If your family lost someone in Hobbs because of another person's or company's negligence, you may have a wrongful death claim under New Mexico law. Hobbs has one of the highest fatal-crash rates per capita of any city in New Mexico — driven primarily by the Permian Basin truck industry, oilfield-commuter patterns, and aggressive scheduling that produces fatigue and HOS violations.
See our overview of wrongful death cases →
Hobbs context.
Major Roadways
US-62/180, NM-18, NM-128, and the heavy oilfield routes connecting to Texas.
Local Courts
the Fifth Judicial District Court (100 N. Main St.) and the U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico.
Trauma Care
Lea Regional Medical Center (the nearest Level I trauma is UNM Hospital in Albuquerque, ~300+ miles).
Why It Matters Here
Hobbs sits in the heart of the Permian Basin and produces one of the highest rates of commercial truck and oilfield-related crashes in New Mexico. Frac sand trucks, water haulers, and heavy oilfield equipment run constantly on a road system that wasn't designed for that volume.
New Mexico applies pure comparative fault — you can recover even at 99% fault, with damages reduced by your share. The state also has a three-year statute of limitations (vs. Texas's two), allows uninsured motorist (UM) "stacking" in many situations, and applies no general damages cap on standard injury claims. See our TX vs NM guide →
Who can bring a New Mexico wrongful death claim?
New Mexico wrongful death claims (NMSA §41-2-1 to §41-2-4) are brought by a personal representative of the decedent's estate on behalf of statutory beneficiaries. Beneficiaries follow intestate-succession rules and can include the surviving spouse, children, parents, and (in their absence) siblings. The personal representative is appointed by the probate court and is often a close family member — sometimes the same person who would inherit.
What damages can be recovered?
- Loss of financial support the decedent would have provided
- Loss of household services — childcare, home maintenance, day-to-day work
- Loss of companionship, comfort, and society
- Mental anguish of the surviving family
- Loss of inheritance
- Funeral and burial expenses
- Survival claim damages — the decedent's pre-death medical bills and pain and suffering
- In cases of gross negligence (e.g., drunk driving): punitive damages
The evidence that builds the case.
- The official crash or incident report and any criminal investigation files
- 911 audio, dispatch records, and first-responder statements
- Medical records, autopsy reports, and toxicology
- Surveillance video and dashcam footage — preserved quickly
- For truck cases: ECM data, ELD logs, driver qualification file
- For premises cases: prior incident reports, maintenance records, security footage
- Economic and life-care experts for damages calculations
NM deadlines.
Three years from the date of injury for most personal injury claims (NMSA §37-1-8). Cases against government entities require notice within 90 days under the New Mexico Tort Claims Act — a deadline many victims miss. Get a free case review →
How we work with families.
Wrongful death cases require something different from other personal injury work. The legal questions matter, but so does the way the family is treated through the process. We keep clients informed, we don't push for premature settlement, and we never charge a family a dime unless we recover. Our founder Shawn Barnett has lived through serious injury himself — the recovery, the long road back — and that perspective informs how we treat families who've lost someone they love.