South Carolina Statutes
§ 47-3-920 — Definitions.
South Carolina § 47-3-920
This text of South Carolina § 47-3-920 (Definitions.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
S.C. Code Ann. § 47-3-920 (2026).
Text
For purposes of this article:
(1)"Guide dog" means a dog that is trained for the purpose of guiding blind persons or a dog trained for the purpose of assisting hearing impaired persons.
(2)"Humane euthanasia" means the termination of a terminally ill or critically injured guide dog or service animal's life by a means that produces a rapid and minimally painful death as provided in Section 47-3-420.
(3)"Notice" means an actual verbal or written warning prescribing the behavior of another person and a request that the person stop the behavior.
(4)(a) "Service animal" or "service animal-in-training" means an animal that is trained or that is being trained to do work or perform tasks for an individual with a disability, including a physical, sensory, psychiatric, intellectual, or other ment
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Legislative History
HISTORY: 2003 Act No. 37, SECTION 1, eff June 2, 2003; 2019 Act No. 44 (S.281), SECTIONS 3, 4, eff May 16, 2019. Editor's Note 2019 Act No. 44, preamble, provides as follows: "Whereas, service animals that are properly trained to assist persons with disabilities play a vital role in establishing independence for such persons; and "Whereas, the term 'service animal' has a distinct meaning in the law. A service animal means an animal that is trained for the purposes of assisting or accommodating the sensory, mental, or physical disability of a disabled person. Under the law, the provision of emotional support, well-being, comfort, or companionship does not constitute the work or tasks of a service animal; and "Whereas, no vest, other marking, or documentation is required for an animal to qualify as a service animal, nor are such vests, markings, or documentation a reliable indication of whether an animal is, by law, a service animal. People sometimes erroneously think that a therapy animal, an emotional support animal, or any animal wearing a vest or having any other type of marking is a service animal as defined by law; and "Whereas, there is an increasing number of occurrences in which people exploit the confusion related to service animals and attempt to bring an animal into a place that it would otherwise not be allowed to enter by passing off the pet, therapy animal, or emotional support animal as a service animal, either by oral misrepresentation, placement of a vest or other marking on the animal, or presentation of a 'certificate', despite knowing that it is not a service animal; and "Whereas, some companies mislead individuals into believing that they will be entitled to the rights or privileges for individuals with disabilities with service animals if they buy the company's vests or obtain some type of certificate. These misrepresentations, in some cases, are unlawful deceptive trade practices and compound the confusion around service animals; and "Whereas, commendably, federal and state laws require places of public accommodation, including airports, restaurants, theaters, stores, hospitals, and more, to allow any animal that is presented as a service animal into the place of public accommodation. These same places of public accommodation face a dilemma if someone enters the premises and intentionally misrepresents his animal as a service animal; and "Whereas, when people try to falsely represent a nonservice animal as a service animal, business owners and other places of public accommodation become increasingly distrustful that the animals being represented to them as service animals are, in fact, service animals. Misrepresentation of service animals delegitimizes the program and makes it harder for persons with disabilities to gain unquestioned acceptance of their legitimate, properly trained, and essential service animals. Now, therefore, [Text of Act]." Effect of Amendment 2019 Act No. 44, SECTION 3, rewrote (4). 2019 Act No. 44, SECTION 4, added (6) and (7), relating to the definitions of "Emotional support animal" and "Places of public accommodation".
Nearby Sections
15
§ 47-3-10
Definitions.§ 47-3-410
Animal shelter defined.§ 47-3-420
Methods of euthanasia.§ 47-3-430
Provision governing shelters.§ 47-3-440
Penalties; injunction.§ 47-3-450
Exceptions.Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
Bluebook (online)
South Carolina § 47-3-920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/sc/3/47-3-920.