For the purposes of this chapter, the following words and phrases shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this section:
Admission; liberty to approach.
The dumping, deserting or leaving of any animal on public or private property with the intent of terminating any further responsibility for the animal; or failing to properly redeem any animal impounded or quarantined by the city.
The purchase of a dog or cat from the City of Seagoville for pet purposes.
A governmental animal control or animal services department, or any organization approved by the animal control authority and registered with the city that shelters animals for the purpose of protection, rescue and eventual placement in a home where proper care can be given to the animal.
A person or persons, or an establishment authorized by the chief of police for confinement, maintenance, safekeeping and control of dogs, cats or other animals which come into custody of the city in the performance of their official duties and to enforce the provisions of this chapter.
An animal that is specially trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a disability or by the virtue of a natural aptitude or acquired ability is able to provide therapeutic treatment, mitigation, safety or rescue.
Felis catus.
A domesticated fowl that is commonly raised by people for its eggs and meat; a hen or a rooster.
All domesticated members of the family Canidae, but shall not include wolves, jackals, foxes or any other wild or dangerous member of such family. An adult dog is one which is more than six (6) months of age.
Livestock;
A dog;
A cat;
A ferret;
Any bird, other than one in the Falconiforms or Strigiforms Order, that is commonly kept as a human’s companion;
Any “pocket pet,” such as a mouse, hamster, gerbil, guinea pig, or rabbit, that is commonly kept as a human’s companion;
Any fish, such as a goldfish or tropical fish, that is commonly kept as a human’s companion; and
Any nonvenomous and nonconstrictor reptile or amphibian that is commonly kept as a human’s companion.
A humane painless method to end life for animals including those suffering, injured, contagious, or sick or as required by any state or federal law, as it currently exists or may be amended.
Any homeless, wild, or untamed cat.
A female chicken.
Any person who intentionally or unintentionally causes or allows the breeding or studding of a dog or a cat or engages in the breeding of more than 1 (one) litter of dogs and/or cats per household or premises per calendar year, whether or not such animal(s) are made available for sale, adoption, or other placement.
A product of the mating of two (2) different species of animals regardless of the number of generations born since the original mating.
Any treatment to any animal which deprives the animal of necessary substance including food, water or protection from weather, or any treatment of any animal such as overloading, overworking, tormenting, beating, mutilating or teasing, or other abnormal treatment as may be determined by the animal services department or a law enforcement officer.
The harboring or owning of dogs or cats permanently located or living at any location within the city.
House of shelter; place where animals are bred or lodged.
A litter consists of one (1) or more puppies or kittens.
Any horses, mules, donkeys, ponies, cattle, bulls, sheep, goats, hogs, pigs, of any and all kinds regardless of sex.
The person designated by the city council in accordance with Texas Health and Safety Code § 826.017.
A passive electronic device that is injected into an animal by means of a hypodermic-type syringe device. Each microchip shall contain a unique and original number that is read by an electronic scanning device for purposes of animal identification and recovery by the animal’s owners.
Any person who owns, keeps. shelters, maintains, feeds, harbors or has temporary or permanent custody of a domestic or prohibited animal, or who knowingly permits a domestic or prohibited animal to remain on or about any premises occupied by that person over which that person has control. An animal shall be deemed to be owned by a person who harbored it, fed it, or sheltered it for five (5) consecutive days or more. If a person under the age of seventeen (17) years owns an animal subject to the provisions of this chapter, the head of the household of which such person under the age of seventeen (17) years is a member shall be the person responsible for the animal under this chapter. Such household head may himself be under the age of seventeen (17) years and therefore subject to prosecution under this chapter. There may be more than one (1) person responsible for an animal.
Small enclosure; closely confined; shut up.
Any individual, firm, partnership, association, corporation or other legal entity.
Any animal, except birds kept in a cage or aviary that is not regulated by international, federal or state law, or common domestic species which include gerbils, hamsters, guinea pigs or laboratory mice or rats, and regardless of state or duration of captivity, that poses a potential physical or disease threat to the public or that is protected by international, federal or state regulations, including but not limited to the following:
Class reptilian.
Family Helodermatidea (venomous lizards); Family Viperidae (rattlesnakes, copperheads, cottonmouths, other pit vipers and true vipers); Family Elapidae (coral snakes. cobras, mambas, and other elapids); the following listed species of Family Colubridae-Dispholidus typus (Boomslang), Hyrodynastes gigas (water cobra), Boiga (mangrove snake), and Thelotornis (African twig snake) only; Order Phidia, Family Boidae (racers, boas, water snakes, and pythons); and Order Crocodilia (crocodiles. alligators, caimans, and gavials);
Class Aves.
Order Falconiforms (such as hawks, eagles, and vultures); Subdivision Ratitae (such as ostriches, rheas, cassowaries, and emus); and Order Strigiforms (such as owls);
Class Mammalia.
Order Carnivora, Family Felidae (such as ocelots, margays, tigers, jaguars, leopards, and cougars), except commonly accepted domesticated cats; Family Canidae (such as wolves, wolf-dog hybrids, dingos, coyotes, and jackals), except domesticated dogs; Family Mustelidae (such as weasels, skunks, martens, mink, and badgers), except ferrets; Family Procyonidae (raccoon); Family Ursidae (such as bears); Order Marsupialia (such as kangaroos and common opossums); Order Edentata (such as sloths, anteaters, and armadillos); Order Proboscidea (elephants); Order Primata (such as monkeys, chimpanzees, and gorillas); Order Rodentia (such as porcupines); and Order Ungulata (such as antelope, deer, bison, and camels); and
Animals not listed.
