The
SD Supreme Court handed down five decisions this morning:
1) Reemployment benefits appropriate;
2) Set
back restriction upheld by Supreme Court;
3) Defense verdict in
personal injury action upheld by 4-1 ruling
4) Collateral attack under
Rule 60(b)(6) permitted by Supreme Court;
5) Eviction from 5200
acre farm upheld.
Summaries
follows:
BLACK HILLS ADVENTURE LODGING, LLC v. DLR, REEMPLOYMENT
ASSISTANCE DIVISION, 2025 S.D. 4: This case
involves an application, “for reemployment
assistance benefits with the South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation”
by an individual who cleaned cabins. The defense was that she was an
independent contractor, not an employee.
The ALJ and the Circuit Court
ruled that this an employment situation and “ordered
[Employer] to pay into the unemployment compensation fund based on the wages
paid to [employee] and others similarly situated to her.” The SD Supreme
Court affirmed, but ordered that the language “and
others similarly situated” was a ‘bridge
too far’ (my words, not the Court’s) because:
[¶38.] Permitting the Department to hold [Employer]
liable for “others similarly situated” to [Employee] would run directly counter
to the individualized analysis that must be made to determine whether an
individual is an employee of a putative employer.
This decision is unanimous (5-0), with opinion authored by Chief
Justice Jensen.
DECRAMER
v. DORALE, MCCOOK COUNTY BD OF ADJUSTMENT, 2025 S.D. 5: County Board of
Adjustment granted variance from 9 foot setback rule (“structures must be set back a minimum of nine
feet from neighboring property lines”) to home builder after
he had already constructed his house.
The Circuit Court denied relief to neighbor, sought by a petition for
writ of certiorari. The SD Supreme
Court reversed, stating:
[¶22.] Because the Board acted illegally and in excess of its
authority by granting a variance that did not comply with either SDCL
11-2-53(2) or the Ordinance, the circuit court should have reversed the
decision of the Board and vacated the grant of the variance.
This
decision is unanimous (5-0) with opinion authored by Justice DeVaney.
GEERDES
v. LIKNESS, 2025 S.D. 6: This is a
personal injury action arising out of a motor vehicle accident. The jury found for the Defendant on the issue
of causation. Plaintiff’s Motion for New
Trial, premised on the assertion that Defendant hadadmitted causation, was denied. The SD Supreme Court affirmed, in a (4-1)
ruling. The Court’s opinion is authored
by Justice Myren. Justice Kern
dissented, stating:
[¶30.] In my view, defense counsel admitted
causation and the circuit court erred in submitting the causation question to
the jury and abused its discretion in denying Geerdes’ motion for a new trial.
ESTATE OF MACK, 2025 S.D. 7:
This is a collateral attack upon a probate order of distribution. The
attack is lodged under SDCL 15-6-60(b)(6) – “Any other reason justifying relief from the
operation of the judgment.”
The recipient’s attorney at the time had not communicated with the recipient
and was in the process of being disciplined by the State Bar. The trial court denied relief. But, the SD Supreme Court reversed, holding:
[¶25.] Based upon [Recipient’s] unrefuted
affidavit and the pending disciplinary proceedings at the time involving [his
attorney], in which the Board expressed “serious concerns” about his ability to
practice law, we conclude that extraordinary circumstances existed as required
by Rule 60(b)(6) to set aside the order of distribution. Because the circuit
court determined the distribution was fair and equitable, it concluded that no
injustice would occur by denying the motion to vacate. The circuit court’s
assessment of the distribution was not based on a current valuation of the
estate assets and was made without affording Robert an opportunity for a
hearing on the proposed distribution. Under these circumstances, the circuit
court abused its discretion in denying the motion to vacate the order for
distribution pursuant to Rule 60(b)(6).
This
ruling is unanimous (5-0), with opinion authored by Justice Myren.
STOCK
v. GARRETT, 2025 S.D. 8: This litigation involves 5,200 acres of farm land in
Sully County apparently worth slightly more than $10 million. The plaintiffs sued claiming a right to
possession under a lease with an option to purchase, alleging a default in the
lease payments. Jury trial resulted in a
verdict for Plaintiffs which the trial court enforced by ordering eviction. The SD Supreme Court affirmed. All five justices voted to affirm in a 3-2
ruling. The majority opinion is authored
by Chief Justice Jensen. Justice DeVaney
filed a concurring opinion, in which Justice Kern agreed. The litigation was complicated by the fact a parallel
proceeding had been filed in federal court by Plaintiffs. The purpose of Justice DeVaney’s concurring
opinion is to express another view in regard to the federal court proceeding,
as explained by Justice DeVaney as follows:
[¶65.] I concur with the majority opinion, but I write
separately on the parallel litigation issue because I arrive at the same result
in a different manner.
These
decisions may be accessed at
http://ujs.sd.gov/Supreme_Court/opinions.aspx .