Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Court Upholds Quebec Family's Right To Know Who Adopted Their Beloved Cat Sundae

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Oct, 2018 01:39 PM
  • Court Upholds Quebec Family's Right To Know Who Adopted Their Beloved Cat Sundae
MONTREAL — A search for a cat has ended in Quebec's highest court with a ruling this week that an animal shelter must divulge the identity of the family that took in the missing pet.
 
 
The Quebec Court of Appeal upheld a lower court decision ordering that the name and contact information of the adoptive family be handed over to the animal's owner.
 
 
The ruling says Sundae, who has been owned by Axel Boucart since 2009, wandered off from the family home in Trois-Rivieres, Que. without his collar or tag "on or about" April 13 this year.
 
 
"Sundae is the epitome of feline sociability," the family wrote on Facebook after the orange-and-white calico cat disappeared. "He goes to people, sticks to them and even invites them to supper and sometimes to bed."
 
 
They described him as "a loving, cuddly and purring mega cat."
 
 
The family said the cat was a roamer, so they were not alarmed when he disappeared for a day or two.
 
 
But after he failed to turn up after more than a week, they reported Sundae missing on April 23 to the SPA Mauricie animal shelter.
 
 
On May 28, the family was told the cat was at the shelter. A day later, they learned the cat was in fact already living with its new adoptive family.
 
 
Last month, a Quebec court judge in Trois-Rivieres ordered the SPA Mauricie to hand over contact information for Sundae's new family. But the animal shelter refused and sought to appeal the matter. It claimed Quebec's privacy laws prevent it from disclosing the information.
 
 
Appeal Court Justice Robert Mainville rejected the privacy argument, saying it wasn't relevant.
 
 
He ruled that Boucart has the right to obtain from the shelter "information concerning the name and contact information of the family that would have adopted the cat, in order to try to recover it."
 
 
Sundae has not yet found his way home according to a Facebook post Thursday from Boucart, who declined further comment.
 
 
The SPA Mauricie did not return the calls from The Canadian Press.

MORE National ARTICLES

Real Estate Board Reports Metro Vancouver Home Sales Down Sharply

Real Estate Board Reports Metro Vancouver Home Sales Down Sharply
The benchmark price for a detached home was $1,540,900, a 4.5 per cent decrease from September 2017 and a 3.4 per cent skid over the last three months.

Real Estate Board Reports Metro Vancouver Home Sales Down Sharply

Canadian Cities Consider Drinking In Public Parks Ahead Of Cannabis Legalization

Canadian Cities Consider Drinking In Public Parks Ahead Of Cannabis Legalization
"I think a lot of people who want to have a bottle of wine in a public park on a Sunday are probably going to be doing that anyway," said Mitchell Kosny, interim director of Ryerson University's School of Urban and Regional Planning.

Canadian Cities Consider Drinking In Public Parks Ahead Of Cannabis Legalization

Toronto Police To Expand Neighbourhood Officer Program Amid Spate Of Shootings

Toronto's police service is set to expand an existing neighbourhood officer program in an effort to "build trust and reduce crime," but critics say it's unlikely to do either.

Toronto Police To Expand Neighbourhood Officer Program Amid Spate Of Shootings

Slide Near Site C Dam In Northeastern B.C. Cuts Road, Prompts Limited Evacuation

Slide Near Site C Dam In Northeastern B.C. Cuts Road, Prompts Limited Evacuation
FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. — A landslide in northeastern British Columbia near a gate to the Site C hydroelectric project has damaged a road, isolated a small community and forced the evacuation of two properties.

Slide Near Site C Dam In Northeastern B.C. Cuts Road, Prompts Limited Evacuation

Singh Puts On Brave Face One Year In As NDP Faces Existential Questions

Singh Puts On Brave Face One Year In As NDP Faces Existential Questions
OTTAWA — One year ago, Jagmeet Singh was being hoisted into the air at a packed Toronto hotel as NDP leadership results rolled in.

Singh Puts On Brave Face One Year In As NDP Faces Existential Questions

Walmart Fined $20K For Selling Contaminated Food After Fort McMurray Wildfire

Walmart Canada has been ordered to pay a $20,000 fine for selling contaminated food after a devastating wildfire in northern Alberta two years ago.

Walmart Fined $20K For Selling Contaminated Food After Fort McMurray Wildfire