Burn Injury Classification: First Through Fourth Degree and TBSA
Burns are classified by depth and extent. Both measurements determine the severity of the injury and drive every major legal and medical decision.
first-degree burn
A burn that affects only the outer layer of skin (epidermis). Causes redness and pain. No blistering. Heals without grafting. Sunburn is the most common example.
Depth classification runs from first degree through fourth degree. A first-degree burn affects only the outer skin layer and heals without medical intervention. A second-degree burn reaches into the dermis, causes intense pain and blistering, and may require grafting if deep. Third-degree burns destroy the full thickness of the skin, killing nerve endings and creating a leathery or waxy appearance. Fourth-degree burns extend into muscle, bone, or tendon. They are the most severe and typically require amputation of the affected area.
TBSA
Total Body Surface Area. A calculation of what percentage of the body’s skin surface is burned. Medical teams use the Rule of Nines: each arm = 9%, each leg = 18%, the torso front = 18%, torso back = 18%, head = 9%, genitalia = 1%. TBSA drives fluid resuscitation calculations, burn center admission criteria, and life care projections.
TBSA is the second critical metric. The Rule of Nines assigns percentages to body regions to calculate extent. Second and third-degree burns covering more than 10% TBSA in adults, or 5% TBSA in children, meet the threshold for burn center admission. TBSA drives fluid resuscitation volumes, surgical planning, and the total damage picture in a legal case.
Inhalation injury is a separate and serious complication. Breathing smoke or superheated gases damages the airways independently of surface burns. It worsens prognosis significantly and requires bronchoscopy to diagnose. An attorney evaluating your case needs to know whether inhalation injury is documented, because it affects life expectancy projections and the life care plan.
Electrical burns are often underestimated. They enter at one point and exit at another. The real damage occurs along the path the current traveled through the body: heart, kidneys, muscles, and nerves. Surface wounds may look minor while internal damage is severe. Arc flash injuries produce a burst of thermal energy that causes contact burns without the current passing through the body. The distinction between contact electrical burns and arc flash injuries matters for identifying the liable party.
Chemical burns progress as long as the agent remains in contact with tissue. Alkaline burns (lye, cement) penetrate more deeply than acidic burns because they do not trigger the protein coagulation that limits acid penetration. Contact time and concentration determine depth. Irrigation must be immediate and prolonged. If your employer failed to provide proper decontamination resources, that delay in treatment is a separate element of your damages.
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Treatment: Debridement, Skin Grafting, and the Surgical Timeline
Severe burn treatment is not a single procedure. It is a months-long surgical process.
Debridement
Removal of dead, infected, or damaged tissue from a burn wound to allow healthy tissue to heal. Surgical debridement (tangential excision) is the gold standard for major burns. It is performed under anesthesia, repeated as needed, and is a prerequisite for skin grafting.
Debridement is the first step. Dead tissue must be removed before the wound can heal or be grafted. Surgical debridement (tangential excision) removes thin layers of tissue until viable bleeding tissue is reached. It is performed within 24-72 hours for major burns and repeated at intervals. The process is significant in duration and recovery.
Skin grafting replaces the removed tissue with new skin. An autograft uses the patient’s own skin harvested from an unburned donor site: the thigh, back, or scalp. An allograft uses cadaver skin as a temporary covering while the donor site heals. Synthetic skin substitutes (Integra, Biobrane) provide a scaffold when donor sites are limited. The choice of graft type depends on TBSA size, available donor sites, and patient condition. Graft selection affects life care plan projections and the damage calculation, which is why a plastic surgeon or burn surgeon typically serves as a consulting expert.
In the Tyler area, UT Health Tyler’s East Texas Burn Center at 1000 S. Beckham Ave. is the regional burn center for East Texas. Christus Mother Frances Hospital in Tyler is the other major trauma facility in Smith County. Where your care occurs matters for a legal case. Records from a designated burn center carry more weight in establishing the severity of your injury.
