
When a driver breaks a traffic law and someone dies as a result, Georgia law allows surviving family members to file a wrongful death claim using that violation as direct evidence of negligence. Traffic violations like speeding, running red lights, driving under the influence, and texting while driving create a legal foundation for holding the at-fault driver financially responsible under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2.
Most people think of traffic tickets as minor inconveniences, but inside a courtroom or settlement negotiation, a single traffic citation can be the difference between a dismissed claim and a multi-million dollar verdict. Georgia’s wrongful death laws are built around the concept of negligence, and traffic law violations are one of the clearest ways to prove that negligence existed. Understanding how this connection works gives grieving families a clearer picture of what they are facing and what kind of evidence actually matters in these cases.
What Georgia’s Wrongful Death Law Says About Negligence
Georgia’s wrongful death statute, found at O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2, gives surviving spouses, children, and parents the right to recover damages when a person dies due to another party’s negligent or wrongful act. To win a wrongful death claim, the family must show that the defendant owed a duty of care, breached that duty, and that the breach directly caused the death. Traffic law violations fit directly into this framework because every driver on Georgia roads is legally obligated to follow traffic laws, and breaking those laws is itself a breach of that duty.
The value of a traffic violation in a wrongful death case comes from how clearly it establishes fault. Rather than relying entirely on witness testimony or accident reconstruction, an attorney can point to a police report showing the driver was cited for running a red light or exceeding the speed limit. That documented violation removes much of the guesswork from proving negligence, which is why these citations carry significant weight in both settlement talks and at trial.
Negligence Per Se: How a Traffic Violation Becomes Legal Proof
Georgia courts apply a doctrine called negligence per se, which means that when a person violates a law designed to protect public safety and someone dies as a result, the violation itself is treated as proof of negligence. Under this rule, a family’s legal team does not need to argue that the driver was acting carelessly in a general sense. The law already made that determination by requiring a specific standard of conduct, and the driver failed to meet it.
For negligence per se to apply in a Georgia wrongful death case, two conditions must be satisfied. First, the victim must belong to the class of people the law was designed to protect, which in traffic law cases almost always includes all road users. Second, the death must result from the exact type of harm the law was created to prevent. A speeding law exists to prevent speed-related crashes, so if a speeding driver kills a pedestrian, those conditions are clearly met.
This doctrine significantly shifts the burden in litigation. The at-fault driver and their insurance company can no longer simply argue that their client was driving “reasonably.” The documented violation stands as evidence of negligence, leaving the defense to challenge causation or damages instead of fault itself.
Common Traffic Violations That Support Wrongful Death Claims in Georgia
Traffic violations range widely in severity, but several types appear most often in Georgia wrongful death cases because of how directly they connect to fatal outcomes.
- Speeding – Driving above posted speed limits reduces reaction time and increases crash severity. Under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-181, speed limits are legally enforceable, and violations in fatal crashes are documented in police reports and used to establish negligence per se.
- Driving Under the Influence – DUI is one of the most powerful violations in a wrongful death case. Under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-391, operating a vehicle while impaired is illegal, and a DUI citation in a fatal crash can also open the door to punitive damages under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1.
- Running Red Lights or Stop Signs – Failure to obey traffic control devices under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-20 is a frequent cause of intersection deaths and is typically confirmed through surveillance cameras or witness statements.
- Distracted Driving – Georgia’s hands-free law under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-241 prohibits drivers from holding phones while driving. Text records and phone data can confirm a violation occurred at the time of the crash.
- Improper Lane Changes – Unsafe lane changes under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-123 cause sideswipe and merge accidents, many of which are fatal for motorcyclists and cyclists.
- Failure to Yield – Violations of O.C.G.A. § 40-6-70 are a leading cause of pedestrian and left-turn fatalities at intersections across Georgia.
- Reckless Driving – Defined under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-390, reckless driving carries a higher standard of culpability than ordinary negligence and can strengthen arguments for punitive damages in wrongful death cases.
Each of these violations creates a documented record that connects the driver’s unlawful behavior to the fatal outcome, giving surviving families a tangible legal foundation to build their claim on.
How Police Reports and Citations Strengthen a Wrongful Death Case
The police report filed after a fatal crash is often the first and most important piece of evidence in a wrongful death case. Officers who respond to the scene document observed violations, record witness statements, note road and weather conditions, and often note whether citations were issued. When a citation appears in that report, it creates an official government record of the traffic law violation that is admissible in civil proceedings.
