In U.S., dog custody battles on the rise
London: In the United States, lawyers are reporting a sharp rise in the number of custody battles for family pets, says a telegraph report.
American courts are now regularly ruling on what should happen to dogs in divorce cases, making heart-wrenching decisions on which partner will get custody of the animal. "The incidents seem to be increasing markedly and judges have to deal with them," The Telegraph quoted Joyce Tischler of the Animal Legal Defense Fund.
For instance, Jennifer Keene, who not only faced the collapse of her marriage but dealt with the trauma of breaking up their canine family too. She and her husband were the owners of Moxxy, an Australian cattle dog, and Sixxy, a pointer mix. As part of their divorce, they agreed to take one dog each.
However, the experience was so depressing that the dog trainer from Beaverton in Oregon wrote a book to help other couples going through the same experience, We can't Stay Together for the Dogs.
Lorrie Elliot, an animal lawyer from Seattle said: "It would be much better if we had a law that said animals are more than property."
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siliconindia news bureau
Reader’s comments
Comment 1: Living in the US for many years, I've noticed people who don't have children are usually the ones that adopt a dog/pet to fill the void. It is very convenient and a lot less responsibility in involved than if they adopt children, which in itself is a complicated and difficult process. With that in perspective, it is not difficult to understand legal battles over dogs since essentially they are treated as children, perhaps more than children in some cases. Now why many people don't have children is another topic of dicussion needing a root-cause analysis! The resulting conclusion can very well be, " if people had children, then lawyers won't have pet custody cases to cash-in on! " :-)
Posted by : Abul Fazal - Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Posted by : Abul Fazal - Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Comment 2: This is the basic difference between US and other countries. While others are concerned about human children, the Americans are behind dogs at the time of divorce.
Posted by : Thomas - Monday, July 21, 2008
Posted by : Thomas - Monday, July 21, 2008
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