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Railroad
Collisions FAQs
Since 1979, Brett & Coats PLLC has been helping the victims
and families of those injured or killed in
railroad collisions throughout Washington State.
We also represent railroad workers and their
families in Federal Employers' Liability Act
(FELA) claims. Whether your accident or illness
was caused by negligence or faulty equipment,
our firm's personal injury attorneys have the
experience to develop the critical evidence
necessary to prove your claim. While monetary
compensation cannot change the past, it can help
you worry less about medical bills, employment,
rehabilitation, and your future.
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How
do I successfully pursue a railroad collision
injury claim?
-
What types of money
damages can I recover?
-
How much is my injury claim
worth?
-
What should I do immediately to
help preserve my claim?
-
How should I select a lawyer to
represent me?
-
How much will it cost to hire a
lawyer?
-
How does the insurance claim
process work?
-
How can I deal with my
immediate medical bills?
-
How long do I have to file a
claim?
-
What if I have a preexisting
medical condition?
-
What types of money damages
are allowed for wrongful death?
1.
How do I successfully pursue a railroad
collision injury claim?
In order to
successfully pursue a railroad collision injury
claim:
- You must
prove that the accident occurred due to the
reckless or negligent actions of another,
- You must prove that you were injured,
- You must establish that your injury was
caused by the accident and not by a preexisting
condition or unrelated event, and
- You must establish that the party who
injured you was insured.
Under laws,
rules, and regulations, a railroad must provide
a reasonably safe workplace for the benefit and
protection of its employees. When a railroad
fails to ensure the safety of its workers by
providing safe tools and equipment, adequate
training and supervision, or warning employees
of hazardous conditions, it can be found
negligent. Employees who have been injured and
families of those killed in a railroad accident
are entitled to seek reparation of their damages
under FELA.
More than one
person or entity may have been partially at
fault in your accident, and you may have even
been partially at fault. In these situations,
the court distributes the fault among all of
these entities. Generally, if the other person
bore 80% of the fault and you were responsible
for the remaining 20%, you will recover only 80%
of your total damages. If several people were at
fault, there are special rules on "joint
and several liability" that govern the
portion of the total damages that are paid by
each person or entity at fault. If you face a
situation where several people or entities may
have been negligent, your best course of action
is to consult with an experienced personal
injury lawyer who can help to prove your claim.
At Brett & Coats PLLC, we offer a free
case evaluation to determine the likelihood of a
recovery and the likely range of any recovery. Contact
us for your free case evaluation.
If you have been
injured through the fault of another, your
lawyer should immediately obtain all records,
witness statements and photographic evidence to
immediately lay to rest the issue of fault. Your
attorney must act promptly since memories fade,
conditions change and witnesses move. Without
proof of fault you cannot support a claim for
your injuries.
In order to prove
who was at fault for an accident, your attorney
will obtain all investigative records from law
enforcement and the railroad, and interview the
witnesses and investigating officers. In more
complicated cases, your lawyer may hire licensed
engineers to reconstruct the accident, civil
engineers to evaluate the structural and track
design, or mechanical engineers to evaluate any
equipment malfunction.
At Brett & Coats we offer a free case evaluation to
determine the likelihood of a recovery and the
likely range of any recovery. Contact
us for
your free case evaluation.
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2.
What types of money damages can I recover?
You are entitled
to be compensated for your losses if you were
injured because of the railroad's negligence or
careless action. To the extent that can be
accomplished with money damages, the general
rule is that the goal is to put you back into
the position you were in prior to your injury.
While the legal system recognizes that money
cannot undo a serious injury, its power is
limited to awarding damages to compensate for
the injury.
There are six
main categories of damages you may be entitled
to:
- Property
Damages - You are entitled to repair or
replacement of any property damaged in the
accident. For example, damage to your car,
your clothes, your eyeglasses or other
personal property. For more information on
Property Damages click here
- Medical
Expenses - All costs you have incurred for
health care should be repaid to you
including ambulance bills, hospital bills
and charges for surgical, medical or
chiropractic care. You may be entitled to
payment of these bills regardless of who
caused the accident.
For more information on Medical Expenses to
date click here
- Future Medical
Expenses - You are entitled to a sum of
money that will enable you to pay for future
medical care of injuries caused by the
accident. For example, you may be entitled
to future surgical care or future in-home
nursing care if you are disabled.For more information on Future
Medical Expenses click here.
