My dictionary says the same Laura but livestock is not a washing machine or
TV and even the warranties for them usually says something about the
warranty not being honoured if the product is misused

So therefore Laura from what you are saying - if a puppy that you sell does
not turn out to be show quality you will recompense the purchaser - even if
said puppy has not come up to par because of incorrect feeding, exercise (to
much or to little) or general lack of care or heeding of advice on the part
of the new owner?
As I said before you cannot in my opinion state categorically that a puppy
is show quality until it is shown against its peers and been successful -
prior to that it has "show potential" and much of the care and preparation
is in the hands of the new owner not of the breeder
re MVD would you still recompense someone whose Cavalier dies at 6 or 7 even
if you knew said dog was grossly over weight, was unfit due to inadequate
exercise , fed inappropriately in fact led the sort of life that was bound
to exacerbate the dog's heart condition?
Just curious!

Annette
----- Original Message -----
From: "Laura Trunk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, June 14, 2002 4:00 PM
Subject: Re: [CKCS-L] question on warrantees


> My dictionary states that a guarantee or warranty is an "assurance by a
> seller that goods or property will be repaired or replaced if not as
> represented".
>
> I think if someone buys and pays for a show puppy that will be healthy
> enough to be bred later and quality enough to be shown--there should be
some
> type of guarantee/warranty if that puppy does not turn out as hoped.  This
> is not to say the puppy WILL turn out, but it is an assurance that the
buyer
> will get what they paid for.   If their show/breeding prospect turns out
to
> only be a pet--then I believe they should have to only pay for a pet.
>
> My guarantee/warranty is that if the puppy does not turn out, the
difference
> in price between show puppy and pet puppy will be refunded, and the owner
> may keep the dog--these are live animals who feel after all, not inanimate
> objects.  If there is a health problem involved, then my health
> guarantee/warranty kicks in.  In the case of MVD, I do nothing unless the
> dog dies before a certain age because so many, even with early onset MVD,
> live a normal lifespan without major expense beyond what the average dog
> would cost.  If they do die early, then money is refunded.   Again, I
think
> it is only fair they get what they paid for. To me, if ones Cavalier dies
> from MVD at age 6 or 7--that person did NOT get what they paid for and
some
> refund of money should be expected.
>
> Laura Lang
>
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