
Filing a wrongful death claim in premises liability in Georgia allows the surviving family members of a person killed on someone else’s unsafe property to seek financial compensation from the responsible property owner. Georgia law governs these cases through two key statutes: O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2, which establishes who may file a wrongful death claim, and O.C.G.A. § 51-3-1, which holds property owners liable for negligence that injures lawful visitors.
Most families think of wrongful death as something that happens on the road or in a hospital, but a dangerous staircase, a poorly lit parking lot, or an unsecured swimming pool can kill just as surely as a car crash. Premises liability wrongful death cases sit at the intersection of property law and death claims, two areas that each carry their own rules, deadlines, and burdens of proof. Understanding how they work together is the first step toward holding a negligent property owner accountable.
What Is a Wrongful Death Claim in Georgia
A wrongful death claim is a civil lawsuit filed by surviving family members when another person’s negligence or wrongful act causes someone’s death. Under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2, the law gives the surviving spouse the primary right to file, followed by children if there is no surviving spouse, and then the parents of the deceased if no spouse or children survive. The purpose of the claim is to recover the full value of the deceased person’s life, which includes both economic and non-economic losses.
Georgia’s wrongful death statute is separate from an estate claim. The wrongful death claim belongs to the surviving family and covers the value of the life lost, while the estate may separately pursue claims for medical expenses and funeral costs under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-5. Families dealing with a premises-related death may need to pursue both types of claims simultaneously, which is one reason legal guidance matters early in the process.
What Is Premises Liability Under Georgia Law
Premises liability is the legal obligation of property owners to maintain safe conditions for people who enter their property. Under O.C.G.A. § 51-3-1, owners and occupiers of land must use ordinary care to keep their property safe for invitees, meaning customers, tenants, guests, and others who have a legal right to be there. When a property owner fails that duty and someone dies as a result, a wrongful death premises liability claim may apply.
Georgia law draws a clear line between different types of visitors. An invitee receives the highest duty of care, a licensee receives a lower duty, and a trespasser generally receives very limited protection except in cases involving children under the attractive nuisance doctrine. The victim’s legal status on the property at the time of death directly affects the strength of a wrongful death claim.
Common Premises Liability Scenarios That Lead to Wrongful Death
Many types of hazardous property conditions can result in a fatal injury and give rise to a wrongful death claim. Property owners can face liability across both residential and commercial settings when they ignore known dangers or fail to inspect for foreseeable risks.
Some of the most common scenarios include:
- Slip and fall deaths – Wet floors, icy walkways, or uneven surfaces that cause fatal falls in retail stores, apartment complexes, or office buildings.
- Swimming pool drownings – Unguarded pools or missing safety equipment, particularly involving children, are among the most common premises-related wrongful deaths.
- Stairway and balcony collapses – Structural failures caused by poor maintenance or code violations that result in fatal falls.
- Inadequate security – A property owner’s failure to provide proper lighting, security personnel, or working locks in high-crime areas, leading to a fatal criminal attack.
- Toxic exposure – Deaths caused by carbon monoxide leaks, asbestos, or other hazardous substances on poorly maintained properties.
- Falling objects – Unstable shelving, construction debris, or overhead equipment that strikes and kills someone on the property.
Each of these scenarios requires proving that the property owner knew or should have known about the danger and failed to act. The specific facts of how the death occurred shape the legal theory that supports the claim.
Who Can File a Wrongful Death Premises Liability Claim in Georgia
Georgia strictly controls who has the legal right to file a wrongful death lawsuit. Under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2, the surviving spouse holds the first right to file on behalf of all beneficiaries, including any children. If no spouse survives, the deceased’s children may file jointly.
If the deceased had no spouse or children, the right to file passes to the deceased’s parents. When no immediate family members survive, the administrator or executor of the estate may bring the wrongful death claim under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-5. Georgia courts have consistently held that only the party with the proper legal standing may bring the lawsuit, and disputes among family members about standing can complicate and delay a case.
How Negligence Is Proven in a Premises Liability Death Case
Winning a wrongful death premises liability claim requires proving four elements of negligence. Each element must be supported by evidence, and the absence of any one element can defeat the claim.
Establishing the Duty of Care
The first element is showing that the property owner owed a legal duty to the deceased. For an invitee, this duty is established by O.C.G.A. § 51-3-1, which requires ordinary care to keep the property safe. The relationship between the victim and the property, such as a customer in a store or a tenant in an apartment building, typically establishes this duty without dispute.
