When car accidents cause serious injuries, the impact extends beyond the injured person to their loved ones. Loss of consortium claims compensate family members for the damage to their relationships with the injured person. These derivative claims recognize that family bonds have value the law should protect.
The Nature of Consortium
Loss of consortium encompasses the intangible elements of close family relationships:
Companionship
The comfort of having your loved one present and engaged in life together.
Affection
The emotional bonds, love, and caring that family members share.
Society
The social aspects of relationships, including conversation, shared activities, and mutual support.
Services
The practical services family members provide each other, from household tasks to caregiving.
Sexual Relations
In spousal claims, the loss of physical intimacy.
Guidance and Nurturing
In parent-child claims, the loss of parental guidance or the nurturing relationship between parent and child.
Who May Bring Consortium Claims
Spouses
Spousal consortium claims are recognized in virtually all jurisdictions. A spouse may recover for loss of their marital relationship when their partner is injured.
Children
Some jurisdictions permit children to bring consortium claims for loss of parental relationships. Others do not recognize such claims.
Parents
Some jurisdictions permit parents to bring consortium claims for injuries to children. This is particularly relevant when children suffer catastrophic injuries.
Unmarried Partners
Recognition of consortium claims for unmarried domestic partners varies widely. Traditional requirements of marriage are expanding in some jurisdictions.
Same-Sex Partners
Following marriage equality, married same-sex couples have the same consortium rights as other spouses. Unmarried same-sex partners face the same limitations as other unmarried couples.
Derivative Nature
Consortium claims are derivative of the injured person’s claim:
Dependent on Primary Claim
If the injured person has no valid claim, family members have no consortium claim.
Affected by Comparative Fault
The injured person’s comparative fault typically reduces consortium damages proportionally.
Statute of Limitations
Consortium claims typically share the limitations period of the underlying injury claim.
Settlement Impact
Settlement of the injured person’s claim may or may not resolve consortium claims depending on how settlements are structured.
Proving Loss of Consortium
Consortium claims require evidence of relationship damage:
Pre-Accident Relationship
Testimony about the quality of the relationship before the accident establishes the baseline.
Post-Accident Changes
Documentation of how the relationship changed after the injury.
Spouse Testimony
The claiming spouse’s description of what was lost.
Injured Person Testimony
The injured person’s perspective on relationship changes.
Third-Party Observations
Friends and family who observed the relationship before and after.
Medical Testimony
Medical evidence of how injuries affect the injured person’s ability to participate in the relationship.
Privacy Considerations
Consortium claims involve intimate matters:
Sexual Relationship
Claims may require disclosure of private sexual matters, which some couples find objectionable.
Relationship Problems
Pre-existing relationship problems may be explored by defendants.
Discovery Scope
Defendants may seek discovery into personal aspects of the relationship.
Weighing Privacy vs. Recovery
Couples must decide whether potential recovery justifies privacy intrusion.
Valuation Challenges
Consortium damages are difficult to quantify:
No Economic Baseline
Unlike lost wages, there is no dollar amount from which to calculate.
Jury Discretion
Juries have substantial discretion in valuing consortium.
Relationship to Primary Damages
Consortium awards often correlate to the severity of the primary injury.
Comparable Verdicts
Attorneys research similar cases for valuation guidance.
Duration Considerations
The duration of consortium loss affects damages:
Temporary Impairment
Injuries from which the person recovers fully limit consortium damages.
Permanent Impairment
Permanent injuries create lifetime consortium losses.
Death
Wrongful death creates permanent total loss of consortium.
Life Expectancy
Consortium damages extend over the expected duration of the relationship.
Common Scenarios
Spouse in Coma
Complete loss of all consortium elements for the duration of the coma.
Permanent Disability
Ongoing limitations on activities, intimate relations, and emotional availability.
Chronic Pain
Pain interferes with mood, activities, and relationship quality.
Traumatic Brain Injury
Personality changes may fundamentally alter the relationship.
Depression
Mental health conditions affect the injured person’s ability to participate in the relationship.
Defense Strategies
Defendants challenge consortium claims through:
Pre-Existing Problems
Evidence that the relationship had problems before the accident.
Alternative Causes
Arguments that relationship difficulties stem from factors other than the accident.
Minimal Impact
Evidence that the injuries have not significantly affected the relationship.
Exaggeration Claims
Assertions that the claimed impact is overstated.
Insurance Coverage
Consortium claims implicate insurance coverage:
Separate Limits Question
Whether consortium claimants have their own per-person limits or share with the injured person.
Policy Limits Allocation
How limited policy proceeds are allocated between primary and consortium claims.
Multiple Claimants
When several family members have consortium claims, allocation becomes complex.
Procedural Considerations
Consortium claims have procedural aspects:
Joinder
Consortium claims typically must be joined with the primary claim.
Separate Trials
Courts may order separate trials for consortium claims in some circumstances.
Jury Instructions
Specific instructions address how juries should evaluate consortium.
Practical Guidance
Consider whether consortium claims are appropriate given the severity of injuries.
Evaluate privacy implications before pursuing consortium claims.
Document the relationship before and after the accident.
Understand that consortium claims add complexity but may add significant value.
Ensure consortium claimants are included in case evaluation and settlement discussions.
Relationships have value beyond what can be measured in dollars. Consortium claims recognize that injuries harm families, not just individuals.
Sources:
- Consortium recognition by jurisdiction: State case law and statutory compilations
- Derivative claim doctrine: Restatement (Second) of Torts
- Valuation approaches: Jury verdict research and case law analysis