Fluid resuscitation in the first 24 hours is governed by the Parkland formula: 4 mL multiplied by the percentage of TBSA multiplied by body weight in kilograms. Inadequate resuscitation causes kidney failure. Over-resuscitation causes pulmonary edema. Both are documented complications that can indicate a hospital care standard-of-care violation. If you believe your care at the initial treating facility was inadequate, that is a separate claim worth evaluating.
After grafting, recovery continues for years. Contracture is scar tissue tightening across joints. It requires occupational therapy, custom splinting, and often additional surgery (Z-plasty or scar release procedures). Compression garments are worn 23 hours a day for 12-18 months to minimize hypertrophic scarring. Facial burns, hand burns, and eyelid injuries typically require staged reconstructive procedures over 1-3 years. Your life care plan must document all of this. A plan that only projects the initial hospitalization significantly undervalues the case.
Infection, Sepsis, and Systemic Complications
Burn injuries destroy the skin barrier. That barrier is the body’s primary defense against infection. The resulting vulnerability to infection is not a minor risk. It is the leading cause of death in hospitalized burn patients after the first 72 hours.
Sepsis
A life-threatening systemic response to infection. The body’s immune response becomes dysregulated and begins damaging its own tissues and organs. In burn patients, sepsis is defined by specific criteria including temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, and white blood cell count. It requires ICU-level treatment and carries a significant mortality rate.
Sepsis develops when a localized wound infection spreads to the bloodstream. Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus are the most common burn wound pathogens. Both are capable of rapid systemic spread.
MODS
Multi-Organ Dysfunction Syndrome. Progressive failure of two or more organ systems following a major physiological insult such as severe burns and sepsis. Involves kidneys, lungs, liver, and cardiovascular system. Significantly increases mortality and long-term care needs.
Toxic shock syndrome, fungal infections (Candida), and pneumonia are additional complications requiring extended ICU management. MODS develops when systemic infection overwhelms multiple organ systems simultaneously. Major burns also suppress the immune system, which is why infection risk remains elevated for weeks after the initial injury.
The legal relevance of these complications is direct. Every additional week of ICU care increases past medical expenses. Every organ system affected changes the life care plan. If a burn victim dies from sepsis, the standard of care at every facility that treated them becomes relevant to a wrongful death claim. A burn care expert assesses whether the treating facilities met the standard of care, and that determination may add a medical negligence claim to the personal injury case. View wrongful death claims
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes; each case is decided on its own facts. See our full case results.
Economic and Noneconomic Damages in a Texas Burn Injury Case
Texas law divides damages into economic and noneconomic categories. Both are fully recoverable in non-medical-malpractice burn injury cases.
Economic damages cover measurable financial losses. They include past and future medical expenses, lost wages, loss of earning capacity, home health care costs, and durable medical equipment. Texas limits recovery of medical expenses to amounts actually paid or incurred, not the full billed list price. This comes from CPRC Section 41.0105 as interpreted in Haygood v. De Escabedo, 356 S.W.3d 390 (Tex. 2012). If your health insurer negotiated a reduced rate, you recover the negotiated amount, not the chargemaster rate. This distinction matters significantly when preparing demand packages.
Loss of Earning Capacity
The difference between what a person could have earned over their working lifetime before the injury and what they can earn after it. Calculated by a vocational rehabilitation expert (who identifies what jobs the person can now perform) working with a forensic economist (who converts future lost earnings to present value). This is separate from lost wages, which covers earnings already missed.
Loss of Earning Capacity is calculated by vocational experts and forensic economists. Hand burns, facial disfigurement, and pulmonary damage from inhalation injury frequently prevent return to prior employment. A life care plan for a working-age adult with extensive TBSA burns routinely projects future costs in the millions.
Noneconomic damages include pain and suffering, mental anguish, and physical impairment. Texas also recognizes disfigurement as a separate and distinct noneconomic harm. Burn scars on the face, neck, and hands carry independent legal value above and beyond pain and suffering. Texas does not cap noneconomic damages in non-medical-malpractice personal injury cases. Full recovery is available.
