Pre-trial settlement valuation and trial strategy in Oregon both turn on these numbers.
Below: five scenarios at common verdict sizes and fault percentages, with the recovery a
Oregon plaintiff would actually receive under the state\'s modified comparative fault (51% bar) rule.
Practical illustration: an injured driver wins a $200,000 verdict in Oregon and the jury assigns 10% fault to them. Applying Oregon's modified comparative fault (51% bar) rule yields a net recovery of $90,000.
Scenario: a slip-and-fall plaintiff is awarded $1,000,000 by a Oregon jury, with 25% of fault attributed to them for not watching where they walked. Under Oregon law (modified comparative fault (51% bar)), the final award is $187,500.
Scenario: a slip-and-fall plaintiff is awarded $1,000,000 by a Oregon jury, with 49% of fault attributed to them for not watching where they walked. Under Oregon law (modified comparative fault (51% bar)), the final award is $255,000.
Practical illustration: an injured driver wins a $200,000 verdict in Oregon and the jury assigns 50% fault to them. Applying Oregon's modified comparative fault (51% bar) rule yields a net recovery of $250,000.
Worked example: a Oregon jury awards a plaintiff $500,000 in damages and finds the plaintiff 60% at fault. Under the state's modified comparative fault (51% bar) rule, the plaintiff actually recovers $0.