Associated Press Updated: 15 February 2013 | 11:56 am in B380, Education Policy, K-12 Education, Public Safety, Statewide News

Farmers who host tours can be liable for accidents, Iowa Supreme Court rules

Farm Bureau concerned that lawsuits could jeopardize educational tours


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Rowan Trout, 5, was nose to nose with a calf at the petting zoo during the Breakfast on the Farm event at NICC in Calmar in June 2010. (Joyce A. Meyer/Correspondent)

The Iowa Supreme Court says farmers who host educational tours are not shielded from personal injury lawsuits under Iowa’s recreational use law.

The court ruled 5-2 on Friday that the owners of a dairy farm can be sued by a chaperone injured when she fell through a hole in a hayloft during a kindergarten class field trip.

The Iowa Farm Bureau had warned that allowing farmers to face liability would jeopardize tours that teach children about animals and farming. The group says farmers may no longer host such events if they’re worried about lawsuits.

At issue is a law that bars injury lawsuits against landowners who open their land for public recreational uses such as snowmobiling and hunting. The court says playing on a hayloft in a barn doesn’t qualify.



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