Loss of Consortium
A legal claim available to the spouse of an injured person for the loss of companionship, affection, physical intimacy, and household services caused by the injury. It is a separate damage claim from the injured person’s own damages and is brought by the spouse in the same lawsuit.
The spouse of a severely burned person has a Loss of Consortium claim for loss of companionship and household services. This is a separate element that belongs in your damage calculation from the beginning.
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Exemplary Damages for Gross Negligence: Chemical, Electrical, and Product Defect Burns
Texas allows exemplary damages when the defendant’s conduct rises above ordinary negligence. The standard is gross negligence.
Under CPRC Section 41.001(7), gross negligence is defined as an act or omission that involves an extreme degree of risk, and where the defendant had actual, subjective awareness of the risk but proceeded with conscious indifference to the rights, safety, or welfare of others. It is not enough that the defendant was careless. The conduct must reflect indifference to known danger.
Chemical burn cases frequently support gross negligence claims. An employer who fails to provide proper personal protective equipment for known corrosive chemical exposures, fails to maintain OSHA-required Safety Data Sheets for hazardous substances, or stores incompatible chemicals in violation of hazard communication standards has documented knowledge of the risk. Deviating from it anyway, particularly after prior incidents, is the factual pattern courts examine for gross negligence.
Electrical burns have their own standard. OSHA 1910.333 requires that equipment be de-energized and locked out before maintenance or servicing. Arc flash incidents on energized equipment are a predictable consequence of skipping lockout/tagout. Employers and contractors who skip these protocols know exactly what the risk is. That documented awareness is what separates gross negligence from ordinary negligence.
Product defect burns create a different path. Strict product liability under CPRC Chapter 82 allows recovery without proving the manufacturer was negligent. But when a manufacturer knew of a defect from prior incidents, failure analyses, or regulatory notices and continued selling the product anyway, the same facts that prove strict liability may also support exemplary damages. Prior recall notices, internal quality reports, and engineering documentation are the evidence to pursue.
Exemplary Damages
Texas term for punitive damages. Available under CPRC Chapter 41 when the defendant acted with fraud, malice, or gross negligence. Require proof by clear and convincing evidence (higher standard than the preponderance standard used for compensatory damages). Capped under CPRC 41.008 at the greater of: (a) two times economic damages plus noneconomic damages up to $750,000, or (b) $200,000. The cap does not apply to certain felony conduct.
Exemplary Damages are capped under CPRC Section 41.008. The cap is the greater of two times economic damages plus noneconomic damages up to $750,000, or $200,000. The cap does not apply when the conduct constitutes a felony, such as deliberate assault. Clear and convincing evidence is required for exemplary damages. That is a higher burden than the preponderance standard used for compensatory damages.
Establishing the defendant’s subjective awareness of risk requires specific factual proof: prior complaints, safety audits, incident reports. A burn case built only on negligence theory may leave significant damages on the table if gross negligence facts are present.
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Founding partners Trey Morris and Justin Dewett lead every Tyler injury case Morris & Dewett takes.
Proportionate Responsibility and Liability in Burn Cases
Texas uses a proportionate responsibility system. Under CPRC Chapter 33, the jury assigns each party a percentage of responsibility. Your recovery is reduced by your own percentage of fault. If you are 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. At exactly 50%, you recover 50% of your damages.
Defense attorneys in burn cases routinely try to push your fault percentage above 50%. Common arguments include: you misused the product, you ignored safety warnings, you failed to wear PPE you were given, you were intoxicated, or a co-worker’s actions (not the employer’s) caused the accident. Each of these is a standard defense narrative. An experienced burn injury attorney needs a documented rebuttal for each one before your case reaches a jury.
