Title 15Commerce and TradeRelease 119-73

§1824 Unlawful acts

Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 44— - PROTECTION OF HORSES › § 1824

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Makes it illegal to move, transport, deliver, or receive a horse that is sore if there is reason to think the horse will be shown, entered, sold, or auctioned. Professional carriers and their employees are not guilty if they are doing their normal job and did not know the horse was sore. It is also illegal to show, enter, sell, auction, or let any of those things happen with a sore horse. Horse show and sale managers must keep sore horses out. If a show or sale has not named the required official under section 1823(c), the managers still must disqualify or bar sore horses. If they have named that official, managers must disqualify or bar a horse once that official or the Secretary says the horse is sore or they otherwise learn it is sore. It is illegal to use any tools, devices, or substances that the Secretary bans to prevent soring. Organizers must keep and turn in records and let inspectors see or copy them when required under section 1823. No one may remove a mark that identifies a detained horse. Organizers must also provide proper space or facilities for the Secretary to conduct inspections, as set by regulations under section 1828.

Full Legal Text

Title 15, §1824

Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

The following conduct is prohibited:
(1)The shipping, transporting, moving, delivering, or receiving of any horse which is sore with reason to believe that such horse while it is sore may be shown, exhibited, entered for the purpose of being shown or exhibited, sold, auctioned, or offered for sale, in any horse show, horse exhibition, or horse sale or auction; except that this paragraph does not apply to the shipping, transporting, moving, delivering, or receiving of any horse by a common or contract carrier or an employee thereof in the usual course of the carrier’s business or employee’s employment unless the carrier or employee has reason to believe that such horse is sore.
(2)The (A) showing or exhibiting, in any horse show or horse exhibition, of any horse which is sore, (B) entering for the purpose of showing or exhibiting in any horse show or horse exhibition, any horse which is sore, (C) selling, auctioning, or offering for sale, in any horse sale or auction, any horse which is sore, and (D) allowing any activity described in clause (A), (B), or (C) respecting a horse which is sore by the owner of such horse.
(3)The failure by the management of any horse show or horse exhibition, which does not appoint and retain a person in accordance with section 1823(c) of this title, to disqualify from being shown or exhibited any horse which is sore.
(4)The failure by the management of any horse sale or auction, which does not appoint and retain a qualified person in accordance with section 1823(c) of this title, to prohibit the sale, offering for sale, or auction of any horse which is sore.
(5)The failure by the management of any horse show or horse exhibition, which has appointed and retained a person in accordance with section 1823(c) of this title, to disqualify from being shown or exhibited any horse (A) which is sore, and (B) after having been notified by such person or the Secretary that the horse is sore or after otherwise having knowledge that the horse is sore.
(6)The failure by the management of any horse sale or auction which has appointed and retained a person in accordance with section 1823(c) of this title, to prohibit the sale, offering for sale, or auction of any horse (A) which is sore, and (B) after having been notified by such person or the Secretary or after otherwise having knowledge that the horse is sore.
(7)The showing or exhibiting at a horse show or horse exhibition; the selling or auctioning at a horse sale or auction; the allowing to be shown, exhibited, or sold at a horse show, horse exhibition, or horse sale or auction; the entering for the purpose of showing or exhibiting in any horse show or horse exhibition; or offering for sale at a horse sale or auction, any horse which is wearing or bearing any equipment, device, paraphernalia, or substance which the Secretary by regulation under section 1828 of this title prohibits to prevent the soring of horses.
(8)The failing to establish, maintain, or submit records, notices, reports, or other information required under section 1823 of this title.
(9)The failure or refusal to permit access to or copying of records, or the failure or refusal to permit entry or inspection, as required by section 1823 of this title.
(10)The removal of any marking required by the Secretary to identify a horse as being detained.
(11)The failure or refusal to provide the Secretary with adequate space or facilities, as the Secretary may by regulation under section 1828 of this title prescribe, in which to conduct inspections or any other activity authorized to be performed by the Secretary under this chapter.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Amendments

1976—Pub. L. 94–360 substituted provisions prohibiting the transportation, receipt, exhibition, sale, or auction of a sored horse, and the showing, sale or auction of a horse bearing any device or substance prohibited by regulation of the Secretary, and making the management of a horse show, exhibition, or sale, responsible for failure to disqualify such horses from participating, and for interfering with the conducting of inspections by the Secretary of horses in the show or of the management records, for provisions authorizing the inspection of horses, transported in commerce, and requiring the management of shows and exhibitions to maintain such records as the Secretary prescribes. Provisions now covering the maintenance of records and the inspection of horses are set out as section 1823 of this title.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

15 U.S.C. § 1824

Title 15Commerce and Trade

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73