James Tex Steeg v. Baskin Family Camps, Inc., D/B/A Balcones Springs Executive Retreat & Conference Center ( 2003 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-02-00400-CV
    James Tex Steeg, Appellant
    v.
    Baskin Family Camps, Inc., d/b/a Balcones Springs Executive Retreat &
    Conference Center, Appellee
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BURNET COUNTY, 33RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. 20152, HONORABLE GUILFORD L. JONES, III, JUDGE PRESIDING
    OPINION
    James Tex Steeg appeals from the take-nothing summary judgment rendered against
    him on his claims that he was injured by the negligent acts and omissions of Baskin Family Camps,
    Inc., doing business as Balcones Springs Executive Retreat & Conference Center. He sues for
    damages he claims resulted from his fall from a horse during a trail ride at appellee’s facility. The
    district court granted appellee’s motion for summary judgment based on its immunity from damages
    for personal injuries suffered by a participant in an equine activity under the Liability for Equine
    Activity Act (“the Act”). See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 87.003 (West Supp. 2003). On
    appeal, Steeg contends that appellee’s actions either did not fall within the scope of the limitation
    of liability or fell within an exception to the limitation. He also contends that the Act violates the
    open courts guarantee of the state constitution. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 13. We will reverse the
    judgment and remand for further proceedings.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    The following factual summary is taken from evidence submitted in the summary-
    judgment proceedings. It includes some evidence that favors the judgment and therefore cannot be
    considered under our standard of review. See Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. v. Steel, 
    997 S.W.2d 217
    , 223
    (Tex. 1999) (“When reviewing a summary judgment, we take as true all evidence favorable to the
    nonmovant.”). This evidence is included in order to present a context for the proceedings in the trial
    court. This factual summary should not be taken as a conclusive finding of any fact.
    Steeg, then fifty-three years old, attended a corporate retreat with other members of
    the real-estate sales agency of which he was president. He participated in a trail ride guided by
    appellee’s employee, Camden Fisher. Fisher was hired as a food server, had not led a ride at
    appellee’s facility, had not received appellee’s written trail ride policies, and was not asked about
    her qualifications when she was asked to lead the ride. But, she had ridden horses her whole life,
    ridden horses at auctions, and been a scout on a week-long trail ride. She intended to become a
    wrangler when appellee had a position available. Fisher had also ridden the horses used on this ride
    along the same trail.
    Fisher saddled the horses for the ride using Australian stock saddles. Although she
    preferred Western saddles and did not use the Australian stock saddles when riding the horses in
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    preparation for the ride, Fisher said she was familiar with the Australian stock saddles.1 Fisher
    testified that she saddled all the horses without supervision and regirted Steeg’s horse—Rose, a horse
    used for children—after the horse released stomach air.
    Before the ride, the riders signed release waiver forms releasing appellee from
    liability. Although Fisher did not at that time ask about their riding experience, at some point before
    they departed Fisher asked Steeg whether he had ridden a horse before. He said he had ridden fifteen
    years earlier and that he knew how to ride.
    Fisher rode last in the line of five horses. Rebecca Freeman, a participant, rode at the
    front. Where the trail opened up, Freeman ran her horse ahead and then returned to the group; some
    witnesses recalled that Steeg accompanied her; testimony varied as to whether Freeman ran her horse
    one, two, or three times. Fisher permitted these departures, but requested that the riders wait until
    the trail opened up and that they remain within her sight; neither Steeg nor Freeman remembered this
    latter restriction. There is also some dispute regarding when Freeman obtained permission to ride
    ahead, and if that permission included Steeg explicitly or implicitly. Fisher testified that, when the
    riders paused at the midway point, she rechecked all of their horses to make sure the equipment was
    in place.
    When Freeman ran her horse for the final time, Steeg’s horse followed; it is disputed
    whether Steeg prompted the horse or it ran after Freeman’s horse of its own accord. Steeg said he
    1
    Steeg notes that Fisher referred to the Australian stock saddles as an “English saddle” or
    “English style saddle.” Appellee responds that the English and Australian saddles are similar.