Proportionate Responsibility
Texas’s fault allocation system under CPRC Chapter 33. The jury assigns a percentage of fault to each party, including the plaintiff. If the plaintiff is 51% or more at fault, the plaintiff recovers nothing. At 50% or less, the plaintiff recovers damages reduced by their own percentage. Only defendants with more than 50% responsibility face joint and several liability.
Proportionate Responsibility allows defendants to designate responsible third parties under CPRC Section 33.004. If a contractor points to the equipment manufacturer, or the manufacturer points to the maintenance company, each attempts to spread fault. You have 60 days after the designation to add the designated party as a defendant. Missing that window forecloses your claim against them.
Workplace burn injuries involve a separate complexity. When an employer subscribes to Texas workers’ compensation, the workers’ comp system provides the exclusive remedy against the employer. You cannot sue the employer directly in civil court. But you can sue third parties: equipment manufacturers, subcontractors, chemical suppliers. If your employer does not subscribe to workers’ comp, they lose the three defenses of contributory negligence, assumption of risk, and fellow servant doctrine. Non-subscriber cases typically proceed with a lower burden for the plaintiff.
Morris & Dewett’s approach to proportionate responsibility disputes starts at the evidence-gathering stage. We work with liability experts who examine the physical evidence, the incident report, the OSHA record, and the employer’s safety program before the insurance company builds its narrative. The percentage of fault assigned to you at trial reflects what was documented before trial.
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What Is the Deadline to File a Burn Injury Lawsuit in Texas?
Texas gives you two years to file a personal injury lawsuit. Under CPRC Section 16.003(a), the clock starts on the date of injury. For most burn accidents, accrual is the date of the accident. The injury is not hidden. The discovery rule extends the deadline only when an injury was inherently undiscoverable through reasonable diligence. That is rare for burns.
Tolling rules apply in specific situations. Under CPRC Section 16.001, limitations are tolled for minors. A child injured at age 10 has until age 20 to file. The disability must exist at the time the cause of action accrues. A disability arising after accrual does not pause the clock.
Product liability burn cases have an additional consideration. CPRC Section 16.012 imposes a 15-year repose period running from the date the product was first sold. A case involving a product manufactured and sold more than 15 years ago may be time-barred against the manufacturer even if the 2-year personal injury limitation has not run.
The 2-year deadline is shorter than it sounds for severe burn survivors. Hospitalization for major TBSA burns routinely lasts weeks to months. Rehabilitation follows. By the time a burn survivor is medically stable enough to think about legal options, a significant portion of the limitation period may have elapsed. Building a burn injury case requires retaining burn care experts, life care planners, and forensic economists. That process takes time. Contacting an attorney as early as medically practical is the right approach.
Oilfield and industrial burns in East Texas carry specific evidence preservation priorities. Smith County and the surrounding East Texas region has active oil and gas operations. Burns from blowouts, flash fires, and hydrogen sulfide exposure involve OSHA Process Safety Management (PSM) regulations. OSHA conducts inspections after serious incidents and produces reports documenting compliance failures. Those reports must be obtained through formal records requests and can be critical evidence for a gross negligence claim. Product recall records, OSHA 300 logs, chemical SDS sheets, and incident reports should be preserved by legal hold as soon as possible.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What burn degree qualifies as a serious injury for a lawsuit in Texas?
- Any burn injury can support a legal claim if it was caused by someone else's negligence. In practical terms, second-degree burns requiring skin grafting, third-degree burns of any size, and fourth-degree burns are the injuries that generate significant damages and complex legal cases. The degree alone does not determine whether a case exists -- TBSA, location on the body, and resulting complications all affect the total damage picture.
- Can I sue my employer for a workplace burn injury in Texas?
- It depends on whether your employer subscribes to Texas workers' compensation. If they do, workers' comp is the exclusive remedy against the employer. You cannot bring a civil lawsuit against them. However, you can still file civil claims against third parties whose products or negligence contributed to the accident: equipment manufacturers, subcontractors, chemical suppliers. If your employer does not carry workers' comp (a non-subscriber), you can sue them directly in civil court. They cannot raise contributory negligence, assumption of risk, or the fellow servant defense.
