Stray Dog Dispute Between Sam Hanson Fleming And Jordan Biggs Heads For Portland Courtroom (VIDEO)

CORVALLIS, Ore. — A Portland man says a 45-pound dog that leaped the fence of his house last year and vanished is named “Chase.”

The Oregon State University student who found a dog nearby and trained it to alert her when she’s about to have an asthma attack calls it “Bear.”

An animal control official says “Bear” is “Chase,” and that the Portland man should have his dog back. The woman has sued, asking a court to rule that she is the dog’s legal owner.

The confrontation over the ownership of the 2-year-old Siberian husky and mixed-breed dog arose by chance: Two months ago, Jordan Biggs was visiting in Portland and stopped for coffee at a coffee hut.

Sam Hanson-Fleming was in line and recognized the dog and its distinctive facial features. He says it recognized him, as well.

Hanson-Fleming says the two agreed to meet later for the return of the dog, but she told him by phone two days later she would not give up the dog.

Hanson-Fleming says he conducted an extensive search to find the dog. That included posting pictures on Craigslist and filing lost animal reports with Multnomah County Animal Services.

In a May interview with the Corvallis Gazette-Times, Biggs said that she had canvassed the neighborhood, posted fliers, called local animal shelters and checked Craigslist and other websites. She didn’t, however, contact the Oregon Humane Society or Multnomah County Animal Services. After a while, Biggs figured the dog was hers, and she took Bear to OSU with her.

“If she’d have gone door-to-door, she would have come to our house,” Hanson-Fleming told the paper.

Multnomah County Animal Services Director Mike Oswald investigated the dog’s ownership under a county code that grants him the authority to settle animal ownership disputes. On Tuesday, he determined that Hanson-Fleming is the rightful owner.

On Wednesday, however, prominent animal law lawyer Geordie Duckler, of Tigard, filed a suit asking a judge to rule Biggs the rightful owner. Duckler didn’t return a call for comment.

Earlier on HuffPost:

GALLERY: ANIMALS IN THE NEWS

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  • Animals In The News

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  • Woman Punches Bear to Save Dog

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  • Open Rabbit Sport Tournament

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  • Sprinkles the Koala

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  • Sprinkles the Koala

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  • Camel in the Family

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  • Camel in the Family

    Charlotte Anderson-Dixon pushes her 18-month-old son Reuben on the swing as Joe the camel watches.

  • Camel in the Family

    Nathan Anderson-Dixon, his wife Charlotte, their 18-month-old son Reuben, Joe the camel and a reindeer.

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  • Off-Road Alligator

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  • Insect with Singing Penis

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  • Elephant Votes in Thailand

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  • Deer With Wings

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  • World’s Biggest Bitch

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  • Antarctic penguin swims to New Zealand

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  • Two-headed Bearded Dragon

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  • Scientist Swims With Whales

    Natalia Avseenko swims with beluga whales in the White Sea off the coast of northern Russia.

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  • Sweden Moose on Loose

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  • Bear in Hot Tub

    Jenny Sue Rhoades sat down on her couch to watch television when something outside caught her eye. It was a large Florida black bear walking through the back yard of her Barry Court home in southwest Seminole County.

  • Heidi, The Cross-Eyed Possum

    German media sensation Heidi the cross-eyed opossum is presented to the press at the Leipzig Zoo on June 9, 2011. On July 1st, 2011 Leipzig Zoo will open the 20,000m2 “Gondwanaland Tropical Experience World” to the public – a near-natural home for 300 exotic animals and more than 17,000 tropical plants with Heidi being one of its inhabitants.

  • Trouble, The Millionaire Dog

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  • Earless Bunny

    A new-born rabbit without ears is held in Namie City, just outside the 30km exclusion zone of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station. The owner of the rabbit says it was born without ears on May 7.

  • Surf Dog

    A dog competes during the during the 6th annual Loews Coronado Bay resort surf dog competition in Imperial Beach, near San Diego on June 4, 2011.

  • Water Skiing Elephant Dies

    In this undated 1958 photo provided courtesy of Liz Dane, Dane is shown performing her act with Queenie the water skiing elephant. The Valdosta Daily Times reports that 59-year-old Queenie was euthanized Monday, June 2, 2011, after her health deteriorated.

