After a fatal crash, more than one person may suffer a devastating loss. A spouse may lose financial support and companionship. Children may lose guidance, care, and stability. Parents, stepchildren, or other dependents may also be affected, depending on the family situation. In California, a fatal car accident attorney can help determine which family members may have the legal right to recover compensation and how those claims should be handled.
Fatal car accident claims are not always simple. Families may assume that only one person can file a claim, or that compensation goes automatically to the closest relative. In reality, California wrongful death law creates a specific structure for who may bring a claim and who may recover damages. Understanding that structure early can help prevent disputes, delays, and missed deadlines.
Who Can Recover Compensation After a Fatal Crash in California?
California Code of Civil Procedure § 377.60 controls who may bring a wrongful death claim. The law generally allows a claim to be brought by the deceased person’s surviving spouse, domestic partner, children, or the personal representative of the estate on behalf of eligible heirs. If there are no surviving children, certain other heirs who would inherit under California intestate succession rules may have the right to bring a claim.
This means that yes, multiple family members may be able to recover compensation after a fatal crash. The exact answer depends on the deceased person’s family structure.
Eligible claimants may include:
- A surviving spouse
- A surviving domestic partner
- Children of the deceased person
- Grandchildren, if the deceased person’s child has also passed away
- Other heirs who would inherit if there is no surviving spouse, domestic partner, or child
- Certain dependents, such as a putative spouse, stepchildren, minors who lived with the deceased, or parents, in specific circumstances
Not every grieving relative has a legal claim. A sibling, cousin, aunt, uncle, or close friend may feel the loss deeply, but they may not have standing unless they fall within the categories recognized by California law.
Can a Spouse and Children Both Recover?
Yes. In many fatal car accident cases, the surviving spouse and children may all be included in the wrongful death claim. The spouse may seek compensation for the loss of companionship, financial support, household services, and the emotional impact of losing a partner. Children may seek compensation for the loss of parental guidance, care, support, training, and companionship.
These are separate personal losses, even though they arise from the same death. One family member’s grief does not erase another family member’s claim.
For example, if a father is killed in a crash and leaves behind a wife and two children, all three may have recoverable wrongful death damages. The case may be filed together, or a personal representative may bring the claim on behalf of the eligible heirs.
What If the Deceased Person Was Not Married?
If the deceased person was not married and did not have a registered domestic partner, the right to recover usually shifts to children. If there are no children, the claim may pass to other heirs who would inherit under California intestate succession rules.
This can include parents in some cases. It may also include siblings or other relatives if there are no closer surviving heirs. The correct order depends on the family tree and California inheritance rules.
This is one reason it is important to speak with an attorney early. Family relationships can be legally complicated, especially when there are children from different relationships, unmarried partners, estranged relatives, or disputes about dependency.
Can Parents Recover After Losing an Adult Child?
Parents may be able to recover compensation after the death of an adult child in certain circumstances. If the adult child had no surviving spouse, domestic partner, children, or other closer heirs, parents may have standing under inheritance rules.
Parents may also have a claim if they were financially dependent on the deceased person. California wrongful death law includes certain dependent family members in specific situations, even if they are not first in line under the usual heir structure.
The details matter. A parent’s right to recover may depend on whether the deceased person had children, whether the parent depended on the deceased for financial support, and whether another eligible heir has priority.
Can Unmarried Partners Recover Compensation?
An unmarried partner does not automatically have the same rights as a spouse or registered domestic partner. California law gives clear priority to surviving spouses and domestic partners, but an unmarried partner may face a harder legal path.
In some cases, a putative spouse may have rights. A putative spouse is someone who had a good faith belief that they were legally married, even if the marriage was later found invalid. A putative spouse’s children may also have rights in certain circumstances.
An unmarried partner may also have other legal issues to explore, but wrongful death standing is not automatic. This is often one of the most sensitive areas in fatal crash cases because emotional closeness alone does not always create legal standing.
How Is Compensation Divided Among Family Members?
When multiple family members are eligible, the settlement or verdict must be divided among them. This can happen through agreement, court approval, mediation, or a judge’s decision if there is a dispute.
The division is not always equal. The value of each person’s claim may depend on the relationship with the deceased, financial dependence, age, household role, and the type of loss each person suffered.
For example, a minor child who depended on a parent for financial support may have a different damages claim than an adult child who lived independently. A spouse who shared a household and relied on the deceased person’s income may have different losses than a relative who had limited contact.
The goal is to fairly account for each eligible person’s loss.
What Damages Can Family Members Recover?
Wrongful death damages in California may include both economic and non economic losses.
Economic damages may include:
- Funeral and burial expenses
- Loss of financial support
- Loss of benefits
- Loss of household services
- Loss of gifts or financial contributions
Non economic damages may include:
- Loss of love
- Loss of companionship
- Loss of comfort
- Loss of care
- Loss of assistance
- Loss of protection
- Loss of guidance and moral support
These damages belong to the surviving family members. They are different from survival action damages, which belong to the deceased person’s estate and relate to certain losses the deceased person suffered before death.
Do All Family Members Have to File Together?
California wrongful death claims are usually treated as one joint action. This means all known eligible heirs should generally be included in the same case. The purpose is to avoid multiple lawsuits over the same death and to make sure the defendant does not face repeated claims from different family members.
If one eligible heir files the lawsuit without including others, disputes can arise. Other heirs may need to be added. This is why attorneys usually identify all potential claimants early and make sure the case is organized correctly from the beginning.
How Long Do Family Members Have to File?
In most California wrongful death cases, the deadline to file a lawsuit is two years from the date of death. California courts list wrongful death under the two year civil deadline category.
However, some cases may involve shorter deadlines. If a government entity may be responsible, such as a city, county, public agency, or dangerous road condition claim, the family may need to file a government claim much sooner. Missing a deadline can prevent recovery, even if the case is strong.
Speak With a Fatal Car Accident Attorney Before Family Disputes Delay the Case
When multiple family members may have a claim, the legal process can become complicated quickly. Questions about who qualifies, who files, how damages are divided, and how settlement money is handled should be addressed before the insurance company uses confusion against the family.
A fatal car accident attorney can identify eligible heirs, preserve evidence, handle the insurance companies, value each category of loss, and structure the claim properly under California law.
Bojat Law Group represents families across Southern and Central California after fatal car accidents, truck crashes, rideshare collisions, pedestrian accidents, bicycle accidents, and other serious incidents. If your loved one was killed in a crash, call (818) 877-4878 for a free consultation. You pay no fee unless the firm wins your case.

