Vreeman v. Jansma ( 2023 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 22-1365
    Filed June 21, 2023
    JERRY WILLIAM VREEMAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    vs.
    CARL JANSMA, MATLOCK FEEDLOT, LLC, JANSMA ENTERPRISES, INC.,
    CJ FEEDLOT, LLC,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Sioux County, James N. Daane,
    Judge.
    A plaintiff appeals the district court order granting summary judgment based
    on statutory immunity for domesticated animal activity.       REVERSED AND
    REMANDED.
    Stephen F. Avery of Cornwall, Avery, Bjornstad & Scott, Spencer, for
    appellant.
    Joseph D. Thornton of Smith Peterson Law Firm, LLP, Council Bluffs, for
    appellees.
    Heard by Bower, C.J., and Vaitheswaran, Tabor, Greer, Schumacher,
    Badding, Chicchelly and Buller, JJ.
    2
    CHICCHELLY, Judge.
    Jerry Vreeman sustained a serious leg injury while attempting to help Carl
    Jansma get a downed heifer back onto its feet. Vreeman filed a negligence suit
    against Jansma and his business entities: Matlock Feedlot, LLC, Jansma
    Enterprises, Inc., and CJ Feedlot, LLC (collectively “Jansma”). Jansma filed a
    motion for summary judgment, arguing he could not be liable because Iowa Code
    chapter 673 (2021) provides immunity for domesticated animal activity.         The
    district court agreed and dismissed the case. We reverse and remand for further
    proceedings.
    I.    Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Jansma operates a feedlot with approximately 2500 cattle. On January 1,
    2020, Jansma discovered a downed heifer in an area where slats are installed.
    Because the slats lack the strength to support motorized vehicles, he decided to
    stand the animal up manually. During depositions, Jansma said that his neighbor
    Vreeman had assisted him in doing so five or six times in the past ten years, while
    Vreeman recounted assisting Jansma about two or three times. Vreeman further
    stated that he has encountered a downed heifer in his personal farming operations
    between five and twenty times in his forty years of experience but he has always
    used a loader to get the animal upright.
    On the day in question, Jansma phoned Vreeman to ask if he could help
    get the animal back on its feet. Jansma and Vreeman helped each other out with
    goods and services from time to time but did not have an employment or other
    formal relationship. Upon arriving at the feedlot, Jansma directed Vreeman to the
    head of the downed heifer, while Jansma took the rear. The animal weighed
    3
    approximately 1300 to 1600 pounds. The two men offered different accounts of
    how exactly they were going to push the cow into an upright position. In any event,
    the heifer swung its head around and hit Vreeman before they could be successful,
    which resulted in serious injury to Vreeman’s leg.
    In July 2022, the district court held an unreported hearing on Jansma’s
    motion for summary judgment. The court granted the motion and dismissed the
    case. Vreeman filed a timely appeal.
    II.    Review.
    We review the district court’s ruling on the defendants’ motion for summary
    judgment for correction of errors at law. Wermerskirchen v. Canadian Nat’l R.R.,
    
    955 N.W.2d 822
    , 827 (Iowa 2021). Summary judgment is appropriate “if the
    pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file,
    together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any
    material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”
    Iowa R. Civ. Pro. 1.981(3). Likewise, “[w]hen resolving an appeal from a district
    court ruling on a summary judgment motion requires us to resolve a legal question
    involving statutory interpretation, we review the district court ruling on the statutory
    interpretation question for correction of errors at law.” Homan v. Branstad, 
    887 N.W.2d 153
    , 164 (Iowa 2016).
    III.   Discussion.
    Jansma’s motion for summary judgment asserted that he is immune from
    liability for Vreeman’s injury under Iowa Code section 673.2, which provides: “A
    person, including a domesticated animal professional, domesticated animal
    activity sponsor, the owner of the domesticated animal, or a person exhibiting the
    4
    domesticated animal, is not liable for the damages, injury, or death suffered by a
    participant or spectator resulting from the inherent risks of a domesticated animal
    activity.” Most of the statute’s terms are easily applied to the facts at bar:
    •   As a member of the bovine family, a heifer is a domesticated animal. See
    
    Iowa Code § 673.1
    (2).
    •   Jansma is both a “person” and the owner of the domesticated animal. See
    Baker v. Shields, 
    767 N.W.2d 404
    , 409 (Iowa 2009) (applying a broad
    interpretation of the term “person” under section 673.2).
    •   Whether Vreeman was a “participant” hinges on the definition of
    “domesticated animal activity,” which we address further below. See 
    Iowa Code § 673.1
    (12) (“‘Participant’ means a person who engages in a
    domesticated animal activity, regardless of whether the person receives
    compensation.”).
