Compensation ranges, treatment costs, and how North Dakota's Modified Comparative Fault (50% Bar) rule affects your Fractures recovery.
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Fractures truck accident settlements in North Dakota typically use a 2x–4x damages multiplier. Settlements range from $45K to $950K, though severe cases involving surgery or permanent disability can exceed $950K. North Dakota's Modified Comparative Fault (50% Bar) directly affects your final compensation amount.
| Severity Level | Typical Settlement Range |
|---|---|
| Simple Fracture, Full Recovery | $45K – $155K |
| Multiple Fractures / ORIF Required | $130K – $480K |
| Comminuted / Pelvis / Lasting Effects | $280K – $950K |
Bone fractures are among the most common serious injuries in commercial truck accidents. The structural forces involved — particularly in frontal, side-impact, and rollover crashes — routinely fracture ribs, long bones (femur, tibia, fibula), pelvis, clavicle, and facial bones. Fractures range from simple (clean break, conservative treatment) to comminuted (shattered into multiple pieces requiring complex surgical reconstruction) and open/compound fractures (bone breaches skin, dramatically increasing infection risk and recovery time).
Typical lifetime treatment cost range: $15K – $350K (varies by injury severity, surgical needs, and ongoing care requirements)
The mass differential between commercial trucks and passenger vehicles means that truck accident fractures are typically far more severe than those from passenger-vehicle-only collisions. Dashboard intrusion in frontal impacts causes femur and tibia fractures. Steering wheel compression causes sternum and rib fractures. Side-impact (T-bone) crashes from trucks cause pelvic and thoracic fractures as the door structure intrudes into the passenger compartment. Rollover crashes expose occupants to multiple fracture patterns as the vehicle structure collapses.
North Dakota uses the 50% bar rule. This is governed by North Dakota Century Code § 32-03.2-02 (modified comparative fault, 50% bar).
North Dakota Fault Rule: Modified Comparative Fault (50% Bar)
Under N.D. Cent. Code § 32-03.2-02, you can recover if you are less than 50% at fault. Being assigned exactly 50% means no recovery — making fault allocation fights particularly intense in high-value Fractures cases.
Example: Your damages are $2,500,000. You are found 35% at fault. Recovery: $2,500,000 × 0.65 = $1,625,000.
Based on Broken Bones & Fractures economic damages and a 2–4× 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 |
|---|---|
| Simple Fracture, Full Recovery | $45K – $155K |
| Multiple Fractures / ORIF Required | $130K – $480K |
| Comminuted / Pelvis / Lasting Effects | $280K – $950K |
Ranges represent 25th–90th percentile of estimated outcomes. Does not account for North Dakota fault deductions. Commercial truck policies typically carry $750K–$5M in coverage. High-value cases may require excess coverage claims.
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