Compensation ranges, treatment costs, and how New Hampshire's Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar) rule affects your Burns recovery.
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Burns truck accident settlements in New Hampshire typically use a 5x–9x damages multiplier. Settlements range from $145K to $7.0M, though severe cases involving surgery or permanent disability can exceed $7.0M. New Hampshire's Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar) directly affects your final compensation amount.
| Severity Level | Typical Settlement Range |
|---|---|
| 2nd Degree Burns, <20% TBSA | $145K – $530K |
| 3rd Degree Burns / Skin Grafting | $520K – $2.2M |
| Severe/Extensive Burns, Disfigurement | $1.6M – $7.0M |
Burn injuries from truck accidents occur through multiple mechanisms: post-crash fire from fuel ignition, steam/coolant scalding when the engine compartment is breached, chemical burns from HAZMAT spills, and friction burns (road rash) from occupant ejection. Truck accidents present elevated fire risk because commercial vehicles carry 100–300 gallons of diesel fuel — far more than a passenger vehicle — and fuel system rupture is common in high-force impacts. Burns are rated by depth: first-degree (superficial), second-degree (partial thickness), third-degree (full thickness, requiring skin grafting), and fourth-degree (full thickness through fat to muscle/bone).
Typical lifetime treatment cost range: $120K – $4.5M (varies by injury severity, surgical needs, and ongoing care requirements)
Commercial trucks carry 100–300 gallons of diesel fuel — 25–75× the fuel capacity of a passenger vehicle. When a truck's fuel tanks rupture in a high-force collision, the resulting fire can engulf both vehicles within seconds. FMCSA regulations require truck fuel system integrity standards, but high-impact crashes routinely overcome these protections. HAZMAT trucks — carrying flammable liquids, gases, or corrosive chemicals — present even higher burn injury risk. A HAZMAT spill that ignites or contacts occupants can cause severe chemical burns on top of thermal burns, dramatically increasing treatment complexity and settlement value.
New Hampshire uses the 51% bar rule. This is governed by New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated § 507:7-d (modified comparative fault, 51% bar).
New Hampshire Fault Rule: Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar)
Under N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 507:7-d, you can recover if you are 50% or less at fault. Defense attorneys will aggressively seek to attribute 51% fault to you — especially in high-value Burns cases where a single percentage point means the difference between a multi-million dollar recovery and zero.
Example: Your Burns damages total $3,000,000. You are found 30% at fault. Your net recovery: $3,000,000 × 0.70 = $2,100,000.
Based on Burn Injuries economic damages and a 5–9× damages multiplier. Assumes 0% plaintiff fault. Actual amounts vary significantly based on injury severity, treatment needs, and case evidence.
| Injury / Case Profile | Est. Settlement Range |
|---|---|
| 2nd Degree Burns, <20% TBSA | $145K – $530K |
| 3rd Degree Burns / Skin Grafting | $520K – $2.2M |
| Severe/Extensive Burns, Disfigurement | $1.6M – $7.0M |
Ranges represent 25th–90th percentile of estimated outcomes. Does not account for New Hampshire fault deductions. Commercial truck policies typically carry $750K–$5M in coverage. High-value cases may require excess coverage claims.
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