  • Animals in the News

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  • China Liger Cubs

    In this photo taken on Thursday, May 19, 2011, a dog nurses two liger cubs at a zoo in Weihai in east China’s Shandong province. Cong Wen of Xixiakou Wildlife Zoo in eastern China says four cubs were born to a female tiger and a male lion on May 13. The tiger mom fed the ligers for four days then for unknown reasons abandoned them, she says. Chinese zoo workers brought in a dog to nurse them instead, but two died of weakness. (AP)

  • Horse plunges into crowd

    In this May 5, 2011 image provided by Animals Australia, a riderless horse plunges into a crowd of spectators after jumping a fence at the Warrnambool Grand National Steeple Chase at Warrnambool, Australia. An 80-year-old woman and a two-year-old boy are in stable condition in a hospital while 5 others were also injured.

  • Posing Praying Mantis

    Giant Malaysian Shield Praying Mantis pictured in Igor’s studio in Munich, Germany.

  • Roo the Reading Dog

    Roo the Reading Education Assistance Dog (R.E.A.D) helps a pupil at Graytown Elementary School in Graytown, Ohio.

  • Goose and Deer Become Unlikely Friend

    Wildlife experts in Buffalo, N.Y., have been amazed by an unusual springtime friendship between a deer and a nesting goose. It’s a relationship that has blossomed inside a cemetery.

  • Ride Cow Like a Horse

    When Regina Mayer’s parents refused to buy her a horse, the 15-year-old German girl trained Luna the cow to be a top-class riding companion. Not only do the two regularly go on long rides together through the picturesque southern German countryside, they even do jumps.

  • Elvis Bug

    Is it Elvis… or Bert from “Sesame Street”? This stink bug photographed in Singapore seems to be a fan of one of them — but it’s not clear which one.

  • Smokey the LOUD Cat

    Pet cat Smokey is believed to have the loudest purr in the world — with piercing purrs as loud as a lawnmower. Most cats purr at around 25 decibels but Smokey’s powerful purrs average an amazing 80 decibels. Owners Ruth and Mark Adams, of Northampton, Britain, say Smokey’s deafening purrs make it impossible for them to hear the television or radio when she is in the room and they struggle to have telephone conversations.

  • Camel Fight

    Afghan festival-goers watch as a “camel fight” starts during the second day of Persian new year, or “Nowruz,” celebrations in Mazar-e-Sharif, in northern Afghanistan.

  • Missing Rare Indian Star Tortoise

    Cheyenne Mountain Zoo’s Tutti is a rare Indian star tortoise. Butti, the zoo’s missing tortoise, looks similar to Tutti. The two are brothers and live at the zoo in Colorado Springs, Colo.

  • Sheep Dog

    This is a lamb in China that looks just like a dog. Farmers in Fugu County, in western China’s Shaanxi Province, were left open-mouthed when they saw the young animal running around their field. The lamb has a mouth, nose, paws and tail which look very similar to a dog’s features – but still has a white woolly coat.

  • Gibbon Betina

    Withe-handed gibbon mother Betina, 32, holds her 2-week-old baby at the Safari zoo in Ramat Gan near Tel Aviv on March 17. The birth of the gibbon surprised the zoo staff, as it had been 11 years since Betina last gave birth.

  • Big Litter

    Hania, a 4-year-old Great Dane, feeds her 3-day-old puppies in the Warsaw suburb of Nowa Iwiczna on March 17. Hania gave birth by cesarean section to 17 puppies.

  • Spider With Human Face

    A rare spider with a human face, known as a lichen crab spider, has been spotted at a nature reserve in Wareham, Dorset, England.

  • Britain’s Saddest Puppy

    Six-month-old puppy Princess has such delicate skin she can’t go outside. While other dogs run free at Britain’s Bleakholt Animal Sanctuary, Princess must gaze through the window. But this canine, otherwise known as Britain’s Saddest Puppy, has become a minor celebrity in the media.

