Considering how many times we've had people post on this forum about buying horses on application and associated problems they have had in actually getting papers, and not once has anyone mentioned that they had to pay the membership fee for the seller...I find it hard to believe that this rule has come into play much until this year. No doubt the rule has always been there, but I have to think that it hasn't been enforced in many (most? any?) cases--and now for some reason it is being enforced. I'm quite sure that out of all the cases we've read about on here, there's been more than one where the seller didn't have a current membership.
I cannot say for sure of course, because I've always made it a practice to purchase only horses that were already registered...or at least I purchased horses from people that I knew would get registration papers on the foals I purchased. If I had any reason to think that registration papers would be a problem, I didn't buy the horse...but until Lucy posted on here about the Shetland filly she bought on application and then ran into this problem I'd never heard anyone mention that it was a problem!
So, are transfers now a problem too? If the seller doesn't have a membership the buyer cannot use his/her membership to have the transfer processed? Buyer has to pay the seller's membership before the horse can be transferred into the new name? I'd really object to that one. Even in Morgans--where it is the LAW (federal law here in Canada!) that the seller must transfer the papers (at seller's expense) into the name of the buyer within 6 months of date of sale, if seller is not a member and the is...and buyer agrees to pay for the transfer, then the registry allows the buyer to process that paperwork without any hassle and without any surcharge. Actually the Morgan registry does have a non-member fee for registry work, but if seller is not a member and buyer is, buyer does not have to pay the non-member fee in order to have the papers transferred--he can process the paperwork under his own membership...which is as it should be. As long as one of the parties is a member, that should be good enough.