The animal services director may declare any species of animal not listed in this subsection as “prohibited” if the confinement of the animal within the city can be shown to constitute a threat to public health and safety.
Dogs which are less than six (6) months of age.
A nonprofit organization with a 501(c)3 approved by the animal services department and registered with the city that shelters animals for the purpose of protection, rescue, and eventual placement in a home where proper care can be given to the animal.
A business that regularly sells animals for pet purposes to an ultimate owner. The term includes any owner, operator, agent, or employee of the business.
To wander about.
An adult male chicken.
A fenced area or structure that is:
Locked;
Capable of preventing the entry of the general public, including children;
Capable of preventing the escape or release of a dog;
Clearly marked as containing a dangerous dog; and
In conformance with the requirements for enclosures established by the animal services department.
Any physical injury that involves a substantial risk of death, disfigurement, or impairment of any part of the body, including but not limited to a broken bone or a laceration requiring either multiple stitches or cosmetic surgery.
Has the same meaning as assistance animal.
Shelter for a dog that shall effectively protect the animal from any form of cold, overheating, inclement weather and direct effects of wind, rain, snow, ice or the sun. By way of example, and not limitation, a shelter may consist of a three-sided structure with a roof that is nailed together to prevent any wind from coming through. The shelter should be on a low platform to keep it off the ground. The shelter shall provide shade during hot weather months with provisions for cooling the animal when temperatures exceed ninety (90) degrees Fahrenheit. During temperatures fifty (50) degrees Fahrenheit or lower auxiliary heat or clean, dry bedding material shall be provided for insulation against the cold and replaced as needed.
An animal rendered incalculable of reproduction.
An unrestrained domestic animal outside the boundaries of the premises owned, leased, or legally occupied by the animal’s own.
An injection of the United States Department of Agriculture approved rabies vaccine administered by a licensed veterinarian.
A veterinarian licensed to practice veterinary medicine in one (1) or more of the fifty (50) states or a person who practices veterinary medicine on an installation of the armed forces or National Guard.
Any animal not normally considered domesticated regardless of the state or duration of captivity, that can typically be found in a wild state which, because of its size, vicious nature, potential disease threat, or other natural characteristic(s), would constitute a danger to human life, property or domestic animals, or any animal that is restricted from ownership by any international, federal, or state law including, but not limited to, the following animals:
Reptiles.
Venomous reptiles, crocodiles, alligators, any reptile that typically reaches a total length greater than eight (8) feet, and iguanas;
Birds.
Emus, ostriches, or rheas;
Mammals.
Ocelots, lions, tigers, jaguars, leopards, cougars, bobcats, wolves, dingoes, coyotes, jackals, elephants, armadillos, kangaroos, wallabies, wallaroos, opossums, beavers, porcupines, weasels, martins, minks, badgers, pandas, bears, racoons, bats, foxes, skunks, cheetahs, servals, caracals, hyenas, squirrels, wild rabbits, or nonhuman primates;
Any species illegal to own under federal or state law, or nay animal which is, or may be hereafter, listed as a “high risk” animal in the Texas Rabies Control Act;
Any hybrid of any animal classified as a wild animal.
Nonnative wildlife that present a serious threat to public health or safety including, but not limited to, chimpanzees, gorillas, gibbons, drills, mandrills, orangutans, baboons, siamangs, cheetahs, leopards, jaguars, tigers, lions, cougars, panthers, bears, rhinoceros, elephants, hippopotamuses, alligators, crocodiles (except dwarf), gavials, black caimans, Komodo dragons, venomous reptiles, Africa golden cats, African hunting dogs, and any hybrid of any animal classified as a wild animal class. For the purposes of this chapter, all wild animals class I are wild animals by definition and subject to regulation as either or both.
Native wildlife that present as serious threat to public health or safety, including, but not limited to, bobcats, coyotes, wolves, cougars, bears, alligators, wild hogs (also known as “feral hogs”), rattlesnakes (any species), copperhead snakes, cottonmouth snakes, coral snakes, Massasaugas, other venomous reptiles, badgers, coatis, fox (any species), javelina, racoons, skunks (any species), and any hybrid of any animal classified as a wild animal class II.
An organization that has met all of the state and federal requirements to possess and display wild or domestic animals for educational purposes.
A person holding all current state and/or federal permits needed to temporarily house allowed native wild animal species in his or her possession with the goal of rehabilitating the animal(s) and releasing it back into its natural habitat in accordance with all state and federal laws.
Any temporary spectacle, display, event exhibition, or act where the operator has met all state and federal requirements to possess and display domestic, wild, or wild class I animals for educational purposes.
Any facility other than a pet shop or kennel, displaying or exhibiting one or more species of nondomesticated animals, operated by a person, partnership, corporation or governmental agency.
(1977 Code, sec. 4-1; Ordinance 25-2017 adopted 11/6/17; Ordinance 05-2018 adopted 3/5/18; Ordinance 28-2018 adopted 12/3/18)