Lost a Loved One Due to Someone Else’s Negligence in Cincinnati?
Here’s what to know — and what to do next.
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Key Takeaways
- Preserve all evidence related to the death immediately — police reports, medical records, employment records, and photos of the incident scene — because electronic records, surveillance footage, and vehicle data can be lost or destroyed quickly.
- Ohio’s statute of limitations for wrongful death is two years from the date of death, not the date of the incident (Ohio Rev. Code § 2125.02), and only the personal representative of the deceased’s estate can file the claim.
- Ohio allows both a wrongful death claim (Ohio Rev. Code § 2125.02) for the family’s losses and a survival claim (Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.21) for the deceased’s own damages between injury and death — pursuing both provides the fullest recovery.
- Hamilton County recorded 60 fatal traffic crashes in 2024, with the I-75/I-71 interchange, I-275, and the Brent Spence Bridge corridor among the deadliest stretches. Hamilton County ranks third in Ohio for fatal crashes.
- In cases involving extreme recklessness such as drunk driving, punitive damages may be available under Ohio Rev. Code § 2315.21, capped at two times compensatory damages, and Ohio’s dram shop law (Ohio Rev. Code § 4399.18) may allow claims against bars that served a visibly intoxicated person.
- Most wrongful death attorneys work on contingency with free, confidential consultations — they handle the probate process, evidence gathering, expert retention, and litigation so you can focus on your family.
Take care of yourself and your family first
We’re sorry you’re here. Losing someone because of another person’s negligence, recklessness, or wrongful act is devastating. No legal process can undo that loss. But Ohio law gives your family the right to seek accountability and financial security.
Before thinking about legal claims, take the time you need to grieve. Surround yourself with people who support you. There are urgent legal timelines you’ll need to be aware of, but the most immediate priority is your family’s wellbeing.
That said, if the death occurred in circumstances that may involve legal liability — a car accident, a truck crash, a workplace incident, a medical error, a defective product, or a criminal act — it’s important to begin protecting evidence and understanding your options soon.
Preserve all evidence related to the death
Keep everything connected to the circumstances of the death: the police or accident report, all medical records and hospital bills, correspondence from insurance companies, documentation of funeral and burial expenses, your loved one’s employment records, pay stubs, and tax returns, and photos or other documentation of the incident scene.
If the death resulted from a vehicle accident, make sure the police report has been filed. If it resulted from medical care, request complete medical records from every provider involved. Evidence can be lost, overwritten, or destroyed quickly — especially electronic records, surveillance footage, and vehicle data.
Understand who can file a wrongful death claim in Ohio
Under Ohio Rev. Code § 2125.02, a wrongful death claim must be filed by the personal representative (executor or administrator) of the deceased person’s estate. If there’s already an executor named in a will, that person files. If there’s no will, the probate court appoints an administrator.
In Hamilton County, the Probate Court is located at 230 East 9th Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202. The court handles estate administration, appointment of personal representatives, and distribution of wrongful death proceeds to beneficiaries.
The claim is filed on behalf of the deceased person’s surviving beneficiaries, which typically include the surviving spouse, children, and parents of the deceased. The compensation recovered is distributed to these beneficiaries according to Ohio law.
Know Ohio’s 2-year statute of limitations for wrongful death
Under Ohio Rev. Code § 2125.02, the statute of limitations for wrongful death is two years from the date of death — not two years from the date of the incident that caused the death. If the person was injured in an accident and died weeks or months later from those injuries, the clock starts on the date of death.
This is a hard deadline. Miss it and the family permanently loses the right to file a wrongful death claim in Ohio courts. Given the complexity of these cases — opening an estate, appointing a personal representative, gathering evidence, and retaining experts — starting the process early is essential.
Understand the two types of claims that may apply
Ohio recognizes two separate but related claims when someone dies due to another’s negligence.
Wrongful death claim (Ohio Rev. Code § 2125.02): Filed on behalf of the surviving beneficiaries. Compensates for the losses suffered by the family — loss of financial support, loss of companionship and consortium, loss of parental guidance (for surviving children), mental anguish of survivors, and funeral/burial expenses.
Survival claim (Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.21): Filed on behalf of the deceased person’s estate. Compensates for the damages the deceased person suffered between the time of injury and death — their medical expenses, pain and suffering, lost wages during that period, and other personal losses.
Both claims can (and often should) be pursued simultaneously. They address different types of damages and together provide the fullest possible recovery for the family.
Understand what compensation is available
Wrongful death damages in Ohio may include: loss of the deceased person’s expected future income and financial support, loss of benefits (health insurance, retirement contributions), funeral and burial expenses, loss of the deceased person’s services, companionship, care, guidance, and consortium, mental anguish and emotional suffering of the surviving beneficiaries.
Survival claim damages may include: the deceased person’s medical expenses from the injury to death, pain and suffering experienced by the deceased before death, and lost wages during the period between injury and death.
In cases involving extreme recklessness or intentional misconduct, punitive damages may also be available under Ohio Rev. Code § 2315.21, capped at two times compensatory damages. Ohio also caps non-economic damages at the greater of $250,000 or three times economic damages (up to $350,000 per plaintiff) — though this cap does not apply in cases of catastrophic injury or death.
Identify all responsible parties
Wrongful death can result from many types of negligence, and multiple parties may be responsible: the driver who caused a fatal car or truck accident, a trucking company that pressured unsafe driving, a healthcare provider who committed a fatal medical error, a property owner whose negligence caused a fatal fall, an employer whose unsafe workplace caused a fatal injury, a manufacturer whose defective product caused a death, or a bar or restaurant that served a visibly intoxicated person who then caused a fatal accident (Ohio dram shop law, Ohio Rev. Code § 4399.18).
Cincinnati’s position as a tri-state metro means the incident may involve parties in Ohio, Kentucky, or Indiana. An attorney experienced in multi-state litigation can identify all responsible parties and the correct jurisdiction.
Talk to a wrongful death attorney
Wrongful death cases are among the most complex and emotionally challenging areas of law. They require navigating probate court to establish a personal representative, investigating the circumstances of death thoroughly, identifying all liable parties, working with medical, economic, and vocational experts, calculating the full financial and personal impact on the family, and managing litigation against defendants who will fight aggressively.
An experienced Cincinnati wrongful death attorney handles all of this while you focus on your family. Most work on contingency — you pay nothing unless they recover compensation. The initial consultation is free and confidential.