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Wrongful Death Lawyer in Texas & New Mexico – The Longhorn Law Firm
Wrongful Death Attorneys

When negligence takes someone you love.

No legal claim brings back someone you've lost. But it can hold the people responsible accountable, secure your family's future, and provide a small measure of justice. We handle these cases with the care, gentleness, and tenacity they require.

Licensed in TX & NM
$50M+ Recovered
No Fee Unless We Win
Available 24/7

Wrongful death claims are among the most difficult cases anyone can face. The legal process feels intrusive at a time of unimaginable grief. We try to make that process as gentle as possible while still fighting hard for the recovery your family deserves. You'll never be rushed, pressured, or treated like a case number.

What qualifies as wrongful death

A wrongful death claim arises when a person dies as a result of someone else's negligence, recklessness, or intentional act. Common causes include:

  • Car, truck, and motorcycle accidents
  • Drunk driving fatalities
  • Pedestrian accidents
  • Workplace fatalities (especially construction and oil field deaths)
  • Defective product injuries
  • Medical malpractice
  • Nursing home neglect and abuse
  • Premises liability incidents
  • Criminal acts (including assault and homicide)

The standard for proving wrongful death is the same as for any negligence claim — the defendant owed a duty, breached it, and that breach caused the death. The difference is who can bring the claim and what damages are available.

Who can file a wrongful death claim

Texas

In Texas, wrongful death claims can be filed by the surviving spouse, children, and parents of the deceased. These family members can bring the claim individually or together. If none of those family members files within 3 months of the death, the executor or administrator of the estate may file.

New Mexico

In New Mexico, the personal representative of the deceased's estate files the wrongful death claim. Recovery is distributed among the surviving spouse, children, parents, and other eligible heirs under New Mexico's wrongful death statute.

In both states, separate "survival action" claims may also be available — these recover damages the deceased themselves suffered before death (pain, suffering, medical bills).

What families recover

Wrongful death damages typically include both economic damages (financial losses) and non-economic damages (loss of relationship). Common recoverable damages:

  • Medical expenses incurred before death
  • Funeral and burial costs
  • Lost income the deceased would have earned over their expected working life
  • Lost employment benefits (health insurance, retirement, pension)
  • Lost household services the deceased provided
  • Loss of love, companionship, comfort, and society
  • Loss of consortium for surviving spouse
  • Loss of parental guidance for surviving children
  • Mental anguish and grief of family members
  • Punitive damages when the at-fault conduct was malicious, intentional, or grossly negligent (common in DUI death cases)

Time limits for filing

Texas: 2 years from the date of death for most wrongful death claims.

New Mexico: 3 years from the date of death for most wrongful death claims.

Claims against government entities (e.g., crashes involving government vehicles or property) have much shorter notice deadlines — often as short as 90 days in New Mexico and 6 months in Texas. If a government employee or vehicle was involved in your loved one's death, call us immediately.

"You should be grieving, not navigating courts and insurance companies. Let us handle the legal side so you and your family can focus on healing."

Our approach to wrongful death cases

We handle these cases differently. Wrongful death isn't a transaction. It's a family in pain who needs an advocate. We promise to:

  • Move at your pace. Some families want to move quickly. Others need time. We adjust to what your family needs.
  • Communicate honestly. If the case is straightforward, we'll tell you. If it's going to be a fight, we'll prepare you for that too.
  • Investigate thoroughly. We pursue every party who contributed to your loved one's death — driver, employer, manufacturer, property owner — to maximize the available recovery.
  • Treat you with respect. No pressure tactics. No insensitive language. No phone trees.
  • Fight hard at the right time. Insurance companies don't respect grief — they exploit it. We push back firmly.

If your family has lost someone to negligence, call us when you're ready. We'll listen with care, explain your options honestly, and let you decide what comes next.

How They Try to Beat You

Texas's restrictive beneficiary rule — CPRC § 71.004.

The Texas Wrongful Death Statute, Tex. CPRC § 71.001 et seq., is notably restrictive about who can bring a wrongful death claim. Only three categories of beneficiaries are recognized:

  • The surviving spouse of the decedent
  • The children of the decedent (biological and adopted)
  • The parents of the decedent

This list is exhaustive. The Texas statute does not recognize claims by:

  • Siblings of the decedent (no matter how close)
  • Step-children who were not legally adopted
  • Unmarried domestic partners (no common-law marriage exception unless formally established)
  • Grandparents
  • Aunts, uncles, cousins
  • Close friends or chosen family

The effect: when a person dies in a Texas accident, the question of who can sue can be sharper and more painful than in most other states. A 50-year sibling relationship counts for nothing under § 71.004. A 30-year unmarried partnership counts for nothing. Only the statutory beneficiaries have standing.

