Kovnat v. Xanterra Parks and Resorts

770 F.3d 949, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 20140, 2014 WL 5334693
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 2014
Docket13-8095
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 770 F.3d 949 (Kovnat v. Xanterra Parks and Resorts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kovnat v. Xanterra Parks and Resorts, 770 F.3d 949, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 20140, 2014 WL 5334693 (10th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

BRISCOE, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff Corrine Kovnat was injured while horseback riding in Yellowstone National Park. Kovnat filed this diversity action alleging negligence, as well as negligent training and supervision, on the part of defendant Xanterra Parks & Resorts (Xanterra), the provider of the horseback riding services. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Xanterra, concluding that, in light of certain provisions of Wyoming’s Recreational Safety Act, Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-1-121, et seq., *951 Xanterra owed no duty of care to protect Kovnat from the injuries that she sustained. Kovnat now appeals from that ruling. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings. 1

I

Factual background

Kovnat and her husband, Gary, are residents of California. In late June 2012, Kovnat and her husband traveled to Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming for purposes of vacationing. On the afternoon of June 27, 2012, the couple signed up for an evening horseback trail ride at the Canyon Corral, located within the park grounds. Defendant Xanterra operates the Canyon Corral and is the provider of the horseback trail riding opportunities that originate there.

At the corral that evening, Kovnat and her husband joined other guests on a series of benches to await the ride. While still seated on the benches, the guests were instructed by Xanterra’s wranglers on how to handle a horse. According to Xanterra, guests are instructed by wranglers that “[i]f they notice the saddle to be moving even a little bit, ... they should stand up in the saddle and attempt [to] pull the saddle straight,” App. at 139. Guests are also “instructed to let [a wrangler] know if there’s an issue with their saddle.” Id.

Following the safety speech, the guests, including Kovnat and her husband, proceeded into the corral to meet their horses. Kovnat was initially assigned a large black horse. Kovnat, concerned this horse was too big, explained to the wranglers that the horse scared her and requested a different horse. A wrangler responded by giving the large black horse to Kovnat’s husband. The wrangler then walked back into the corral to retrieve a smaller horse named Tack for Kovnat to ride.

Kovnat had difficulty mounting Tack by herself. Consequently, a wrangler assisted her by “pushing] [her up] by the butt several times.” Id. at 59. More specifically, the wrangler “pushed [Kovnat] into the saddle sideways on her stomach,” and “[o]nce on her stomach perpendicular to the horse she was able to maneuver herself into the saddle.” Id. at 258. Once Kovnat was atop the horse, the wrangler placed her feet into the stirrups. Kovnat said to her husband, “It doesn’t feel right. My left leg is straight and really long, and my right leg is really high up and bent. It feels uncomfortable.” Id. at 64. According to Kovnat’s husband, he “could see [a] difference in the posture of [Kovnat’s] legs based on the flexion of her knee in the stirrup.” Id. at 70. Kovnat’s husband explained that Kovnat’s “right foot was higher up, and the [right] knee was bent more, and [her] left foot was lower down, and ... there was more extension of [her left] knee,” making “it look[ ] uneven.” Id. at 306.

A female wrangler who was standing nearby observing “kind of glanced” at Kovnat’s stirrups, said “ ‘Oh, it’s fine,’ and [then] walked away.” Id. at 65. Kovnat, taking reassurance from the wrangler’s comment, did not express any further concerns to the staff regarding her stirrups being uneven. She did, however, “mention[ ] to [her husband that] it still didn’t *952 feel right, but [that the female wrangler] must know.” Id. at 66.

Kovnat, her husband, and the other guests left the corral in a single line, with Kovnat’s husband in front of Kovnat. Xanterra wrangler Lisa Kever checked the cinch tension on each of the saddles as the riders left the corral. Kever specifically recalled checking the cinch tension on Kovnat’s saddle. According to Kever, she observed three other employees also check the cinch tension on Kovnat’s saddle. 2 Id. Kever did not, however, check Kovnat’s stirrups.

The group of riders rode up a small slope or hill and then began riding on flat terrain near an area called Jenna’s Meadow. Approximately fifteen minutes into the ride, Kovnat looked down at her saddle and “the thing in the middle, the horn, ... started to move.” Id. at 69. Kovnat “yelled out to the wrangler,” but “the saddle pulled [her] all the way over” to the left and “underneath [her] horse.” Id. In other words, “the saddle started to move to the left” and Kovnat “went with it” to the left and ultimately underneath the horse. Id. at 72. According to Kovnat, she struck her back on the ground.

Xanterra wrangler Luke Bannister responded to Kovnat’s exclamation and movements, but was unable to reach Kovnat and her horse before Kovnat hit the ground. Kovnat immediately complained to Bannister that she was experiencing pain in her lower back. Although Kovnat eventually stood up, she was unable to walk back to the corral on her own. An emergency medical assistance team employed by the National Park Service was summoned, initiated care, and placed Kovnat on a backboard. Kovnat was then carried by several persons to an awaiting ambulance and transported to a hospital in Livingston, Montana, where she was diagnosed with a fracture to her LI, L2, and L3 transverse process.

Shortly after Kovnat’s accident, Bannister “went to remove the saddle” from Tack, but “could not move [it].” Id. at 140. The saddle “was tight enough to where ... the only way it could have been moved was to have a substantial amount of weight pulling it to one side or the other.” Id. In Bannister’s view, this meant that there “would not have been a loose cinch or a malfunction of the saddle causing it to roll.” Id. at 141. Rather, he opined, “[i]t would have been a large amount of weight pulling the saddle one direction or the other that would have caused it to roll.” Id.

Procedural background

On February 4, 2013, Kovnat initiated this diversity action by filing a complaint against Xanterra. The complaint’s first cause of action, entitled “Negligence/Premises Liability,” alleged that Xanterra “negligently maintained, managed, controlled, and operated Canyon Corrals, in that [Kovnat’s] horse was improperly saddle[d].” Id. at 8. The second cause of action, entitled “Complaint for Damages for Negligent Training and Supervision,” id. at 9, alleged, similarly, that Xanterra *953 “negligently maintained, controlled, managed, and operated the premises,” and, more specifically, “negligently failed to maintain the horse saddle in a safe condition or warn ... Kovnat of its unsafe condition.” Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
770 F.3d 949, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 20140, 2014 WL 5334693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kovnat-v-xanterra-parks-and-resorts-ca10-2014.