Insurance adjusters and defense attorneys read police reports carefully. A citation in the report signals that liability may be difficult to dispute, which often influences how quickly and how generously an insurer is willing to settle. When a violation is not cited but evidence suggests one occurred, attorneys may request dashcam footage, traffic camera recordings, and cell phone records to build an equivalent foundation.
The Role of Evidence in Connecting Violations to Fatalities
Beyond the police report, a successful wrongful death claim requires evidence that directly links the traffic violation to the death. This is the causation element, and it must show that the violation was not merely present but was the actual cause of the fatal accident. An attorney must demonstrate that but for the traffic law violation, the crash would not have occurred and the person would not have died.
Evidence used to make this connection includes accident reconstruction expert reports, medical examiner findings, toxicology results in DUI cases, electronic data from the vehicle’s event data recorder, and testimony from eyewitnesses. In truck accident cases, this may also include hours-of-service logs that reveal a commercial driver violated federal regulations, which can compound the violations and strengthen the wrongful death claim further.
How Insurance Companies Respond to Traffic Violation Evidence
Insurance companies are skilled at minimizing payouts, and a traffic violation in the police report does not automatically mean they will offer a fair settlement. Insurers routinely hire their own accident reconstruction experts to challenge causation, argue that the violation was minor or unrelated to the crash, or attempt to shift partial blame onto the deceased through Georgia’s modified comparative fault rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33.
Under modified comparative fault, if the deceased is found to be 50 percent or more at fault for the crash, the family recovers nothing. Insurers may try to argue that the deceased was speeding, not wearing a seatbelt, or otherwise contributed to the accident even when the other driver committed a clear traffic violation. This is why legal representation matters significantly in wrongful death cases involving traffic violations, because insurers use every available tool to reduce what they owe.
Damages Available in Georgia Wrongful Death Cases Involving Traffic Violations
Georgia law allows two types of recovery in wrongful death cases. The first, brought by the surviving family under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2, covers the full value of the deceased person’s life, including both economic contributions and intangible elements like companionship and guidance. The second, brought by the estate under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-5, covers funeral expenses, medical bills incurred before death, and the pain and suffering the deceased experienced.
When the traffic violation involves DUI or reckless driving, Georgia courts may award punitive damages on top of compensatory damages. Punitive damages are not meant to compensate the family but to punish the defendant for especially dangerous conduct. Under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1, punitive damages in most cases are capped at $250,000, but that cap does not apply when the defendant acted with specific intent to harm or was driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
Why You Need an Attorney for Traffic Violation-Based Wrongful Death Claims
Connecting a traffic violation to a wrongful death claim requires more than simply pointing to a police citation. An attorney must preserve evidence before it disappears, negotiate with insurers who will work aggressively to reduce the payout, identify all liable parties, and present the case in a way that satisfies Georgia’s legal standards for wrongful death recovery. Attempting to handle this process without legal guidance puts the family at a serious disadvantage.
If your family has lost someone in a crash caused by a driver who violated Georgia’s traffic laws, Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group is ready to help you understand your legal options. Call (404) 446-0847 for a consultation with an attorney who knows how to build wrongful death cases around documented traffic violations and fight for the full compensation your family deserves.
How a Wrongful Death Case Based on Traffic Violations Moves Forward
Once a family decides to pursue a wrongful death claim, the case follows a defined legal process that begins immediately after the loss.
Retaining an Attorney and Preserving Evidence
The first step after losing a loved one in a traffic crash is retaining an attorney as quickly as possible. Evidence like dashcam footage, traffic camera recordings, and black box data from the at-fault vehicle can be overwritten or destroyed within days if no legal hold is placed on it.
An attorney will send spoliation letters demanding that all relevant evidence be preserved and will begin subpoenaing records before they become unavailable. This early action often makes the difference between a provable case and one where critical evidence is lost.
Investigating the Crash and Identifying All Violations
With evidence secured, the attorney conducts a thorough investigation to identify every traffic violation involved in the crash. This may involve hiring accident reconstruction specialists, reviewing cell phone records for hands-free law violations, and examining commercial vehicle logs for federal regulatory violations.
The goal of this phase is to build the most complete picture of the driver’s unlawful conduct. Multiple violations strengthen the claim, and each one documented adds to the legal pressure on the at-fault party and their insurer.