- How is the value of a severe burn injury case calculated in Texas?
- A burn injury case value includes economic damages (past and future medical expenses under the Haygood rule, lost wages, loss of earning capacity, home care costs, medical equipment) and noneconomic damages (pain and suffering, mental anguish, physical impairment, and disfigurement as a separate category). Texas does not cap noneconomic damages in personal injury cases outside of medical malpractice. Life care planners and forensic economists project future costs and lost earnings to present value. Gross negligence cases can also include exemplary damages under CPRC Chapter 41.
- What is the deadline to file a burn injury lawsuit in Texas?
- Two years from the date of the injury under CPRC Section 16.003(a). For minors, the clock is tolled until age 18, giving them until age 20 to file. Product liability claims face a 15-year repose period from the date the product was first sold, which can cut off claims against manufacturers of older products even within the 2-year window.
- What is the difference between an autograft and a skin substitute in burn treatment?
- An autograft is skin harvested from the patient's own body (donor site) and transplanted to the burned area. It is the gold standard for permanent wound coverage. Allografts use cadaver skin as temporary coverage. Synthetic skin substitutes such as Integra or Biobrane provide a scaffold when donor sites are insufficient for the TBSA involved. Which type is used depends on burn size, patient condition, and available donor skin. The type and number of grafting procedures performed is a key input to the life care plan and the damage calculation.
- Can I recover damages for scarring and disfigurement in a Texas burn case?
- Yes. Texas recognizes disfigurement as a distinct noneconomic damage category separate from pain and suffering. Burn scars on the face, neck, hands, and other visible areas carry independent value recognized by Texas juries. There is no statutory cap on disfigurement damages in personal injury cases outside of medical malpractice. A forensic economist does not calculate disfigurement -- it is presented to the jury as a factual question about the nature and permanence of the scarring.
- What does gross negligence mean in a Texas burn injury case?
- Under CPRC Section 41.001(7), gross negligence requires two elements: an act or omission involving an extreme degree of risk, and the defendant's actual, subjective awareness of that risk combined with conscious indifference to the safety of others. It is not enough that the risk was obvious. The defendant must have subjectively known about it and disregarded it anyway. Establishing gross negligence in burn cases typically requires evidence of prior incidents, failed safety audits, OSHA violations, or knowledge of product defects -- documented proof of what the defendant knew before the accident occurred.
- Which hospital treats severe burns in the Tyler, Texas area?
- UT Health Tyler's East Texas Burn Center at 1000 S. Beckham Ave. is the designated regional burn center for East Texas. It is the primary referral destination for severe burns from Smith County and the surrounding region. Christus Mother Frances Hospital in Tyler is the other major trauma facility in Smith County. Texas DSHS designates burn centers based on specific capability criteria. Treatment at a designated burn center is a significant factor in establishing the severity of the injury in a legal case.
- What economic damages are available in a Texas burn injury claim?
- Economic damages in a Texas burn case include past and future medical expenses (limited to amounts actually paid or incurred under CPRC Section 41.0105 and the Haygood rule), lost wages from missed work, loss of earning capacity (projected future earnings the person can no longer achieve), home health care costs, durable medical equipment, and the costs of long-term reconstructive procedures. A life care planner documents future medical needs. A forensic economist converts those projected costs and lost earnings to present value.
- Can I recover punitive damages for a burn caused by a defective product?
- Yes, if the manufacturer had actual knowledge of the defect and proceeded with conscious indifference to consumer safety. Strict product liability under CPRC Chapter 82 does not require proving negligence -- but for exemplary damages under CPRC Chapter 41, you need clear and convincing evidence of gross negligence or malice. Prior recall notices, internal engineering reports documenting known defects, regulatory notices, and prior injury claims against the same product are the categories of evidence that support an exemplary damages claim in a product defect burn case.
Last updated June 5, 2026

