Trending...
- Purple Heart Recipient Honored by Hall of Fame Son In Viral Tribute Sparking National Conversation on Service Fatherhood, Healing and Legacy
- Atlanta Tech Founder Seeks Clarity on Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy
- VENUS Goes Live on CATEX Exchange As UK Financial Ltd Activates The Premier Division Of The Maya Meme's League
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. - WisconsinEagle -- The South Dakota Supreme Court's February 4, 2026 decision in Hamer v. Duffy, 2026 S.D. 4, establishes that violations of Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations can constitute negligence per se under state law, reshaping how truck accident cases will be litigated and settled statewide. Hoy Law of Sioux Falls represented Justin and Kim Hamer and secured the landmark ruling.
The case arose from an April 2019 collision at a malfunctioning traffic signal near the Interstate 29 interchange in Lincoln County. Justin Hamer, driving a pickup, was struck by a commercial truck operated by Paul Duffy of Cornerstone Poured Foundations. With no independent witnesses and both drivers claiming right of way, the case went to trial, but not before pretrial rulings stripped it down to almost nothing.
The trial court excluded both of Hamer's expert witnesses, blocked his attempt to raise federal trucking regulations, and refused to instruct the jury on those standards. One expert would have testified about Duffy's fatigue from working 13-hour days on fragmented sleep. An accident reconstructionist had calculated Duffy had nearly five seconds to react to Hamer's vehicle. Without that testimony or any federal regulatory framework, the jury found both drivers negligent but awarded Hamer nothing under South Dakota's contributory negligence standard.
More on Wisconsin Eagle
Hoy Law appealed, and the Supreme Court unanimously reversed on three grounds. First, it held that the FMCSRs, adopted into state law under SDCL 49-28A-3, establish the standard of care for commercial truck drivers, and that unexcused violations constitute negligence per se. The Court rejected the defense argument that these regulations don't create a private cause of action. Second, the Court found the trial court abused its discretion in excluding both experts, noting their testimony provided specialized knowledge beyond what any layperson could bring. The Court also observed that defense counsel argued the very issues in closing that the excluded experts would have addressed. Third, the Court ruled the jury should have been instructed on 49 C.F.R. § 392.3, which prohibits operating a commercial vehicle while impaired by fatigue.
The implications reach beyond this case. The FMCSRs cover hours of service, hazardous condition driving, vehicle maintenance, and driver qualifications. Any of those can now support a negligence per se claim when a violation causes injury, shifting the trial question from whether a truck driver acted "reasonably" to whether the driver broke a specific safety rule. It also changes settlement dynamics, giving plaintiffs concrete regulatory violations to point to. Because employers are liable for employees' negligent acts on the job, trucking companies in South Dakota face direct accountability when drivers violate federal safety rules.
More on Wisconsin Eagle
Thanks to Hoy Law taking this case to the state's highest court, the Hamers will get a new trial where their full case can finally reach a jury.
The case arose from an April 2019 collision at a malfunctioning traffic signal near the Interstate 29 interchange in Lincoln County. Justin Hamer, driving a pickup, was struck by a commercial truck operated by Paul Duffy of Cornerstone Poured Foundations. With no independent witnesses and both drivers claiming right of way, the case went to trial, but not before pretrial rulings stripped it down to almost nothing.
The trial court excluded both of Hamer's expert witnesses, blocked his attempt to raise federal trucking regulations, and refused to instruct the jury on those standards. One expert would have testified about Duffy's fatigue from working 13-hour days on fragmented sleep. An accident reconstructionist had calculated Duffy had nearly five seconds to react to Hamer's vehicle. Without that testimony or any federal regulatory framework, the jury found both drivers negligent but awarded Hamer nothing under South Dakota's contributory negligence standard.
