Wrongful Death Claims: Recovering Funeral and Probate Costs

When a family member dies due to negligence in Las Vegas, the emotional toll is immediate. The financial toll follows days later. Between the funeral home, the cemetery, and the probate attorney, the “business of death” can easily cost $15,000 to $25,000 in the first month alone. The Federal Trade Commission reports average burial costs between $7,000 and $12,000, and that is before accounting for cemetery fees, headstones, and legal administration expenses.

A common fear we hear is: “Will these costs come out of my settlement?”

The answer lies in NRS 41.085, Nevada’s wrongful death statute. This law allows us to force the at-fault party to pay for the administration of death, but only if we structure the lawsuit correctly.

If we file the claim properly, we can use the defendant’s money, not yours, to pay for the funeral and legal administration. This guide explains the “Two Checkbook” system of Nevada wrongful death law and how to protect your family’s recovery.


The “Two Checkbook” System: NRS 41.085

In many states, a wrongful death lawsuit is one big pot of money. In Nevada, it is legally split into two separate claims (or “checkbooks”). Understanding this distinction is the key to protecting your financial future.

Checkbook 1: The Heirs’ Claim

  • Who gets it: The surviving spouse, children, or parents.
  • What it covers: Grief, sorrow, loss of support, and loss of companionship.
  • The “Debt Shield”: Under NRS 41.085(4), money awarded to heirs is not liable for the decedent’s debts. If your loved one died with $50,000 in credit card debt, creditors cannot touch this money. It is yours, pure and simple.

Checkbook 2: The Estate’s Claim

  • Who gets it: The “Estate” (managed by the Special Administrator).
  • What it covers: Funeral expenses, medical bills incurred before death, and punitive damages.
  • The Purpose: This money is used to pay off the debts of the deceased, including the funeral and probate costs, so the family doesn’t have to.

The Strategy:

We file both claims simultaneously. We use the Estate’s Claim to clean up the financial mess (funeral, medical bills, administration fees) so that the Heirs’ Claim remains untouched and fully available for your family’s future.


Recovering Funeral Expenses

Funeral costs in Las Vegas can range from $8,000 to over $20,000. Under Nevada law, these are considered “special damages” that the Estate is entitled to recover from the defendant.

How We Shift the Burden

  1. Don’t Pay Cash Yet: If possible, ask the funeral home to accept an “assignment” against the future insurance settlement.
  2. File the Estate Claim: We include the full cost of the funeral, burial, cremation, and plot in the Estate’s damages demand.
  3. The Settlement Pays the Bill: When the case settles, the Estate’s portion of the funds pays the funeral home directly.

The Consequence:

If you don’t open an Estate claim (and only sue as heirs), the defendant is not legally required to reimburse the funeral costs under the Heirs’ portion of the statute. You effectively volunteer to pay for the funeral out of your own “grief and sorrow” money.


Recovering Probate & Administration Costs

While NRS 41.085 explicitly lists “funeral expenses,” it does not list “probate attorney fees” as a line-item damage the defendant must pay. However, the legal reality is that you cannot sue without opening probate.

Therefore, the administration of the Estate is a necessary cost of the lawsuit.

How We Fund the Administration

We ensure the Estate Claim is robust enough to cover these administrative costs by aggressively pursuing “Survival Damages” (damages the victim suffered before they died).

  • Pre-Death Medical Bills: Even if the victim died at the scene, there are often ambulance or ER bills.
  • Lost Wages: We calculate the income lost between the injury and death.
  • Punitive Damages: If the defendant was drunk or reckless, these damages belong to the Estate.

By recovering these funds, we create a solvent Estate that can pay for its own administration (the Special Administrator filing fees, court costs, and legal work). This ensures that the cost of managing the lawsuit doesn’t bleed into the Heirs’ recovery.


Heirs vs. Estate: A Comparison

Damage TypeHeirs’ ClaimEstate’s Claim
Grief & Sorrow✅ YES❌ NO
Funeral Expenses❌ NO✅ YES
Medical Bills (Pre-Death)❌ NO✅ YES
Punitive Damages❌ NO✅ YES
Liable for Debts?🛡️ PROTECTED (Creditors can’t touch)⚠️ LIABLE (Used to pay debts)

Source: NRS 41.085


Action Plan: Managing the Financials

  1. Keep All Receipts: Every dollar spent on the funeral, obituary, transport of remains, and cemetery plot must be documented. These are “special damages” we will bill to the defendant.
  2. Do Not Pay Estate Debts Personally: Do not use your own savings to pay off the deceased’s credit cards or medical bills. These are the Estate’s problem, not yours. If the Estate recovers money, it will pay them. If it doesn’t, they may get written off, but never volunteer your own money.
  3. Appoint a Special Administrator: As discussed in our executor guide, we need to open the Estate quickly to legally claim these expenses.

Why You Need Experience on Your Side

Navigating NRS 41.085 requires a strategic balance between the Heirs’ interests and the Estate’s obligations. A mistake here, like commingling funds or failing to file the Estate claim, can cost your family tens of thousands of dollars in funeral and administrative costs.

With 40+ years of experience, Jack Bernstein knows how to structure these claims to maximize the defendant’s payout and shield your family’s recovery from creditors. We make the at-fault party pay for the expensive administration of death, so you don’t have to.

Contact Jack Bernstein Injury Lawyers for a free consultation: (702) 633-3333.

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For over 40 years, Jack Bernstein has protected the rights of injured victims and their families. Don’t let medical bills, lost wages, and other expenses put a burden on your family.

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Jack G. Bernstein, Esq. Las Vegas Car Accident Injury Attorney
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