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SPONSOR:
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
148th GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE BILL NO. 204
AN ACT TO AMEND TITLES 3 AND 11 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO ANIMAL CRUELTY.
Section 1. Amend 7905, Title 3 of the Delaware Code by making deletions as shown by strike through and insertions
as shown by underline as follows and redesignate accordingly:
7905 Impoundment.
(a) Any agent in Sussex and New Castle Counties of this State, so appointed by the Delaware Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, or in Kent County of this State, so appointed by the Kent County Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals, or any law enforcement officer as defined in 222 of Title 11, may, in instances of an alleged acts act of
animal cruelty or fighting or baiting, and as provided for by the laws of Delaware relating to seizure of property, impound in the
appropriate S.P.C.A. shelter or, if required, in an appropriate veterinarian facility, any animal subjected to cruel mistreatment or
cruel neglect or other cruelty to an animal, including fighting or baiting, and any other animal of the same owner or custodian.
Should the owner or custodian of an animal not be available at or near the premises where the animal is located, upon taking an
animal under this section the agent shall leave in an appropriate place written notice to the animal's owner or custodian of such
action. Societies for the prevention of cruelty to animals shall take all reasonable action to insure ensure that owners or
custodians of an animal, impounded under this section, shall have received notice of such action as soon as possible and no later
than 24 hours after the impoundment.
(b) An animal impounded under this section shall not remain in the custody of the appropriate Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals longer than 48 hours unless in the meantime a legal proceeding, civil or criminal, shall be
instituted with respect to that animal or any other under common ownership or custody in the appropriate court under an
applicable animal cruelty law or under section 1325 or section 1326 of Title 11 of the Delaware Code and shall be returned to its
owner or custodian unless a complaint is filed within the 48-hour period in the appropriate court under the animal cruelty laws
against the owner or custodian, except that upon good cause shown a court may permit a reasonable extension of the 48-hour
period not to exceed 30 days upon a showing of need for animal protection while investigation continues in anticipation of a
legal proceeding. The period of 48 hours in this subsection shall not include any time on days when the civil courts in Delaware
are not open for the transaction of business. After a legal proceeding shall be instituted under an applicable cruelty law or under
Title 11 of the Delaware Code, 1325 or 1326, suchWhen a complaint is filed in the appropriate court, the impounded animal
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shall remain in the custody of the appropriate Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals pending the outcome of the
action and exhaustion of appeals. If the owner or custodian is found to be in violation of the animal cruelty laws the court shall
make a final determination as to the disposition of the animalshall be determined in such legal proceeding with respect to that
animal to have committed cruelty to an animal contrary to an applicable animal cruelty law, civil or criminal, of this jurisdiction
or any equivalent civil or criminal animal cruelty law of another jurisdiction or a violation of 1325 or 1326 of Title 11 of the
Delaware Code, the court in such legal proceeding shall make a final determination as to the disposition of the impounded
animal such as may be required by the applicable statute and such as will provide reasonable assurance against the possibility of
any future cruelty to or mistreatment of that animal. Should the complaint all such legal proceedings be withdrawn, prior to final
judgment in a court hearing, the animal shall be immediately made available to its owner or custodian.
