Wrongful Death · Fort Lauderdale

Fort Lauderdale wrongful death lawyer.

Losing someone you love to another person's carelessness is a wound no settlement can heal. But the law gives your family a way to hold the responsible party accountable and to recover what that loss has cost — and will keep costing. Robert DiStefano handles these cases himself, with the care your family deserves.

  • 40+ yearsFlorida personal injury
  • $100M+ recoveredfor Florida accident victims
  • 4.8 ★ / 51verified Google reviews
What a wrongful death claim is

A Fort Lauderdale wrongful death lawyer for your whole family

A wrongful death claim is the civil case Florida law allows when someone dies because another person or company was careless or did something wrong. As a Fort Lauderdale wrongful death lawyer, Robert DiStefano helps Broward families bring that claim — so the people who caused the loss answer for it, and so the family is not left carrying the financial weight alone.

We know money is not why you are here. No amount brings back a husband, a wife, a child, or a parent. But a wrongful death case does two things that matter. It forces the truth into the open about how your loved one died. And it recovers the support, the services, and the companionship your family lost — the income they counted on, the bills left behind, and the void that person filled in everyday life.

Florida wrongful death cases follow their own special law — the Florida Wrongful Death Act — that controls who may recover, who is allowed to file, what your family can claim, and how long you have. The rest of this page walks you through each of those, in plain language, so you know where you stand before you ever pick up the phone.

The Florida law that applies

The rules behind a Florida wrongful death claim

Wrongful death cases are governed by a specific Florida statute — and by deadlines that are unforgiving. Here is the law that shapes your family's case, in plain terms.

Fla. Stat. §§ 768.16–768.26

Florida's Wrongful Death Act

This is the law that allows the case. It says the death must be caused by another's wrongful act, negligence, or default, that one person — the personal representative of the estate — files on behalf of everyone, and that the estate and the surviving family (such as a spouse, children, and certain parents) may recover. It also sets a 2-year deadline from the date of death.

Fla. Stat. § 768.21

What your family can recover

The Act lists the losses survivors may claim: lost support and services the person provided, lost companionship and guidance, and the mental pain and suffering of a spouse, children, and certain parents. The estate may also recover lost earnings and net accumulations, plus medical and funeral expenses it paid.

Fla. Stat. § 768.81 amended 2023

The 51% fault bar

Florida follows a modified comparative negligence rule. A recovery is reduced by the share of fault assigned to your loved one, and if they are found more than 50% at fault, the claim recovers nothing. Insurers push this hard in death cases — proving where the real fault lies protects your family.

Florida common law

No cap on most damages

Florida does not cap most compensatory damages in an ordinary wrongful death case. There is no statutory ceiling on the value of the support, companionship, and suffering your family lost. The law lets us pursue the full, true measure of that loss rather than an arbitrary limit.

This page provides general information about Florida law and is not legal advice. Statutes and case law change; your specific case requires a consultation.

Rooted in Broward County

We know how these losses happen in Broward

Fatal cases in Broward are not abstract to us. They happen on the same highways we drive, at the same properties we pass, in the same waterways that make this place home. We know the roads, the records, and the local agencies these cases run through.

Fatal road & truck crashes

  • Interstate 95 — Broward's deadliest corridor, where high-speed and distracted driving cause some of the county's worst fatal collisions.
  • Interstate 595 & Florida's Turnpike — fast freight and commuter routes where a single careless truck driver can take a life.
  • US-1 & Oakland Park Blvd — busy surface roads where fatal intersection and pedestrian crashes are far too common.

Drownings & the water

  • Apartment & community pools — fatal drownings tied to missing barriers, broken gates, or no required safety equipment.
  • The Intracoastal & New River — boating and dock incidents in Broward's heavily used waterways.
  • Fort Lauderdale beaches & canals — drownings where a property or operator ignored a known danger.

Negligent security

  • Apartment complexes & parking lots — fatal assaults that follow broken lighting, gates, or cameras a property failed to fix.
  • Bars, clubs & late-night venues — deaths tied to absent or untrained security where violence was foreseeable.
  • Our office — 7471 W Oakland Park Blvd, Suite 106. If grief makes travel hard, we will come to you.

DiStefano Law is not an out-of-state intake service. We are a Fort Lauderdale firm, on Oakland Park Boulevard, that has represented grieving Florida families for four decades.