The 3-month rule

Under § 71.004(c), if none of the statutory beneficiaries files within 3 months of the death, the executor or administrator of the estate may file on their behalf — unless all beneficiaries affirmatively request that no action be brought. This creates an unusual procedural posture in cases where the beneficiaries are minors or unable to act on their own behalf.

Damages available to beneficiaries

Under § 71.010, beneficiaries can recover:

  • Pecuniary loss — the value of the financial support and services the decedent would have provided
  • Loss of companionship and society
  • Mental anguish
  • Loss of inheritance — the value the decedent would have saved and passed on

Each beneficiary has their own claim. A surviving spouse's pecuniary loss is calculated independently from each child's. Each child's loss of parental guidance and companionship is its own claim.

Survival action vs. wrongful death — two distinct claims.

Wrongful death cases in both Texas and New Mexico actually involve two legally distinct claims that travel together — the wrongful death claim and the survival action. Understanding the difference matters because the damages and beneficiaries are different.

The wrongful death claim — belongs to beneficiaries

This is the claim governed by Tex. CPRC § 71.004 in Texas (or the parallel NM wrongful death statute, NMSA § 41-2-1 et seq., in New Mexico). It compensates the beneficiaries for their own losses resulting from the death: their financial dependence on the decedent, the relationship they lost, the mental anguish they suffer. The damages go directly to the beneficiaries, not through the estate.

The survival action — belongs to the estate

Under Tex. CPRC § 71.021 (the Texas Survival Statute), the estate inherits any claims the decedent could have brought had they survived. The survival action compensates for:

  • Pre-death pain and suffering — what the decedent experienced between injury and death (this can be substantial in cases where the decedent survived hours, days, or weeks)
  • Pre-death mental anguish — the decedent's awareness of impending death
  • Medical expenses incurred before death
  • Lost wages for the period between injury and death
  • Funeral and burial expenses

Survival action proceeds flow into the estate and are distributed under the decedent's will (or, if no will, under the intestacy statutes). This means the survival action proceeds may go to people who are not wrongful death beneficiaries — and vice versa.

Why both claims matter for valuation

In cases where the decedent survived the initial injury for any period of time — even hours — the survival action's pre-death pain and suffering component can be very large. In cases where death was instantaneous, the survival action is limited to medical/burial expenses and the wrongful death claim dominates. Cases are valued by adding up both claims, not just one.

New Mexico's expansive framework — Romero v. Byers.

New Mexico's wrongful death framework is substantially more generous than Texas's in several key dimensions. The most important: the recognition of the "value of life itself" as a recoverable category of damages, established by Romero v. Byers, 117 N.M. 422 (1994).

The "value of life" doctrine

In Romero, the New Mexico Supreme Court held that the value of the decedent's lost life — separate from any pecuniary contribution, separate from beneficiaries' losses — is itself a recoverable category of damages. The jury is instructed to consider what the decedent's life was worth to the decedent: their relationships, their experiences, their plans, their personhood. This category does not exist in Texas.

Practical effect on case value

The Romero "value of life" component frequently adds hundreds of thousands of dollars — sometimes millions — to NM wrongful death case valuations beyond what the same case would be worth in Texas. For cases involving young decedents with long expected lifespans, the differential is largest.

Broader beneficiary recognition

While the NM wrongful death statute also identifies primary beneficiaries (spouse, children, parents), NM courts have been more flexible about recognizing additional classes in appropriate circumstances. Loss of consortium claims in NM also extend to a broader range of relationships than in Texas.

No statutory cap on punitive damages

Unlike Texas, NM does not impose a statutory cap on punitive damages in most wrongful death cases. Where the defendant's conduct was particularly reprehensible — DUI fatalities, knowing safety violations, corporate misconduct — NM juries can return punitive verdicts that would be statutorily reduced in Texas.

Cross-Border Strategy
When a TX death and NM death look very different

For a family that lost a loved one in an accident near the TX/NM border, the question of where the death occurred — and which state's law governs — can mean a difference of millions of dollars. A 35-year-old wage-earner killed in a serious accident may have a case worth $2-4 million in Texas and $5-10 million in New Mexico, based solely on the legal frameworks. We handle these jurisdictional questions carefully — they're worth taking seriously.

