Compensation ranges, treatment costs, and how New Jersey's Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar) rule affects your Wrongful Death recovery.
⚠️ New Jersey has a 2-year statute of limitations on truck accident claims. Acting quickly protects your right to compensation.
Wrongful Death truck accident settlements in New Jersey typically use a specialized wrongful death formula. New Jersey's Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar) directly affects your final compensation amount.
| Severity Level | Typical Settlement Range |
|---|---|
| Single Decedent, No Dependents | $450K – $1.8M |
| Married, Spouse as Primary Survivor | $1.5M – $5.0M |
| Surviving Spouse + Minor Children | $3.0M – $10.0M |
Wrongful death claims arise when a truck accident fatality is caused by another party's negligence. In commercial truck accident wrongful death cases, the claim is typically brought by surviving family members against the truck driver, carrier, shipper, and/or equipment manufacturer. Wrongful death and survival actions are legally distinct: a survival action recovers damages the deceased suffered between injury and death (pain and suffering, lost earnings); the wrongful death action compensates surviving family for their own losses (financial support, companionship, guidance). Both actions are typically filed together.
Large truck crashes killed 5,837 people in the US in 2022 (NHTSA FARS) — an average of 16 deaths per day. Occupants of passenger vehicles account for approximately 72% of all large truck crash fatalities. The disparity in mass between a fully loaded 80,000-lb semi-truck and a 3,500-lb passenger car means that even moderate-speed impacts are often fatal for car occupants. Wrongful death claims in truck accident cases frequently involve gross negligence evidence — hours-of-service violations, falsified logs, or a carrier's prior safety violations — which can support punitive damage claims in addition to compensatory damages.
New Jersey uses the 51% bar rule. This is governed by New Jersey Statutes Annotated § 2A:15-5.1 (modified comparative fault, 51% bar).
New Jersey Fault Rule: Modified Comparative Fault (51% Bar)
Under N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2A:15-5.1, 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 Wrongful Death cases where a single percentage point means the difference between a multi-million dollar recovery and zero.
Example: Your Wrongful Death damages total $3,000,000. You are found 30% at fault. Your net recovery: $3,000,000 × 0.70 = $2,100,000.
Based on typical wrongful death economic and non-economic damages. Assumes decedent was not at fault. Actual amounts depend heavily on decedent's age, income, and number of dependents.
| Injury / Case Profile | Est. Settlement Range |
|---|---|
| Single Decedent, No Dependents | $450K – $1.8M |
| Married, Spouse as Primary Survivor | $1.5M – $5.0M |
| Surviving Spouse + Minor Children | $3.0M – $10.0M |
Ranges represent 25th–90th percentile of estimated outcomes. Does not account for New Jersey fault deductions. Commercial truck policies typically carry $750K–$5M in coverage. High-value cases may require excess coverage claims.
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