Yes,Andyvan, the CPS must have seen statements and reports and decided there was not a sufficiently good chance of conviction, prima facie case or none. It's not clear what the County Court judge was beiing asked to do. The owner is still the owner, no matter what anybody has paid in good faith to 'buy' the dog, if he has paid, unless the dog was abandoned by the owner and so is held to have no owner any more..Without showing a valid claim for conversion, that someone is keeping the dog against the right of the owner,the judge would not do anything. It may be that the judge thought that even then he had no power to order disclosure by the keeper of the record (seems wrong if he did. The record holder is obstructing the course of a rightful claim and assisting the potential defendant in the retention of a dog not rightfully his/hers)