Sheard v. Hattum

2021 S.D. 55
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 2021
Docket29496
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2021 S.D. 55 (Sheard v. Hattum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheard v. Hattum, 2021 S.D. 55 (S.D. 2021).

Opinion

#29496-aff in pt & rev in pt-SRJ 2021 S.D. 55

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

**** TALYN SHEARD, a/k/a TALYN O’CONNER, as Personal Representative for the Estate of Chalan Hedman, Plaintiff and Appellant, and

JEFFREY PAUL HOLSHOUSER, Plaintiff,

v.

ROBERT HATTUM, BEVERLY HATTUM, TODD HATTUM and CHELSEA HATTUM, jointly and severally, DBA HATTUM FAMILY FARMS, Defendants and Appellees. ****

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT HUGHES COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

****

THE HONORABLE MARGO D. NORTHRUP Judge

BRAD A. SCHRIEBER Pierre, South Dakota Attorney for plaintiff and appellant.

GARY D. JENSEN BRETT A. POPPEN of Beardsley, Jensen & Lee, Prof. LLC Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for defendants and appellees.

**** ARGUED MAY 24, 2021 OPINION FILED 09/22/21 #29496

JENSEN, Chief Justice

[¶1.] Chalan Hedman and Troy Hattum lost their lives after an explosion

and fire at the Hattum Family Farms. Chalan’s estate (the Estate) brought a

wrongful death suit against the Hattum Family Farms and individual members of

the Hattum family, seeking damages on strict liability and negligence theories. The

circuit court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissed

the Estate’s claims. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

Facts and Procedural History

[¶2.] At the time of the accident, Hattum Family Farms was owned and

operated by Robert (Bob) Hattum and Beverly Hattum, their son Todd Hattum, and

Todd’s wife Chelsea Hattum (the Hattums). 1 Troy was Todd and Chelsea’s son.

Troy was 22 years old, and Chalan was 23. Both men had worked full-time for the

Hattums for several years and were good friends. Chalan had lived in Todd and

Chelsea’s home for a time and was engaged to be married to their daughter, Taylor

Hattum. Chalan had a minor child, Z.O., from a prior relationship.

[¶3.] The accident occurred on the morning of August 8, 2016, when Troy

and Chalan attempted to weld a half-inch split in a diesel fuel tank they had taken

off a Peterbilt truck that the Hattums owned. The tank had leaked since the year

before when Chalan used the truck to haul silage. Chalan used a bar of soap to plug

the split, but it only stopped the leak for about 30 minutes. The Peterbilt truck had

1. Beverly Hattum passed away in 2017, but she was initially named as a defendant when the action commenced in 2018. Later, the circuit court granted the Hattums’ uncontested motion to dismiss Beverly from the lawsuit. While this appeal was pending, Bob passed away.

-1- #29496

air conditioning, but as silage season approached, Bob told Chalan to haul silage

with another truck that did not have air conditioning. On the morning of the

accident, Chalan’s fiancé, Taylor, testified that Chalan told her he would not drive a

truck without air conditioning.

[¶4.] Jeff Holshouser was the only surviving witness to the accident. He

worked full-time for the Hattums in the 1980s and considered Bob a friend. For the

last several years, he had worked seasonally for the Hattums. When Jeff arrived at

work on August 8, 2016, he saw the Peterbilt truck was pulled up to the front of the

shop at the Hattum farm. Troy and Chalan were the only other people in the shop

that morning. Todd was in Pierre buying equipment, and Bob was working ten

miles away. Troy told Jeff that he was going to weld the split in the tank.

[¶5.] Jeff began to help Chalan take the mounts off the tank. The tank held

about 75 to 100 gallons of diesel fuel, and there was about a gallon or so left in the

tank. The men dumped that out, then all three men ran about 50 gallons of water

from a nearby fire hydrant through the tank and “sloshed” it around. They rinsed

the tank out two or three times for about 20 minutes in this manner. Then they

used an air compressor to dry it out. Once the tank had been rinsed and the men

identified the split, Troy and Chalan used a grinder to shine it. Meanwhile, Jeff

walked over to the shop bench about 20 feet away and began to organize the tank’s

mounting brackets.

[¶6.] Troy or Chalan, although Jeff was “pretty sure” it was Troy, drove an

ATV up to the shop and parked it under the overhead door. Troy and Chalan left

the ATV running, then hooked a hose up to the exhaust of the ATV and placed the

-2- #29496

other end in the filler hole of the diesel tank, so that exhaust from the ATV ran into

the tank cavity. Jeff became concerned because he had never seen anything being

welded this way and asked Troy what he was doing. Troy assured Jeff that this was

the “textbook way” to do the job. Troy also showed him a spot on the tank where

Troy claimed to have welded the tank a year earlier. Based on Troy’s assurances,

Jeff walked back to the shop bench and resumed organizing the mounting brackets.

[¶7.] There was a strong wind blowing through the shop doors that morning.

Chalan closed the walk-through door of the shop and lowered the overhead door so

it rested on the seat of the ATV. Chalan also grabbed a large piece of cardboard to

use as a windbreaker. He stood next to Troy and held the cardboard while Troy

began to weld the tank.

[¶8.] Within a minute or so, there was an explosion. It blew Jeff forward

onto the shop bench. Jeff turned to look toward Chalan and Troy and saw that the

entire front area of the shop where they had been standing was “totally engulfed in

flames – floor to ceiling.” Jeff could not see either man through the flames, but he

heard them screaming. Chalan seemed to be outside the shop while Troy was

screaming from inside.

[¶9.] Jeff rushed to the back of the shop where he believed there was a fire

extinguisher but could not find it. He turned back and saw Troy moving towards

the center of the shop, still engulfed in flames. Jeff yelled “drop and roll,” and Troy

did. Jeff dove on top on him and rolled with him, but he quickly realized the floor

they were rolling on was also on fire and his clothes were burning.

-3- #29496

[¶10.] Jeff jumped up and peeled off his shirt and jacket and used them to try

to beat the flames off his pants. He could hear gas hissing from an oxygen tank in

the shop and recognized they did not have much time to flee. Jeff grabbed Troy’s

hand to lead him out, but Troy pulled his hand away as if he was in pain. Jeff

opened the walking door to the shop to exit, and Troy followed. Jeff believed

another tank in the shop exploded at that time, and he lost sight of Troy.

[¶11.] Jeff ran to retrieve a fire extinguisher. He saw Troy walking out of the

shop as he ran back. Jeff extinguished some of the remaining flames on Troy and

guided him toward the front of Todd’s house where there was a swimming pool. Jeff

saw that Troy’s siblings had exited the house by this point and Chalan was with

them. Jeff surmised that Chalan must have gotten out of the shop through the

overhead door and jumped into the pool.

[¶12.] An ambulance arrived to take the three men to the hospital. Jeff’s

face, arms, hands, ears, and upper body were burned. Troy and Chalan suffered

more severe burns. Both men died in the hospital within two weeks of the accident.

[¶13.] Talyn Sheard, the biological mother of Z.O. and the personal

representative of the Estate, filed a complaint against the Hattums on July 5, 2018.

The complaint alleged claims for strict liability and negligence and sought

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 S.D. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheard-v-hattum-sd-2021.