    3
    tried to get his horse to stop and yelled for Freeman to stop. Freeman’s horse stopped abruptly, as
    did Steeg’s horse. Steeg fell off the horse sideways onto his upper left chest. His chest hurt and he
    felt winded. His saddle had slipped ninety degrees to the side. Freeman recalled that Steeg said his
    saddle slipped when the horse ran, but could not remember for certain whether he said that before
    or after he fell; she believed that he yelled it as the horses were running. When Fisher and the other
    riders caught up to the pair, she moved Steeg’s saddle back on top of the horse. Steeg said that
    Fisher tightened the girth; Fisher did not recall doing so. Steeg testified that he did not believe that
    the saddle was defective, but that it had been cinched too loosely onto the horse.
    Shortly after the ride, Steeg participated in a teambuilding exercise on ziplines—an
    exercise in which each person was strapped into a climbing harness suspended from a cable, climbed
    up a telephone pole, and slid down the cable over a lake and into a sandpit landing area six hundred
    feet away. Although it was painful to climb the pole, Steeg participated. He attended the evening
    social activities and stayed the night.
    Almost a day after the fall, when colleagues told him he literally looked green, Steeg
    went to the hospital. While at the hospital, he was sweaty and losing consciousness—symptoms of
    shock from blood loss. Doctors discovered that he had a ruptured spleen that had to be removed.
    Sometime during or after the splenectomy, he suffered a stroke. Thereafter, his vision was impaired.
    The impairment was attributed to the stroke triggered by the surgery and blood loss from the spleen
    ruptured by the fall.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Steeg sued appellee, alleging that several negligent acts and omissions led to his
    injuries and consequent damages. He contended that appellee failed to have enough trained staff to
    4
    conduct the trail ride, failed to properly train Fisher how to conduct a safe trail ride, and failed to
    properly train Fisher on the characteristics and use of the Australian stock saddle. He complained
    that Fisher failed to properly supervise and control the riders, including Steeg himself, by allowing
    them to run their horses, by failing to properly enforce her own instructions, and by failing to
    properly inspect and secure his saddle. He requested $1,875,000 in damages—the sum of
    $31,471.31 in past medical expenses, up to $345,106.40 in lost income (up to $38,776 annually lost
    for 8.9 years of work-life expectancy), and past and future pain, physical impairment, and mental
    anguish—approximately $1.5 million.
    Appellee moved for summary judgment on several grounds. Appellee contended that
    it was exempt from liability under the Act. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 87.003.
    Appellee asserted that the Act applied because Steeg’s injuries were caused by one or more of the
    following: the propensity of an equine animal to behave in ways that may result in injury, the
    unpredictability of an equine animal’s reaction to sudden movement by another animal, and a
    participant’s negligent actions. Appellee also contended that Steeg released appellee from liability
    by signing the release waiver form. Appellee finally contended that Steeg presented no evidence to
    support his claims that its acts and omissions proximately caused his injuries—especially his vision
    impairment.
    Steeg responded that neither the Act’s immunity nor the release waiver excused
    appellee from liability for his damages. Steeg argued that negligence in supervision, saddling of the
    horse, and conduct of the ride are not inherent risks of equine activity.
    5
    The district court concluded that appellee was not liable for damages because the
    injury was within the scope of the Act’s liability immunity and not within its exceptions. The court
    held that a slipping saddle is an inherent risk of an equine activity. The court held further that an
    improperly cinched girth strap is not faulty equipment under the statute. The court also held that
    neither the training and supervision of the wrangler nor the wrangler’s allowing ride participants to
    trot or run their horses constituted wilful and wanton disregard of the safety of the riders. Based on
    these findings, the court concluded that the Act barred appellee’s liability for Steeg’s injuries. The
    court denied the motion based on Steeg’s signing of the release waiver, and declined to reach the no-
    evidence basis for the motion. The court granted summary judgment that Steeg take nothing by his
    claims.
    DISCUSSION
    Steeg raises several issues on appeal, but we will reach only the first. He argues that
    the basis for immunity from liability—the inherent risk of equine activity—does not include the risk
    that equine professionals and sponsors will be negligent and thereby injure participants. Our
    resolution of this appeal is guided by the standard of review for summary judgments, the terms of
    the Act, and the facts of this case as presented in the summary-judgment record.