If the victim was a licensee rather than an invitee, the duty owed is lower, requiring only that the owner refrain from willful or wanton harm and warn of known hidden dangers. Understanding the distinction matters because it directly determines what the property owner was legally required to do.
Proving the Owner Knew About the Hazard
The second element is demonstrating that the property owner had actual or constructive knowledge of the dangerous condition. Actual knowledge means the owner directly knew about the hazard. Constructive knowledge means the condition existed long enough that a reasonable owner exercising ordinary care would have discovered it.
Evidence used to prove knowledge often includes maintenance records, prior complaints from other visitors, surveillance footage showing how long a hazard existed, and inspection logs. In inadequate security cases, incident reports showing prior crimes on the property are particularly powerful in establishing that the owner knew violence was a foreseeable risk.
Showing the Owner Failed to Act
The third element is proving that the owner failed to fix the hazard or provide adequate warning. A property owner who knew about a broken stair railing for weeks but never repaired it or posted any warning has clearly failed this duty. The standard applied is what a reasonably careful property owner would have done under the same circumstances.
Expert testimony from building inspectors, safety engineers, or security consultants is often used to demonstrate that the owner’s inaction fell below industry standards. These experts compare the owner’s conduct to applicable building codes, Occupational Safety and Health Administration guidelines, or accepted safety practices in the industry.
Linking the Hazard to the Death
The fourth element is causation: proving that the owner’s failure directly caused the victim’s death. This is sometimes the most contested element in premises liability wrongful death cases. The defense may argue that the victim’s own actions contributed to the fatal outcome.
Georgia follows a modified comparative fault rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33. If the deceased is found to be 50 percent or more at fault, the family cannot recover any damages. If the deceased is found less than 50 percent at fault, the compensation is reduced proportionally. Building a strong causation argument early in the case is essential to protecting the full value of the family’s claim.
Damages Available in a Georgia Wrongful Death Premises Liability Case
Georgia law allows surviving family members to recover two distinct categories of compensation. The wrongful death claim itself covers the full value of the deceased’s life, measured from the deceased person’s perspective under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2.
This includes the economic contributions the deceased would have made over a lifetime, such as wages, benefits, and retirement savings, along with the non-economic value of the deceased’s care, companionship, and guidance to surviving family members. Separately, the estate may recover funeral and burial expenses and any pre-death medical costs through an estate claim under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-5. In cases involving particularly reckless or malicious conduct by the property owner, punitive damages may also be available under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1.
The Statute of Limitations for Wrongful Death Claims in Georgia
Georgia law gives surviving family members two years from the date of death to file a wrongful death lawsuit, as established under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33. Missing this deadline almost always results in the case being dismissed permanently, regardless of how strong the evidence is.
There are limited exceptions to this two-year window. If the deceased’s estate must file the claim because no qualifying family members survive, the deadline runs from the date of death as well. When a government entity owns the property where the death occurred, additional procedural steps apply, including ante litem notice requirements under O.C.G.A. § 36-11-1, which must be filed within 12 months. Starting the legal process as early as possible protects the family’s rights and gives attorneys time to preserve evidence before it disappears.
Steps to Filing a Wrongful Death Premises Liability Lawsuit in Georgia
The process of pursuing a wrongful death premises liability claim involves several distinct stages that build on each other. Acting quickly and deliberately at each stage improves the outcome for the surviving family.
Consult with a Wrongful Death Attorney
The first step is meeting with an attorney who handles wrongful death and premises liability cases in Georgia. Many attorneys offer free consultations, giving families a chance to understand their legal options without any upfront cost. The attorney will evaluate the facts, identify the liable parties, and explain the realistic value of the claim.
Choosing an attorney early also means evidence is preserved before it is lost or destroyed. Surveillance footage, for example, is often recorded over within days. An attorney can send a legal hold notice to the property owner demanding that all relevant footage and records be preserved immediately.
Investigate the Death Scene and Gather Evidence
Once an attorney is retained, a thorough investigation begins. This includes visiting the property, collecting photographs, obtaining police or incident reports, and identifying witnesses who saw the conditions that led to the death.
Physical evidence such as the actual defective condition, building inspection records, and prior complaint logs is gathered during this phase. If the property has since been altered or repaired, documentation of the post-incident changes may itself serve as evidence of the owner’s awareness of the problem.
Identify All Liable Parties
Premises liability wrongful death cases often involve more than one responsible party. The property owner, the property manager, a commercial tenant who controlled the area where the death occurred, or a third-party security company could each share liability.
