Colorado Tort Law: Negligence, Liability, and Civil Claims

Colorado tort law governs civil wrongs — situations where one party's conduct causes harm to another, giving rise to a legal claim for damages outside of contract. This page covers the structure of negligence doctrine, liability standards, and civil claim mechanics as they operate under Colorado statutes and court rules. The framework applies across personal injury, property damage, and economic loss disputes filed in Colorado state courts.

Definition and scope

A tort is a civil wrong recognized by law as giving rise to a cause of action for damages. Colorado tort law draws from the Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S.), common law principles developed through Colorado Supreme Court decisions, and procedural rules established under the Colorado Rules of Civil Procedure (C.R.C.P.).

The three primary categories of torts recognized in Colorado are:

  1. Negligence — unintentional harm resulting from a failure to exercise reasonable care
  2. Intentional torts — deliberate wrongful acts such as assault, battery, fraud, or intentional infliction of emotional distress
  3. Strict liability — liability imposed regardless of fault, most commonly in product liability and ultrahazardous activity contexts

Negligence is the most frequently litigated category. Colorado's approach to negligence liability is shaped by a modified comparative fault rule codified at C.R.S. § 13-21-111, which bars recovery if the plaintiff's own negligence is determined to equal or exceed 50 percent of the total fault.

For the broader regulatory and legal context surrounding civil claims and court jurisdiction, see the Regulatory Context for the Colorado Legal System.

Scope and coverage limitations: This page addresses tort claims arising under Colorado state law and adjudicated in Colorado state courts. Federal tort claims — including those under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) — are not covered here. Claims involving federally regulated industries, tribal sovereign immunity, or interstate compact disputes fall outside this page's scope. Tort law in other states is not addressed. For the full service landscape of Colorado civil law, the Colorado Legal Services Authority index provides structured navigation across related areas.

How it works

A negligence claim in Colorado requires a plaintiff to establish four elements by a preponderance of the evidence:

  1. Duty — the defendant owed a legal duty of care to the plaintiff
  2. Breach — the defendant failed to meet the applicable standard of care
  3. Causation — the breach was both the actual and proximate cause of the plaintiff's harm
  4. Damages — the plaintiff suffered quantifiable harm as a result

Colorado applies an objective "reasonable person" standard to assess breach. The standard of care may be elevated in professional contexts — physicians, attorneys, and engineers are held to the standard of their respective professional communities, as established through expert testimony under C.R.E. Rule 702.

Under C.R.S. § 13-21-111.5, Colorado uses a pro-rata system of liability for multi-defendant cases. Each defendant is responsible only for damages proportionate to their allocated percentage of fault. Joint and several liability applies only in narrow circumstances — primarily where a defendant is found 50 percent or more at fault, or in specific categories such as hazardous waste or intentional misconduct.

Damages in Colorado tort cases fall into two categories:

Punitive damages require clear and convincing evidence of fraud, malice, or willful and wanton conduct under C.R.S. § 13-21-102, and are capped at an amount equal to the compensatory damages awarded.

The Colorado statute of limitations governs filing deadlines. Most negligence claims carry a two-year limitations period under C.R.S. § 13-80-102.

Common scenarios

Colorado tort claims arise across a defined set of factual contexts:

Decision boundaries

Negligence vs. intentional tort: The distinction determines both available damages and insurance coverage implications. Intentional torts exclude coverage under standard general liability policies. Comparative fault principles do not apply to intentional conduct in the same manner as negligence.

Negligence per se: Where a defendant violates a statute designed to protect a class of persons — such as traffic regulations or building codes — Colorado courts may apply negligence per se, eliminating the need to prove breach independently. The plaintiff must still establish causation and damages.

Governmental immunity: Claims against Colorado state and local government entities are subject to the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act (CGIA), C.R.S. § 24-10-101 et seq., which limits waiver of sovereign immunity to enumerated categories including vehicle operation, dangerous conditions on public property, and public facility maintenance. Notice requirements under the CGIA impose a 182-day deadline for filing written notice of claim before suit.

Statute of repose vs. statute of limitations: For construction defect claims, C.R.S. § 13-80-104 imposes a six-year statute of repose, distinct from the standard two-year limitations period. The repose period begins at substantial completion, not at discovery of defect.

For procedural mechanics governing how civil claims move through the court system, Colorado Civil Procedure Overview provides the applicable process framework.

References

📜 4 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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