    The standard of review
    Summary judgment is properly granted only when the movant establishes there are
    no genuine issues of material fact to be decided and he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    See Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(c); Lear Siegler, Inc. v. Perez, 
    819 S.W.2d 470
    , 471 (Tex.1991); Memorial
    6
    Med. Ctr. v. Howard, 
    975 S.W.2d 691
    , 692 (Tex. App.—Austin 1998, pet. denied). A defendant
    seeking summary judgment must negate as a matter of law at least one element of each of the
    plaintiff’s theories of recovery or plead and prove as a matter of law each element of an affirmative
    defense. See Centeq Realty, Inc. v. Siegler, 
    899 S.W.2d 195
    , 197 (Tex. 1995). If the defendant
    establishes his right to summary judgment, the plaintiff must then present evidence raising a fact
    issue. See 
    id. In reviewing
    the grant of summary judgment, we view the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the non-movant and make every reasonable inference and resolve all doubts in favor of
    the non-movant. See id.; Nixon v. Mr. Prop. Mgmt. Co., 
    690 S.W.2d 546
    , 548-49 (Tex. 1985).
    The Act
    In the Act, the legislature specified certain situations in which persons involved in
    equine activities are not liable for damages resulting from dangers or conditions that are an inherent
    risk of that activity. There is no dispute on appeal that appellee is an equine activity sponsor and that
    Steeg was involved in an equine activity. Sponsors of such activities are immune from liability as
    set out in the statute:
    Except as provided by Section 87.004, any person, including an equine activity
    sponsor . . . is not liable for property damage or damages arising from the personal
    injury or death of a participant in an equine activity or livestock show if the property
    damage, injury, or death results from the dangers or conditions that are an inherent
    risk of an equine activity . . . including:
    (1) the propensity of an equine or livestock animal to behave in ways that may result
    in personal injury or death to a person on or around it;
    (2) the unpredictability of an equine or livestock animal’s reaction to sound, a
    sudden movement, or an unfamiliar object, person, or other animal;
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    (3) with respect to equine activities, certain land conditions and hazards, including
    surface and subsurface conditions;
    (4) a collision with another animal or an object; or
    (5) the potential of a participant to act in a negligent manner that may contribute to
    injury to the participant or another, including failing to maintain control over the
    equine or livestock animal or not acting within the participant’s ability.
    Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 87.003.
    There are some exceptions to this immunity:
    A person, including an equine activity sponsor [or] equine professional . . . is liable
    for property damage or damages arising from the personal injury or death caused by
    a participant in an equine activity or livestock show if:
    (1) the injury or death was caused by faulty equipment or tack used in the equine
    activity or livestock show, the person provided the equipment or tack, and the
    person knew or should have known that the equipment or tack was faulty;
    (2) the person provided the equine or livestock animal and the person did not make
    a reasonable and prudent effort to determine the ability of the participant to
    engage safely in the equine activity or livestock show and determine the ability
    of the participant to safely manage the equine or livestock animal, taking into
    account the participant’s representations of ability;
    (3) the injury or death was caused by a dangerous latent condition of land for which
    warning signs, written notices, or verbal warnings were not conspicuously
    posted or provided to the participant, and the land was owned, leased, or
    otherwise under the control of the person at the time of the injury or death and
    the person knew of the dangerous latent condition;
    (4) the person committed an act or omission with wilful or wanton disregard for the
    safety of the participant and that act or omission caused the injury;
    (5) the person intentionally caused the property damage, injury, or death; . . . .
    8
    
    Id. § 87.004
    (West Supp. 2003). The remaining exception to the immunity involves livestock shows.
    See 
    id. The Act
    thus shields sponsors from liability for factors beyond their control, such as
    innate equine behavior, unknown land conditions, negligence by participants, and interactions of
    these factors. The Act denies immunity from liability for factors essentially within the sponsors’
    control, such as tack in poor condition, the inappropriate matching of participant and horse, the
    known dangers of sponsors’ land, and their own wilful or intentional actions. The Act essentially
    sets two benchmarks on the continuum of factors causing injuries and damage: (1) factors that are
    inherent risks of equine activity and never result in liability; and (2) other factors listed in the Act
    that are excepted from immunity. These benchmarks do not exhaust the potential causes of injury,
    however; between them lie other factors that may result in the sponsor’s liability for damages.
