The most basic difference between a survival action and a wrongful death action is that survival action is a personal injury action for damages that the decedent suffered between the time of the injury and their death. That window between the initial accident and the death could be mere seconds or it could be years. A survival action is typically brought by the estate of the person who was killed, usually through a probate process, and may accompany a wrongful death claim. A McKinney survival action lawyer could help recover compensation on behalf of an injured decedent and hold negligent defendants accountable.
A survival action recovers compensation on behalf of the decedent’s estate, not on behalf of the decedent’s family or loved ones. As a result, a designated personal representative of the estate is the only person who may bring a survival action.
The Texas Estates Code lays out who is first, second and third in line to be a personal representative. Typically, a personal injury lawyer will hire another lawyer who works on trusts and estates to manage that part of the case, because they are different types of cases with different nomenclature and everything else.
The order of preference for a personal representative starts with the surviving spouse and then to different relatives. If none are available, a court will appoint somebody willing to serve. Sometimes, an estate lawyer will seek out a survival action lawyer to handle the case and litigate for the pain and suffering claim, the survival claim of the decedent.