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Can you be held responsible if a dog that you trained six months
ago bites a person today? If dogs belonging to your clients bite one another, Or if you adopt-out a dog and it bites its
owner? Attorney Kenneth Phillips - the country's leading authority in dog bite law - says that you can, and that these are
only three out of dozens of scenarios where canine professionals are vulnerable from a legal standpoint. However, he also
knows how you can avoid liability, too. And that is the subject of a new video. |
Phillips is now being featured in a DVD / CD-ROM package that you should
seriously consider buying. It is called Avoiding Liability When You Train, Shelter or Adopt-Out, and its price tag
is minimal, especially when you consider what it will get you: peace of mind. The DVD is a 90-minute seminar that teaches
trainers, rescue and adoption organizations, and shelters how to avoid liability for accidents. Phillips takes an approach
that combines two things: safe practices and properly drafted contacts, waivers and company policies.
Don't worry: you don't have to sit down and watch this video with your lawyer, because it comes with a CD-ROM that
contains all the legal documents that Phillips talks about!
He drafted all of them, especially for this package. You can print them out as is, customize them in your word processor,
or combine them with the documents you already are using.
For the price of this DVD / CD-ROM set, you would get about 15 minutes of a good attorneys time. Spend that money
here, and you will have 90 minutes of a GREAT attorneys time plus a Training Agreement, Adoption Agreement, Waiver for
Entry on Premises, Bailment Agreement for Surrender of Dog, and Policy and Procedures for Observing and Reporting Problems
with Dogs.
What You Will Receive:
This is a multimedia presentation that includes seven essential items for your protection:
- Seminar on DVD. A one and one-half hour seminar on DVD, taped by Tawzer Dog Videos in which Attorney Kenneth
Phillips covers the five most troublesome legal issues for canine pros: liability for dog bites and negligence; avoiding
liability for dog bites on your premises; avoiding liability after adopting out a dog; the liability of a client to you if
his dog bites you; and the special rules for animal control agencies and humane societies.
- Seminar Outline on CD-ROM. This outline was the script for the presentation. You can print it out from your
computer and refer to it when watching the DVD.
- Legal Documents on CD-ROM. Five essential legal documents for your protection: Dog Training Agreement, Waiver and
Release for Entry to Premises, Bailment Agreement for Surrender of Dog, Adoption Agreement, and Policy and Procedures for
Observing and Reporting Problems with Dogs. Written by Attorney Phillips, they are formatted to be printed from your
computer or revised in your word processor (i.e., .pdf and .rtf files).
Why You Need These Documents:
Trainers, shelters and adoption organizations can be held liable for serious dog attacks that happen when the dog is long
gone. However, you can avoid liability with the right procedures and legal documents:
- The Dog Training Agreement will help keep you from being liable for bites and other things that might happen after
the dog completes your training. It also helps to avoid liability for accidents that can happen during training and around
your premises. Furthermore, it makes the client liable to you and your employees if his dog injures any of you! These are
just a few of the features of this thorough contract.
- The Waiver and Release for Entry to Premises helps to shield you from liability for accidents that happen on your
property. It protects you from claims by clients and their guests. It is simple to use and is very thorough.
- The Bailment Agreement for Surrender of Dog is essential for shelters, rescues and adoption agencies in the 30
states that have strict liability dog bite statutes. Normally, your organization takes ownership of a dog, but that make
you liable for bites, because liability goes along with ownership. However, with this bailment agreement, you can have
custody and control of the dog without fearing liability under the state dog bite law.
- The Policy and Procedures for Observing and Reporting Problems with Dogs will help avoid some of the most
embarrassing and damaging lawsuits that now face shelters, rescues and adoption organizations. This document institutes a
reasonable policy for gathering information about potentially dangerous dogs, and sharing that information with those who
may adopt the dog. Following the policy will help protect you from liability for injuries inflicted by a dog that you
adopt-out.
- The Adoption Agreement limits your exposure to claims that you misrepresented anything about a dog. Unfortunately,
even an innocent misrepresentation can make you legally responsible for bites and other problems; long after you adopt-out
a dog. This agreement will help keep you lawsuit-free by providing appropriate disclosures, and making the new owner
assume the risks presented by the dog.
DISCLAIMER:
You should not change a single word of any of the Avoiding Liability documents unless your attorney first tells you it
would be acceptable legally, and then, after making the change, he or she reviews it and confirms that it is acceptable.
These legal documents cover common issues, but your own business or agency may have peculiar ones. For that reason, you
are strongly advised to ask your own attorney whether the documents should be supplemented or modified. They are without
warranty, guarantee or promise of immunity. Neither they nor any other legal measure can eliminate the possibility of a
lawsuit. No document will protect you if you adopt it but then fail to abide by it or you breach it. |
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