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Home » Teacup drama fizzles as Yorkie breeder cleared of misleading claims
Regulatory Law

Teacup drama fizzles as Yorkie breeder cleared of misleading claims

Appeals committee finds buyer received a healthy registered puppy and rules website advertising was not deceptive.
Kennedy MudzuliBy Kennedy MudzuliJanuary 31, 2026No Comments
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A buyer’s “teacup” complaint goes cold after the appeals committee finds the Yorkie breeder’s advertising was fair and not misleading.
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  • Advertising appeals committee ruled breeder’s website did not mislead consumers about pedigree, endorsements or puppy size descriptions.
  • Panel found private WhatsApp disputes are not advertising and cannot be judged under the advertising code.
  • The buyer received proper registration documents and a healthy puppy, with terms like teacup treated as informal marketing language.

What began as a frustrated puppy purchase ended with a clear message from regulators that the breeder’s advertising was fair, the paperwork was in order, and the puppy itself was exactly what it was supposed to be.

The Advertising Regulatory Board’s Advertising Appeals Committee has dismissed a consumer’s appeal against Darlington Yorkies, finding no misleading advertising on the breeder’s website and confirming that the dispute stemmed from personal expectations rather than deceptive marketing.

In a detailed ruling, the committee emphasised that the advertising code exists to police public claims, not to resolve private disagreements after a sale.

At its core, the case centred on misleading advertising, and the panel concluded there simply wasn’t any.

A personal disagreement, not a public deception

The buyer had purchased a small Yorkshire Terrier marketed as a “teacup” Yorkie and later felt the dog was larger than expected and overpriced. The breeder offered a full refund if the puppy was returned, but the parties could not agree on terms.

That disagreement spilled over into complaints about the breeder’s website, including references to pedigree registries, animal welfare bodies and the terminology used to describe the dogs. But the committee drew a firm boundary around what qualifies as advertising.

“The ARB is not a general consumer tribunal,” the panel said. “It does not adjudicate the fairness of prices, resolve contractual disputes, enforce company law or determine broader regulatory or policy questions.”

Much of the evidence consisted of WhatsApp chats and post sale exchanges, which the committee said were private. “These are all private communications about a specific transaction and do not constitute advertising,” it ruled. “They may be relevant in another forum, but they are not relevant here.”

No false endorsements

The buyer argued that references to the SPCA, NSPCA, KUSA, EKASA, Canine SA and Hill’s Pet Nutrition created the impression that the breeder was officially endorsed. The committee disagreed, finding that the website simply showed cooperation or product use.

It said the site “does not state or imply that SPCA or NSPCA endorses the advertiser” and that the Hill’s material communicates only that the breeder uses and recommends the brand.

On registration, the panel noted that buyers receive documentation confirming each puppy’s lineage and registry, and that the website includes a clear explanation. “Nothing about this suggests misleading or unsubstantiated advertising,” the ruling stated.

“Teacup” seen as informal language

One of the biggest concerns was the use of the word “teacup”, often associated with very small dogs and higher prices. The committee treated this as descriptive rather than a promise.

“‘Teacup’ and ‘pocket’ are informal descriptors with no recognised breed standard meaning,” it said, adding that “no objective weight or size guarantee is made in the public advertising”.

In other words, the term signals general size expectations, not a fixed measurement or guarantee. Without a specific promise, there was no basis to say the breeder had exaggerated the value of the puppy.

Photos and transparency

The complaint also alleged that similar puppy photographs appeared at different prices. The breeder explained that images are regularly updated and sometimes serve as examples of what a litter looks like.

The committee accepted that explanation, finding the pictures “appear to give a reasonable expectation of what the puppies will look like”. Importantly, each buyer receives individual certification tied to their specific dog, which confirms authenticity and lineage. That, the panel said, provides practical reassurance to consumers.

Appeal dismissed

After reviewing all submissions, the committee found no factual or legal mistake in the original decision. “In light of this, we find no material error of fact or law in the Directorate’s ruling,” the panel said. The appeal was dismissed.

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Kennedy Mudzuli

Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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