  • Parrot on Roller Skates

    A parrot trained by Italian trainer Anthonie Zattu performs wearing a pair of rollerskates during the International Festival of Cirkus Art on Feb. 20, 2011, in Prague.

  • Charlie the Cat

    He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named? No, it’s Charlie — an unlucky cat who happens to look just like the evil Lord Voldemort from the “Harry Potter” films. Charity workers are trying to find a new home for the British kitty, who lost his nose and ears to skin cancer.

  • Silverback Strut

    Ambam, a silverback gorilla at the Port Lympne Wild Animal Park in Kent, England, shows off the stance that’s turned him into a viral video sensation. Ambam doesn’t do the typical ape walk — he stands and struts like a person.

  • Leaping Lemurs

    A group of lemurs encounters a unusual roadblock on the way to their feeding den: a turtle. The lemurs clearly don’t want to get into a territorial spat with the creature… so they take turns leaping over it in this photo sequence shot at the Indianapolis Zoo.

  • Heidi, The Cross-Eyed Possum

    Jeepers, creepers — where’d she get those peepers? Heidi the cross-eyed possum has become a media sensation in Germany.

  • Titanic Toad

    Of course she’s unhappy. Who likes getting weighed right after the holidays? This is Agathe, a cane toad, and she’s sitting on a toy scale during an annual animal inventory at the Hanover Zoo in Germany on Jan. 5. Agathe weighs a slight hop over 4 pounds.

  • Orange Gator

    Sylvia Mythen, a 74-year-old woman from Venice, Fla., snapped the photo of this orange alligator sunning itself by a pond near her home. Florida Wildlife Commission experts have analyzed the photo and determined that the reptile’s coloring is not genetic. Officials suspect the animal might be the victim of a prank but won’t know for sure until they can examine it.

  • Clothing a Battered Chicken

    Amy Leader with Sunny, a rescued chicken, in his newly-knitted sweater. Kind-hearted animal lovers have come to the rescue of a group of featherless chickens by knitting them their very own woolly sweaters. Sunny and his not-so-feathered friends were rehomed after being rescued from a poultry farm. Many of them are missing their plumage because the conditions they used to live in.

  • Rhino Cow

    A bizarre three-horned cow has proven itself to be a cash cow for a farmer in Baoding, in China’s Hebei province. Farmer Jia Kebing said the 2-year-old cow was born with a small bump on its head that has grown to be nearly 8 inches long and now resembles a rhino’s horn. “My farm has fame in this region for this cow, and people came in just paying a visit to this cow,” said Jia.

  • Monkey Macaw

    This lazy monkey hitches a ride to the top of a tree — by sitting on the back of a parrot. The squirrel monkey, which lives with a male and female parrot at a hotel in Colombia, was photographed by Alejandro Jaramillo after it hopped onto the macaw. These kinds of bizarre inter-species friendship aren’t unheard of, but they aren’t common.

  • Guru, the Hairless Chimp

    Looking almost like a bronze statue of a person, Guru the hairless chimpanzee eats in his enclosure at India’s Mysore Zoo. Guru lost all his hair to alopecia, a condition that can also affect humans.

  • Kangaroo’s Human Lifestyle

    Beemer the kangaroo has Vegemite on toast with a side salad of fresh-picked wild grasses, accompanied by adoptive “mother” Julianne “Julz” Bradley.

  • World’s Longest Cat

    Robin Henderson stretches her cat, Stewie, outside of her home in Reno, Nev. Stewie, a 5-year-old Maine Coon, has been accepted by Guinness World Records as the world’s longest cat at 48.5 inches long.

  • Bear Steals Car

    This photo shows a bear inside Ben Story’s car on July 23, in Larkspur, Colo. Story said the bear got into his empty car, honked the horn and sent it rolling into a thicket with the bear inside. Sheriff’s deputies released the bear using a rope to open the door.

  • Piggyback Monkey

    Miwa, a baby monkey, rides a young boar named Uribo in the Fukuchiyama City Zoo, in Kyoto, Japan, on Oct. 19. Both have been sheltered by the zoo since June after losing their mothers

  • Rare Lobsters

    The odds of seeing these three together are roughly 1 in 900 quintillion — but a series of timely donations has allowed Connecticut’s Maritime Aquarium to put together one of the most unusual lobster displays ever. While the blue lobster is a 1 in a million catch, the orange and calico are even rarer — with the odds of finding them roughly 1 in 30 million.

