At Steve Boyd, PC, we listen to you, fight for you, and we get results.
Losing a family member because of someone else’s carelessness leaves your family with grief, unanswered questions, and financial pressures that should never have been yours to carry. New York law gives surviving families the right to hold the responsible party accountable through a wrongful death claim, but the process involves strict deadlines, complex legal requirements, and insurance companies that move quickly to protect their own interests. Most families have never dealt with any of this before, and doing so while grieving is an enormous burden.
Our Niagara Falls wrongful death lawyer team at the Law Offices of Steve Boyd, PC, serves families throughout Western New York who find themselves in exactly this position. We have spent more than 25 years standing beside people facing the hardest moments of their lives, fighting for the compensation and accountability they deserve. We know the local courts, we know the insurance tactics, and we know how to build cases that get results. We handle the legal process so your family can focus on each other. If you lost someone due to another party’s negligence, we are ready to listen and ready to fight.
Get a Free Niagara Falls Wrongful Death Case Evaluation
A wrongful death in New York occurs when a person dies as the direct result of someone else’s wrongful act, negligence, or carelessness, and the deceased would have had a valid personal injury claim had they survived.
New York law governs wrongful death claims under two closely related statutes. The first, EPTL § 5-4.1, gives the deceased person’s estate the right to file a wrongful death lawsuit. The second, EPTL § 11-3.2, protects any personal injury claims the deceased could have brought before death, including claims for the pain and suffering they endured before passing. Together, these two laws give families two separate paths to seek compensation: the wrongful death claim itself and a survival action filed on behalf of the estate.
A wrongful death claim does not require proof of intent. Carelessness, recklessness, and certain intentional acts can all qualify. The key question is whether the responsible party’s conduct would have made them legally liable in a personal injury case had the victim lived. If yes, a wrongful death action may move forward.
Attorneys and courts in New York often describe this as the “survival test.” The death does not create a brand-new legal case. The victim’s original personal injury claim carries forward, now pursued by the estate on behalf of surviving family members. The stronger the underlying negligence case, the stronger the wrongful death claim.
Niagara Falls, NY, sits in Niagara County along one of the most heavily traveled corridors in Western New York. The combination of commercial traffic on major routes, active tourism, aging infrastructure, and ongoing construction and industrial activity creates conditions where fatal accidents occur with tragic frequency.
Motor vehicle crashes remain the leading cause of wrongful death claims in the region. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, an estimated 27,365 people died in motor vehicle crashes during the first nine months of 2025 alone, a fatality rate of 1.10 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles traveled. New York State accounted for an estimated 770 of those deaths during the same period. Fatal crashes happen every day in this state, and the causes are rarely mysterious: distracted driving, speeding, drunk driving, and commercial truck negligence top the list.
Beyond roadway deaths, wrongful death claims in the Niagara Falls area arise from several other circumstances.
Under EPTL § 5-4.1, only the court-appointed representative of the deceased person’s estate has the legal authority to file a wrongful death lawsuit in New York.
This representative takes one of two forms. When the deceased left a valid will, the executor named in that will asks the Surrogate’s Court for formal appointment. When no will exists, an eligible family member must petition the same court to serve as estate administrator. Either way, the court must grant an official appointment before any lawsuit can begin.
While this representative files the lawsuit, they do so on behalf of the deceased’s closest family members, known legally as distributees. These generally include the surviving spouse, biological or legally adopted children, parents, and, in some cases, dependent relatives.
Many families miss a critical point here: if no representative has been appointed and the filing deadline passes, the right to sue disappears permanently. This single risk makes reaching out to a Niagara Falls wrongful death lawyer early one of the most important decisions a family can make. Our team can help start the estate appointment process right away so your rights stay protected.
Proving a wrongful death claim follows the same path as a personal injury case, because the wrongful death action traces directly back to the injury claim the victim could have brought while alive.
Four elements must be established. First, the defendant owed the deceased a duty of care. Drivers owe a duty to operate their vehicles safely. Contractors owe a duty to keep job sites free of known hazards. Doctors owe a duty to provide care that meets an accepted medical standard. Second, the defendant failed to meet this duty through careless, reckless, or wrongful conduct. Third, this failure caused the death. Fourth, the death produced real, measurable financial losses for surviving family members.
Expert witnesses often play a central role in making these elements stick. In car and truck accident cases, accident reconstruction specialists examine the crash scene, vehicle damage, and road conditions to show what happened and who bears responsibility. In medical malpractice cases, qualified doctors review records and explain where the care fell short. In construction cases, safety engineers look at job site conditions and identify which rules were not met.
Steve Boyd, PC, brings in experienced specialists for every case type. We gather evidence from the start, track down witnesses, and put together a complete picture of what happened and why. Families should never try to manage this process without legal help.
New York currently limits wrongful death compensation to financial losses suffered by the deceased’s closest family members. Grieving relatives cannot recover for their own emotional pain and suffering under the current state law.
This surprises many families, and understandably so. New York remains one of only a small number of states that limit wrongful death recovery to financial harm alone. A proposed reform called the Grieving Families Act would have changed this, allowing families to recover for grief and emotional loss. The legislature passed it, but the governor vetoed it in December 2024. Nothing has changed. Our attorneys follow any developments closely and will update your family if the law shifts.
