishable by a fine of not less than two
hundred fifty dollars ($250) nor more than one thousand dollars
($1,000).
(1) The agency shall cause a notice to be affixed to a conspicuous place
where the animal was situated or personally deliver a notice stating the
grounds for believing the animal should be seized under subdivision (a)
or (b). The notice shall include all of the following:
(A) The name, business address, and telephone number of the officer
providing the notice.
(B) A description of the animal to be seized, including any
identification upon the animal.
(C) The authority and purpose for the possible seizure or impoundment.
(D) A statement that, in order to receive a hearing prior to any
seizure, the owner or person authorized to keep the animal, or his or
her agent, shall request the hearing by signing and returning the
enclosed declaration of ownership or right to keep the animal to the
officer providing the notice within two days, excluding weekends and
holidays, of the date of the notice.
(E) A statement that the cost of caring for and treating any animal
properly seized under this section is a lien on the animal, that any
animal seized shall not be returned to the owner until the charges are
paid, and that failure to request or to attend a scheduled hearing shall
result in a conclusive determination that the animal may properly be
seized and that the owner shall be liable for the charges.
(2) The preseizure hearing shall be conducted within 48 hours, excluding
weekends and holidays, after receipt of the request. The seizing agency
may authorize its own officer or employee to conduct the hearing if the
hearing officer is not the same person who requests the seizure or
impoundment of the animal and is not junior in rank to that person. The
agency may utilize the services of a hearing officer from outside the
agency for the purposes of complying with this section.
(3) Failure of the owner or keeper, or his or her agent, to request or
to attend a scheduled hearing shall result in a forfeiture of any right
to a preseizure hearing or right to challenge his or her liability for
costs incurred pursuant to this section.
(4) The hearing officer, after the hearing, may affirm or deny the
owner's or keeper's right to custody of the animal and, if reasonable
grounds are established, may order the seizure or impoundment of the
animal for care and treatment.
(h) If any animal is properly seized under this section, the owner or
keeper shall be personally liable to the seizing agency for the cost of
the seizure and care of the animal. Furthermore, if the charges for the
seizure or impoundment and any other charges permitted under this
section are not paid within 14 days of the seizure, or, if the owner,
within 14 days of notice of availability of the animal to be returned,
fails to pay charges permitted under this section and take possession of
the animal, the animal shall be deemed to have been abandoned and may be
disposed of by the impounding officer.
(i) If the animal requires veterinary care and the humane society or
public agency is not assured, within 14 days of the seizure of the
animal, that the owner will provide the necessary care, the animal shall
not be returned to its owner and shall be deemed to have been abandoned
and may be disposed of by the impounding officer. A veterinarian may
humanely destroy an impounded animal without regard to the prescribed
holding period when it has been determined that the animal has incurred
severe injuries or is incurably crippled. A veterinarian also may
immediately humanely destroy an impounded animal afflicted with a
serious contagious disease unless the owner or his or her agent
immediately authorizes treatment of the animal by a veterinarian at the
expense of the owner or agent.
(j) No animal properly seized under this section shall be returned to
its owner until, in the determination of the seizing agency or hearing
officer, the animal is physically fit or the owner can demonstrate to
the seizing agency's or hearing officer's satisfaction that the owner
can and will provide the necessary care.
(k) Upon the conviction of a person charged with a violation of this
section, or Section 597 or 597a, all animals lawfully seized and
impounded with respect to the violation shall be adjudged by the court
to be forfeited and shall thereupon be transferred to the impounding
officer or appropriate public entity for proper adoption or other
disposition. A person convicted of a violation of this section shall be
personally liable to the seizing agency for all costs of impoundment
from the time of seizure to the time of proper disposition. Upon
conviction, the court shall order the convicted person to make payment
to the appropriate public entity for the costs incurred in the housing,
care, feeding, and treatment of the seized or impounded animals. Each
person convicted in connection with a particular animal may be held
jointly and severally liable for restitution for that particular animal.
The payment shall be in addition to any other fine or sentence ordered
by the court. The court may also order, as a condition of probation,
that the convicted person be prohibited from owning, possessing, caring
for, or having any contact with, animals of any kind and require the
convicted person to immediately deliver all animals in his or her
possession to a designated public entity for adoption or other lawful
disposition or provide proof to the court that the person no longer has
possession, care, or control of any animals. In the event of the
acquittal or final discharge without conviction of the arrested person,
the court shall, on demand, direct the release of seized or impounded
animals upon a showing of proof of ownership. Any questions regarding
ownership shall be determined in a separate hearing by the court where
the criminal case was finally adjudicated and the court shall hear
testimony from any persons who may assist the court in determining
ownership of the animal. If the owner is determined to be unknown or the
owner is prohibited or unable to retain possession of the animals for
any reason, the court shall order the animals to be released to the
appropriate public entity for adoption or other lawful disposition. This
section is not intended to cause the release of any animal, bird,
reptile, amphibian, or fish, seized or impounded pursuant to any other
statute, ordinance, or municipal regulation. This section shall not
prohibit the seizure or impoundment of animals as evidence as provided
for under any other provision of law.
(l) It shall be the duty of all peace officers, humane society officers,
and animal control officers to use all currently acceptable methods of
identification, both electronic and otherwise, to determine the lawful
owner or caretaker of any seized or impounded animal. It shall also be
their duty to make reasonable efforts to notify the owner or caretaker
of the whereabouts of the animal and any procedures available for the
lawful recovery of the animal and, upon the owner's and caretaker's
initiation of recovery procedures, retain custody of the animal for a
reasonable period of time to allow for completion of the recovery
process. Efforts to locate or contact the owner or caretaker and
communications with persons claiming to be the owner or caretaker shall
be recorded and maintained and be made available for public inspection.
SEC. 20. Section 599d is added to the
Penal Code, to read: 599d. (a) It is the policy of the state that no
adoptable animal should be euthanized if it can be adopted into a
suitable home. Adoptable animals include only those animals eight weeks
of age or older that, at or subsequent to the time the animal is
impounded or otherwise taken into possession, have manifested no sign of
a behavioral or temperamental defect that could pose a health or safety
risk or otherwise make the animal unsuitable for placement as a pet, and
have manifested no sign of disease, injury, or congenital or hereditary
condition that adversely affects the health of the animal or that is
likely to adversely affect the animal's health in the future.
(b) It is the policy of the state that no treatable animal should be
euthanized. A treatable animal shall include any animal that is not
adoptable but that could become adoptable with reasonable efforts. This
subdivision, by itself, shall not be the basis of liability for damages
regarding euthanasia.
SEC. 21. Sections 12 and 13 of this
act shall become operative on July 1, 1999.
SEC. 22. Notwithstanding Section 17610
of the Government Code, if the Commission on State Mandates determines
that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to
local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made
pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of
Title 2 of the Government Code. If the statewide cost of the claim for
reimbursement does not exceed one million dollars ($1,000,000),
reimbursement shall be made from the State Mandates Claims Fund.
Notwithstanding Section 17580 of the Government Code, unless otherwise
specified, the provisions of this act shall become operative on the same
date that the act takes effect pursuant to the California California.