- Lost Income -
Even if you are self employed or work on
commission, you are entitled to be paid for
the income lost because of your injury
including lost wages from your job while in
the hospital, while in recuperation, when
going to doctor, or for continued therapy
visits after your return to work.For more
information on Lost Income click here.
- Lost Future
Earning Capacity - If you are partially or
completely disabled from employment because
of your injury, you are entitled to a sum of
money that will compensate you for the lost
capacity to earn money in the future. For
more information on Lost Future Earning
Capacity click here.
- General
Damages for Pain and Suffering - You are
entitled to be compensated in dollars for
the pain, suffering, disfigurement and
disability you have experienced as a result
of the injury. Although this category of
damages is well established in the law, a
lawyer can help assess the dollar amount of
the loss and prove it to an insurance
company based on their experience in other
situations and understanding of the local
justice system. For
more information on General Damages for Pain
and Suffering click here.
Additional
information on Property Damages
You are entitled to have personal property
damages paid by the insurance company of the
party who caused the injury. If the personal
property was damaged beyond repair, you are
entitled to the difference between the fair cash
market value of the damaged property immediately
before it was damaged and its salvage value. If
the personal property is repairable, you are
entitled to recover the lesser of the cost of
repairs plus any diminished value after the
repairs, or the difference between the fair cash
market value before the damage and the salvage
value. In either case, you are entitled to a sum
to compensate you for loss of use of the
property during the time reasonably required for
repair or replacement.
Often if your
only losses are to personal property and you
were not harmed in the collision, you can
negotiate a settlement directly with the
insurance adjuster without the help of a lawyer.
(Back to question 2)
Additional
Information on Medical Expenses
As the victim of
a railroad collision, you are entitled to any
medical expenses incurred as a result of your
injury. To acquire these sums, your attorney
will collect all of your medical records from
health care providers, including bills. This
documentation is then provided to the insurance
company to prove that the expense was incurred
and that the treatment was required because of
the collision. The insurance company may attempt
to argue that you had a preexisting condition
that dictated the treatment or that another
injury required the treatment. In order to
protect you against this ploy, a skilled
attorney will obtain a complete history of
medical care predating the accident, including a
written statement from the attending physician
confirming that in their professional opinion
the need for treatment was more than likely
attributable to the collision.
Recovering
compensation for medical expenses from an
insurance company is similar to filing for an
income tax refund from the government - you need
to collect all of your receipts and accurately
fill out the required paperwork. Brett & Coats attorneys and paralegals are trained to
handle the paper process in a timely, proactive
manner.
(Back to question 2)
Additional
Information on Future Medical Care
You are entitled
to compensation to pay for future medical care
related to your injury. The insurance company
will require an accurate, detailed estimate from
the physician or health care workers who will
provide your future health care services.
Your attorney
will obtain your complete written medical
records from all health care providers so that
the insurance company (and you) can see the
doctor's diagnosis and recommended treatment for
your injury. Your lawyer will meet regularly
with physicians to review the records and help
them to address the insurance company's
requirements in order to pay for future medical
care.
It is important
to remember that there is a one-time lump-sum
payment for future medical care paid at
settlement. Once a claim is settled, it is not
generally possible to reopen the claim. At Brett & Coats, PLLC, we are careful to avoid
settlement until we know all of our client's
future medical needs.
(Back to question 2)
Additional
Information on Lost Income
If you have been
injured in a railroad collision, you are
entitled to recover all the lost income caused
by the injury, including lost wages from your
job while in the hospital, lost income while
recuperating, doctor visits and any continued
therapy visits after your return to work.
Medical proof of your inability to work and the
amount of pay that will be lost due to the
injury must be calculated. If you are a wage
earner who lost a specific number of hours of
work, you are entitled to receive your hourly
wage for each hour lost. However, if you work on
commission (like a realtor), or if you are
self-employed (like a fisherman), your lawyer
must reconstruct your financial losses by
reviewing business, tax and accounting records
from prior years to determine your future wages.
Your lawyer will
obtain your complete written medical records
from all health care providers to confirm the
doctor's opinion regarding your medical
situation. Your attorney will also meet
regularly with doctors to review the records and
help them to address the specific requirements
imposed by the insurance companies before they
are willing to concede that a client has been
unable to work because of the injury.
