SnakeGirl3
New member
If this wasn't Brian at BHB (or another known breeder), a genetics guarantee from the breeder would not be sufficient "proof" of genetics if you sold the animal. Someone who buys a het should hold that animal until they prove it out and are certain that it is indeed a het before labeling it and selling it as such, regardless of paperwork from a breeder (even a breeder as well-known and respected a Brian). In this case, that should have been Cliff. Once he had proven the animal, selling it to David as a het and asking a higher price for it than your average spider would be perfectly acceptable, but the fact of the matter is, Cliff sold the snake based on an assumption (granted, one he should have been able to believe), not on proof from himself. In this case, I believe that Brian would have been liable for re-imbursing or re-supplying Cliff with another animal had Cliff kept and proven this animal himself as a non-het. But since Cliff sold it, Brian is responsible for nothing. Suppose Cliff switched the animal to a spider he had produced and was calling it the het he received from Brian? I do not know Cliff, and am not trying to accuse him of doing such, but my point is that from the original breeder's (Brian's) standpoint, he could argue that that's what happened and could have told you to forget it. But instead, Brian told you he would try to make it right, which to me speaks volumes about Brian. I'm not trying to necessarily defend Brian (as I have had no personal deals with him), and I do agree that Brian should have followed through in a much more timely manner since he did tell you he would try to make this right. But in the end, he sold the animal to Cliff, not to you.