    Appellee argues that interpreting the Act to permit sponsor liability for negligence
    improperly grafts onto the Act a preliminary showing of non-negligence for equine activity sponsors
    to gain the protections of the Act. But considering whether Steeg’s injuries resulted from the
    sponsor’s negligence is not a pretest. Rather, it is part of the inquiry into whether the injury resulted
    from an inherent risk of equine activities. The facts of each case will reveal whether the cause of the
    damage is one for which the sponsor is immune from liability. See Sapone v. Grand Targhee, Inc.,
    
    308 F.3d 1096
    , 1103-05 (10th Cir. 2002).
    Appellee further argues that the absence of negligence among the causes of injury
    excepted from the immunity in section 87.004 means that sponsor negligence must be included in
    the list of causes of damage for which sponsors are immune from liability. See Tex. Civ. Prac. &
    9
    Rem. Code Ann. § 87.004. But sponsor negligence is not expressly listed as an inherent risk of
    equine activity nor is it mentioned as an exception to immunity. See 
    id. § 87.003.
    We conclude that
    the absence of negligence from the list of exceptions means only that sponsor negligence is not
    excepted from immunity.
    Whether immunity applies depends upon the interpretation of the phrase “results from
    the dangers or conditions that are an inherent risk of an equine activity.” Appellee propounds a
    restrictive interpretation of the phrase, arguing essentially that, because a horse may run and stop
    unexpectedly and a rider may fall, such falls are inherent risks for which sponsors are immune from
    liability. However, the Act confers immunity from liability for injury resulting, not from specific
    occurrences such as falls, but from more general dangers or conditions like unpredictable behavior
    of animals or other participants. See 
    id. Because the
    Act does not confer immunity for injuries
    resulting from a fall or other occurrence caused by something other than an inherent risk, courts must
    consider the full array of underlying causes for the horse running and the person falling that are
    evident in the record. Courts must examine whether the injury results from innate equine behavior,
    the actions of participants, or some other cause, such as sponsor negligence. Given the wide array
    of possible causes of injuries, determining whether injuries result from an inherent risk of equine
    behavior or from some other cause requires a fact-intensive inquiry into the circumstances leading
    to the injury. See 
    Sapone, 308 F.3d at 1103-05
    .
    Application
    We must now determine whether appellee established that no genuine issue of
    material fact exists regarding whether Steeg’s injury resulted from an inherent risk of equine activity
    and that appellee was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Lear 
    Siegler, 819 S.W.2d at 471
    .
    10
    In holding that appellee is immune from liability for damages, the district court
    concluded that a slipping saddle is an inherent risk of an equine activity. A saddle may slip for many
    reasons, several of which arise from inherent risks of equine activity—horses sweat, saddles stretch,
    saddle pads compress, riders sit off-center. See Cooperman v. David, 
    214 F.3d 1162
    , 1168-69 (10th
    Cir. 2000); see also 
    Sapone, 308 F.3d at 1103-05
    . But a saddle may slip for reasons that are not
    inherent risks, such as negligent cinching. See 
    Cooperman, 214 F.3d at 1168-69
    .2 Sponsors are not
    immune from all damages resulting from slipping saddles, just from those due to injuries resulting
    from inherent risks of equine activity. See 
    id. The district
    court thus erred by concluding as a matter
    of law that all slipping saddles are an inherent risk of equine activity, and thus holding appellee
    immune from liability.
    A similar analysis preserves Steeg’s complaints that appellee’s conduct of the ride
    created the conditions that caused him to be thrown from the horse. Although injuries suffered after
    falling from a horse that runs and stops suddenly may result from inherent risks of equine activity,
    like innate horse behavior or goading by participants, Steeg contends that his injuries resulted from
    appellee’s negligent acts and omissions. Sponsors are not immune if they fail to fulfill a common-
    law duty to protect participants. See 
    Sapone, 308 F.3d at 1104
    (although bolting horses are inherent
    risk of equine activity, child’s injuries suffered in fall from bolting horse might be caused by non-
    inherent risk factors such as inadequate pre-ride instructions, taking a too-difficult path, and not
    2
    Although the Tenth Circuit concluded that the plaintiff had not presented sufficient
    evidence to show that the saddle slipped for reasons that are not inherent risks of equine activity, the
    court cited a case in which a court held that a rider did not assume the risk that his saddle would be
    improperly cinched. Cooperman v. David, 
    214 F.3d 1162
    , 1167 n.5 (10th Cir. 2000) (citing Liossis
    v. Cavalry Riding Academy Co., 
    87 N.E.2d 266
    , 268 (Ohio 1949)).
