ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This mаtter comes before the Court on Defendant’s motion to dismiss. This case requires the Court to determine the legal effect of a Participation, Waiver and Release Agreement (the “Release”) signed by Plaintiff prior to his participation in a horse ride provided by Defendant. Because Defendant presented, and the Court considered, material extraneous to the pleadings, the motion is treated as one for summary judgment. 1
The parties agree to the material facts necessary to decide the validity and enforceability of the Release. In particular, *1298 Defendant, while not conceding negligence on the part of itself or its agents, does admit that Plaintiff was injured as a result of a fall from Defendant’s horse. (Def.’s Answer ¶4.) For his part, Plaintiff does not deny that he signed the Release. (PL’s Resp. to Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss at 2.) Of course the parties diverge regarding the legal significance of the Release. According to Defendant, the Release acts as a complete bar to Plaintiffs negligence claim. 2 Plaintiff counters that the Release is unenforceablе as against public policy. After reading the briefs, hearing oral arguments, and being fully advised of the premises, the Court FINDS and ORDERS as follows:
Background
Defendant, Darwin Ranch, Inc., operates a dude ranch in Teton County, Wyoming. On July 16,1995, Plaintiff, Marc Street, an invitee of Defendant’s ranch, participated in a horseback trail ride. During the ride, Plaintiff fell from his horse and injured his leg. Prior to the outing, Plaintiff signed thе Release, in which he: (1) acknowledged and assumed certain integral risks of horse-related activities, 3 and (2) waived any claims against Defendant arising out of an injury caused by participation in recreational activities, including injuries caused by Defendant’s negligence. 4 Plaintiff commenced this suit alleging that Defendant was negligent when, among other unspecified acts, it “gave plaintiff a horse to ride which it knew or had reason to know was dangerous for plaintiff to ride; did not properly evaluate whether or not plaintiffs horse was appropriate for plaintiff, an inexperienced rider; and did not assist or help plaintiff, an inexperienced rider.” (PL’s Compl. ¶ 6.)
Summary Judgment Standard
A party is entitled to summary judgment where there are no genuinе issues of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Analysis
Under Wyoming law, exculpatory agreements such as the Release at issue here are enforced unless the exculpatory clause is contrary to public policy.
See Schutkowski v. Carey,
1. Public Duty and Nature of the Service Offered
The Release is consistent with Wyoming public policy under
Schutlotvski
factors one and two. Without denigrating the eminent role of equine pursuits in the history, culture, and economy of Wyoming, the Court concludes that Defendant’s services plainly are not оf sufficient public import to engender a public duty. In Wyoming, “[p]rivate recreational businesses generally do not qualify as services demanding a special duty to the public.... ”
Schutkowski,
Despite the great weight of Wyoming precedent to the contrary, Plaintiff raises two points to support his contention that equine providers do owe a public duty. First, Plaintiff contends that all recreational activity providers owe a public duty under general premises liability principles. (Pl.’s.Resp. to Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss at 5-6.) Second, Plaintiff asserts that Wyoming’s Recreation Safety Act (the “Act”) establishes a public policy which creates a public duty for equine providers. (Id. at 6-7.) The Court finds neither argument convincing.
Plaintiff cites
Dalury v. S-K-I, Ltd.,
Nor does the Court find any merit in Plaintiffs suggestion that the Recreation Safety Act establishes a public policy from which springs a public duty. As an initial matter, the Court finds no fault with Plaintiffs premise that a release agreement is invalid as against public policy if it conflicts with a standard of care imposed by a safety statute. For example,
Murphy v. American River Runners,
Where Plaintiff finds a statutory duty of care for equine providers in the Recreation Safety Act, however, remains a mystery. While many other states have enacted statutes that attempt to define the duties of hazardous recreation activity providers, Wyoming has not done so. See Wyo.Stat. Ann. § 1-1-122, 123; Cathy Hаnsen and Steve Duerr, Recreational Injuries & Inherent Risks: Wyoming’s Recreation Safety Act, 28 Land & Water L.Rev. 149, 168 (1993). In fact, the Wyoming legislature explicitly considered establishing statutory equine provider duties before enacting the 1993 amendments to the Act, but ultimately decided not to do so. See Catherine Hansen-Stamp, Recreational Injuries & Inherent Risks: Wyoming’s Recreation Safety Act — An Update, 33 Land & Water L.Rev. 249, 261-62 (1998) (citing H.R.0159, 52nd Leg. (Wyo.1992)). Instead, the operative portion of the Act provides:
(a) Any person who takes part in any sport or recreational oрportunity assumes the inherent risk in that sport or recreational opportunity, whether those risks are known or unknown, and is legally responsible for any and all damage, injury or death to himself or other persons or property that results from the inherent risks in that sport or recreation opportunity.
