The owner or person who has custody or control of any animal shall:
(1) 
Keep the animal in clean, sanitary, and healthy condition;
(2) 
Provide the animal sufficient nutritious and wholesome food, served to the animal in clean containers, to maintain the animal’s good health;
(3) 
Provide the animal a constant and adequate supply of fresh, clean, potable water served from a clean container that keeps the animal hydrated for environmental conditions;
(4) 
Provide the animal care and veterinarian medical treatment for injuries, parasites, and disease that is sufficient to maintain the animal in good health and minimize and prevent suffering;
(5) 
Maintain the animal’s shelter (pens, kennels, coops, fenced areas and enclosures of any kind) in sanitary condition, including, but not limited to, disposing of all animal waste promptly, and all pens and enclosures shall be cleaned as needed to prevent odors and not attract insects or other vermin or create a nuisance; and
(6) 
Provide the animal with adequate shelter that:
(A) 
Is large enough for the animal to enter, stand, turn around, and lie down in a natural manner;
(B) 
Keeps the animal dry;
(C) 
Provides the animal natural or artificial shade from direct sunlight;
(D) 
Protects the animal from excessive heat and cold and other adverse weather conditions; and
(E) 
Is adequately ventilated.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(a))
No person shall beat, cruelly ill-treat, torment, mentally abuse, overload, overwork, or otherwise abuse an animal, or cause, instigate or permit any dog fight, cock fight, or other combat between animals or between animals and humans.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(b))
It shall be unlawful for an owner or other person having custody or control of any animal to abandon such animal, including the abandonment of any animal at the animal control facility.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(c))
It shall be unlawful for a person other than a licensed veterinarian to crop a dog’s ears, dock an animal’s tail, or castrate an animal; provided, however, that this section shall not apply to normal livestock operations occurring within the city.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(d))
The operator of any motor vehicle which strikes or injures a domesticated animal shall stop and immediately render aid and report such incident to the animal control authority or the police.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(e))
A person commits an offense if the person ties or tethers a dog or other animal in an unenclosed front or back yard, or by a fixed point, chain, or tether so as to create, as determined by the animal control authority, an unhealthy situation for the animal or a potentially dangerous situation for a person or another animal. A person restraining a dog with a chain or tether shall attach the chain or tether to a properly fitted collar, not wrap a chain or tether directly around the animal’s neck.
(1) 
Use of restraint unreasonably limiting animal’s movement.
An owner may not leave an animal outside and unattended by use of a restraint that unreasonably limits the animal’s movement:
(A) 
Between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.;
(B) 
Within 500 feet of the premises of a school; or
(C) 
In the case of extreme weather conditions, including conditions in which:
(i) 
The actual or effective outdoor temperature is below 32 degrees Fahrenheit;
(ii) 
A heat advisory has been issued by a local or state authority or jurisdiction; or
(iii) 
A hurricane, tropical storm, or tornado warning has been issued for the jurisdiction by the National Weather Service.
(2) 
Definition of restraint unreasonably limiting animal’s movement.
A restraint unreasonably limits an animal’s movement if the restraint:
(A) 
Uses a collar that is pinch-type, prong-type, or choke-type or that is not properly fitted to the animal;
(B) 
Is a length shorter than the greater of:
(i) 
Five times the length of the animal, as measured from tip of the animal’s nose to the base of its tail; or
(ii) 
Ten feet;
(C) 
Is in an unsafe condition; or
(D) 
Causes injury to the animal.
(3) 
Exceptions.
Subsections (2)(B)(i) and (2)(B)(ii) of this section do not apply to:
(A) 
An animal restrained to a running line, pulley, or trolley system and that is not restrained to the running line, pulley, or trolley system by means of a pinch-type, prong-type, choke-type, or improperly fitted collar;
(B) 
An animal restrained in compliance with the requirements of a camping or recreational area as defined by a federal, state, or local authority or jurisdiction;
(C) 
An animal restrained for a reasonable period, not to exceed three hours in a 24-hour period, and no longer than is necessary for the owner to complete a temporary task that requires the animal to be restrained;
(D) 
An animal restrained while the owner is engaged in, or actively training for, an activity that is conducted pursuant to a valid license issued by the state if the activity for which the license is issued is associated with the use or presence of the animal;
(E) 
An animal restrained while the owner is engaged in conduct directly related to the business of shepherding or herding cattle or livestock; or
(F) 
An animal restrained while the owner is engaged in conduct directly relating to the business of cultivating agricultural products, if the restraint is reasonably necessary for the safety of the animal.
