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Wrongful Death Claims for Dallas-Fort Worth Families
Dallas Wrongful Death Lawyers
When a family loses someone to another's negligence, Texas law gives them a way to hold the responsible party accountable.
A wrongful death case cannot undo the loss. It can secure the financial future the death took away, and it can make the people responsible answer for what happened.
Texas actually provides two claims after a death, one for the family and one for what the person who died endured, and a serious case pursues both.
Lawsuit Legal is a Texas trial firm based in Houston, and we represent families across Dallas-Fort Worth after a fatal crash, a workplace death, or fatal medical negligence.
Our Texas cases are led by personal injury attorney Don Worley, licensed by the State Bar of Texas, with more than 40,000 cases handled and over $100 million recovered for injury victims.
We handle these cases with the care they require and the resources to take on the companies and insurers that caused the loss.
Call (888) 713-6653 for a free, confidential conversation about your family's loss. You Win or It's Free.
- $100+ million recovered w/ a 98% recovery rate
- Wrongful death and survival claims pursued together for the full loss
- Texas trial lawyers, Houston-based, serving all of Dallas-Fort Worth

The Two Claims Texas Gives a Grieving Family
Texas law treats a death as giving rise to two separate claims, and they compensate different losses. A full case brings both.
The wrongful death claim belongs to the surviving family. It compensates the losses the death caused them, the lost companionship and support, the mental anguish, and the financial losses that follow.[1]
The survival claim belongs to the estate of the person who died. It recovers what they themselves endured before death, including their conscious pain and suffering, their final medical bills, and funeral costs.[2]
Keeping the two claims distinct matters, because each reaches losses the other does not. A case that pursues only one leaves part of the family's recovery on the table. Coordinating the two so they reinforce each other, rather than one quietly reducing the other, is part of what we handle so a family does not unknowingly trade away part of what it is owed.
Who Has the Right to File in Texas
Texas limits who may file a wrongful death claim to a specific group of close family members, and the survival claim runs through the estate.
- The spouse of the person who died.
- The children of the person who died, including adult children.
- The parents of the person who died.
Any of these family members can file, together or individually, and the recovery is shared among them. Siblings and other relatives are not included under the statute. The survival claim is brought by the estate's representative for the benefit of the heirs. Sorting out who has the right to file, and coordinating the claims so the family is not divided, is part of the work in every case.
What a Texas Wrongful Death Recovery Covers
A wrongful death recovery is meant to account for the full weight of the loss, both the measurable financial harm and the human loss that no number can capture.
- Loss of companionship, love, comfort, and society, the relationship the family lost.
- Mental anguish suffered by the surviving spouse, children, and parents.
- Lost financial support and earnings the person would have provided over a lifetime.
- Lost services, care, and guidance, including a parent's role in a child's life.
- Lost inheritance, what the person likely would have left to the family.
- The survival claim's damages, the conscious pain and suffering before death, plus final medical and funeral costs.
- Exemplary damages when the conduct was grossly negligent or worse.
Putting a value on a life is the hardest part of these cases, and it is where families are most often shortchanged by an early insurance offer. We document the full loss, financial and human, so it is accounted for correctly.
How a Life Is Valued in a Wrongful Death Case
The value of a wrongful death case is built from evidence, not guessed at, and it comes from two different kinds of loss.
The economic loss is projected by an economist, who calculates the income, benefits, and household services the person would have provided across the rest of their working life and beyond, reduced to present-day value. For a parent, that includes the financial support and the care and guidance a child has now lost.
The human loss is established through the people who knew the person, the relationships they held, and the role they played in the family. The survival claim's value, the conscious suffering before death, is shown through the medical and scene evidence.
Both halves have to be documented thoroughly, because the side paying has every incentive to treat a life as a small number. Proving the full measure of the loss is what produces a recovery that reflects it.
