“APPENDIX. 
I. UNSOUNDNESS. 
Legal Interpretation of the Term. 
“Tf at the time of sale the horse has any @sease which 
ther actually does diminish the, natural usefulness of the 
imal, so as to make him less capable of work of any 
‘scription, or which in its ordinary progress will diminish 
e natural usefulness of the animal, this is unsoundness ; _ 
‘if the horse has, either from désease or accident, undergone . 
iy alteration of structure that either actually does at the 
me or in its ordinary effects wz/7 diminish the natural 
iefulness of the horse, such a horse is unsound.” (Lord 
llenborough in the case of Elton v. Brogden, 4 Camp. 
31.) 
II. VICE. 
DEFINITION.—A horse is said ‘to be vicious which has a’ 
ibit dangerous to itself or to those who have the usual 
talings with it; or any habit which either does -or may 
nder the horse itself less useful. , 
Examples ; ‘—Rearing, running away, kicking, restiveness, 
zaving, cribbing, wind-sucking, etc., etc. 