Why DiStefano Law

Robert carries this for your family, personally

When you call our office, you reach a firm where the founding attorney does the work. Robert DiStefano has practiced Florida personal injury law for more than 40 years and handles every wrongful death matter himself. You will not be passed down a chain or left explaining your loss again and again to a stranger.

A wrongful death case asks a great deal of a family that is already grieving. We try to carry as much of that weight as we can. We open the estate and get the personal representative appointed so the case can be filed correctly. We secure the crash report, the property records, or the safety history before that evidence disappears. And we work with the experts — accident reconstructionists, economists, and others — who prove both what happened and what your family truly lost.

We take these cases on a contingency fee — no fee unless we recover for you. There is nothing to pay up front, and we advance the costs the case needs. For outcomes in serious and catastrophic-injury matters, see related case results →

01

We listen, then act fast

Tell us what happened in a free, confidential call. We move quickly to preserve the report, the scene, and the records before they are lost.

02

We handle the estate steps

We help open the estate and get the personal representative appointed so the claim is filed by the right person, the right way.

03

We prove the full loss

With the right experts, we document fault and the true value of the support, services, and companionship your family lost.

Questions grieving families ask us

Wrongful death questions, answered

Who can file a wrongful death claim in Florida?
In Florida, a wrongful death claim is filed by one person — the personal representative of the deceased person's estate — but it is brought on behalf of the whole family. The law recognizes specific survivors who may recover, which can include a surviving spouse, the person's children, and, in certain cases, the parents. Other blood relatives or adoptive siblings who depended on the person for support may also qualify. Exactly who can recover, and what each person can claim, depends on the family's situation, so it is worth a short call to sort out where you stand.
What is a personal representative, and why is one required?
A personal representative is the individual the court appoints to act for the deceased person's estate — often a spouse, an adult child, or another close family member named in a will. Florida's Wrongful Death Act requires the personal representative to be the one who files the lawsuit, even though the claim is for the benefit of the surviving family members. If no estate has been opened yet, that is one of the first things we help with, so the case is filed correctly by the right person and is not delayed or thrown out on a technicality.
What damages can surviving family members recover?
Florida law lets survivors recover for the real losses a death causes. That includes the loss of financial support and the value of services the person provided, the loss of companionship, guidance, and protection, and the mental pain and suffering that close family members carry. The estate itself may also recover the person's lost earnings and net accumulations, along with the medical and funeral expenses it paid. Florida does not cap most of these compensatory damages, so the goal is to prove the full, true value of what your family lost — not settle for an arbitrary number.
How long do I have to file a wrongful death case in Florida?
In most Florida wrongful death cases, you have 2 years from the date of death to file the lawsuit. Some situations can change that timeline — for example, when the death involves a government entity or when a death was hidden or not immediately discoverable — and a claim that involves a child can have special rules. Because the deadline is strict and evidence fades quickly, the safest step is to talk with a lawyer early so we can confirm the exact date that applies to your family and protect the claim before time runs out.
How is a wrongful death case different from a criminal case?
They are completely separate. A criminal case is brought by the state to punish someone for breaking the law, and it can end in jail, probation, or fines paid to the government — not to your family. A wrongful death case is a civil claim your family brings to recover money for the losses the death caused. The two can run at the same time, and they have different standards of proof, so a person can be found responsible in a civil case even if they were never charged or convicted in the criminal case. You do not have to wait for a criminal case to finish to protect your civil claim.

Related help from our firm: traumatic brain injury claims, child injury cases, or reach us anytime through our contact page.

Client reviews

What clients say about working with us

4.8 ★★★★★ 51 verified Google reviews Read all on Google →

★★★★★

“The best lawyer in South Florida. Thank you DiStefano for all the hard work that you and your team have done to get me amazing results.”

Taravia Google

★★★★★

“I had a wonderful experience with Robert! He fought hard for me and kept me in the loop the whole time. The whole office is just great!”

Paulavia Google

★★★★★

“Mr. DiStefano is the best! Kept me up to date with everything, and his paralegal Michelle also kept us informed. Happy with my settlement — I highly recommend him.”

Stacy Leevia Google

Talk to Robert today

Let us carry the legal weight.

Get a free, confidential, same-day case review. There is no fee unless we recover for you, and no pressure — just straight, compassionate answers about your family's rights and what comes next.

(954) 572-8000
Robert DiStefano, Esq. · Fort Lauderdale