Under the current rules, these categories of financial loss may qualify for compensation under EPTL § 5-4.3.
Get a Free Niagara Falls Wrongful Death Case Evaluation
Wrongful death compensation in New York comes down to one core question: what did the family lose financially when this person died?
EPTL § 5-4.3 sets the standard, requiring “fair and just compensation for the financial losses resulting from the death.” Reaching a fair number takes detailed analysis, not guesswork.
The deceased’s age and projected remaining lifespan determine how many years of contributions the family has lost. Pay stubs, tax returns, and employment records establish the earnings baseline. Benefits, business interests, and reasonable career advancement factor in as well.
Cases involving young parents tend to produce larger figures because the family loses decades of income, care, and guidance. Cases involving older individuals may lean more heavily on the value of ongoing household services and support.
The Law Offices of Steve Boyd, PC, works with financial professionals who build thorough, case-specific models. No category of loss goes unexamined, because a missed item can meaningfully reduce what your family recovers.
New York law gives families two years from the date of death to file a wrongful death claim, under EPTL § 5-4.1. Miss this window and the right to seek compensation is gone, regardless of how strong the case might be.
Two years sounds like enough time. In practice, the real window shrinks fast. Evidence disappears within days of a fatal accident. Surveillance video overwrites itself. Physical evidence gets cleaned up, repaired, or discarded. Witnesses grow harder to find, and their memories fade. Insurance companies begin protecting their own interests from the moment they learn a claim may be coming. On top of that, building a thorough wrongful death case takes time. Investigators need to be retained, experts need to review records, and the estate appointment process must be completed before any lawsuit can be filed. Waiting until the deadline is close leaves little room to do any of that well.
A few important exceptions to the standard two-year rule apply in specific situations.
Do not wait. Every day of delay creates real legal risk. A Niagara Falls wrongful death lawyer can step in immediately, preserve critical evidence, and make sure your family never loses ground to a deadline.
Your family should not have to figure out the legal system while grieving. We handle the case so you do not have to. From the first phone call, our team moves quickly to protect what your family is owed.
We secure police and accident reports, lock down physical evidence before it disappears, retrieve surveillance footage, and bring in the expert witnesses your case requires. We deal directly with insurance companies and opposing attorneys, so your family never has to. When the situation calls for it, we come to you, whether at home, a hospital, or wherever you work.
Here is what every family we represent can expect from us.
The Law Offices of Steve Boyd, PC has secured $2.125 million for one wrongful death estate and has recovered millions more for Western New York families over more than 25 years of experience.
The days after a fatal accident are disorienting. Most families are not thinking about legal deadlines, and they should not have to be. But a few early steps can make a significant difference in your family’s ability to seek justice later.
We walk families through every one of these steps at no cost and with no pressure.
Yes, you can, and there is a specific law regarding this matter. Under New York’s comparative fault law, CPLR § 1411, a wrongful death claim can move forward even if the deceased shared some responsibility for the accident. The total compensation is reduced by the percentage of fault assigned to the deceased, but the right to recover survives.
Most states cut off compensation entirely once the injured person bears more than 50% of the blame. New York sets no such limit. Even when the deceased carried meaningful responsibility for what happened, the family may still recover. The award reflects only the portion of fault belonging to others.
A straightforward example: if a jury sets total damages at $1 million but finds the deceased 30% responsible, the estate recovers $700,000.
Insurance companies and defense attorneys push hard on fault questions in wrongful death cases. Shifting even a small percentage of blame onto the deceased directly reduces what they owe. We build a clear, evidence-backed picture of responsibility to protect your family’s recovery from those tactics.
New York’s wrongful death law dates to 1847. Little about its core framework has changed since then, even as families and lawmakers have pushed for updates. A few features of this system are worth understanding before your family moves forward.
Two separate claims often run alongside each other in a fatal accident case. The wrongful death claim compensates surviving family members for the financial losses the death created. The survival action compensates the estate for the pain and suffering the deceased experienced before dying. Both can be filed in the same lawsuit, but they follow different rules and carry different deadlines.
Because New York ties compensation to financial loss, awards often reflect the deceased’s earnings and economic contributions. A high-earning provider’s death may result in a larger recovery than the death of a stay-at-home parent, a retiree, or a child, even though the grief is no less real. An experienced wrongful death attorney works to identify every available category of financial loss and present the most complete picture the evidence supports.
Efforts to modernize New York’s wrongful death law continue in the state legislature. The most recent reform bill was vetoed in December 2024. Speak with an attorney to understand where the law stands and how any future changes might apply to your family’s situation.
No settlement or verdict can bring back the person your family lost. But accountability matters. So does making sure your family has the financial support to move forward without the added burden of someone else’s negligence. The Law Offices of Steve Boyd, PC has stood with Western New York families for more than 25 years, in Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Rochester, and across the region. We will stand with you. Call our Niagara Falls wrongful death lawyers today at (716) 600-0000 for a free, confidential consultation.