Wrongful death FAQ.

Who can file a wrongful death claim in Texas?

Under Tex. CPRC § 71.004, only the surviving spouse, children (biological and adopted), and parents of the decedent have standing. Siblings, step-children, unmarried partners, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins cannot bring wrongful death claims under Texas law. This rule is strict and has been consistently applied by Texas courts.

Who can file a wrongful death claim in New Mexico?

New Mexico's wrongful death statute, NMSA § 41-2-1 et seq., recognizes similar primary beneficiaries (spouse, children, parents) but NM courts have been more flexible about including additional classes in some circumstances. NM also allows a personal representative of the estate to bring the claim on behalf of statutory beneficiaries.

What's the deadline to file?

Generally 2 years from the date of death in Texas under Tex. CPRC § 16.003(b). Generally 3 years from the date of death in New Mexico under NMSA § 41-2-2. For government-entity defendants, much shorter notice requirements apply — 6 months in Texas, 90 days in NM. Survival actions follow the underlying claim's deadlines.

What's the difference between a wrongful death claim and a survival action?

A wrongful death claim compensates beneficiaries for their own losses from the death. A survival action compensates the decedent's estate for what the decedent suffered between injury and death (pre-death pain and suffering, medical bills, lost wages). They are legally distinct, travel together in most cases, and have different beneficiaries — the wrongful death claim goes to statutory beneficiaries, the survival action goes to the estate.

What can be recovered in a Texas wrongful death case?

Under Tex. CPRC § 71.010: pecuniary loss (the value of financial support and services), loss of companionship and society, mental anguish of the beneficiaries, and loss of inheritance. Each beneficiary has their own claim with their own damages calculation. Punitive damages may also be available in cases of gross negligence under Tex. CPRC § 41.003, subject to the statutory cap.

What additional damages are available in a New Mexico wrongful death case?

NM allows the same categories as Texas plus the "value of life" damages established by Romero v. Byers, 117 N.M. 422 (1994) — compensation for the loss of the decedent's life itself, separate from any pecuniary value. NM also generally does not cap punitive damages, unlike Texas.

How is "pecuniary loss" calculated?

Through expert economic analysis. A forensic economist projects what the decedent would have earned over their remaining expected work life, deducts personal consumption, applies appropriate growth rates and present-value discount rates, and produces a number. For a young high-earner, pecuniary loss can be in the millions. For an older retired decedent, pecuniary loss is much smaller — but the non-economic damages (companionship, mental anguish, value of life in NM) become proportionally more important.

Are there punitive damages in wrongful death cases?

Yes, where the death was caused by gross negligence or other punitive-eligible misconduct (DUI fatalities, corporate disregard for safety, intentional misconduct). In Texas, punitive damages are capped by Tex. CPRC § 41.008 — generally the greater of $200,000 or 2× economic damages plus an amount equal to non-economic damages capped at $750,000. In NM, no comparable statutory cap applies in most cases.

Can multiple beneficiaries each have their own claim?

Yes. A surviving spouse and three children would have four separate claims under the wrongful death statute, each with its own damages calculation. The survival action is one claim that belongs to the estate. Allocation among beneficiaries can become contested in cases where family relationships are strained — we handle these allocation questions carefully.

What if my loved one survived for a while before dying?

Then the survival action's pre-death damages component can be substantial. A decedent who survived a serious crash for two weeks before dying — conscious and in pain — has a survival action with potentially significant pre-death pain and suffering damages. These cases are valued by combining the wrongful death and survival action claims, not just one.

Should I take the insurance company's first offer?

Almost never. First offers in wrongful death cases are almost always significantly below the true case value, particularly in cases involving young decedents, catastrophic-fault defendants (DUI, gross negligence), or extensive corporate liability theories. We always advise clients to let us evaluate the full case before responding to any offer.

Insurance company tactics we see every day.

After a fatal incident, insurers know families are grieving and vulnerable. Some adjusters take advantage. Here are the patterns we see — and how we counter them.

