When a loved one dies due to a preventable surgical error, families face not only devastating grief but also complex legal questions about accountability and justice. In Georgia, wrongful death claims arising from surgical errors allow surviving family members to seek compensation for their loss and hold negligent medical providers responsible under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2.
Surgical errors represent some of the most tragic forms of medical malpractice because they often occur during procedures meant to save or improve lives. Whether the error involved operating on the wrong body part, leaving surgical instruments inside the patient, administering improper anesthesia, or failing to control post-operative bleeding, these mistakes can result in preventable death. Georgia law recognizes that when a surgeon’s negligence causes a patient’s death, the surviving family members deserve both answers and compensation. The path to justice begins with understanding your rights and connecting with experienced legal representation who can investigate what happened, identify all responsible parties, and build a compelling case for full accountability.
Life Justice Law Group provides compassionate and thorough representation to Macon families who have lost loved ones to surgical errors. Our team understands the medical complexities involved in these cases and works with expert witnesses to establish how the standard of care was violated and how that violation directly caused your family member’s death. We handle every aspect of your wrongful death claim on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay no fees unless we win your case. Call us today at (480) 378-8088 for a free consultation and case evaluation, or complete our online form to get started on your path toward justice and fair compensation.
What Constitutes a Surgical Error in Georgia Wrongful Death Cases
A surgical error occurs when a surgeon or surgical team member deviates from the accepted standard of medical care during a surgical procedure, resulting in harm to the patient. Not every negative surgical outcome constitutes an error—surgery inherently carries risks, and some complications occur despite proper care. However, when a surgeon makes a preventable mistake that a reasonably skilled surgeon would not have made under similar circumstances, and that mistake causes the patient’s death, Georgia law recognizes this as grounds for a wrongful death claim.
The standard of care in surgical cases is determined by what a reasonably competent surgeon with similar training and experience would do in the same situation. Medical expert testimony typically establishes this standard and demonstrates how the defendant surgeon’s actions fell below it. Under Georgia’s medical malpractice laws, plaintiffs must prove that the surgeon’s deviation from the standard of care directly caused the patient’s death, not merely that the surgeon made an error or that the patient died following surgery.
Georgia courts recognize numerous types of surgical errors as potential grounds for wrongful death claims. These include wrong-site surgery (operating on the wrong body part or side), wrong-patient surgery, wrong-procedure surgery, leaving foreign objects like sponges or instruments inside the patient, unnecessary surgery performed without proper indication, anesthesia errors that cause brain damage or cardiac arrest, surgical technique errors such as cutting or damaging organs or blood vessels, failure to control bleeding during or after surgery, and inadequate post-operative monitoring that allows complications to progress undetected. When any of these errors directly results in a patient’s death, surviving family members have legal grounds to pursue a wrongful death claim under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2.
Common Types of Surgical Errors That Lead to Wrongful Death
Surgical errors take many forms, but certain mistakes occur with troubling frequency in hospitals and surgical centers across Georgia. Understanding these common errors helps families recognize when their loved one’s death may have been preventable.
Wrong-Site, Wrong-Patient, or Wrong-Procedure Surgery – Despite multiple safety protocols designed to prevent these errors, surgeons still occasionally operate on the wrong body part, the wrong side of the body, the wrong patient entirely, or perform the wrong procedure. These “never events” are considered inexcusable and nearly always constitute clear malpractice. When they result in death, liability is typically straightforward because no reasonable surgeon should make such fundamental mistakes.
Retained Surgical Objects – Surgical teams sometimes leave sponges, towels, clamps, or other instruments inside a patient’s body after closing the incision. These foreign objects can cause severe infections, internal bleeding, sepsis, or organ damage that proves fatal if not discovered and removed quickly. Hospitals use counting protocols to prevent retained objects, and failure to follow these protocols demonstrates clear negligence.
Anesthesia Errors – Anesthesiologists and nurse anesthetists must carefully calculate dosages, monitor vital signs throughout surgery, and respond immediately to complications. Errors include administering too much anesthesia (causing cardiac arrest or respiratory failure), administering too little (causing the patient to wake during surgery and experience trauma), failing to monitor oxygen levels (leading to brain damage or death), failing to review the patient’s medical history for drug allergies or contraindications, and improper intubation (blocking the airway or allowing aspiration). Anesthesia errors that cause death often involve multiple failures in judgment and monitoring.
Surgical Technique Errors – Even when operating on the correct site, surgeons can make technical mistakes that prove fatal. These include accidentally cutting or puncturing organs, blood vessels, or nerves, failing to control bleeding during the procedure, improper suturing that leads to internal bleeding or infection, removing too much or too little tissue, and failing to recognize complications as they develop during surgery. Technique errors often reveal inadequate surgical skill, rushing through procedures, or inattention to detail.
Post-Operative Care Failures – Many surgical deaths occur not during the procedure itself but in the hours and days afterward when complications develop. Fatal post-operative errors include failure to monitor vital signs adequately, failure to recognize signs of internal bleeding or infection, premature hospital discharge before the patient is stable, inadequate pain management that masks serious symptoms, and failure to respond quickly to post-surgical emergencies. These failures often involve nursing staff and hospitalists in addition to the surgeon, expanding potential liability.
Inadequate Surgical Planning – Some deaths result from errors made before the first incision. These include failure to review the patient’s complete medical history, failure to order necessary pre-operative tests, proceeding with surgery despite contraindications or excessive risk factors, inadequate informed consent (not explaining risks or alternatives), and poor surgical team communication about the procedure plan. When inadequate planning leads to a preventable death, the surgeon and hospital may share liability for failing to properly prepare.
