Sherburn, Minn. – Shirley Kittleson has unwanted guests. They won't stop eating and they won't go home.
But Kittleson's guests aren't holiday visitors. They're miniature horses — a herd of 72 that was thrust on her after the Animal Humane Society and the Watonwan County sheriff seized them from a southern Minnesota pony farm, where they were being mistreated.
Now this rural Minnesota veterinarian has housed and tended to the ponies for a year and a half, and she can't get anyone to pay for their care. Kittleson is trying to collect on a bill that has passed $325,000 — and climbing. Last month, she filed a lawsuit against the Humane Society and Watonwan County in Martin County District Court for nonpayment.
"This was so big we couldn't let it go," she said recently, adding, "We sure would like to get our stalls back."
At 72, Kittleson has been a vet for 40 years, treating large and small animals on a sprawling farm about 8 miles southeast of Sherburn, a town of about 1,100 people near the Iowa border, where she grew up in a family that bred and raised golden palominos.
In June 2018, she got a call: Could she take in some ponies? Say, six dozen of them?
"We said we could," she said. "A lot of them were mares with newborn babies."
The ponies were seized from Michael Johnson, the third-generation owner of a pony farm in Odin, in neighboring Watonwan County, about 25 miles from Kittleson's place. Authorities responding to an anonymous tip charged Johnson with three misdemeanors involving mistreatment of the animals.