When car accident victims die, some claims die with them while others survive. Survival actions preserve the deceased’s own claims for the benefit of their estate. Understanding what damages survive helps families pursue complete recovery.
The Common Law Background
Historically, personal injury claims died with the victim:
Common Law Rule
The principle that personal actions die with the person meant that if a negligent defendant killed rather than merely injured someone, they faced less liability.
Perverse Incentive
This created an incentive to kill rather than injure.
Statutory Reform
Survival statutes now preserve most claims.
Survival Actions Defined
Survival actions preserve the deceased’s own claims:
The Deceased’s Claim
What the deceased could have recovered if they had survived.
Estate Recovery
Proceeds go to the estate, not directly to wrongful death beneficiaries.
Pre-Death Focus
Covers the period from injury to death, not the ongoing loss from death itself.
Typical Surviving Damages
Conscious Pain and Suffering
The deceased’s physical pain and emotional suffering before death.
Requires proof that the deceased was conscious and experienced suffering.
Duration from injury to death affects recovery.
Pre-Death Medical Expenses
Emergency treatment, hospitalization, and all medical care before death.
Pre-Death Lost Wages
Earnings lost between injury and death if the deceased survived any period after the accident.
Property Damage
Claims for property damage typically survive.
The Conscious Pain Requirement
Consciousness before death is often required:
Unconscious Victims
If death was instantaneous or the victim never regained consciousness, conscious pain damages may be unavailable.
Proving Consciousness
Medical records, witness testimony, and circumstances of death establish consciousness.
Even Brief Consciousness
Some jurisdictions permit recovery for even brief periods of conscious suffering.
Terror and Apprehension
Some courts allow recovery for pre-impact terror even if death was nearly instantaneous.
Damages That Do Not Survive
Future Lost Earnings
The deceased’s future earnings are addressed in wrongful death claims, not survival claims.
Future Pain and Suffering
Ongoing suffering that would have occurred had the deceased lived does not survive.
These Belong to Wrongful Death
Survivors’ losses are addressed through wrongful death claims rather than survival claims.
Survival vs. Wrongful Death
The distinction matters for recovery:
Different Beneficiaries
Survival claims benefit the estate (and ultimately heirs). Wrongful death claims benefit statutory beneficiaries (which may differ from heirs).
Different Damages
Survival claims focus on pre-death losses. Wrongful death claims focus on survivors’ losses.
Complementary Claims
Both claims may be brought from the same fatal accident.
No Double Recovery
The same damages cannot be recovered in both claims.
Estate Administration
Survival claims require estate administration:
Personal Representative
Someone must be appointed to pursue the claim on behalf of the estate.
Probate Process
Formal or informal probate may be required.
Distribution
Recovery becomes estate assets distributed according to will or intestacy laws.
Creditor Claims
Survival proceeds may be subject to creditors:
Estate Debts
The estate may owe debts that must be paid from assets.
Medical Bills
Pre-death medical expenses are estate debts.
Contrast with Wrongful Death
Wrongful death proceeds often pass directly to beneficiaries, potentially avoiding some creditor claims.
Statute of Limitations
Survival claim limitations have special considerations:
Tolling at Death
Statutes may toll during the period before a personal representative is appointed.
Relation Back
Claims filed after appointment may relate back to the date of death.
Separate Limitations
Survival and wrongful death claims may have different limitations periods.
Tax Implications
Tax treatment differs between claim types:
Physical Injury Exclusion
Damages for physical injury are generally tax-exempt under IRC § 104.
Estate Taxation
Large estates may face estate tax on survival proceeds.
Beneficiary Taxation
Distributions to beneficiaries may have tax consequences.
Proving Pre-Death Damages
Documentation of the pre-death period:
Medical Records
Detailed records of treatment, consciousness, and pain.
Witness Statements
Those who interacted with the deceased before death.
Duration Evidence
How long the victim survived with injuries.
Expert Medical Testimony
Physicians can testify about likely pain experience based on injuries.
Strategic Considerations
When a victim dies after an accident:
Determine whether death was instantaneous or whether a survival period existed.
Document evidence of consciousness and suffering during any survival period.
Appoint a personal representative to pursue claims.
Coordinate survival and wrongful death claims.
Consider creditor issues affecting survival proceeds.
Understand jurisdictional variations in what survives.
The distinction between survival and wrongful death claims affects recovery, distribution, and estate planning. Proper understanding ensures complete compensation for fatal accidents.
Sources:
- Conscious pain requirement: State survival statutes and case law
- Estate administration requirements: State probate codes
- Tax treatment: 26 U.S.C. § 104