Santa Clara County Title C (Animals) sets care standards and pet limits while California Penal Code §597 makes neglect or cruelty a crime. SCC Animal Services investigates hoarding with the Sheriff and District Attorney for seizure and prosecution.
In unincorporated Santa Clara County, County Code Title C governs animal care, licensing, and pet limits. Severe overcrowding, filthy conditions, malnutrition, or untreated illness shifts a case from administrative pet-limit enforcement to cruelty under California Penal Code §597, a wobbler that can be charged as a misdemeanor or felony. SCC Animal Services Authority partners with the Sheriff's Office and District Attorney to seize animals, document veterinary harm, and recover boarding and medical costs. Courts can order forfeiture and bar future ownership for years. Cities including San Jose and Sunnyvale run their own animal services with parallel cruelty referral pipelines.
Exceeding pet limits draws administrative citations and kennel-permit demands. Cruelty-level hoarding under Penal Code §597 brings misdemeanor or felony charges, animal seizure, mandatory vet-cost restitution, and court-ordered ownership bans lasting up to ten years.
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See how Santa Clara County's animal hoarding rules stack up against other locations.
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