(c) In any civil action under this chapter alleging that cruelty to an animal has been committed by the owner or
custodian of any impounded animal, or in any criminal action under 1325 or 1326 of Title 11 with respect to an impounded
animal, if a court determines that, at the time that animal was impounded, probable cause existed to believe that the animal had
been subjected to cruelty to an animal or that an animal fighting or baiting law had been violated by the owner or custodian of
the impounded animalUpon a determination that probable cause exists to believe that the animal cruelty or animal fighting laws
have been violated by the owner or custodian of any impounded animal, the State and/or the appropriate Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals or both shall have the right to recover the costs of holding and caring for any animal
impounded under this section from the owner or custodian of the animal for that animal and all others of that owner or custodian
impounded under this section, notwithstanding the final disposition of the civil or criminal matter. Upon a determination in such
a civil or criminal action that probable cause did not exist at the time of impoundment to believe that the animal cruelty or
animal fighting or baiting laws had been violated by the owner or custodian, there shall be no right to recover from the owner or
custodian the costs of holding and caring for any animal impounded under this section. Upon impoundment, the State or
appropriate Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals shall submit a detailed billing to the owner or custodian of the
animal, listing the monthly costs of boarding, evaluation, veterinary and other costs associated with care. Notwithstanding any
provision of this section or any other law to the contrary, failure of the animal's owner or custodian to pay these costs within 30
days of the receipt of a detailed monthly billing will result in ownership of the animal reverting to the State or to the appropriate
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (S.P.C.A.). The provisions of this subsection shall be applicable
notwithstanding the final disposition of the criminal charges or civil proceeding.
(d) An owner or custodian of an animal impounded under this section who is found guilty of cruelty to the animal, and
the court orders the animal returned to such owner or custodian, shall, prior to taking the animal, reimburse the appropriate
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals its regular standard fees charged for the care of animals while in the Society's
custody plus any veterinary fees incurred for the animal during the period of impoundment. Failure of the animal's owner or
custodian to pay such fees within 5 days 7 days after a finding of guilty will result in ownership of the animal reverting to the
appropriate S.P.C.A... The S.P.C.A. may then dispose of the animal in accord with its procedures for such disposition.
(e) Should an animal which has been impounded under this section expire while in the custody of the Society for the
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Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the animal shall, as soon as possible, be turned over to the State Veterinarian at the
Department of Agriculture. The State Veterinarian shall take whatever action necessary, including autopsy if required, to
determine cause of the animal's death and shall record such cause. The cause of death shall, if requested, be furnished to the
animal's owner and to the court handling the complaint relative to the animal. Disposition of the animal's remains shall be
coordinated with the animal's owner and, provided a complaint has been filed, with the court handling the complaint.
Section 2. Amend Chapter 79, Title 3 of the Delaware Code adding a new 7908 by making deletions as shown by
strike through and insertions as shown by underline as follows and redesignating accordingly:
7908. Cruelty to an animal; civil action.
(a) For the purpose of this section, the following words and phrases shall include, but not be limited to, the meanings
respectively ascribed to them as follows:
(1) "Abandonment" includes completely forsaking or deserting an animal originally under one's ownership or
custody or care without making reasonable arrangements for care and custody of that animal, including its proper
feeding and watering, to be assumed by another person. Abandonment shall not include releasing cats after
participation in the Trap, Neuter and Release Program.
(2) "Animal" shall not include any fish, crustacean, or molluska.
(3) "Cruel" includes every act or omission to act whereby unnecessary or unjustifiable physical pain or
suffering is caused or permitted.
(4) "Cruel mistreatment" includes any treatment whereby unnecessary or unjustifiable physical pain or
suffering or serious injury is caused or permitted.
(5) "Cruel neglect" includes abandonment or neglect of an animal which is under the ownership or custody or
care or control of the neglector, whereby the neglector fails to feed the animal properly or to give proper shelter or
proper veterinary care to the animal or whereby pain or suffering is caused to the animal. By way of example, cruel
neglect shall also include allowing an animal to live in unsanitary conditions, such as keeping an animal where the
animal's own excrement or secretion is not removed from the animal or its living area and/or other living conditions
which are injurious to the animal's health.
