And to think I get fussed at by members for towing MK 14 trailers with my Deuce that actually stop's more suddenly with the airlines hooked up. Anyhow, back to the OP, you need a CDL A to tow a 10,000 pound or over trailer. You should not tow it with a 1 ton truck regardless of the brakes on the truck or trailer. If they are in anyway questionable you open the door to a DOT inspection and they love "low hanging fruit". They know the law as well as any CDL driver has learned. To tow a load that heavy, once again, you need a CDL A. It's not very difficult to get a CDL but once you have one, you'll understand the differences and the liabilities you open yourself up to. The new Dodges claim they can tow 37,000 pounds of trailer weight, they don't mention 1 time that you'd need a CDL but that's advertising and I'm telling you to haul 10,000 pounds behind that Dodge, you'll need a CDL and if you're over 26,000 combined, the same. CDL A, that closes one gap but you'll have to use common sense to do it safely and get out of the lawyers sights if it goes wrong.