Joint and Several Liability: How Multiple Defendants Share Injury Responsibility
Joint and several liability is a foundational doctrine in U.S. tort law that determines how financial responsibility for a plaintiff's harm is distributed among multiple defendants. When the rule applies, each defendant can be held responsible for the full amount of a judgment, regardless of that defendant's individual share of fault. This page covers the definition of the doctrine, the mechanism by which courts apply it, the factual scenarios where it arises most frequently, and the legal boundaries that determine when it does and does not apply.
Definition and scope
Joint and several liability holds that when 2 or more defendants are found liable for the same indivisible injury, the plaintiff may collect the entire judgment from any single defendant — or from a combination of defendants — until the judgment is satisfied. The doctrine does not expand the total award; it governs only how the plaintiff may pursue collection.
The Restatement (Third) of Torts: Apportionment of Liability, published by the American Law Institute (ALI), addresses the doctrine in §§ 10–26 and identifies 3 primary structural forms:
- Pure joint and several liability — any defendant may be compelled to pay rates that vary by region of damages, regardless of individual fault percentage.
- Several liability only — each defendant pays only the share of damages proportional to that defendant's assigned fault percentage.
- Hybrid approaches — a defendant is jointly and severally liable only if that defendant's fault exceeds a defined threshold (commonly rates that vary by region, though state thresholds vary).
The doctrine belongs to the broader framework of tort law fundamentals and interacts directly with apportionment rules addressed under comparative fault rules.
How it works
When a jury returns a verdict against multiple defendants, the court must complete several distinct steps before entering judgment:
- Fault apportionment — The factfinder assigns a percentage of fault to each defendant (and, where applicable, to the plaintiff). This step is governed by the jurisdiction's comparative fault statute or common law rules.
- Damage calculation — The total compensatory award is determined, covering economic and non-economic losses. For an overview of how courts classify recoverable amounts, see compensatory damages explained.
- Liability classification — The court determines whether joint and several liability, several-only liability, or a hybrid rule applies under the governing state statute or common law.
- Judgment entry — Under pure joint and several liability, each defendant is listed as jointly and severally liable for the full award. Under several-only rules, separate judgment lines reflect each defendant's proportional share.
- Contribution and indemnification — A defendant who pays more than its apportioned share may pursue a contribution claim against co-defendants to recover the excess. This right of contribution is separate from the plaintiff's collection rights and is detailed under indemnification and contribution claims.
The burden of proof in civil cases remains with the plaintiff throughout — establishing that each named defendant caused the indivisible harm is a prerequisite before the liability-sharing mechanism activates.
Common scenarios
Joint and several liability arises in predictable factual clusters across U.S. tort litigation:
Multi-vehicle collisions — When 2 or more negligent drivers combine to cause a single crash injuring a third party, each driver may be jointly and severally liable for the full injury, even if Driver A was rates that vary by region at fault and Driver B was rates that vary by region at fault.
Construction site injuries — General contractors, subcontractors, and property owners may all be named defendants when a site defect causes harm. Courts applying joint and several rules allow the injured worker (where tort claims are available outside workers' compensation) to collect the full judgment from the defendant with the deepest pockets.
Product liability chains — Manufacturers, distributors, and retailers may each be defendants in a defective product case. Under product liability legal standards, joint and several liability historically allowed plaintiffs to recover fully from any chain member, though many states have modified this for innocent distributors.
Medical malpractice — When a surgical team's combined negligence causes patient harm, hospitals and individual providers may face joint liability. Several states have carved out specific modifications for medical malpractice defendants.
Environmental contamination — Federal courts applying the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), 42 U.S.C. § 9607, have held that joint and several liability applies to hazardous waste cleanup costs when the harm is indivisible, a position confirmed in Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. United States, 556 U.S. 599 (2009) (U.S. Supreme Court).
Decision boundaries
The single most consequential variable in joint and several liability analysis is the state legislature's statutory choice among the 3 structural forms. As of the ALI's last comprehensive survey period, fewer than some states retained pure joint and several liability without modification; the majority had enacted hybrid or several-only rules through tort reform legislation (American Law Institute, Restatement Third, Torts: Apportionment of Liability, 2000).
Key decision thresholds:
- Fault percentage floor — Hybrid statutes in states such as California (Civil Code § 1431.2, which limits non-economic damage liability to several-only for most defendants) trigger different rules depending on whether the defendant's fault exceeds a threshold.
- Intentional vs. negligent conduct — Even several-liability states commonly preserve joint and several liability for defendants who acted intentionally. This distinction is explored under intentional torts overview.
- Indivisibility of harm — Joint and several liability requires that the plaintiff's injury be a single, indivisible harm. Where the harm is divisible — each defendant's conduct produced a distinct, measurable injury — courts may apportion damages without applying joint and several rules.
- Plaintiff's own fault — In contributory negligence jurisdictions, a plaintiff found at any fault may be barred entirely; in pure comparative fault jurisdictions, the plaintiff's recovery is reduced but the joint and several mechanism among defendants remains intact. See contributory negligence states for the full classification.
- Governmental defendants — Sovereign immunity doctrines and statutes like the Federal Tort Claims Act impose caps and procedural prerequisites that can limit or eliminate joint and several exposure for public-entity defendants.
The interaction between joint and several liability and vicarious liability creates a secondary decision layer: an employer held vicariously liable for an employee's tort may be jointly and severally liable for the employee's full fault share even without independent negligence on the employer's part.
References
- American Law Institute — Restatement (Third) of Torts: Apportionment of Liability
- Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), 42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq. — U.S. EPA
- Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. United States, 556 U.S. 599 (2009) — Supreme Court of the United States
- California Civil Code § 1431.2 — California Legislative Information
- Uniform Apportionment of Tort Responsibility Act — Uniform Law Commission
- Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346, 2671–2680 — U.S. Department of Justice