They will move the horses feet around and can get violent. They may kick, bite, rear, charge, ect. However, it is better for you to leave them alone and settle it and eventually it will get more peaceful.
If the horses seem to be fighting one specific horse to the death, then you should interfere, but it is not common for horses to do this as their instinct is not to weaken the herd by killing a horse but merely establish who is a better leader, and this does not involve killing.
You may see a horse (particuarly the lead mare) working kind of like a cow horse and keeping a specific horse out of the herd. This horse probably did something unexceptable in the herd and will not be allowed in the herd until it shows submissive behavior like lowering its head and licking its lips. Then the horse would turn its back to the horse, it's signal to come back in.
What factors are considered in determining whether a particular act is subject to Respondeat Superior?
mood
Evaluation is the act of determining the worth of something
I work with miniature horses and they pretty much act lik normal sized horses
Horses in general do not act any certain way because of their color. A palomino horse is simply a color of horse, not a breed. In the wild, they will act the way any wild horse will act.
No.
Horses will generally, run, buck, kick, rear up, or will act jumpy, etc.
Voters Act
they will usually run and buck.
The military owns the horses. The cavalry men ride the horses, but, there are no more cavalrys. The animal rights act passed, relieving all work horses from military duty.
the superiority of a school is the principal
He suffers from a superiority complex. Our team will win because of our superiority on the field.