(Back to question 2)
Additional
Information on Future Lost Income
You are entitled
to compensation for the loss of future income or
future loss of earning capacity. In order to
receive an award, you must provide medical proof
that your injury will inhibit your ability to
earn income in the future. You must also
demonstrate the amount of income you will lose.
Projecting the amount of future income lost can
be a simple or complicated process depending on
your type of employment. While this can be
difficult, the Brett & Coats, PLLC team is
experienced in economic reconstruction and
projection.
To prove that you
are unable to work or cannot work at the same
level of earnings you enjoyed before the injury,
your attorney will obtain a written statement
from a doctor describing your medical condition
and prognosis. This documentation is then
reviewed by a vocational rehabilitation
specialist who can better assess your ability to
perform in the work force with the medical
condition. The specialist's review often
requires extensive physical, mental and
psychological testing. Once the vocational
specialist establishes a level of employment
ability, an economist will be consulted to
estimate the difference between the anticipated
future earnings prior to the accident and the
earnings you can now expect in the future as a
result of total or partial disability. This
difference is the loss of future earnings or
loss of future earning capacity.
If you were
partially or completely disabled as a result of
an injury caused by a railroad company, the loss
of future income or an inability to work at the
same level can have a significant impact on your
capacity to support yourself and your family.
Talk with an experienced legal professional at
Brett & Coats PLLC before you attempt to
negotiate a settlement with an insurance
adjuster whose goal is to minimize the insurance
company's payout.
(Back to question 2)
Additional
Information on General Damages for Pain and
Suffering
The law is clear
regarding a victim's right to recover money
damages for pain, suffering, disability and
disfigurement. However, it is more difficult to
estimate the amount of money required to
compensate a victim for their loss. This
difficulty is compounded by the need to prove
the calculation to an insurance company or a
court. While medical expenses or lost wages can
be substantiated through bills or pay stubs, how
is a value assigned to pain? How do we measure
what pain is worth? Since we can't ask
volunteers to describe how much money they would
be willing to accept to be seriously injured in
a railroad collision, or ask a railroad worker
the amount that they would accept to be hurt on
the job, we estimate the money value in a pain
and suffering claim by analyzing damage awards
made in similar cases. At Brett & Coats PLLC, we have access to state, regional and
national publications, as well as computerized
data banks to identify similar cases and project
a solid estimate of the range of awards made for
similar losses.
These comparisons
help us to secure the most fair settlement
amount with the insurance company. In situations
where the insurance company refuses to pay a
fair settlement, our attorneys have the skill to
present real human losses to a jury in a
compelling way. Because our experienced personal
injury attorneys are always prepared to take a
claim to trial (and the insurance companies know
it), we can usually obtain a favorable
settlement that includes an appropriate amount
for general damages in an out of court
settlement.
(Back to question 2)
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3.
How much is my injury claim worth?
There are two
ways to estimate the monetary settlement value
of a claim, and our attorneys recommend that
both be used to achieve success in a railroad
collision claim.
To find a total
claim value, add up the amounts you are entitled
to for property damage, medical expenses to
date, future medical expenses, lost earnings to
date, future lost earnings, and general damages
for pain and suffering. Since damages such as
general damages for pain and suffering are
difficult to evaluate, the second method of
assigning a monetary settlement value is used.
Your attorney will review state, regional and
national publications and computerized databases
to find similar claims with similar injuries and
similar liability patterns to develop a
statistical analysis of your claim's value.
You should not
attempt to estimate the value of your claim
without professional assistance. At Brett & Coats PLLC, we offer a free case evaluation to
determine the likelihood of a recovery and the
likely range of any recovery. Contact
us for
your free case evaluation.
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4.
What should I do immediately to help preserve my
claim?
The answer to
this question is not: "Get a lawyer
quickly" or "be your own lawyer".
Instead, work to keep your claim alive until you
can select a proven personal injury attorney. To
support your claim before you meet with an
attorney, it is important to preserve evidence
and protect your negotiating position. By
documenting your accident and injuries, you are
substantiating your claim and providing your
chosen attorney with a head start on your legal
strategy.
Take photographs
of the accident scene, pictures of the damages,
photographs of your injury, and photographs of
yourself during your recovery period. Do not
attempt to interview witnesses to the collision.