Identifying every liable party before filing is important because Georgia’s modified comparative fault rules allow responsibility to be distributed among multiple defendants. Leaving out a liable party can reduce the total compensation the family receives, so a complete investigation of ownership and control records is necessary.
File the Lawsuit and Complete Discovery
After the investigation is complete, the attorney files the wrongful death lawsuit in the appropriate Georgia Superior Court. The defendant is then served and given time to respond, and the case enters the discovery phase.
Discovery involves exchanging documents, deposing witnesses, and retaining expert witnesses. This phase can take several months to over a year depending on the complexity of the case. Strong discovery results directly shape the leverage available during settlement negotiations.
Negotiate a Settlement or Go to Trial
Most wrongful death premises liability cases in Georgia resolve through a negotiated settlement before trial. The attorney presents the evidence gathered during investigation and discovery to the insurance company or defense counsel and demands fair compensation for the full value of the life lost.
If the property owner’s insurer refuses to offer a fair amount, the case proceeds to trial before a jury. Georgia juries decide the amount of damages, and they are instructed to assess the full value of the life from the deceased’s own perspective. Taking a case to trial carries more risk but can result in significantly higher compensation when the evidence strongly supports the family’s claim.
Why These Cases Require an Experienced Georgia Attorney
Wrongful death premises liability cases are legally complex because they combine two separate areas of law that each carry their own standards of proof, procedural requirements, and damage calculations. An attorney without specific experience in both areas may miss critical elements that reduce or eliminate the family’s recovery.
The property owner’s insurance company will assign experienced defense attorneys immediately after a fatal incident is reported. Those attorneys will begin building a defense, collecting evidence, and looking for ways to assign fault to the deceased before the family has even hired a lawyer. Having skilled legal representation from Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group on your side early in the process is the most effective way to level that playing field and protect the full value of your family’s claim. Call (404) 446-0847 today for a free consultation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a family member file both a wrongful death claim and an estate claim after a premises-related death?
Yes, and in many Georgia premises liability cases, filing both types of claims is appropriate. The wrongful death claim under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2 belongs to the surviving family and covers the full value of the life lost, while the estate claim under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-5 recovers expenses the deceased incurred before death, including medical bills and funeral costs. Each claim follows slightly different rules about who controls it and who receives the proceeds.
What happens if the deceased was partially at fault for the accident on the property?
Georgia’s modified comparative fault rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33 applies to wrongful death premises liability cases. If the deceased is found to be less than 50 percent responsible for the fatal accident, the family can still recover damages, but the amount will be reduced by the deceased’s percentage of fault. If the deceased is found 50 percent or more at fault, the family recovers nothing, which is why building a strong liability case that minimizes assigned fault to the victim is so important.
How long does a wrongful death premises liability case typically take to resolve in Georgia?
The timeline varies considerably based on the complexity of the case, the number of liable parties, and whether the matter settles or goes to trial. Cases that settle before litigation may resolve within several months of filing, while cases that require full discovery and a trial can take two to three years or longer. The two-year statute of limitations under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 means the family must file the lawsuit within that window, but the case itself may continue well beyond that point.
Does homeowner’s insurance cover wrongful death claims on residential property?
Homeowner’s insurance policies often include premises liability coverage, which may apply when someone is fatally injured on a residential property due to the homeowner’s negligence. However, the available policy limits may be significantly lower than the full value of the wrongful death claim, and insurers frequently dispute coverage or fault. An attorney can review the applicable policies and determine whether additional claims against umbrella policies or other coverage sources are available to the family.
What if the dangerous property was owned by a Georgia city or county government?
Cases involving government-owned property follow a different procedural path. Before filing a lawsuit against a Georgia municipality, surviving family members must file an ante litem notice under O.C.G.A. § 36-11-1 within 12 months of the death. Failing to file this notice on time can permanently bar the wrongful death claim. Government entities also have certain immunity protections that can limit or complicate liability, making early legal consultation especially important in these cases.
Conclusion
A wrongful death claim in premises liability in Georgia gives families a legal path to justice and financial accountability when a negligent property owner’s failure to maintain safe conditions costs a loved one their life. From proving the four elements of negligence to meeting Georgia’s strict filing deadlines and navigating both wrongful death and estate claims, these cases demand thorough preparation and experienced legal representation.
If your family has lost someone due to a dangerous condition on another person’s property, the attorneys at Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group are ready to help you understand your rights and build the strongest possible case. Contact the firm today at (404) 446-0847 for a free, no-obligation consultation.