(b) A provider of any sport or recreational opportunity is not required to eliminate, alter or control the inherent risks within the particular sport or recreational opportunity.
Wyo.Stat.Ann. § 1-1-123.
Plaintiffs position is particularly puzzling because, despite the word “safety” in the title, the true public policy expressed by the Act is to benefit the recreation industry and Wyoming economy by eliminating provider liability for inherent recreation аctivity risks. See Hansen & Duerr, 28 Land & Water L.Rev. at 170-71; see also Wyo.Stat.Ann. § l-l-123(a), (b). The *1301 Release is, at the very least, consistent with the public policy expressed by the Act, if not in furtherance of it. Plaintiffs position that the Release violates a policy expressed by the Act is, to be frank, bewildering.
2. Fair Contracting
The third
Schutkowski
factor, which requires the exculpatory clause to be fairly entered into, is closely related to the first two elements. It addresses the concern that “ ‘[a]s a result of the essential nature of the service, in the economic setting of the transaction, the party invoking exculpation possesses a decisive advantage of bargaining strength against any member of the public who seeks his services.’ ”
Schutkowski,
Because trail rides are a recreational, nonessential service, Defendant did not possess the type of market power that would invalidate the Release. A similar situation was addressed in Milligan, where the reрresentative of a skier killed while participating in a ski race claimed a release was unfair because it was prepared solely by the resort and offered on a “take it or leave it” basis. Id. at 1067. The court held that the release was fairly entered into because
[the resort] did not force [the skier] to ski in the race. [The skier] could have chosen not to race. Skiing in the race was not a matter of practical necessity, and putting on the race was not an essential service. Nor was skiing in the race the only reasonable alternative. Thus, no decisive bargaining advantage or disadvantage existed.
Id.
Trail rides, like ski races, are not essential services or practical necessities. Plaintiff was hardly at Defendant’s mercy, and could have.refused the trail ride, and attendant Release, without threat to life or limb. In Judge Cardozo’s timeless words, “the timorous may stay at home.”
Murphy v. Steeplechase Amusement Co.,
3. Clear and Unambiguous Language
The Release is adequate under the fourth
Schutkowski
factor requiring the exculpatory clause to evidence the parties’ intent to release the exculpated party from negligence liability in clear and unambiguous language.
See Milligan,
Disputes generally arise under the fourth
Schutkowski
factor when the exculpatory agreement does not contain the word “negligence,” although even then the agreement may be sufficiently clear. In
Milligan,
for example, exculpatory language exempting a party from “legal claims or legal liability of any kind ... whether foreseen or unforseen” was held to evidence an intention to release the party from negligence liability.
Id.
at 1068. Language releasing claims against “all persons whomsoever directly or indirectly hable, from any and all ... claims and demands, actions and causes of action ... and any and all other claims or damages whatsoever both in law and in equity and in any way resulting from personal injuries” was clear enough to waive negli
*1302
gence liability.
Schutkowski,
The Release blatantly and unambiguously specifies that Plaintiff waived negligence claims against Defendant for all-injuries resulting from participation in the recreational activity, see
supra
note 4, making it even more clear than the exculpatory clauses found valid in
Schutkowski
and
Milligan.
Common sense must guide the Court’s interpretatiоn of the Release, see
Schutkowski,
In sum, the Release is valid and enforceable because it does not concern an essential service or practical necessity, and it expresses unambiguously the intent of the parties to exculpate Defendant from negligence liability.