Instead, record their names, addresses and phone
numbers so that if there is a later dispute you
will have objective bystanders to support your
version of events. Also, be sure to keep a daily
journal beginning with the date of the accident
to document all physical and mental injuries, as
well as your perspective of the accident. Bring
all of this to your lawyer once you have
selected one.
Next, preserve
your negotiating position. Do not sign anything
presented by the insurance adjuster. Do not give
a written or oral statement to an insurance
adjuster. Do not attempt to negotiate a
settlement with an insurance adjuster who works
to minimize payouts. As you are in the process
of preserving evidence and protecting your
negotiating position, you can also invest the
time to find an experienced, proven personal
injury lawyer.
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5.
How should I select a lawyer to represent me?
When you select a
lawyer to represent you in a personal injury
claim, consider three factors:
Does this lawyer
have a reputation for excellent legal ability
and high ethical standards? The
Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory is a
twenty-four volume set listing almost all of the
lawyers in the United States and rating their
legal ability as A (very high to preeminent), B
(high to very high), C (fair to high) or no
rating. A rating of V is given for high-ethical
standards. At Brett & Coats PLLC, we are
proud of our Martindale Hubbell AV rating, the
highest available. The Martindale-Hubbell
directory is also available online at www.martindale.com. But you don't have to rely
solely on a publication. You can ask people in
our community who have experienced the legal
system, talk with someone who works in the
courthouse, or discuss your situation with
someone experienced in railroad collision injury
claims. Ask a number of people to see if any
particular name keeps coming up. Also, look at
the Brett & Coats PLLC attorney
profiles to see that our firm's attorneys are well
qualified to handle your railroad collision
claim. For example, Dean Brett has repeatedly
been selected as a "Superlawyer" by
Washington Law & Politics Magazine, and has
been selected as a Fellow of the American
College of Trial Lawyers. Dean Brett has served on the Board
of Governors of the Washington State Trial
Lawyers Association, the state-wide group
dedicated to fighting for victims of negligence.
Does this lawyer
have experience handling my particular type of
personal injury case? If you have been injured
by another party's negligence, a divorce
attorney or a lawyer who works in estate
planning cannot provide the best representation.
You need to hire an experienced personal injury
lawyer with the credentials to effectively
represent your interests. Relatively few lawyers
devote most of their practice to representing
individuals with claims for personal injury or
wrongful death. Before you hire a lawyer, you
should know how many times the attorney has
actually gone to court on a railroad collision
injury claim. You should also know whether that
attorney has ever obtained a verdict or
settlement in a personal injury case of over a
million dollars, or over $100,000, or even over
$50,000. Don't allow the lawyer to answer your
questions with generalizations. Ask for specific
cases with specific results. Remember, when you
talk to a lawyer you are interviewing him or her
for a job working for you. Look at their resume.
You may also be interested in looking at our
results case
results.
Does this
attorney inspire trust and confidence? You
should hire a lawyer in whom you feel
comfortable placing your trust and confidence.
Remember, the lawyer is going to be employed by
you, to represent you. You need someone easy to
talk to, someone who will explain and advise on
your situation. The best way to determine your
comfort level is to personally meet the lawyer.
If you want to take things a step at a time,
talk to the lawyer on the phone and test your
comfort level prior to scheduling an
appointment. At Brett & Coats PLLC, we
offer a free case evaluation to help determine
the likelihood of a successful claim and the
likely range of any financial recovery. This is
an excellent opportunity to decide if you are
comfortable placing your trust and confidence in
a personal injury lawyer at Brett & Coats PLLC. Contact us
for your free case evaluation.
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6.
How much will it cost to hire a lawyer?
At Brett & Coats PLLC, our clients have a choice in how
they pay for legal services. We can charge on an
hourly basis or on a contingency fee.
If you choose to
hire us on an hourly basis, we will track the
time our lawyers and paralegals spend on your
case and bill you monthly. Our hourly rates
range from $225 for lead trial attorneys to $185
for associate trial lawyers and $80 for
paralegals. On hourly billings, there are two
basic rules: all fees and costs must be paid
monthly and our firm is paid regardless of
whether your claim is won or lost.
With a
contingency fee arrangement, we are paid
one-third of any recovery by settlement or
judgment. If there is no recovery, you owe us
nothing for our legal services. However, you
must pay your own costs, such as the charges
doctors make for providing records and reports,
out of the money you receive when the case is
settled.
