$30 millionVerdict

Federal Jury Awards Oilfield Worker $30 Million After a Frac Tank Explosion Took His Leg

Verdict · U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado (Denver) · 2024

Won by Zaner Law Personal Injury and Car Accident Attorneys.

A defective frac tank exploded under an Air Force veteran at a Weld County well pad in 2019, and a federal jury in Denver returned $30 million, though Colorado's cap on pain-and-suffering damages later cut roughly $14 million.

What happened

In December 2019, Steve Straughen was standing on top of a frac tank at a well pad in Weld County, Colorado, near the intersection of County Roads 90 and 35. The tank was supposed to store water and oil safely. Instead it exploded, launching him roughly 27 feet sideways and about 10 feet into the air.

Straughen, an Air Force veteran and father of two, was 36 at the time and absorbed the full force of the blast. He broke his right ankle, his right knee, his left hip, his pelvis, several ribs, and his jaw. He spent years in rehabilitation trying to save a badly damaged foot. Doctors eventually amputated part of his leg, and he still faces knee and hip replacement surgery.

The tank had been delivered by BHS, a field services company owned by DHI Energy Service. Kurt Zaner of Zaner Harden Law argued the equipment was defective. The complaint alleged that pinholes in the steel and poorly maintained equipment let oxygen mix with the volatile vapor inside, and a nearby burner ignited the mixture. "The tank company had one and only one job, and that was to deliver a vapor-tight tank," Zaner told reporters. "And they didn't do that."

The case went to trial in the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado in Denver. Over roughly nine days, jurors reviewed the engineering evidence and Straughen's medical record, weighing what he would need across roughly 40 more years of life before settling on a figure.

In February 2024, the jury returned $30 million. The award broke down into $10 million for lost income and medical costs, $5 million for physical impairment and disfigurement, and $15 million for pain, suffering, and mental anguish.

The $15 million pain-and-suffering figure did not survive intact. Colorado caps noneconomic damages in personal injury cases under a statute that dates to the 1980s, and the court was required to reduce that portion of the verdict. The cut removed roughly $14 million, leaving Straughen with about $1 million of the $15 million jurors had assigned for his pain. That reduction came from the statutory cap, not from any appeal of the jury's findings.

Sources

This account is drawn from contemporaneous public reporting and the court record.