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by starrchar on 23 April 2012 - 22:04

by Gigante on 23 April 2012 - 23:04
A tragic experience. I don't believe from your description that the breeder is legally or morally required to replace the pup. "There was nothing the owner was doing that would cause seizures" This statement, although most likely accurate, may or may not be true. Theres a lot of grey here.
That being said., Im more inclined to go with the dog from the desert.
I would most likely replace the animal. Its hard enough placing in good homes. It appears your family is that. Back out the emotions and the breeder, as it appears, has no obligation to replace that puppy.
I would want to in this instance, because I really like the people I place my kids with.

by kitkat3478 on 24 April 2012 - 12:04
by Rass on 24 April 2012 - 12:04
Years ago I sold a 2 year old gelding that I had bred. The young lady who bought him paid for him over time religously. The horse developed an incurable lameness in his hocks and had to be put down. I had another horse a filly.. same age.. much better breeding.. much better horse.. and about two weeks after the first one was put down, I showed up at the girl's house with a halter and lead with the filly's name on it and I handed it to her. She was amazed that I would replace the first horse.
There was no contract.. first horse's bill of sale stated the horse was sold "as is" and I had no obligation to replace him. I replaced him with a daughter of a stakes winning stallion by the Triple Crown winner Affirmed... the gelding had been an appendix Quarterhorse by a relatively unknown Quarterhorse Stallion out of a good Thoroughbred mare.
There is no replacement for the animal lost. There is also no replacement for Good Will.

by malndobe on 24 April 2012 - 13:04
by Blitzen on 24 April 2012 - 13:04

by Jenni78 on 24 April 2012 - 13:04
I had an seizure dog from a vaccine reaction and I took him off all processed food and never vaccinated him again, no tick or flea chemicals, etc. and he went from cluster seizures several times per week to one seizure every 6mos-1yr for the rest of his life. You can spend a ton of money and never find out why they happen. My guess on the OP pup would be the fever. My ex's brother had that; he had a high fever as a baby and had seizures ever since.

by starrchar on 24 April 2012 - 15:04
I agree that based on the contract the breeder has no legal obligation to replace the pup, but it just seems like the kind and compassionate thing to do. The owner is so conscientious and she loved that pup so much. The pup died at 10 months of age and all along the way, since she got the pup, the owner was consulting periodically with the breeder because she wanted to make sure she did everything exactly right. She thought she had a good relationship with the breeder, so when the breeder stated she wasn't giving her replacement pup we were all dissapointed and surprised.
I think it would make good business sense to replace the pup if nothing else. The owner was recommending this breeder to everyone who inquired about her pup and if the breeder had offered her a replacement pup or even tried to work out a compromise, she would have continued to do so in spite of going through the terrible ordeal with her pup that died.

by starrchar on 26 April 2012 - 13:04
I want to clarify my statement: I believe there is nothing the breeder did to intentionally or knowingly to cause this problem. I also strongly believe nothing knowingly occurred or was obvious while the puppy was in the possession of the breeder.
As a few people said on this thread that it's a good possibility the fever is what caused the seizures and ultimately the death of the puppy. If the fever or infection that caused the fever was what ultimately caused the death of the puppy, based on the contract, the breeder is not legally responsible to replace the pup. That said, it is likely that whatever caused the 106 degree fever was something that the puppy contracted before she was in the owner's possession, either while in the breeder's possession or during transport. Incubation period for most infections or viruses is typically a minimum of 5 days, according to my vet. I would not consider it the breeder's fault if this is what happened because even in the best of circumstances and environment stuff happens, but I still believe the right thing to do is replace the puppy.
If a breeder does all the proper health testing on the parents and thoroughly researches the dogs in the pedigree for health issues and a puppy from the breeding ends up with hip dysplasia or a heart defect it isn't the breeder's fault, but the breeder is still responsible to make things right with the puppy owner. In that case the breeder is legally bound to replace the puppy and do the right thing. In this horrible ordeal with my family member's puppy it is entirley up to the breeder to decide whether or not she wants to enforce the contract. She has to decide whether she wants to do the compassionate thing or the most profitable.
Thank you again to everyone who commented. I apologize for all the rambling, but if nothing else this has given me an opportunity to express myself and surprisingly it has helped me to start letting go, at least a little bit.

by aceofspades on 27 April 2012 - 00:04
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