adsrollo
Member
Hello - At the moment I'm caught between 2 pals at the yard and their row over who is liable for a mishap that happened. Here's the story; There are a few of us who rent space at a farm yard. It is not a formal livery yard as such, and most of us have done up old stables. One girl (who is a friend) has a 15hh cob. She stabled him in an internal block which housed 2 stables. The cob broke/pushed though the other stable door to get at food - she previously used this space to store feed as there was no one else needing the stable. The cob damaged the concrete which the bolt went into, and also broke off the kick over latch at the bottom. At the time, I said to her that she needed to repair these to the original condition. Her partner fixed the top bolt hole (apparently) drilling a little bit of concrete out - in my opinion it was not secure enough and I said so. She made no effort to replace the kick latch. I reminded her on a couple of occasions this needed to be done.
10 days ago, another girl at the yard asked the farmer if she could bring her newly purchased 13.2 very fine welsh/TB. to which he replied yes, but it would need to be stabled in the internal stable next to the cob. At this point i stressed to the cob owner that the door NEEDED to be properly repaired ASAP as knowing the cob, he would try to get through and there could potentially be a problem. I told her this 2 days running, and I also mentioned it to the welsh/tb owner, and she too requested the bl**dy door be fixed. Alas it was not.
5 nights running the 'morning shift' person (we take it in turns to turn out) found the door pushed in at the top where the bolt was slipping out of it's hole. The door luckily jammed on concrete. The cob owner was made aware of this, but STILL did nothing. Last saturday am, the welsh owner arrived at the yard to find her pony well and truly duffed up. The pony has her winter coat on, and was soaked with sweat and trembling. She had cuts, swellings etc all over her. She was also incredibly distressed. The vet had to be called and the pony was sedated, given antibiotics, tetanus and some other medication. The vet decided not to stitch as the pony was in shock.
The owner of the cob is saying it is not her fault, so she does not need to pay anything (I'm getting the impression she is not insured, although she says she is). She has now agreed to pay 1/2, after great persuasion. The welsh owner is still upset and wants her to pay the full lot (approx £200). It's not quite bad enough, or financially viable to go down the legal route, but it's driving the rest of us mad! If I owned the cob, I would ask for the bill and sort it, along with a bottle of plonk. The cob owner is also denying she was ever advised to fix the door which enabled quite easy access, and the cob must have been provoked (????). I must say she is not being very gracious in my opinion. I have to careful what I write as they may see this! I have said that I think she has a moral and perhaps legal responsibility to cough up. The welsh pony who is unbroken, but very sweet natured and easy to do may not be as easy and willing as she was previously, and will have scars permanently.
Anyone else got any advice, experience etc?? Sorry to witter on, but the whole situation is getting silly and the rest of us are caught in the middle. Many thanks
10 days ago, another girl at the yard asked the farmer if she could bring her newly purchased 13.2 very fine welsh/TB. to which he replied yes, but it would need to be stabled in the internal stable next to the cob. At this point i stressed to the cob owner that the door NEEDED to be properly repaired ASAP as knowing the cob, he would try to get through and there could potentially be a problem. I told her this 2 days running, and I also mentioned it to the welsh/tb owner, and she too requested the bl**dy door be fixed. Alas it was not.
5 nights running the 'morning shift' person (we take it in turns to turn out) found the door pushed in at the top where the bolt was slipping out of it's hole. The door luckily jammed on concrete. The cob owner was made aware of this, but STILL did nothing. Last saturday am, the welsh owner arrived at the yard to find her pony well and truly duffed up. The pony has her winter coat on, and was soaked with sweat and trembling. She had cuts, swellings etc all over her. She was also incredibly distressed. The vet had to be called and the pony was sedated, given antibiotics, tetanus and some other medication. The vet decided not to stitch as the pony was in shock.
The owner of the cob is saying it is not her fault, so she does not need to pay anything (I'm getting the impression she is not insured, although she says she is). She has now agreed to pay 1/2, after great persuasion. The welsh owner is still upset and wants her to pay the full lot (approx £200). It's not quite bad enough, or financially viable to go down the legal route, but it's driving the rest of us mad! If I owned the cob, I would ask for the bill and sort it, along with a bottle of plonk. The cob owner is also denying she was ever advised to fix the door which enabled quite easy access, and the cob must have been provoked (????). I must say she is not being very gracious in my opinion. I have to careful what I write as they may see this! I have said that I think she has a moral and perhaps legal responsibility to cough up. The welsh pony who is unbroken, but very sweet natured and easy to do may not be as easy and willing as she was previously, and will have scars permanently.
Anyone else got any advice, experience etc?? Sorry to witter on, but the whole situation is getting silly and the rest of us are caught in the middle. Many thanks