In Marshall, wrongful death claims often follow familiar patterns: a fatal collision on a busy roadway, an incident involving a commercial driver or vehicle, a workplace injury that worsens, or a medical complication that shouldn’t have been missed. In each situation, the insurer’s first question is usually the same—what can be proven?
Most calculators are built for broad scenarios and may assume facts that don’t match what investigators later find. Common reasons online estimates fall short include:
- Liability disputes (for example, whether someone failed to yield, followed too closely, or ignored a hazard)
- Causation disagreements (whether the incident truly caused the death versus a pre-existing condition)
- Incomplete documentation of funeral costs, lost support, or caregiving responsibilities
- Comparative responsibility issues under Texas law that can reduce recovery even when the defendant was at fault
A lawyer’s job is to replace guesswork with evidence—because evidence is what supports damages.


