Many automated calculators are built to work from a short list of inputs (age, relationship, medical bills, income). Real wrongful death claims are rarely that clean.
In Dyer, the cases we see often involve issues that calculators can’t model well, such as:
- Crash causation disputes (for example, competing accounts of speed, lane position, or braking).
- Construction and roadway changes that complicate fault (work-zone conditions, signage, traffic control).
- Multiple potential defendants (a driver, a trucking or maintenance company, a property owner, or a manufacturer).
- Insurance posture and policy limits that significantly affect what a settlement can realistically reach.
An “estimate” may assume liability is straightforward. But in many real disputes, the defense’s first move is to challenge fault, causation, or the scope of damages.