Why the Insurer's First Offer Is Fast and Low
After a death, the responsible party's insurer often moves quickly, and an early check can feel like relief when funeral costs and lost income are piling up at once.
A fast offer is rarely a fair one. It is built to close the file before the full loss is documented, particularly the lifetime financial support the family lost and the future a surviving child now faces without a parent. An early number seldom accounts for both the wrongful death and survival claims, the decades of lost support, or the uncapped exemplary damages that apply when a felony caused the death.
Accepting that offer almost always ends the claim for good, with no way to reopen it when the true cost becomes clear. The better path is to have the loss valued correctly first, then negotiate or try the case from there.
A wrongful death case cannot bring anyone back, and we never pretend otherwise. What it can do is force a full accounting, of what happened, of who decided it was acceptable, and of what the family lost, and put a number on it that the people responsible have to pay. It can give you a measure of justice and a path forward after tragedy.
When a Crime Also Caused the Death
Many wrongful deaths involve conduct that is also a crime, a drunk driver, a reckless company, a deadly assault. When that happens, two things matter for the family.
First, the criminal case and the civil case are separate. A criminal conviction punishes the wrongdoer, but it does not compensate the family. Only the civil wrongful death claim does that, and it can proceed whether or not anyone is criminally charged or convicted.
Second, Texas caps exemplary damages in most cases, but that cap is removed when the death was caused by certain felony conduct, such as intoxication manslaughter by a drunk driver.[3] In those cases, the punitive portion of the recovery can be substantially larger, which matters both for the family and for deterrence.
We coordinate with the criminal process where one exists, while building the civil case that actually delivers the family's recovery.
The Fatal Cases We Handle Across Dallas
Wrongful death claims arise from the same dangers that run through the rest of our Dallas work, and the cause shapes who is responsible and how the case is built.
- Fatal crashes, on I-35E, I-635, the Mixmaster, and the tollways, including commercial truck crashes that involve a carrier and its insurer.
- Workplace and industrial deaths, including warehouse, construction, and equipment fatalities, often against a non-subscriber employer.
- Fatal medical negligence, when a preventable hospital or surgical error causes a death.
- Drunk and reckless driving, where the felony exception to the damages cap can apply.
- Defective products and unsafe premises, when a dangerous product or property condition turns deadly.
Whatever the cause, the early investigation is what preserves the evidence and identifies every party responsible for the death.
Reaching Every Party Responsible for the Death
A fatal case often involves more than one responsible party, and finding all of them is how a family's recovery is made whole. A single insurance policy rarely covers a catastrophic loss.
- A fatal truck crash can reach the driver, the trucking company, and sometimes the broker or shipper behind the load.
- A workplace or industrial death can reach a non-subscriber employer directly, along with third-party contractors and the makers of failed equipment.
- A defective product can reach the manufacturer and others in the chain that put it on the market.
- A fatal crash or premises death can reach a drunk driver, a bar that overserved, or a property owner who ignored a known danger.
Each responsible party carries its own insurance, so identifying every one of them, early and through a thorough investigation, is what separates a full recovery from a partial one. Where the death occurred also decides which Metroplex county hears the case, and in Dallas County that means the civil district courts downtown, while a death in Tarrant, Collin, or Denton County files in that county's courts, where the jury pool and verdict history can differ.
What to Do After a Fatal Dallas Accident
In the days after a death, legal questions are the last thing a family has room for, which is exactly why a quiet early step or two protects the claim.
- Preserve what you can, including the vehicle, equipment, photos, documents, and the names of any witnesses.
- Be careful with insurers. The responsible party's insurer may reach out early, and you are not required to give a recorded statement or accept an offer.
- Do not sign a release or a quick settlement before the full loss is understood.
- Keep records of medical bills, funeral costs, and the financial support the person provided.
- Talk to a Dallas wrongful death lawyer. Texas generally allows two years to file under Section 16.003, and early work preserves the evidence that proves the case.[4]