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12 J. Animal & Nat. Resource L. 159 (2016)
Equine Liability Statutes: Are the Courts Moving in the Wrong Direction

handle is hein.journals/janimlaw12 and id is 173 raw text is: 

Equine Liability Statutes: Are the Courts Moving in the Wrong Direction?  1 3S



EQUINE LIABILITY STATUTES: ARE THE COURTS
         MOVING IN THE WRONG DIRECTION?

                          BRUCE MANDEVILLE*



I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND

        This paper will focus on cases heard in five different state
Supreme Courts (Connecticut, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, and Texas),
all involving equine-related injuries, and on those courts' application and
interpretation of the Equine Liability Statutes (ELA).' Forty-six states
have enacted some form of Equine Liability Statutes,2 which generally
apply to those equine injury cases wherein inherent risk is deemed to be
the cause of the injury.
        Most ELAs are essentially similar in structure, though some
variation may be seen from state to state. The first section of the
ELA often contains definitions, among them the important definition
of inherent risk. This definition includes the unpredictability of an
equine's reaction and the risk of a participant acting negligently and
not being able to control his or her horse. This section of the statutes
is discussed below, under the heading The Importance of Inherent
Risk. In the ELA definition section an equine activity is also defined,
whereas a spectator may not be (in CT, MI, OH, TX it is not, while

        * Bruce Mandeville currently teaches Equine Business, Law, Contemporary
Issues, Conformation and some hands-on classes. In addition to equestrian sport, he
was also a competitive skier, twice British Columbia slalom champion as a teenager.
He obtained a Bachelor of Commerce and law degree from the University of British
Columbia in addition to some language degrees from the Universit6; Paris-Sorbonne
in Paris, France. Following his graduation he worked as assistant to President for the
data retrieval company, Quick Law. He was involved in the management of the head
office employees and shareholder meetings. At the end of the 1980s he began a full-
time riding career, which spanned 15 years. Bruce competed internationally in the
sport of 3-Day Eventing at 2 Olympics, 2 World Championships and 2 Pan-American
Games. During his riding career he bought and sold horses; taught equitation at
clinics throughout Canada and the USA; and managed equestrian facilities. He began
teaching at Otterbein in 2005.
        Equine Liability Acts (also known as Equine Activity Liability Acts, EALA)
have been enacted to curb frivolous litigation, discussed under Purpose of ELA.
        2 Julie I. Fershtman, Animal Law: The Michigan Equine Activity Liability
Act: Are We Galloping in Circles? 92 Mich. B.J. 22, 22 n.4 (2013) (As of July 2013,
all states except California, Maryland, Nevada, and New York have enacted some
form of an equine activity liability statute. All of them differ but many share common
characteristics.)

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