Automated tools typically work off general patterns. They may ask about age, relationship, and certain financial facts, then generate a range.
But wrongful death outcomes in West Virginia often hinge on issues that a calculator can’t reliably model, such as:
- What actually caused the fatal injury (and whether the defendant can plausibly blame something else)
- Whether evidence was preserved early—critical when the incident involves vehicles, traffic control, or workplace conditions
- How fault is framed when more than one party could be implicated (a common theme in multi-vehicle crashes and shared work-site responsibility)
- What documentation exists for wages, benefits, medical expenses, and the timeline from injury to death
In other words, an estimate can’t review reports, assess witness reliability, or evaluate whether the evidence supports liability under West Virginia standards.