More on Wisconsin Eagle
- Food Journal Magazine Raises the Standard for Restaurant Reviews in Los Angeles
- Colbert Packaging Continues Strategic Capital Investment with New Eterna Equipment Addition
- Williamsville Spa Expands Team to Meet Growing Demand for Professional Facials
- My Dinner with ChatGPT: Santosh Krinsky Explores the promise and limits of artificial intelligence
- Pregis Expands Wind Energy Use, Advancing Progress Toward Net Zero by 2040
Hoy Law appealed, and the Supreme Court unanimously reversed on three grounds. First, it held that the FMCSRs, adopted into state law under SDCL 49-28A-3, establish the standard of care for commercial truck drivers, and that unexcused violations constitute negligence per se. The Court rejected the defense argument that these regulations don't create a private cause of action. Second, the Court found the trial court abused its discretion in excluding both experts, noting their testimony provided specialized knowledge beyond what any layperson could bring. The Court also observed that defense counsel argued the very issues in closing that the excluded experts would have addressed. Third, the Court ruled the jury should have been instructed on 49 C.F.R. § 392.3, which prohibits operating a commercial vehicle while impaired by fatigue.
The implications reach beyond this case. The FMCSRs cover hours of service, hazardous condition driving, vehicle maintenance, and driver qualifications. Any of those can now support a negligence per se claim when a violation causes injury, shifting the trial question from whether a truck driver acted "reasonably" to whether the driver broke a specific safety rule. It also changes settlement dynamics, giving plaintiffs concrete regulatory violations to point to. Because employers are liable for employees' negligent acts on the job, trucking companies in South Dakota face direct accountability when drivers violate federal safety rules.
More on Wisconsin Eagle
- Dr. Sheel Desai Solomon and Preston Dermatology Continue Awards Streak with Top Honors in 2026 Maggy Awards
- Jack and Sage Acquires Sustainable Apparel Brand Kastlfel, Expanding Premium Logo Wear Across National Parks and Ski Resorts
- Cancun International Airport Prepares for Record Travel Surge Ahead of Spring Break, Summer, and the 2026 High Season
- $167 Billion Pharma R&D Market Largely Untapped by AI Creates Major Growth Runway for KALA Bios Data-Sovereign AI Strategy: N A S D A Q: KALA
- Lighthouse Tech Awards Recognize Top HR Technology Providers for 2026
Thanks to Hoy Law taking this case to the state's highest court, the Hamers will get a new trial where their full case can finally reach a jury.
Source: Hoy Law
0 Comments
Latest on Wisconsin Eagle
- Custom Wooden Token Manufacturer Celebrates 10 Years of Helping Brands Stay Top of Mind
- NaturismRE Launches the NRE Health Institute to Advance Evidence-Informed Public Health Research
- P-Wave Classics to publish Robert Bage's Hermsprong in three volumes, beginning 12 May
- Progressive Dental & The Closing Institute Partner with Zest Dental Solutions to Elevate Full-Arch Growth and Patient Outcomes
- CCHR: While Damaging Antipsychotics Win Approval, Proven Non-Drug Alternatives Remain Ignored
- Arcuri Group Announces Long‑Term Partnership with WakeMed Health & Hospitals to Deliver Situational Awareness and De‑escalation Training
- At 25, She Became One of the Youngest AAPI Female Founders to Win One of the World's Most Prestigious Design Awards for a Lamp That Makes You Smile
- Juego Studios Extends Full-Cycle Game Development & Outsourcing Capabilities to the UAE Market
- VENUS Goes Live on CATEX Exchange As UK Financial Ltd Activates The Premier Division Of The Maya Meme's League
- Atlanta Tech Founder Seeks Clarity on Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy
- Purple Heart Recipient Honored by Hall of Fame Son In Viral Tribute Sparking National Conversation on Service Fatherhood, Healing and Legacy
- Amicly Launches as a Safety-First Social App Designed to Help People Build Real, Meaningful Friendships
- Primeindexer Google indexing platform launched by SEO Danmark APS
- Kaltra Introduces New Downward-Spraying Distribution Technology to Boost Microchannel Evaporator Performance
- Talentica Announces Winners of Multi-Agent Hackathon 2026
- NeuroAcoustic Pioneer Dr. Chris Potter Unveils QLL Technology to Disrupt Mental Health Industry
- Special Alert: Undervalued Opportunity: IQSTEL (N A S D A Q: IQST) Positioned for Explosive Multi-Year Growth
- Triple-Digit Growth, Strategic N A S D A Q Uplist, Plus A Scalable Healthcare Rollout Model: Stock Symbol: CDIX
- Vesica Health Receives FDA Breakthrough Device Designation for AssureMDx
- Lineus Medical's SafeBreak® Vascular Added to Alliant GPO Contract
