Online tools often ask for broad inputs (age, earnings, dependents) and then generate a range. That can be a starting point, but it rarely reflects the realities that drive Tennessee wrongful death negotiations.
In Clinton cases, value is commonly shaped by:
- Comparative fault: Tennessee can reduce recovery if the decedent or another party is found partly responsible.
- Proof quality: settlement leverage often hinges on whether the investigation produced usable documentation (photos, statements, logs, recordings).
- Insurance and policy limits: even strong claims may be constrained by what coverage exists.
- Cause-of-death proof: medical records and expert review can be critical when the defense argues the death wasn’t caused by the incident.
So while a calculator may help you understand categories of damages, it can’t replace an attorney’s job of translating your facts into what can actually be recovered.