(4) 
Conditions for restrained animal.
A restrained animal must have access to water and shelter from the elements, have a restraint that does not become entangled, and stay within the owner’s property.
(5) 
Violations; penalty.
(A) 
A peace officer or animal control officer who has probable cause to believe that an owner is violating this article shall provide the owner with a written statement of that fact. The statement must be signed by the officer and plainly state the date on which and the time at which the statement is provided to the owner.
(B) 
A person commits an offense if the person is provided a statement as described in subsection (5)(A) and fails to comply with this article within 24 hours of the time the owner is provided the statement. An offense under this section is a class C misdemeanor.
(C) 
A person commits an offense if the person violates this article and has previously been convicted of an offense under this article. An offense under this section is a class B misdemeanor as provided in Texas Health and Safety Code, section 821.079.
(D) 
If a person fails to comply with this section with respect to more than one animal, the person’s conduct with respect to each animal constitutes a separate offense.
(E) 
If conduct constituting an offense under this section also constitutes an offense under any other law, the actor may be prosecuted under this section, the other law, or both.
(6) 
Hand-held leashes.
This section does not prohibit a person from walking an animal with a hand-held leash.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(f))
A person commits an offense if the person keeps a dog or other animal within a fence/enclosure which is in such a state of disrepair that the animal may escape or be injured or may pose a threat to passersby.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(g))
A person commits an offense if the person sells, offers for sale, barters or gives away as toys, premiums or novelties, baby chickens, ducklings or other fowl under three weeks old and rabbits under two months old, unless the manner or method of display is first approved by the animal control authority.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(h))
A person commits an offense if the person colors, dyes, stains or otherwise changes the natural color of any chickens, ducklings, other fowl or rabbits, or possesses, for the purpose of sale or to be given away, any of the above-mentioned animals which have been so colored.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(i))
A person commits an offense if the person gives away or auctions any animal as a prize for or as an inducement to enter any contest, game or competition, or as an inducement to enter a place of amusement, or offers such animal as an incentive to enter into any business establishment whereby the offer was for the purpose of attracting trade.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(j))
No person may hunt, trap, wound, kill, maim, torture or otherwise threaten the health and safety of any indigenous wild animal in the city limits, excluding the trapping of nuisance wildlife under the authorization and supervision of the animal control authority; also excluding any person who holds a seasonal hunting license for a species for which there exists a hunting season, and that person’s hunting activities occur on property which is properly zoned, and the property owner’s permission has been granted for such activity; or a person holds proper permits issued by the animal control authority or Texas Parks and Wildlife.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(k))
A person commits an offense if the person leaves any animal in any standing or parked vehicle in such a way as to endanger the animal’s health, safety or welfare. The animal control authority or peace officer is authorized to use reasonable force to remove an animal from a vehicle whenever it appears the animal’s health, safety or welfare is or soon will be endangered, and said animal shall be impounded.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(l))
The animal control authority shall liberally utilize the authority granted by Texas Health and Safety Code, section 821.022 to seize and impound any animal, if the animal control authority has reason to believe that an animal has been or is being cruelly treated, pending a hearing before the municipal court on the issues of cruelty and disposition of the animal. Seizure of the subject animal prior to receiving a warrant is hereby authorized if such delay endangers the life of or would unreasonably prolong the suffering of the subject animal.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(m))
(a) 
Displaying animal.
A person commits an offense if the person displays any live animal for a commercial purpose on any roadside, public right-of-way, or commercial parking lot. Commercial purpose shall include, but not be limited to, intent to sell, trade, barter, lease, rent, or give away any live animal.
(b) 
Receiving animal.
A person commits an offense if the person receives any live animal through sale, trade, barter, lease, rent, or give-away conducted on any roadside, public right-of-way, or commercial parking lot.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(n))
A person commits a class A misdemeanor offense if that person violates V.T.C.A., Penal Code, section 42.09, 42.091, or 42.092, as currently written or as may be amended.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(o))
The animal control authority shall determine whether to file a violation of this article as a class C misdemeanor or class A misdemeanor, depending on the degree of abuse or neglect.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(p))
The actions prohibited by this article are in addition to any prohibitions existing elsewhere in this code or any applicable state or federal law. Nothing in this article shall be construed to limit any duty imposed on an owner by any other provisions of this code or any applicable state or federal law.
(Ordinance 1089 adopted 7/11/17; 2004 Code, art. 2.1000(q))