I guess I'm the iconoclast here. I agree with the answers given thus far that say bypassing the service layer is fine in principle, but in my humble opinion, it's not in practice.
The main reason is that it is hard to anticipate when business logic may some day be introduced. For example, I consider "logging" to be business logic. If I want to INTRODUCE logging or journaling or restrict access, I don't want to do that in the DAO layer. But if I have code that bypasses the DAO layer, now ALL that code needs to be refactored.
There's another advantage to the DAO layer that I have often found useful. There are operations I may want to expose to a service layer, but not to any layer above it.
As an example, I can imagine a DAO layer that returns encrypted passwords, but a service layer that only allows you to tell whether an encrypted password you pass in matches the one in the database. I don't want a controller layer being able to fetch valid encrypted passwords - I see that unnecessary exposure.
Thus while I might agree that if you KNOW for damned sure you never ever will need to introduce business logic (such as I've described), and if you have ZERO need to hide some data access operations while exposing others... then by all means expose the DAO layer to higher layers.
My point is that in practice, you can't "know" that, nor should you assume that.