Call

Are Punitive Damages Allowed in Texas?

Home | Are Punitive Damages Allowed in Texas?

Are Punitive Damages Allowed in Texas?Yes. Texas allows punitive damages, which state law calls “exemplary damages,” but only in limited cases. To recover them, the injured person must prove fraud, malice, or gross negligence by clear and convincing evidence. That is a significantly higher bar than simply showing that someone acted carelessly.

What Are Punitive Damages in Texas?

Exemplary damages are money meant to punish especially bad conduct and discourage it from happening again. They are different from compensation for medical bills, lost income, pain, or other direct losses. Your Beaumont personal injury attorney may seek them only when the facts show a level of wrongdoing that goes beyond ordinary carelessness.

When Does Texas Law Allow Them?

Texas law allows exemplary damages only if the claimant proves fraud, malice, or gross negligence by clear and convincing evidence. Texas law recognizes three qualifying grounds:

  • Fraud: The defendant intentionally deceived someone to cause harm or gain an unfair advantage.
  • Malice: The defendant acted with a deliberate intent to harm the claimant.
  • Gross negligence: The defendant was aware of an extreme risk and chose to disregard it, showing conscious indifference to the safety of others.

That is why building a strong claim for exemplary damages depends heavily on company records, safety history, witness statements, and internal decisions that show what the defendant knew and when.

Is Ordinary Negligence Enough?

No. A simple driving error, a careless property condition, or a poor judgment call usually is not enough by itself. Texas draws a sharp line between ordinary negligence and conduct serious enough to support exemplary damages. In a wreck, plant injury case, or dangerous property claim, a Beaumont personal injury attorney will need evidence of drunk driving, repeated safety violations, hidden hazards, fake records, or a decision to ignore an obvious and severe risk.

How Does a Jury Decide This Issue?

How Does a Jury Decide This Issue?Texas requires more than a general finding that the defendant was at fault. The jury must be unanimous on liability for exemplary damages and also unanimous on the amount. State law also requires the trial court to instruct the jury on factors such as the nature of the wrong, the character of the conduct, the degree of blame, the situation of the parties, and the extent to which the conduct offends public justice. 

Is There a Limit on How Much Can Be Awarded?

In most cases, yes. Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code § 41.008 limits exemplary damages to the greater of two amounts. The first is two times the claimant’s economic damages, plus an amount equal to non-economic damages, capped at $750,000. The second is $200,000. The court applies whichever of those two figures is higher.

That cap can matter in serious injury cases where medical costs, lost earnings, and human losses are all significant. Even so, the cap does not make the issue simple, and a Beaumont personal injury attorney still has to sort through which damages count, how they are measured, and whether a specific statute changes the result.

Do Punitive Damages Come Up in Work Injury Cases?

Do Punitive Damages Come Up in Work Injury Cases?

Sometimes, but the answer depends on the kind of work claim involved. Texas workers’ compensation law generally makes benefits the exclusive remedy against a subscribing employer for an employee’s own injuries. There is, however, an important exception in death cases, where surviving family members may pursue exemplary damages if the death was caused by the employer’s gross negligence or intentional act. That can be important in industrial settings across Southeast Texas.

For workers in lower-wage jobs, these distinctions matter. Whether workers’ compensation applies, whether a third party shares responsibility for a crash, a defective product, or an unsafe site condition, these are questions worth getting a straight answer on, even if you are not sure you have a case yet.

What Should I Do If I Think Punitive Damages May Apply?

Speed matters because the strongest evidence often lies in records, phone data, maintenance logs, surveillance footage, company policies, and witness recollections. Evidence that tends to matter most includes:

  • Company records and internal communications showing what the defendant knew and when
  • Maintenance logs, safety inspection reports, and prior violation records
  • Surveillance footage captured before the scene was altered or cleaned up
  • Witness statements from people who observed the conduct or its consequences

Building a strong claim means acting quickly before records are altered, footage is overwritten, or witnesses become hard to reach.

We Are Ready to Answer Your Questions and Fight for Your Rights

Our attorneys at Jonathan C. Juhan P.C. Attorney at Law keep the focus on clear answers, honest guidance, and real help for people who may not know where to turn.

 You can call us anytime, even if you only need information to get started. We do not charge a fee unless we win.

If you have questions about whether punitive damages may be available, call our Beaumont personal injury attorney at (409) 832-8877 or contact us online for a free consultation.

Practice Areas
Testimonials
Free Consultation • No Fee Unless We Win
Trusted Legal Help
Starts Here
Trusted Legal Section background Image
Trusted Legal Section background Image
inn-trusted-mbl-img