    11
    providing a helmet). The district court’s conclusion that appellee was not grossly negligent does not,
    without more, support the summary judgment. Whether Steeg’s injuries and damages were caused
    by an inherent risk of equine activity is a fact-intensive inquiry that cannot be disposed of on
    summary judgment on this record.
    Appellee correctly notes that a great deal of evidence in the record supports the
    judgment. There is evidence that Fisher properly saddled the horse and rechecked it before and
    during the ride, that the saddle stayed in place until the fall, that Freeman persuaded Fisher to allow
    her and Steeg to ride ahead, and that either Freeman convinced Steeg to follow or that Steeg’s horse
    followed on its own. This evidence supports the conclusion that Steeg’s fall and injury resulted from
    one or more of the enumerated dangers or conditions for which sponsors are immune from liability,
    such as innate equine behavior and participant negligence. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann.
    § 87.003(1), (2), (5).
    But the fact that some evidence favors immunity cannot be grounds for summary
    judgment when other evidence weighs against immunity. The standard of review requires that we
    make every reasonable inference and resolve all doubts in favor of the non-movant. See 
    Nixon, 690 S.W.2d at 548-49
    . As a result, summary judgment is usually not appropriate when the issues are
    inherently those for a factfinder, as in cases involving intent, reliance, reasonable care, uncertainty
    and the like. See Wofford v. Blomquist, 
    865 S.W.2d 612
    , 614 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1993, writ
    denied); Hilton v. Texas Inv. Bank, N.A., 
    650 S.W.2d 545
    , 547 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    1983, no pet.).
    12
    Some evidence supports the claim that appellee’s negligent acts or omissions
    contributed to Steeg’s fall. There is evidence that Fisher may not have saddled the horse properly:
    Freeman testified that Steeg complained that the saddle was slipping before he fell off the horse, and
    there is evidence that the saddle slipped ninety degrees to the left when Steeg fell. There is also
    evidence that Fisher chose to ride behind the participants and permitted them to run their horses. By
    affidavit, Jan Dawson, president of the American Association for Horsemanship Safety, Inc., opined
    that the deposition testimony indicates that Fisher did not properly secure the saddle and did not
    adequately monitor its security during the ride. Whether any slippage was due to risks inherent in
    equine activity or because of negligent saddling is a fact question not conclusively resolved by the
    summary-judgment evidence. See 
    Wofford, 865 S.W.2d at 614
    (reasonable care normally fact issue).
    Dawson also opined that appellee conducted the ride negligently by allowing Fisher to lead the ride
    without sufficient training and sending her out as the only wrangler. Dawson also opined that
    Fisher’s decision to ride at the back of the line and permit the riders to gallop away and out of sight
    constituted negligence. Dawson stated that these negligent actions proximately caused Steeg’s fall.
    This evidence reveals the existence of genuine issues of material fact preventing summary judgment.
    Because appellee has not shown as a matter of law that it is immune from liability,
    we need not review Steeg’s challenges to the court’s rejection of the immunity exceptions and to the
    constitutionality of the Act. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1 (court must address issues necessary to final
    disposition of appeal). The exceptions to the immunity are relevant only if the immunity applies.
    Our reversal of the judgment that the immunity applies renders appellate consideration of the
    13
    exceptions unnecessary. For similar reasons, we need not consider Steeg’s contention that the Act
    is unconstitutional.
    CONCLUSION
    We reverse the summary judgment and remand the cause for further proceedings. A
    genuine issue of material fact exists regarding whether Steeg’s injuries resulted from an inherent risk
    of equine activity. Because the record does not conclusively demonstrate that the acts and omissions
    Steeg alleges are inherent risks of equine activity, the court erred by rendering summary judgment
    that appellee is immune from liability for his injuries. This opinion should not be construed as
    deciding conclusively any fact dispute such as whether Steeg’s injuries resulted from a danger or
    condition that is an inherent risk of equine activity. We conclude only that appellee did not show,
    on this record, that it is entitled to immunity and judgment as a matter of law.
    Mack Kidd, Justice
    Before Justices Kidd, B. A. Smith and Yeakel
    Reversed and Remanded
    Filed: July 24, 2003
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