  • Pink Kitty

    This kitty isn’t naturally pink. The cat’s owner, Natasha Gregory of Britain told The Sun that she wanted her pet “to match my hair.” The 22-year-old also has a shocking dye job.

  • Yoga Bear

    There’s Yogi Bear, and there’s yoga bear. Meet Santra, a female brown bear at the Ahtari Zoo in Finland, famous for her morning yoga stretches. After the bear woke up from a nap, amateur photographer Meta Penca took amazing shots of her fitness routine, which reportedly lasted about 15 minutes and included a number of poses.

  • Dog Swallows Shot Glass

    This dog wanted a drink. Meet Billy the German pointer and the shot glass he swallowed. The pooch underwent emergency surgery after doing a shot of Jagermeister — and the glass it was served in. The 18-month-old, who lives in Darwin, Australia, downed the glass during a party thrown by house sitters while his owners were away. It wasn’t until three days later when Billy began vomiting blood that the house sitters realized something was wrong.

  • Chimp Art

    In art, there’s primitivism and there’s primate-vism. Meet Jimmy, a 26-year-old chimpanzee who can paint. Pictured while creating a painting on cardboard on Sept. 20 at a zoo in Niteroi, Brazil, the monkey’s art works have caught the attention of zoological experts who plan a special exhibit for the chimp.

  • Skateboarding With Tillman

    Tillman the skateboarding dog is always learning new tricks. The famed canine skater — who is also an acclaimed surfer and snowboarder — made an appearance at Madame Tussauds on the Las Vegas Strip on Sept. 16.

  • World’s Smallest Cow

    Swallow, an 11-year-old sheep-sized cow from the West Yorkshire region of England, is one of the stars of the 2011 edition of “Guinness World Records.” This 33-inch-high Dexter is the world’s smallest cow.

  • Lip-Syncing Monkey

    A female monkey lip-syncs during a show by the monkey drama troupe Prakit Sitpragaan in Bangkok in September. Prakit Sitpragaan has been performing traditional stories adapted from Asian classical novels and folklore in Thailand for more than 30 years.

  • Giant Atlas Moth

    Giant Atlas moths have hatched at Berkeley Castle Butterfly House in Gloucestershire, England. These huge moths — the largest in the world — are native to the rain forests of Asia and South America. They don’t have stomachs and their mouths do not form properly so they don’t eat a thing during their two-week life span.

  • Smallest Frog

    Some frogs eat flies. This tiny amphibian is not much bigger than one. The Microhyla nepenthicola, a newly discovered species of frog, lives in the jungle on the island of Borneo in Malaysia. It is barely larger than a pea.

  • Beer Deer

    A pet deer at a resort in Weihai, northern China’s Shandong province has become addicted to beer. According to Zhang Xiangxi, who works as a waitress at the resort’s restaurant, she discovered the deer’s unusual tastes last November when she was cleaning up after some customers. She comments: “I saw a bottle of beer was still half full so I playfully passed it to the deer. Unexpectedly it bit the bottle and raised its head and drank all the beer in one shot.”

  • Two Legged Lamb

    A farmer in China’s Shandong province has saved a two-legged lamb after being touched by its struggle to survive. Farmer Cui Jinxiu said the lamb was one of two born in July 2010. “The first one was a very healthy and normal one,” she told Rex USA. “However, the second one surprised me. With a further look I was surprised to find that the lamb only has two legs.” The family thought the lamb wouldn’t survive, but it proved its strong desire to live. “I thought of dumping it after it was born, but the next morning it even stood up by itself.”

  • Zookeeper Lives With Lions

    Alexander Pylyshenko, 40, will live in a cage with two lions for five weeks to raise awareness about living conditions for animals in captivity.

  • Kangaroo On The Loose In Washington State

    Late June 2012, this kangaroo disrupted traffic several times along a highway in Washington state.

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