(6) "Cruelty to an animal" includes cruel mistreatment of any animal or cruel neglect of any animal under the
ownership or care or custody or control of the neglector, whereby unnecessary or unjustifiable physical pain or
suffering is likely caused. By way of example this includes: Unjustifiable beating of an animal; overworking an animal;
tormenting an animal; abandonment of an animal; tethering of a dog for 18 hours or more in any 24-hour period, except
on land owned or leased by the dog's owner that is not less than 10 acres; tethering any dog for any amount of time if
the dog is under 4 months of age or is a nursing mother while the offspring are present, except on land owned or leased
by the dog's owner that is not less than 10 acres; failure to feed properly or give proper shelter or veterinary care to an
animal; owning, possessing, keeping, training, or using a bull, bear, dog, cock, or other animal or fowl for the purpose
of fighting or baiting; being a party to or who causing the fighting or baiting of a bull, bear, dog, cock, or other animal
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or fowl; or cruel mistreatment or cruel neglect of any animal found in Delaware, where such mistreatment or neglect
occurred, partly or wholly, in another state under that other states equivalent civil or criminal cruelty to animals laws,
or under federal law; or killing or injuring any animal belonging to another person without legal privilege or consent of
the owner.
(7) "Custody" includes the responsibility for the welfare of an animal subject to one's care or control whether
one owns it or not.
(8) "Person" includes any individual, partnership, corporation or association living and/or doing business in
the State.
(9) "Proper feed" includes providing each animal with daily food and water of sufficient quality and quantity
to prevent unnecessary or unjustifiable physical pain or suffering by the animal.
(10) "Proper shelter" includes providing each animal with adequate shelter from the weather elements as
required to prevent unnecessary or unjustifiable physical pain or suffering by the animal.
(11) "Proper veterinary care" includes providing each animal with veterinary care sufficient to prevent
unnecessary or unjustifiable physical pain or suffering by the animal.
(12) "Serious injury" shall include any injury to any animal which creates a substantial risk of death, or which
causes prolonged impairment of health or prolonged loss or impairment of the function of any bodily organ.
(13) "Tethering" shall include fastening or restraining with a rope, chain, cord, or similar device creating a
fixed radius; tethering does not include walking a dog on a leash, regardless of the dog's age.
(b) A person engages in conduct within the meaning of this section, actionable as provided herein, when that person
engages in cruelty to an animal as described in subsection (a) of this section.
(c) A persons conduct also constitutes cruelty to an animal when the person cruelly or unnecessarily kills or injures
any animal whether belonging to the actor or another. This section does not, however, apply to the killing of any animal
normally or commonly raised as food for human consumption, provided that such killing is not cruel. A person acts
unnecessarily if the act is not required to terminate an animal's suffering, to protect the life or property of the actor or another
person or the life of another animal while being attacked, or if other means of disposing of an animal exist which would not
impair the health or well-being of that animal.
(d) A persons conduct also constitutes cruelty to an animal when the person captures, detains, transports, removes or
delivers any animal known to be a domestic farm animal, pet or companion animal, or any other animal of scientific,
environmental, economic or cultural value, under false pretenses to any public or private animal shelter, veterinary clinic or
other facility, or otherwise causes the same through acts of deception or misrepresentation of the circumstances and disposition
of any such animal.
(e) The provisions of this section are inapplicable to accepted veterinary practices and activities carried on for scientific
research.
(f) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary, for a first violation of this section relating solely to the tethering of
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Section 5. This bill shall take effect immediately upon its enactment and shall apply to any alleged act of animal
cruelty, fighting, or baiting after the date of its enactment.
SYNOPSIS
This bill revises the procedure for impounding an animal which has allegedly been the subject of cruelty. The
bill also creates a civil cause of action for Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to file suit against any person
who engaged in cruelty to an animal. There is an express exemption from the ground of abandonment for releasing a cat
as part of the Trap, Neuter and Release Program. Upon a finding of cruelty, the defendant is liable to the plaintiff for
liquidated damages of $2,500 to cover the plaintiffs litigation costs, as well as court costs. Also, any person who commits
cruelty to an animal is then prohibited from owning or possessing an animal for up to 5 years, except for commercial
farms. A second concurrent or subsequent act of cruelty extends the prohibition another 5 years. A third concurrent or
subsequent act of cruelty results in a permanent prohibition of owning or possessing an animal, without exception.
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