The Texas Legislature has passed, and Governor Abbott has signed House Bill 365, which will make important changes to the Texas Farm Animal Liability Act (FALA). All farm animal owners should pay careful attention to the changes coming to the FALA, which will modify the scope of application and will also require additional steps be taken by farm animal owners.
According to Tiffany Lashmet, Extension Ag Law Specialist in Amarillo, the Texas Farm Animal Liability Act is a statute offering limited liability to farm animal owners if injuries are caused by an inherent risk to a farm animal activity. For example, when a person rides a horse, there is an inherent risk that person could get bucked off. Through the FALA, the Texas legislature intended to ensure the horse owner in this example would not be liable for resulting injuries. The statute was passed in 1995 and was amended in 2011 to expand the scope beyond just equine animals to all “farm animals.”
In 2020, the Texas Supreme Court issued its opinion in Waak v. Rodriguez, a case involving an employee who was killed while moving a bull. The Court found that the FALA was inapplicable if the injured party was a “rancher or ranch hand.” The Court believed that the legislature intended the Act’s protections to apply only to situations such as “shows, rides, exhibitions, competitions, and the like.”
This bill was designed to essentially modify the FALA to ensure that it does, in fact, apply to working ranches and in situations involving injured ranchers and ranch hands, among other changes. In other words, HB 365 would essentially undo the Texas Supreme Court’s verdict in the Waak case going forward.
House Bill 365 was passed by the Legislature and signed into law by Governor Abbott on June 4, 2021. The new provisions of the Farm Animal Liability Act included in this bill will be effective as of September 1, 2021.
There are a number of key changes made by HB 365 of which farm animal owners should be aware.
Specifically, this bill would add language to ensure its application to working farms and ranches and in instances where a rancher or ranch hand is injured.
The meaning of “farm animal activity” will now also include owning, raising, transporting, or pasturing a farm animal. Similarly, the definition also includes assisting in or providing animal health management activities, including vaccines, assisting in or conducting customary tasks on a farm concerning farm animals, and transporting or moving a farm animal. “Engages in a farm animal activity” will be modified to include feeding, vaccinating, exercising, weaning, transporting, producing, herding, corralling, branding, dehorning, assisting in or providing health management activities, and engaging in routine or customary activities on a farm to handle and manage farm animals.
The bill also adds express language to a couple of additional definitions. It adds “farm owners or lessees” to the description of those protected throughout the bill, and includes a person who handles, buys, or sells livestock animals to the definition of “livestock producer.”
Currently, the FALA defines a farm animal professional as a person engaged for compensation in instructing a participant or renting to a participant a farm animal for the purpose of riding, driving, or being a passenger on the farm animal; renting tack to the participant; examining or administering medical treatment to a farm animal as a veterinarian; and someone providing veterinary or farrier services–who would be required to hang the sign. Tex. Civ. Practice & Remedies Code § 87.001(5). HB 365 will expand the “farm animal professional” definition to add persons engaged for compensation in the following activities: “providing nonmedical care or treatment to a farm animal, including vaccinations; assisting in providing animal health management activities, including vaccination; providing care, feeding, and husbandry of farm animals; assisting or conducting customary tasks on a farm concerning farm animals; and transporting or moving livestock.”
One of the most important changes for farm and ranch owners to be aware of has to do with the requirements that a sign be hung for farm animal professionals. The amendments will require farm animal professionals (which is more broadly defined, as noted above) as well as all farm owners or lessees to post and maintain a sign with statutory language per the Act’s requirements. Additionally, the same statutory language must be included in every written contract that a farm animal professional, owner, or lessee enters with a participant, employee, or independent contractor for professional services, instruction, or the rental of equipment or tack of a farm animal.
The required language has been slightly modified by the new bill, and will read as follows effective September 1:
WARNING
UNDER TEXAS LAW (CHAPTER 87, CIVIL PRACTICE AND REMEDIES CODE), A
FARM ANIMAL PROFESSIONAL OR FARM OWNER OR LESSEE IS NOT LIABLE FOR
AN INJURY TO OR THE DEATH OF A PARTICIPANT IN FARM ANIMAL
ACTIVITIES, INCLUDING AN EMPLOYEE OR INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR,
RESULTING FROM THE INHERENT RISKS OF FARM ANIMAL ACTIVITIES.
This is critical for farm and ranch owners. Previously, farm and ranch owners and lessees were not required to hang the sign. Now, however, they will need to do so. Moreover, because the statutory language required for the sign has been changed (by including farm owners or lessees to the list of those protected and adding the language about independent contractors or employees), farm animal professionals and farm and ranch owners may want to obtain signs with this new language out of an abundance of caution.
In an amendment that was added during the House committee process, the new FALA will expand “farm animal” to include “a honeybee kept in a managed colony.” This means that for beekeepers, the FALA’s protections will now be available for the first time.
The bill will also alter the structure of the section titled “limitation on liability.” The changes will provide that all persons, including a farm owner or lessee, are not liable for damages or injury caused by the inherent risk of a farm animal, farm animal activity, showing of an animal at a livestock show, or the raising or handling of livestock on the farm. Additionally, there was a slight change to the list of inherent risks that will ensure it applies to injuries to a person on the animal, handling the animal, or otherwise around the animal.
Previously, there had been disagreements in lower court opinions regarding whether the Farm Animal Liability Act applied to independent contractors and/or employees who were injured. As of September 1, the amended statute includes both independent contractors and employees in the definition of a “participant.” Thus, this defense is available even in situations with an injured employee or independent contractor.
The passage of House Bill 365 makes important changes to the Texas Farm Animal Liability Act. In addition to expanding the scope of the Act to expressly cover working farms and ranches and to apply to cases involving injured employees and independent contractors, the Act will also require farm and ranch owners or lessees to hang a sign with the required statutory language.
GOTTA HAVE DAIRY CATTLE
June was National Dairy Month.
Cool off with a bowl of ice cream. Delight in a glass of milk. Savor the yogurt.
*Love ice cream? It takes about 12 pounds of milk (about a gallon and a half) to make one gallon of the icy concoction.
*As a comparison, it takes over 21 pounds of whole milk to make ONE pound of butter.
*To produce six to 10 gallons of milk a day, a dairy cow eats about 90 pounds of feed a day, depending on her size.
*Holstein cattle, which are known for their black and white markings, are the most common dairy cattle in the U.S.
They’re joined by other breeds like the Guernsey, which is brown and white; the Jersey, which has more butterfat in its milk; the Brown Swiss; and the milking Shorthorn.
*Texas is the fifth largest dairy-producing state in the nation with 375 Grade A dairies providing over 1.4 billion gallons of milk. Imagine all the ice cream, cheese and other dairy products we could make with that!
Texas dairies provide more than our favorite snacks. They also make a huge impact on the Texas economy each year.
And don’t forget, milk products are part of a healthy diet.