A bill -of-sale is simply a receipt. Lots of times horses are bought and sold without a bill-of-sale. Typically, having the horse is the only proof of ownership a lot of owners have. If the horse has registration papers, there is a detailed description of the horse and if you have the papers it's pretty much proof of ownership but not always. I took in a horse whose owner was about to give him up to a rescue. I had no bill-of-sale and his former owner kept his papers. It's made no difference to me and the vet bills still come to me ;-) . A bill-of-sale, especially with a very detailed description of name, age, markings, former owner and new owner, will help if ownership is in question but it's no guaranty.
2007-01-05 13:12:45
·
answer #1
·
answered by Give life. Be an organ donor! 4
·
12⤊
0⤋
Usually when a person buys a horse they do get a receipt and work out a contract that spells out the terms of the sale. If a horse is not registered with a breed association then a "bill of sale" or receipt is usually typed up to distinguish ownership. Any horse sold at an auction has a consignment form that tells who consigned the horse to sale and who bought it. Many breed registries have a form that you can fill out to transfer ownership if you cannot do so right on the registration papers. Hope this helps.
2007-01-05 13:22:17
·
answer #2
·
answered by ml_lansing 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
a bill of sale is showing that you payed for the horse. it shows the previous owner, the current owner, & a little about the horse. so yes it proves your ownership. you should always ask for a bill of sale when you buy a horse!
2007-01-05 13:17:07
·
answer #3
·
answered by redneck/cowgirl 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Usually their registration papers are transferred into the new owners name showing current ownership. It is certainly not unheard, and recommended, to get a receipt or bill of sale showing the transaction whether they have papers or not.
Also there are other means, such as branding. Having a unique freeze brand on your horse will also register it into your name/farm. Race horses are tattoo'd in their upper lip. Mirco chipping is also available in horses, registering them to you and having that transferred with change of ownership.
2007-01-05 12:23:44
·
answer #4
·
answered by Lotsa Lops 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
I had a bill of sale and also kept all my vet records. I've had the regisn. fm the dpt. of Ag. to prove ownership.
2007-01-05 12:50:30
·
answer #5
·
answered by Dotr 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
you may want to not own the pony. i understand you don't like that answer, inspite of the indisputable fact that this is the perfect one. If the seller had no good to promote the pony to you, it would want to not be yours. to boot to the different remedies stated right here, inspite of the indisputable fact that, think about rights to the pony lower than the doctrine of inauspicious possession. even as it truly is accepted for actual sources (frequently favourite as "squatter's rights"), it truly is often accessible for extraordinarily own sources (which a horse is), too. The regulation on AP varies by state and, even as you're able to do slightly diagnosis on the internet on your own, really a legal professional is going to be able to respond to your question definitively. different remedies, alongside with, e.g., a "caretaker's lien," will in all likelihood also be very efficient. ultimately, a suggestion: evaluate sending this human being a letter inquiring for a reaction. Make NO admissions contained in the letter yet say, e.g., "You suggested X and Y and Z" (laying out what they have instructed you so some distance). also, ask them for copies of any documentation that they have got. This letter might want to serve 2 applications. (a million) you will get their tale "instantly." If this does land up going to courtroom, you may have both their reaction letter (troublesome to regulate a narrative dedicated to paper already) or their failure to reply (it truly is often an admission in itself -- as an celebration, if I ask "did you homicide X?" and also you're saying not something the position maximum folk might want to have objected in the journey that they did not homicide X, your failure to reply can each so often be considered an admission that you murdered X). (2) perhaps, merely perhaps, you will get some documentation out of those human beings (yet I doubt it because, frankly, they in all likelihood are crooks.) it truly is only a suitable level view. do not count number on it as legal suggestion. search for information approved on your state for a definitive answer. best of success -- stay secure!
2016-12-01 21:33:49
·
answer #6
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
I USUALLY HAVE A STAT. DEC. WRITTEN UP SO THAT ENSURES THE TRUE QUALITY AND A VET CHECK FOR SOUNDNESS......................
2007-01-09 00:09:49
·
answer #7
·
answered by Maley 3
·
0⤊
11⤋