The Truth About Wrongful Death Lawsuits in Michigan: What Families Need to Know

Michigan wrongful death claims allow families to pursue accountability when a loved one’s death was caused by negligence, misconduct, or another wrongful act. These cases can involve compensation for financial losses, funeral expenses, lost support, emotional suffering, and the long-term impact a death has on surviving family members. Because wrongful death lawsuits involve strict filing deadlines, probate procedures, and complex evidence requirements, early legal action can be critical to protecting a family’s rights.

The Truth About Wrongful Death Lawsuits in Michigan: What Families Need to Know

Losing someone is devastating. Losing someone because another person, company, or institution acted carelessly, or worse, recklessly, adds a layer of pain that is almost impossible to put into words. Grief and anger live side by side. Questions pile up. And in the middle of all of it, someone may tell you that you have legal rights worth pursuing.

Michigan wrongful death law exists because accountability matters. It won't bring your family member back. But it can force the responsible party to answer for what happened, and it can provide financial stability for the people left behind.

What Is a Wrongful Death Claim Under Michigan Law?

Michigan's wrongful death statute, MCL 600.2922, allows the estate of a deceased person to bring a civil lawsuit when that person's death was caused by the wrongful act, neglect, or fault of another party. In plain terms: if someone else's negligence or misconduct caused the death, the family may have a legal claim.

A few important distinctions families should understand:

  • It's a civil case, not a criminal one. A wrongful death lawsuit is separate from any criminal prosecution. Even if no criminal charges are filed, or if a defendant is acquitted, a civil wrongful death claim can still succeed. The burden of proof is lower in civil court.
  • The claim belongs to the estate. In Michigan, the wrongful death claim is filed through the deceased person's estate, not directly by family members. That distinction matters for how the case is managed and how any recovery is distributed.
  • Negligence isn't the only path. Wrongful death claims can arise from intentional acts, gross negligence, or strict liability, not just careless mistakes.

Who Can File a Wrongful Death Lawsuit in Michigan?

The Personal Representative's Role

In Michigan, the wrongful death lawsuit is filed by the personal representative of the deceased person's estate. This is the person legally authorized to manage the estate, either named in a will or appointed by the probate court. They act on behalf of the estate and the surviving family members throughout the case.

Which Family Members May Recover?

Michigan law allows a defined group of people to receive compensation through a wrongful death claim. These include:

  • Spouse
  • Children (including adult children)
  • Parents
  • Grandparents
  • Grandchildren
  • Siblings
  • Any other individual who was a dependent of the deceased

No Will? No Estate?

If your loved one passed without a will, the probate court appoints a personal representative. This process can be started after the death, and it doesn't prevent you from pursuing a claim. A wrongful death lawyer in Michigan can help initiate or coordinate this process alongside the civil case.

What Damages Can a Michigan Wrongful Death Claim Include?

Economic Damages

These are the measurable financial losses tied directly to the death:

  • Medical expenses incurred before death
  • Funeral and burial costs
  • Lost wages and future earning capacity the deceased would have provided
  • Loss of financial support and benefits

Non-Economic Damages

These damages reflect the human cost of the loss and are often the most significant:

  • Loss of companionship and society
  • Loss of parental guidance and support
  • Grief and mental anguish of surviving family members

Punitive Damages

In most Michigan wrongful death cases, punitive damages are not available. However, in certain civil rights cases, including those involving police misconduct or institutional negligence, additional damages may be recoverable under federal law. Every case is different, and an experienced attorney can assess what applies to yours.

Common Causes of Wrongful Death Cases in Michigan

Wrongful death cases arise from a wide range of circumstances. Some of the most common include:

  • Car and truck accidents: Speeding, drunk driving, distracted driving, and commercial truck driver negligence are leading causes of fatal crashes on Michigan roads. Trucking cases in particular often involve multiple liable parties, from the driver to the carrier to the loading company.
  • Medical malpractice: Surgical errors, misdiagnosis, delayed treatment, and medication mistakes can turn a survivable condition into a fatal one.
  • Workplace accidents: Construction falls, equipment failures, and toxic exposures claim Michigan workers' lives every year. When an employer's negligence or a third party's equipment is responsible, a wrongful death claim may be available outside of workers' compensation.
  • Premises liability: Dangerous conditions on someone else's property, including inadequate security, can give rise to a wrongful death claim when the property owner knew or should have known about the hazard.
  • Police misconduct and civil rights violations: When excessive force, deliberate indifference, or institutional failure leads to a preventable death, families may have claims under both Michigan law and federal civil rights statutes. 

How Long Do You Have to File? Michigan's Wrongful Death Statute of Limitations

The 3-Year Rule

Under Michigan law, wrongful death claims generally must be filed within three years of the date of death. Missing this deadline, even by one day, can permanently bar your family from recovering anything, regardless of how strong the case is.

Exceptions That May Apply

Certain circumstances can affect the filing deadline:

  • If the deceased was a minor, different rules may apply
  • Claims involving government entities or municipalities may have much shorter notice requirements, sometimes as little as six months
  • Discovery of the cause of death may affect the timeline in cases involving medical negligence or toxic exposure

What It Takes to Prove a Wrongful Death Claim

The Four Elements of Negligence

To succeed in a Michigan wrongful death case, your legal team generally needs to establish:

  1. Duty: The defendant owed a duty of care to your loved one
  2. Breach: They failed to meet that duty
  3. Causation: That failure directly caused the death
  4. Damages: The death resulted in real, compensable losses

Building the Case

Strong wrongful death cases are built on evidence gathered early and handled carefully. That typically includes:

  • Accident reports, police reports, and medical records
  • Expert witnesses: medical, accident reconstruction, economic
  • Witness statements and depositions
  • Electronic data: phones, vehicle black boxes, surveillance footage
  • Employment and financial records to document lost income

Why Insurance Companies Fight Back Hard

The defendant's insurer has one goal: pay as little as possible. They will investigate quickly, look for ways to shift blame onto the deceased, and may contact your family directly before you have legal representation. Having a wrongful death lawyer in Michigan in your corner from the start changes that dynamic entirely. At Marko Law, we fight hard, and we don't back down.

How Wrongful Death Settlements and Verdicts Are Distributed in Michigan

Many families don't realize that how money is distributed after a wrongful death case isn't entirely up to them, or their attorney. Michigan law requires probate court approval of any wrongful death settlement or verdict distribution.

Here's how the process generally works:

  • The personal representative negotiates or litigates the claim on behalf of all eligible family members
  • A proposed distribution is submitted to the probate court for approval
  • The court evaluates whether the distribution is fair to all parties, including minor children
  • Attorney fees and case costs are addressed as part of the distribution

Your Family Deserves Answers and Accountability

Grief doesn't follow a schedule. Neither does the pursuit of justice. But Michigan law has deadlines, and the people responsible for your loved one's death have attorneys working for them right now.

The attorneys at Marko Law have stood with Michigan families through some of the most difficult cases imaginable, and delivered results that changed lives. This work is personal to us. Every case we take on reflects a commitment to the people behind it, not just the legal issues involved.

Take the First Step: Contact Marko Law for a Free Case Evaluation

If you lost someone and believe another party's negligence or misconduct was responsible, you may have a wrongful death claim under Michigan law. Don't navigate this alone.

Contact Marko Law today for a free case evaluation.

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