01
Contacting the Family Immediately
Adjusters often call within days, sometimes hours, of a death — offering small 'condolence' payments in exchange for releases. Never sign anything in those first weeks. Get an attorney.
02
Lowballing Funeral and Burial Costs
They'll offer to cover funeral expenses as if that's the case value. Funeral costs are a small fraction — wrongful death claims include lost earnings, loss of consortium, and the survivors' own emotional damages.
03
Minimizing the Deceased's Earning Capacity
Insurers argue the deceased was 'unemployed,' 'underemployed,' or had limited future earnings. We work with economists to project full lifetime earning capacity — including raises, benefits, retirement contributions, and household services.
04
Disputing Causation
If your loved one had any pre-existing condition, they'll argue death wasn't caused by the incident. We work with medical experts to establish causation — the law allows recovery when negligence accelerates or aggravates conditions.
05
Pressuring Quick Settlement
Insurers know families need money for funeral costs and bills, and use that pressure. We arrange for advances on settlements where appropriate and never let financial pressure force a low settlement.
06
Limiting Survivors Eligible to Recover
They'll argue certain family members aren't 'statutory beneficiaries.' Texas and New Mexico wrongful death statutes are specific — spouses, children, and parents typically qualify, with state-specific rules. We make sure every eligible family member is included.

Already getting calls from the insurance company? Don't say a word.

What You Can Recover

The full scope of your damages.

01
Medical Expenses
All medical care provided to your loved one before death — hospital bills, surgeries, emergency care.
02
Funeral and Burial
All reasonable funeral and burial costs your family incurred.
03
Lost Income
The income your loved one would have earned over their expected working life.
04
Lost Benefits
Health insurance, retirement contributions, and other employment benefits that were lost.
05
Loss of Companionship
The loss of love, comfort, care, society, and emotional support your loved one provided.
06
Loss of Consortium
The loss of intimacy, affection, and partnership for a surviving spouse.
07
Pain & Suffering Before Death
If your loved one suffered before passing, those damages can be recovered through their estate.
08
Punitive Damages
When the at-fault conduct was reckless, malicious, or grossly negligent — common in DUI deaths.
How Your Case Moves Forward

The settlement process, step by step.

Most clients have never been through a personal injury case before. Here's exactly what to expect — from the day we take your case to the day you collect your check.

01
Free Consultation & Case Acceptance
You call us, tell us what happened, and we'll evaluate honestly whether you have a case worth pursuing. If we take it, you sign a contingency agreement — meaning we only get paid if we win. No upfront costs, ever.
Typical Timeline: 24–48 Hours
02
Investigation & Evidence Gathering
We send notice letters to insurance companies (which stops them from contacting you directly), order police and incident reports, pull surveillance footage, gather witness statements, and start building your case. We also send a spoliation letter demanding all evidence be preserved.
Timeline: 2–6 Weeks
03
Medical Treatment & Documentation
You focus on getting better — we handle the legal side. We coordinate with your doctors to make sure your injuries are properly documented, all treatment is captured in the record, and any long-term implications are evaluated by specialists.
Timeline: Until You Reach Maximum Medical Improvement
04
Demand Package & Negotiation
Once your treatment plateaus, we send the at-fault insurer a comprehensive demand package — medical bills, lost wages, expert reports, pain and suffering documentation, and a settlement demand. Then we negotiate hard. Most cases settle here.
Timeline: 60–120 Days
05
Lawsuit Filing (If Needed)
If the insurance company won't pay fair value, we file suit. This dramatically changes the negotiation dynamic — insurance companies often increase their offers substantially once they realize you're serious. We prepare every case as if it's going to trial.
Timeline: 6–18 Months from Filing
06
Trial or Final Settlement
Most cases settle before trial — but we're always ready to go to court. When your case resolves (settlement or verdict), we pay off your medical liens, deduct case costs and our fee, and you receive your net recovery. Direct deposit available.
Result: Maximum Recovery
Medical Bills & Treatment

What happens to your medical bills.

The number one worry we hear from clients isn't legal — it's "How am I going to pay these medical bills?" The answer depends on your specific situation, but here's how it usually works.

In most cases, you don't have to pay your medical bills out of pocket while your case is pending. Treatment can be billed to your health insurance, MedPay/PIP coverage, or treated on a medical lien — meaning the provider waits to be paid from your settlement.

When your case settles, your medical bills come out of the gross settlement before you receive your portion. We negotiate aggressively with hospitals, providers, and lien holders to reduce what you owe — often saving clients tens of thousands of dollars in medical liens.

We never want a client to skip treatment they need. The full extent of your injuries must be documented to maximize the value of your case. If money is an obstacle to treatment, talk to us — we have a network of providers who treat injury victims on liens.

