Losing a loved one is devastating under any circumstances. When that loss is caused by someone else’s negligence or wrongful conduct, the grief is compounded by anger, confusion, and practical concerns about your family’s future. A wrongful death claim can’t bring your loved one back, but it can provide financial security and hold the responsible parties accountable.

This guide explains how wrongful death claims work in New York and what grieving families need to know.

What is a Wrongful Death Claim?

A wrongful death claim is a lawsuit brought on behalf of a deceased person’s estate when their death was caused by someone else’s negligent, reckless, or intentional conduct. Common causes of wrongful death include:

New York’s wrongful death statute, EPTL § 5-4.1, allows the personal representative of the deceased’s estate to bring a claim for damages suffered by the surviving family members.

Who Can File a Wrongful Death Lawsuit?

In New York, only the personal representative (executor or administrator) of the deceased person’s estate can file a wrongful death lawsuit. Individual family members cannot file on their own behalf.

If there’s a will, the executor named in the will typically serves as personal representative. If there’s no will, the court will appoint an administrator, usually the surviving spouse, then adult children, then parents, then siblings, in that order of priority.

The personal representative brings the claim on behalf of the “distributees,” the people entitled to inherit under New York law:

  • Surviving spouse
  • Children (including adopted children)
  • Parents (if no spouse or children)
  • Siblings (if no spouse, children, or parents)

What Damages Can Be Recovered?

New York wrongful death damages are meant to compensate the distributees for their pecuniary (financial) losses. These include:

  • Lost Financial Support: The income and benefits the deceased would have provided to their family over their expected lifetime. This is often the largest component of damages and requires expert economic analysis.
  • Lost Services: The monetary value of household services, childcare, guidance, and other contributions the deceased would have provided.
  • Lost Inheritance: The portion of the deceased’s estate that distributees would have inherited had they lived a normal lifespan.
  • Medical Expenses: Medical costs incurred between the injury and death.
  • Funeral and Burial Expenses: Reasonable costs associated with the funeral, burial, or cremation.

What About Pain and Suffering?

Here’s where New York law differs significantly from most other states: New York does not allow recovery of grief, sorrow, or mental anguish damages in wrongful death claims. The damages are strictly economic.

However, there’s an important exception through what’s called a “survival action.”

Wrongful Death vs. Survival Actions

A survival action is a separate but related claim that recovers damages the deceased person could have claimed had they survived:

  • Pain and suffering between the injury and death
  • Lost earnings during that period
  • Medical expenses

The survival action belongs to the estate, not directly to the family members, but the recovery ultimately passes to the beneficiaries.

In practice, wrongful death and survival actions are usually filed together to maximize the family’s recovery.

Proving a Wrongful Death Claim

To succeed on a wrongful death claim, you must prove:

  • The defendant owed a duty of care to the deceased
  • The defendant breached that duty through negligence or wrongful conduct
  • That breach caused the death
  • The distributees suffered pecuniary losses as a result

The burden of proof is “preponderance of the evidence,” meaning you must show it’s more likely than not that the defendant’s conduct caused the death.

Statute of Limitations

In New York, you must file a wrongful death lawsuit within two years of the date of death (not the date of the injury that caused the death).

This is shorter than the three-year deadline for most personal injury claims, and it’s critical not to miss it. Once the statute of limitations expires, you lose your right to sue forever.

Important: If the wrongful death involves a government entity (city bus, public hospital, etc.), you must file a Notice of Claim within 90 days of the death.

Who Can Be Held Liable?

Depending on the circumstances, wrongful death claims can be brought against:

  • Individual wrongdoers (negligent drivers, etc.)
  • Employers (under certain circumstances)
  • Property owners
  • Medical providers and hospitals
  • Manufacturers of defective products
  • Government entities
  • Multiple defendants (with shared or individual liability)

Criminal Cases vs. Wrongful Death Claims

A wrongful death claim is a civil lawsuit, separate from any criminal prosecution. You can pursue a wrongful death claim regardless of whether:

  • Criminal charges are filed
  • The defendant is convicted or acquitted
  • The criminal case is still pending

The burden of proof is lower in civil cases (preponderance of the evidence vs. beyond a reasonable doubt), so it’s possible to win a wrongful death claim even if the defendant was acquitted criminally.

How Settlements and Verdicts Are Distributed

Wrongful death recoveries are distributed according to New York’s intestacy laws (the same rules that govern inheritance when someone dies without a will):

  • If there’s a surviving spouse and children: spouse gets $50,000 plus half the remainder; children split the rest
  • If there’s only a surviving spouse: spouse gets everything
  • If there are only children: children split everything equally
  • If there’s no spouse or children: parents inherit; if no parents, siblings inherit

The court must approve all wrongful death settlements and distributions to ensure they’re fair and properly allocated.

Why You Need an Experienced Wrongful Death Attorney

Wrongful death cases are among the most complex areas of personal injury law. They require:

  • Thorough investigation of the circumstances of death
  • Expert witnesses (economists, medical experts, accident reconstructionists)
  • Complex damages calculations
  • Navigation of probate and estate administration
  • Coordination with any criminal proceedings
  • Sensitivity to the family’s grief while fighting hard for their case

We’re Here to Help

If you’ve lost a loved one due to someone else’s negligence, we understand you’re going through an incredibly difficult time. Our attorneys have decades of experience helping families navigate wrongful death claims while treating them with the compassion and respect they deserve.

Contact us for a free, confidential consultation. We’ll explain your options and help you decide the best path forward for your family.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. This article is informational and not legal advice.