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7.
How does the insurance claim process work?
Insurance
companies are in business to make a profit.
Generally, the insurance company's profit is the
difference between what it collects in premiums
and what it pays out in claims. Therefore, the
insurance adjuster's job is to settle your claim
for as little as possible to maximize the
company's profit. Your lawyer's job is to settle
your claim for its maximum value.
We know how to
work with insurance companies. Insurance
companies have developed a huge bureaucracy to
scrutinize, criticize, evaluate and ultimately
pay insurance claims. The insurance adjuster's
job is to identify false or fraudulent claims
and to refuse to pay undocumented claims. The
insurance adjuster is trying to build a file, to
critically evaluate your claim, and to pay as
little as possible to settle your claim as soon
as possible. Remember, the insurance adjuster
reports to a supervisor. If the adjuster has a
thin, small file on a claim that was settled for
$10,000, the supervisor is likely to say
"You paid too much. This file does not
support a $10,000 payment." Conversely, if
the adjuster settles a claim for $100,000 and
gives the supervisor a thick and well-documented
file that includes complete witness statements,
complete medical opinion letters, and
comprehensive records of all medical care, wage
losses, and other expenses, the supervisor is
more likely to say, "That's fine, the claim
was worth $100,000". Your attorney's role
is to help the insurance adjuster build a file
that supports a full and fair claim settlement.
Your lawyer's
goal should be to maximize your financial
recovery from your injury. Your attorney should
have a reputation for honest dealing; for a fair
but firm settlement posture; for refusing to
settle for a penny less than the claim is worth;
and for being prepared to take each claim to
trial to get a full and fair recovery.
There are
basically five steps the insurance adjuster must
take in handling a personal injury claim:
1. Collecting
Information
2. Setting Reserves
3. Evaluating Damages
4. Negotiating Settlement
5. Defending in Trial if Necessary
Collecting
Information. Since the adjuster must collect
information needed to understand your claim,
your lawyer should provide all the required
information to validate the claim to the
adjuster and their company. Sometimes insurance
adjusters are so busy looking for damaging
information about you or your claim that they
miss favorable information. Your attorney should
collect and highlight that favorable information
- witness statements, photographs of the
accident and your injury, opinion letters from
experts in medicine, accident reconstruction and
economic loss. When your attorney presents the
claim to the adjuster, he is more likely to
understand the significance of your claim.
Setting Reserves.
When a claim comes in, the company must set
reserves, an accounting entry, to assure
government regulators that the company has
adequate money to pay the claim. If initial
reserves are set too low, when the time comes to
settle the claim, the adjuster will sometimes be
too limited in the amount of money he can offer
in settlement. Your attorney must get the
appropriate information to the adjuster as soon
as possible to assist the company in setting
high enough reserves that the ultimate
settlement can be for the full claim value.
Evaluating
Damages. Since the adjusters must evaluate the
claim value, your attorney should provide them
with all relevant information, including
comparable cases from state, regional and
national publications and computerized
databases, and our own evaluation of the claim's
value to assist the adjuster in coming to a full
and fair evaluation.
Negotiating
Settlement. There is an old saying, "A
lawyer who represents himself, has a fool for a
client." Likewise, a personal injury victim
who attempts to negotiate a settlement with a
professional insurance adjuster is likely to
recover far less than the claim's true value. Do
not attempt to negotiate a settlement of your
personal injury claim without professional
advice.
Defending in
Trial if Necessary. If a settlement cannot be
negotiated, the insurance company must defend
its position in court. To improve your chances
for compensation at trial, your attorney must
have a quality reputation, proven credentials, a
fair but firm settlement posture that refuses to
settle for less than a full claim value, and the
ability and resources to prepare for an
aggressive litigation of your claim.
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8.
How can I deal with my immediate medical bills?
To ensure that
you continue to receive the highest quality
medical care and to protect your credit, it is
important to immediately pay medical bills. As a
part of our representation in your railroad
collision injury claim, Brett & Coats PLLC
will manage payment of your medical bills. Your
priorities are to find the best medical care,
follow your doctor's advice, strive to reach the
best possible medical recovery, and send all
your bills to the Brett & Coats PLLC
office. In turn, we will coordinate the
paperwork to obtain payment of those medical
bills through your own medical coverage; the
insurance coverage of any parties involved in
the accident; state and federal medical payment
programs; or by arranging with your health care
providers to hold collection until you receive
your settlement.
