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News story - woman awarded $45,000 for her cat's death



 
 
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  #1  
Old May 11th 05, 03:14 AM
Shahna
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Default News story - woman awarded $45,000 for her cat's death

Just in case there are some who haven't heard or read this news story.

-- Shahna & Shadow (two kitties who live 65 miles south of Seattle)

================================================== =====
Woman awarded $45,000 in cat death

Damages for dog mauling may be feline record
Monday, May 9, 2005

By JESSICA BLANCHARD
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER

A Seattle woman whose cat was mauled to death by a neighbor's dog was
awarded more than $45,000 last week in her wrongful-death lawsuit
against the dog's owner, her attorney announced yesterday.

It is likely the largest damage award in the nation relating to the
death of a cat, said her attorney, noted animal-law expert Adam Karp.

In the lawsuit, filed in Seattle District Court in November, Paula
Roemer alleged that her beloved 12-year-old black-and-white shorthair
cat, Yofi, was attacked and killed in her back yard in February 2004
by a black chow chow belonging to her neighbor.

She was so traumatized that she began having sleep disturbances and
panic attacks, sank into depression and began smoking heavily, she
wrote in a sworn declaration.

"We went to great pains to demonstrate how close she was to Yofi,"
said Karp, founder of the Washington State Bar Association's Animal
Law Section and an adjunct professor of animal law at Seattle
University and the University of Washington.

As a result, her compensation for the pet ties the record-high jury
award of $30,000 in a California veterinary malpractice suit,
Bluestone v. Bergstrom, for a pet's "unique" value, Karp said.

Judge Barbara Linde also awarded $15,000 for Roemer's emotional
distress.

Including cremation and counseling costs, the total award came to
$45,480.

Given that Roemer had to prove she was emotionally attached to the cat
and had suffered tremendously as a result of its death, the amount of
the award "doesn't strike me as that unreasonable," said torts expert
Louis Wolcher, a law professor at the University of Washington.

Traditionally the law treated pets as personal property, like a car or
oven.

But in recent years, the legal community has debated whether animals
should have independent status or be considered something more than
property.

And while common pets -- as opposed to show animals -- have not had a
high economic value, their sentimental value can be very high, Wolcher
said.

Now when damages are awarded for a pet's destruction, "you keep the
legal fiction that it's property, but you begin to treat it other than
something like just a toaster oven," he said.

The death of Roemer's cat was particularly upsetting because she had
rescued it during a trip to Israel about 12 years ago, when she found
the kitten abandoned and dying on the streets of Yaffo, court
documents say.

"I promised Yofi, out loud, every single day of her life, she would be
happy and never again hungry, thirsty, and miserable," Roemer wrote.
"My heart is tremendously heavy with sorrow and guilt that I could not
protect her from this fate."

The night of the attack, Roemer returned from walking her own dog to
find the neighbor's chow chow in her backyard garden, biting and
shaking her cat. The dog dropped Yofi and attempted to attack another
cat of Roemer's, but she was able to throw the cat into the house,
according to her sworn declaration.

She herded the dog out of her yard and searched frantically for Yofi.
When she found the cat, it was so mangled that she almost couldn't
identify it, she wrote in court documents.

Roemer charged that her neighbor had allowed his dogs to run loose
repeatedly and had not built a fence as promised. The neighbor lost
the suit by default, without defending against it, court records show.
And Karp said the man pleaded guilty to negligent control of an
animal, a misdemeanor, in connection with the dog's attack. The
neighbor could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Karp said the $45,480 award is significant partly because it's the
first to indicate that feline companions are as valuable as canines.
Americans' tendency to value dogs more than cats "is just completely
insane," he said.

"For people who live alone -- they're retired, they're elderly -- this
is their family," he said. When their loved one is lost, "the impact
is severe."

The fact that the judgment in Roemer's case came from a judge rather
than a jury was significant, said Wolcher, the professor.

"Jurors can be expected to be swayed by emotional factors," he said.
"But you like to think that judges are more sober."

Whether the judgment will affect future cases is uncertain, Wolcher
said. But it will certainly spark interest in the legal community, he
said.

And if nothing else, "people are going to make sure they lock up their
dogs."

P-I reporter Jessica Blanchard can be reached at 206-448-8322 or


© 1998-2005 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
  #2  
Old May 11th 05, 01:14 PM
whayface
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On Tue, 10 May 2005 19:14:45 -0700, Shahna shahna1 at juno dotcom wrote:


In the lawsuit, filed in Seattle District Court in November, Paula
Roemer alleged that her beloved 12-year-old black-and-white shorthair
cat, Yofi, was attacked and killed in her back yard in February 2004
by a black chow chow belonging to her neighbor.

She was so traumatized that she began having sleep disturbances and
panic attacks, sank into depression and began smoking heavily, she
wrote in a sworn declaration.

"We went to great pains to demonstrate how close she was to Yofi,"
said Karp, founder of the Washington State Bar Association's Animal
Law Section and an adjunct professor of animal law at Seattle
University and the University of Washington.



She should have kept them indoors if she was so close to them, especially while out
walking her dog, since she knew the neighbors had a dog that ran loose !!! She needs to
shoulder part of the blame !!




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