    The parties agree there are no genuine issues of material fact relating to the
    application of chapter 673. See Gardin v. Long Beach Mortg. Co., 
    661 N.W.2d 193
    , 196 (Iowa 2003) (“Where the only controversy concerns the legal
    consequences flowing from undisputed facts, summary judgment is the proper
    remedy.”). Therefore, we turn to Vreeman’s legal arguments against conferring
    immunity to Jansma.
    Vreeman argues that Jansma is not entitled to immunity under Iowa Code
    chapter 673 because standing up a downed heifer is not a “domesticated animal
    activity.” Section 673.1(2) provides:
    “Domesticated animal activity” means any of the following:
    a. Riding or driving a domesticated animal.
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    b. Riding as a passenger on a vehicle powered by a
    domesticated animal.
    c. Teaching or training a person to ride or drive a
    domesticated animal or a vehicle powered by a domesticated animal.
    d. Participating in an activity sponsored by a domesticated
    animal activity sponsor.
    e. Participating or assisting a participant in a domesticated
    animal event.
    f. Managing or assisting in managing a domesticated animal
    in a domesticated animal event.
    g. Inspecting or assisting an inspection of a domesticated
    animal for the purpose of purchase.
    h. Providing hoof care including, but not limited to,
    horseshoeing.
    i. Providing or assisting in providing veterinary care to a
    domesticated animal.
    j. Boarding or keeping a domesticated animal, by the owner
    of the domesticated animal or on behalf of another person.
    k. Loading, hauling, or transporting a domesticated animal.
    l. Breeding domesticated animals.
    m. Participating in racing.
    n. Showing or displaying a domesticated animal.
    We agree that standing up a domesticated animal that is down does not fall under
    one of these specific categories of domesticated animal activity.1 We further agree
    with Vreeman’s observation that the statute establishes a finite list of covered
    activities.2
    1   Vreeman acknowledges that the closest qualifying language would be
    section 673.1(3)(k) but argues that getting a downed heifer back on its feet does
    not fall within the plain meaning of loading, hauling, or transporting. We agree.
    For his part, Jansma did not identify a specific paragraph under which the activity
    qualifies in the prior proceedings or appellate briefing but asserted during oral
    arguments that paragraphs (a), (f), and (j) should apply. We find Jansma’s
    citations were not timely raised and briefed and therefore decline to address this
    contention. See State v. Burns, 
    988 N.W.2d 352
    , 361 n.3 (Iowa 2023) (“We
    generally decline to ‘decide or consider arguments raised for the first time during
    oral argument.’”).
    2 The legislature utilized the open-ended phrase “including, but not limited to” in
    paragraph (h) but chose not to do so when it defined “domesticated animal activity”
    as “any of the following.” See Sallee v. Stewart, 
    827 N.W.2d 128
    , 142 (Iowa 2013)
    (finding the legislature created a “closed universe” by employing the phrase
    “means the following or any combination thereof” in a statutory definition).
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    The district court acknowledged these issues but felt compelled to extend
    the definition based on our supreme court’s holding in Baker, 
    767 N.W.2d at 409
    ,
    which found “the immunity provision of section 673.2 applies to all ‘persons’
    involved in a domesticated animal activity, including those arising from traditional
    farming.” (Emphasis added.) The key distinction is that the supreme court in Baker
    was tasked with defining the term “person” and did not analyze the definition or
    breadth of “domesticated animal activity.” See 767 N.W. 2d at 409. Therefore, we
    do not read the phrase including those arising from traditional farming to expand
    the definition of “domesticated animal activity” to any and all activities associated
    with traditional farming. That phrase must be understood in the context of applying
    a broad definition of the term “person,” which resulted in immunity for an activity
    arising from traditional farming. See 
    id.
     It is true that the parties in Baker were
    attempting to accomplish a similar task as the parties here, but the type of activity
    and cause of injury were different. In Baker, the parties set out with the intention
    to move two heifers, but Baker was injured when the horse that he was attempting
    to mount and ride reared and threw him to the ground. See 
    id. at 405
    . Riding a
    horse falls under the definition of domesticated animal activity, see 
    Iowa Code § 673.1
    (3)(a), whereas getting a heifer onto its feet does not constitute any of the
    listed activities. Without a triggering activity, we are not in the territory of Baker
    and encounter no conflicts with this precedent.
    We note that the bulk of chapter 673 contemplates non-traditional farming
    activities, such as fairs, rodeos, expositions, competitions, and 4–H events.
    Therefore, the parties in Baker disputed whether section 673.2 intended to confer
    immunity outside this context. See 
    767 N.W.2d at 407
    . Although the court found
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    such immunity exists, it did not go so far as to say that it always exists. We cannot
    write an activity into the definition of “domesticated animal activity.” Because
    getting a downed heifer onto its feet does not fall under the statutory definition of
    domesticated animal activity, we find Jansma is not immune from liability under
    chapter 673. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the district court and remand
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. With this result, we need not
    address Vreeman’s additional arguments against conferring immunity.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.