Your good health
is too important to sacrifice quality medical
care because of financial considerations. Take
care of your health first and your Brett & Coats PLLC attorney will coordinate payment of
your medical care as part of our service in your
personal injury claim.
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9.
How long do I have to file a claim?
If your injury
occurred more than one year ago, you may have a
statute of limitations problem. The statute of
limitations requires that a claim be filed
within a certain period of time after the
accident or you will forever lose the right to
do so. Depending on the manner in which you were
injured, the statute of limitations could be
three years, two years or less from the date of
injury. Do not delay in contacting a Brett & Coats PLLC attorney. We offer a free case
evaluation to determine the likelihood of a
recovery and the likely range of any recovery. Contact us
today.
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10. What if I
have a preexisting medical condition?
If a train
company caused your injury, you are entitled to
be compensated for only the injuries suffered in
the collision. If the insurance company suspects
that your injury existed prior to the accident
or that you were injured in an unrelated event,
they may refuse to pay your claim. To prevent
this situation, we obtain your entire medical
history so that we can identify what has been
reported in the records, and we can then
reassure the insurance company that no
preexisting or unrelated injury exists. The
proof of a causal link between the accident and
the injury may seem simple, but your lawyer must
work hard to eliminate the insurance company's
natural skepticism which can lead to non-payment
of your claim.
Special rules
govern compensation for aggravation of
preexisting injuries. If your accident has been
caused by the negligence of another party and
you have been injured in an area where a
pre-existing infirmity exists, you are in the
complicated situation that requires expert legal
help. If prior to the accident you had a
pre-existing bodily condition that was causing
pain or disability and then the accident further
exacerbated the pain or disability, you are
entitled to compensation for the aggravation of
that condition.
If you had a
pre-existing condition or disability prior to
the accident and it made you more vulnerable to
injury than a normally healthy person, you are
also entitled to compensation for those injuries
and damages caused by the accident. You are not
entitled to compensation for an injury sustained
in a subsequent accident that is a normal
consequence of an impaired physical condition
caused by the original injury and which would
not have occurred had the plaintiff's physical
condition not been impaired.
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11. What types of money damages are allowed for
wrongful death?
Four interrelated
statutes govern calculation of recoverable
damages when a person dies as a result of the
railroad's negligence. While none of the
statutes can ever replace the husband or wife or
child who was lost, a successful claim can help
the survivors in many ways. Your attorney will
coordinate with the criminal prosecution of the
party at fault and arrange for grief counseling.
Of course, our most important form of support to
grieving families is securing monetary
compensation for their loss. Money cannot
relieve the grief over the loss of a loved one,
but it can help to relieve financial burdens.
If the person who
died was a minor (under 18) or a child on whom
one or both parents were dependent for support,
or a viable fetus, damages are defined to
include "loss of love and companionship of
the child and for injury to or destruction of
the parent-child relationship in such amount as,
under all the circumstances of the case, may be
just." This broad language has been
interpreted to include parental grief, mental
anguish and suffering. Significantly,
computation of damages is not limited to the
lost child's minority. In addition, medical,
hospital, medication and related expenses and
loss of services and support are recoverable.
A second statute
also allows damages to be recovered on behalf of
..."The wife, husband, child or
children" of the deceased. Adult decedents
who are single and without children do not
qualify here. But for decedents with a surviving
spouse or child, "the jury may give such
damages as, under all circumstances of the case,
may to them be just." Whether an adult who
dies has dependents dramatically affects
verdicts and settlements in death claims.
A third statute
allows recovery for decedents even if they were
unmarried without dependents; the recovery is to
their estate and includes the present value of
their future net earnings had they lived a
normal life expectancy. Usually proof of loss
must be made through the calculations of an
economist
A fourth statute
is useful to help survivors who may not qualify
for help under other statutes. Care must be
taken to avoid duplication of claims made under
other statutes. The claim may be brought on
behalf of the husband or wife, children, and
under special circumstances, certain other
family members.
Developing a
successful legal strategy in a wrongful death
claim is best left in the hands of an
experienced attorney. At Brett & Coats PLLC, we offer a free case evaluation to
determine the likelihood of a recovery and the
likely range of any recovery. Contact us
for
your free case evaluation.
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