Thursday, March 19, 2020

SD Supreme Court hands down 4 decisions


The SD Supreme Court handed down four decisions this morning, holding inter alia
   Dismissal of work comp claim on basis of failure to prosecute reversed;

   Students denied claim (on basis of lack of standing) for lost GEAR UP funding; 

   Trial court’s post-verdict judgment of acquittal reversed, using de novo standard of review;

    Work Comp Insurers’ denial of death benefits rejected

Summaries follow:

LAPLANTE v. GGNSC MADISON, S.D., 2020 S.D. 13:  Employee’s petition for work comp benefits was dismissed “for lack of prosecution pursuant to ARSD 47:03:01:09 [… if there has been no activity for at least one year…]”   The Circuit Court affirmed, but the SD Supreme Court reversed and remanded because employee's participation in vocational rehabilitation program constituted "activity" sufficient to avoid dismissal for failure to prosecute.  This decision is unanimous (4-0) with opinion authored by Justice Jensen. Justice Salter did not participate. 

BLACK BEAR v. MID-CENTRAL, 2020 S.D. 14: Action by several students against multiple defendants, seeking lost funding under the Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs, a/k/a “GEAR UP.”  The lower court ruled against the students and the SD Supreme Court affirmed, but on a different basis (lack of standing) than the lower court.  The issues and resolution thereof are succinctly stated in ¶ 1 of the Court’s opinion:

Students sued various defendants to recover for lost funding for services denied to them under the GEAR UP program due to mismanagement and embezzlement. The circuit court denied summary judgment on several motions by defendants before finding the students’ claims preempted by federal law and dismissing the case. The students appeal and the defendants raise multiple issues by notice of review. We affirm the circuit court’s decision dismissing the students’ case, but do so because the students lack standing to bring their claims. 

The Court’s decision is unanimous (5-0) with opinion authored by Chief Justice Gilbertson. 

STATE v. WOLF, 2020 S.D. 15:  As a result of an altercation initiated by inmate against correctional officer, State pursued 3 charges/counts against inmate.  Jury found inmate guilty on 2 counts, but acquitted inmate on 1 count.  Trial judge granted inmate’s post verdict motion and entered judgment of acquittal on 1 count and sentenced inmate on the remaining count as to which he was found guilty.  In adjudicating the State’s appeal, the SD Supreme Court reversed the trial court’s post-verdict judgment of acquittal and remanded for sentencing in accordance with the jury’s verdict of guilty.  This decision addresses a previously unresolved issue concerning the standard of review, with the issue framed and resolved in ¶ 12, as follows:

We have not previously considered the standard of review applicable to the State’s challenge of an order granting a motion for judgment of acquittal after the jury has returned a guilty verdict. However, a motion for judgment of acquittal attacks the sufficiency of the evidence, which is a question of law whether the motion is considered before or after the jury’s verdict. “Whether the State has provided sufficient evidence to sustain the conviction is a question of law reviewed de novo.” State v. Hauge, 2013 S.D. 26, ¶ 12, 829 N.W.2d 145, 149 (citing State v. Jucht, 2012 S.D. 66, ¶ 18, 821 N.W.2d 629, 633).  

This decision is unanimous (5-0), with opinion authored by Justice Jensen.

BONEBRIGHT v. CITY OF MILLER,  2020 S.D. 16: Employee died in work-related accident.  Employer (City of Miller) and Work Comp fund contested payment of benefits to widow on the basis that employee was engaged in “willful misconduct.”  The Department of Labor ruled for widow on the basis that the “alleged willful misconduct was not a proximate cause of his death.”  The Circuit Court affirmed on a different basis – because the employee “had not engaged in willful misconduct.”  The SD Supreme Court affirmed the Circuit Court, stating in ¶ 24:

The circuit court did not err when it reversed the Department’s determination on bona fide enforcement and proximate cause. Stephanie’s workers’ compensation claim is not precluded by willful misconduct because the City did not demonstrate bona fide enforcement of its safety rules. Given this disposition, it is unnecessary to address the question of proximate cause. 

The Court’s ruling is unanimous (5-0), with opinion authored by Justice Salter.  Retired Justice Konenkamp sat on this case in lieu of Justice De Vaney who served as the trial judge in this case. 

These decisions may be accessed at