★ Documentation
Preserve Medical Records
All hospital records, ER documentation, and autopsy reports become critical evidence. Don't sign blanket medical releases — let us coordinate access.
★ Survival Action
Pre-Death Damages
Most states (including TX and NM) allow a survival action — claiming damages for the deceased's pain, suffering, and medical bills between the injury and death. This is in addition to wrongful death.
★ Beneficiary Rights
Statutory Recovery
Spouses, children, and parents typically have wrongful death claims. Adult children, siblings, and others may have separate claims. We ensure every eligible family member is properly represented.

Worried about medical bills? Let's get you a plan.

Where We Practice

Courts where we file your case.

TX
Texas Courts
  • Bexar County District Courts (San Antonio)Personal injury cases filed in our home base — including high-value cases moved up from county court.
  • Travis County District Courts (Austin)Active practice in Austin's busy injury docket — known for fair juries and reasonable verdicts.
  • Harris County District Courts (Houston)The largest trial volume in Texas — we file and try cases here regularly.
  • Dallas County District CourtsFull coverage of North Texas injury and wrongful death cases.
  • Tarrant County District Courts (Fort Worth)Active in DFW's injury courts.
  • U.S. District Court — Western District of TexasFederal court matters where diversity jurisdiction or federal questions apply.
NM
New Mexico Courts
  • Second Judicial District (Albuquerque)The state's largest district court — covers Bernalillo County and most of central New Mexico.
  • First Judicial District (Santa Fe)Covers Santa Fe, Rio Arriba, and Los Alamos counties.
  • Third Judicial District (Las Cruces)Southern New Mexico's primary injury venue.
  • Fifth Judicial District (Roswell & Carlsbad)Permian Basin oilfield injury cases and southeastern NM matters.
  • Eleventh Judicial District (Farmington)Northwestern New Mexico — including Navajo Nation adjacent matters.
  • U.S. District Court — District of New MexicoFederal trial work throughout the state.
Frequently Asked

Common questions, straight answers.

Q1
Who can file a wrongful death lawsuit in Texas or New Mexico?
Texas: Surviving spouse, children, and parents may file. New Mexico: The personal representative of the estate files on behalf of statutory beneficiaries, who include spouse, children, and (in some cases) parents and siblings. Both states have specific rules about who qualifies and how proceeds are allocated.
Q2
What damages can be recovered in a wrongful death case?
Economic damages: lost earnings (past and future), loss of household services, funeral and burial expenses, medical bills before death. Non-economic damages: loss of companionship, loss of consortium, mental anguish, loss of inheritance, and (in egregious cases) punitive damages. Children often have separate claims for loss of parental guidance.
Q3
How long do I have to file a wrongful death claim?
Texas: 2 years from the date of death. New Mexico: 3 years from the date of death. There are exceptions and tolling provisions for minors and other circumstances. Don't delay — evidence disappears and witnesses scatter quickly.
Q4
What if there are multiple family members with claims?
All eligible beneficiaries should be represented. We coordinate so the family acts as one — coordinating a single legal team to maximize recovery and ensure fair distribution. This avoids family conflict and competing claims.
Q5
Is there a difference between a 'wrongful death' claim and a 'survival action'?
Yes. Wrongful death compensates surviving family for THEIR losses (loss of love, companionship, financial support). Survival action compensates the deceased's estate for what the DECEASED suffered between injury and death (pain, suffering, medical bills). Both can typically be pursued together.
Q6
What if the at-fault party doesn't have insurance — or doesn't have enough?
You may still have recovery options through your own uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage, homeowner's policies (for premises cases), or umbrella policies. Most Texas and New Mexico residents have coverage they don't realize they have. We pull every policy involved to find every dollar available.
Q7
Will my case actually go to trial?
Most cases settle before trial — but we prepare every case as if it will go in front of a jury. Insurance companies and defendants know which attorneys actually try cases and which ones won't. That reputation directly affects the settlement offers we get. If trial is the only path to fair value, we're ready.
Q8
How do you calculate what my case is worth?
Case value depends on factors including: total medical bills (past and future), lost wages and earning capacity, severity and permanence of injuries, pain and suffering, available insurance coverage, and liability strength. No honest attorney will quote you a specific number without reviewing your full case — but we'll give you a realistic range after our investigation.
Q9
What if I can't afford medical treatment while my case is pending?
We work with a network of doctors and specialists who treat injury victims on a medical lien — meaning they wait to be paid out of your settlement, not from your pocket. We also help you tap into health insurance, MedPay, PIP, and any other available benefits to make sure you get the care you need.

Lost someone to negligence?

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