See Schutkowski,
The Release consists of two distinct and independent components. First is the Release’s identification of integral risks, which the Court views as the parties’ attemрt to define the hazards that Defendant had no duty to mitigate. Under Wyoming law, Defendant had no duty to protect against inherent risks, and the failure to do so is not negligent. See Wyo.Stat. Ann. § 1 — 1—128(b); Hansen & Duerr, 28 Land & Water L.Rev. at 155-158. Thus, no waiver is necessary for inherent risks and the language quoted in note 4 would be a nullity if it were limited to the inherent risks enumerated in the Release.
The second component of the Releаse, the language quoted in note 4, is not superfluous text, but is an expression of the parties’ unambiguous agreement to release Defendant from liability for negligent acts which, by definition, are not inherent risks. See Hansen & Duerr, 28 Land & Water L.Rev. at 155-158. The language of the Release is clear. Plaintiff waived claims for “NEGLIGENCE of any kind or nature, whether foreseen or unforseen, arising directly or indirectly оut of any ... injury ... as a result of my participation in the recreational activities ... whether such ... injury results from NEGLIGENCE of Darwin Ranch, Inc .... or from some other cause.” Clearly, the waiver of negligence claims for recreation activity — related injuries is not limited to the enumerated integral risks.
There is no dispute that Plaintiffs injury arose directly or indirectly out of Plaintiffs participation in a recreation activity, namely, the trail ride. Thus, under the valid and enforceable Release, Plaintiffs negligence claim was waived whether the injury was caused by one of the enumerated integral risks or by some other act of negligence on the part of Defendant.
Conclusion
The Court holds as a matter of law that the Release entered into by Plaintiff and *1303 Defendant is valid and enforceable under Wyoming law and that Plaintiffs injury falls within the Release’s coverage. Consequently, Plaintiff cannot maintain this negligence action and Defendant’s motion for summary judgment is hereby GRANTED. Plaintiffs claims are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.
Notes
. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide:
If, on a motion ... for failure of the pleading to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, matters outside the pleading are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as provided in Rule 56, and all parties shall be given reasonable opportunity to present all material made pertinent to such a motion by Rule 56.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b). In this case, the Court considered the Participation, Waiver, and Release Agreement аnd the authenticating affidavit of Loring Woodman, President, General Manager, and custodian of records for Defendant. Both parties treated the motion as a *1298 motion for summary judgment in their briefs. Thus, the motion is converted to one for summary judgment.
. Defendant further insists that Plaintiff's negligence claim is defeated by Wyoming's Recreation Safety Act, Wyo.Stat.Ann. §§ 1-1-121 to 1-1-123 (1999). Because the Court finds the Release dispositive, it does not reach this argument.
. The Release provides that Plaintiff understood and acknowledged certain integral risks, hazards, and dangers including:
risks arising out of any activity involving horses, mules or donkeys which are unpredictable and uncontrollable in all circumstances, which are reactions to the conduct and actions of othеr riders and persons, which without warning kick, bite, stomp, stumble, rear, bolt, fall down, and react to sudden movements, noise, light, vehicles, other animals or objects, and which involve equipment that may break or otherwise fail and other riders who may not control their animals and cause á collision or other unpredictable consequence....
. The Release states:
I, for myself, my heirs, successors, executors and subrogors, hereby KNOWINGLY AND INTENTIONALLY WAIVE AND RELEASE, INDEMNIFY AND HOLD HARMLESS DARWIN RANCH, INC., its owners, agents and employees, from and against any and all claims, actions, causes of action, liabilities, suits, expenses (including reasonable attorney’s fees) and NEGLIGENCE of any kind or nature, whether foreseen or unforseen, arising directly or indirectly out of any damage, loss, injury, paralysis, or death to me or my property as a result of my participation in the recreational activities on a ranch and in a wilderness environment in mountainous terrain, whether such damage, loss, injury, paralysis or death results from NEGLIGENCE of Darwin Ranch, Inc., or its owners, agents, or employees, or from some other cause. I AGREE that neither I, or anyone acting on my behalf, will make a claim against, sue or otherwise maintain action of any kind against Darwin Ranch, Inc. as a result of any injury, paralysis or death to me.
. Claims for wilful and wanton misconduct, however, cannot be waived by an exculpatory agreement.
See Boehm,
. Plaintiff has produced no affidavit, deposition, or other evidence substantiating the allegation that Defendant's horse had abnormally dangerous propensities or that Defendant or its agents knew of any abnormal dangers associated with the horse given to Plaintiff.