Filing the Claim and Engaging the Insurance Company
Once the investigation is complete, the attorney files a formal wrongful death claim with the at-fault driver’s insurance carrier and may also file suit in the appropriate Georgia Superior Court. The attorney sends a demand letter outlining the violations, the evidence, and the damages sought.
Insurance negotiations often begin here. The insurer may make a lowball offer early, hoping the family will accept before understanding the full value of the claim. An experienced wrongful death attorney will reject insufficient offers and push toward a fair settlement or prepare the case for trial.
Litigation and Trial if Settlement Fails
If the insurance company refuses to offer fair compensation, the case proceeds to litigation. The attorney files a formal lawsuit, conducts discovery, deposes witnesses and experts, and prepares arguments for trial. Georgia’s statute of limitations for wrongful death claims is two years from the date of death under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33, so all filings must happen within that window.
At trial, the documented traffic violations become central exhibits. The jury considers the violations as evidence of negligence, weighs causation testimony from experts, and determines both compensatory and, where applicable, punitive damages. Most cases resolve before reaching a jury, but having a trial-ready attorney ensures the family is never forced into an unfair settlement.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a traffic citation alone prove a wrongful death claim in Georgia?
A traffic citation is strong evidence of negligence but does not automatically win a wrongful death case on its own. Under Georgia’s negligence per se doctrine, the violation establishes a breach of duty, but the family must still prove that the violation directly caused the death and that they suffered measurable damages as a result. An attorney must connect all three elements, which is why evidence beyond the citation, such as expert testimony and medical records, remains essential.
What if the at-fault driver was not cited at the scene?
The absence of a citation does not prevent a wrongful death claim from moving forward. Police officers sometimes miss violations at the scene, especially in chaotic multi-vehicle crashes or when a driver flees before the officer arrives. An attorney can gather independent evidence such as traffic camera footage, witness statements, phone records, and accident reconstruction analysis to establish that a traffic law violation occurred even without a formal citation in the police report.
How long does a family have to file a wrongful death claim in Georgia?
Georgia’s wrongful death statute of limitations under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 gives surviving family members two years from the date of the deceased person’s death to file a lawsuit. Missing this deadline typically means the court will dismiss the case and the family loses the right to recover any compensation. There are limited exceptions, such as cases involving minor children or situations where the at-fault party concealed evidence, but families should not rely on those exceptions and should contact an attorney immediately.
Can punitive damages be recovered if a traffic violation caused the death?
Yes, in certain cases. Georgia allows punitive damages in wrongful death cases when the defendant’s conduct was especially reckless or willful. Under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1, a DUI driver who causes a fatal crash is one of the clearest paths to punitive damages in Georgia, as drunk driving reflects conscious disregard for others’ safety. A reckless driving citation can also support a punitive damages argument, though the court must determine that the conduct rose above ordinary negligence to the level of conscious indifference.
Does Georgia’s comparative fault rule affect wrongful death cases involving traffic violations?
Yes, Georgia’s modified comparative fault rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33 applies to wrongful death cases, which means defense attorneys and insurers will often try to assign some percentage of fault to the deceased person. If the deceased is found to be 49 percent or less at fault, the family’s damages are reduced by that percentage. However, if the deceased is determined to be 50 percent or more at fault, the family recovers nothing. A strong showing of the at-fault driver’s traffic violations helps minimize any fault assigned to the deceased.
Who can file a wrongful death claim in Georgia?
Under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2, the right to file a wrongful death claim belongs first to the surviving spouse. If there is no surviving spouse, the right passes to the deceased’s children. If there are no children, the parents may file. When none of these relatives survive, the estate’s administrator may bring the claim under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-5. The order of priority is fixed by statute, and only one claim can be filed, though all beneficiaries share in the recovery.
Conclusion
Traffic law violations are not just administrative infractions in Georgia. When they cause a death, they become the foundation of a legal case that can deliver justice and financial security to the families left behind. From speeding citations to DUI charges, each documented violation strengthens the argument that the driver’s unlawful conduct took a life that should never have been lost.
If your family is dealing with this kind of loss, you do not have to face the insurance companies or the court system alone. Atlanta Truck Accident Law Group has the experience to take documented traffic violations and build them into a wrongful death case that protects your family’s rights. Call (404) 446-0847 today to speak with an attorney and take the first step toward the accountability your family deserves.