Farm Onsite Stallion Service Agreement is an agreement between Breeder and Mare owner. The agreement is for a particular breeding season for one foal.
Farm Onsite Stallion Service Agreement is an agreement between Breeder and Mare owner. The agreement is for a particular breeding season for one foal.
Non-papered dogs should not be bred, with very few exceptions (mostly involving outstanding hunting or working ability). Most papered dogs should not be bred either. If a purebred dog is worthy of being bred, it will already have papers, plus a list of titles and other accomplishments appropriate to its breed.
This law requires that animals have adequate access to medical care, food, water and shelter. Despite this law, there are no regulations on how many dogs a person owns, how they are bred, or how they are sold, meaning there are virtually no regulations on dog breeders in Arizona.
Limited Registration helps breeders protect their breeding programs. If breeders do not want puppies used for breeding purposes, they can request the Limited Registration option for those puppies. Full AKC Registration. Full registration gives the new owner full breeding rights of the puppy.
Non-Breeding Agreement. The Purchaser agrees that the Puppy is being sold as a companion animal (Pet) and not for breeding purposes. The Purchaser agrees to have the Puppy spayed/neutered between the ages of 8 months to 18 months and as recommended or advised by a licensed Veterinarian.
A pet dealer shall not offer for sale a cat or dog that is less than eight weeks old. C. A pet dealer who violates subsection A of this section is guilty of a class 1 misdemeanor. Added by Laws 1997, Ch.
Arizona is one of the states that now does not ban dogs based on their breeds.
Be aware that most contracts in the dog world are not legally enforceable, especially the ones that are micromanaging. Legally, dogs are property. As a result, do not rely on contracts to ``force'' the behavior that you want. Instead....
Kelsey Dickerson with the Arizona Humane Society said there are no regulations in Arizona for backyard breeding, a dangerous practice involving non-licensed breeders. “These are basically people who are trying to make a profit by breeding animals and selling them around for a profit,” Dickerson said.