Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 54— - TRANSPORTATION, SALE, AND HANDLING OF CERTAIN ANIMALS › § 2158
Shelters and similar places must keep every dog or cat they get for at least five days so an owner can get it back or someone else can adopt it before the animal is sold to a dealer. The rule applies to city, county, or state pounds and shelters; private humane groups that care for animals or run under contract with a government pound; and research facilities licensed by the Department of Agriculture. A dealer cannot give or sell a random source dog or cat unless the buyer gets a valid certificate that shows the dealer and recipient information, a description of the animal (species/breed, sex, birth date if known, color and markings, and other details the Secretary requires), where and when the animal was obtained, and a statement that the pound or shelter held the animal for five days. The original certificate must travel with the animal and be kept by the research facility for at least one year; the dealer must also keep a copy for one year. Transfers between research facilities need a copy. The Secretary may allow modern ID methods like microchips if they record the same information. Dealers who break these rules or lie on certificates face penalties under section 2149. More than one violation brings a $5,000 fine per animal. Three or more violations lead to permanent loss of the dealer’s license. The Secretary had to create implementing rules within 180 days after November 28, 1990.
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Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 2158
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73