Many AI tools estimate wrongful death value by using simplified assumptions. Richmond Hill cases, however, often hinge on details that a generic model can’t see—such as how traffic patterns contributed to the crash, what witnesses observed near a particular intersection, or whether an employer or contractor followed safety requirements.
In practice, settlement value changes dramatically when the defense can argue:
- fault should be shared (or not attributable to their insured)
- causation is disputed (the death may be linked to complications rather than the initial incident)
- documentation is incomplete (missing medical records, wage records, or incident reports)
- policy coverage limits or notice issues affect what’s available
That means a calculator can be a starting point for questions—but it shouldn’t be treated like a prediction of what Richmond Hill insurance carriers will actually negotiate.