Who Can File a Wrongful Death Claim in Macon, Georgia
Georgia’s wrongful death statute, O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2, establishes a strict hierarchy for who has the legal right to bring a wrongful death claim. Unlike personal injury claims which belong to the injured person, a wrongful death claim belongs to the deceased person’s estate and is filed on behalf of specific surviving family members in a defined order of priority.
The surviving spouse holds the first and primary right to file a wrongful death claim in Georgia. If the deceased was married at the time of death, the spouse must bring the action and will receive the entire recovery unless the deceased also left surviving children. If there are surviving children, the spouse and children share the recovery, with the spouse receiving at least one-third regardless of how many children exist. This means if the deceased left a spouse and two children, the spouse receives at least one-third and the children split the remaining two-thirds. If the deceased left a spouse and five children, the spouse still receives one-third and the five children share the other two-thirds.
If there is no surviving spouse, the deceased’s children become the proper parties to file the wrongful death claim. All children share equally in any recovery, and the term “children” includes biological children, legally adopted children, and in some cases, children born after the parent’s death. Adult children have the same rights as minor children to bring wrongful death claims. If there are multiple children, they must act together or designate one representative to file on behalf of all of them. The children collectively hold the right to the full value of the life of the deceased.
When the deceased left no surviving spouse and no surviving children, the parents of the deceased have the right to file the wrongful death claim under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2. If both parents are living, they share the recovery equally. If only one parent survives, that parent receives the entire recovery. Parents filing wrongful death claims face the particular tragedy of outliving their child, and Georgia law recognizes their right to seek compensation for this loss regardless of the child’s age at death.
If the deceased left no surviving spouse, no children, and no parents, the right to file a wrongful death claim passes to the administrator or executor of the deceased’s estate. This personal representative files the claim on behalf of the estate, and any recovery becomes part of the estate assets distributed according to Georgia’s intestacy laws or the deceased’s will. This situation is less common but occurs when the deceased was unmarried, childless, and both parents predeceased them. The estate representative must still prove the full value of the deceased’s life, but the recovery benefits the estate’s heirs rather than direct family members.
Georgia law does not allow siblings, grandparents, aunts, uncles, or other extended family members to file wrongful death claims regardless of how close they were to the deceased or how much they depended on the deceased financially or emotionally. The statute’s hierarchy is absolute. However, these family members may have separate claims for their own losses, such as claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress if they witnessed the death or its immediate aftermath under particularly shocking circumstances.
Proving a Surgical Error Wrongful Death Claim in Georgia
Successfully pursuing a wrongful death claim based on a surgical error requires proving four essential elements under Georgia law. Each element must be established through credible evidence, and failure to prove even one element can result in the claim being dismissed or a verdict for the defendant.
Establish the Medical Standard of Care
The first element requires proving what the appropriate standard of care was for the surgical procedure in question. In Georgia medical malpractice cases, the standard of care is defined as what a reasonably competent medical professional with similar training and experience would do under the same or similar circumstances. This is not determined by what the best surgeon might do or what cutting-edge techniques exist, but rather what a competent, ordinary surgeon practicing in the same specialty would consider appropriate.
Expert medical testimony is mandatory in Georgia surgical error cases under O.C.G.A. § 24-7-702. Your attorney must retain a qualified medical expert—typically a surgeon who practices in the same specialty as the defendant—to review the case and provide an opinion about the standard of care. This expert will review all medical records, surgical notes, anesthesia records, nursing notes, hospital policies, and other relevant documentation. The expert must be prepared to testify that based on their knowledge, training, and experience, a competent surgeon in the defendant’s position should have taken specific actions or followed particular protocols that the defendant failed to follow.
Prove the Surgeon Breached the Standard of Care
The second element requires demonstrating that the defendant surgeon or surgical team actually violated the established standard of care. This means showing that their actions or omissions fell below what a reasonably competent surgeon would have done. The breach might involve an action the surgeon took (such as cutting the wrong organ) or an action the surgeon failed to take (such as not ordering necessary pre-operative tests or not monitoring for complications).
Your medical expert must specifically identify how the defendant’s conduct deviated from accepted practice. This might include testimony that the surgical technique used was inappropriate, that the surgeon proceeded despite obvious risk factors that should have postponed surgery, that the surgical team violated basic safety protocols, or that post-operative monitoring was inadequate. The expert’s opinion must be based on reliable medical knowledge and established practices, not speculation. Georgia courts require that expert opinions be grounded in accepted medical literature, professional guidelines, standard hospital protocols, or the expert’s own extensive clinical experience.
Establish Causation Between the Breach and the Death
The third element, causation, is often the most contested aspect of surgical error wrongful death claims. It is not enough to prove that the surgeon made an error and that the patient died. You must prove that the surgical error directly caused or substantially contributed to the death. Georgia law requires proof of proximate causation, meaning the breach must be a substantial factor in bringing about the harm, and the harm must be a reasonably foreseeable result of the breach.
Medical causation testimony must address two questions: did the breach cause the injury or complication, and did that injury or complication cause the death? For example, if a surgeon accidentally cut a major blood vessel during surgery, your expert must testify that this cut caused internal bleeding, and the internal bleeding (along with any failure to control it) caused the patient to go into shock and die. Defense attorneys often argue that the patient died from underlying health conditions, surgical complications that would have occurred anyway, or unforeseeable reactions. Your expert must be prepared to explain why the death would not have occurred but for the surgical error, or why the error was a substantial contributing factor even if other conditions played a role.
Document Damages and the Value of Life
The fourth element requires proving the damages—specifically, the full value of the life of the deceased from the perspective of the deceased. Under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2, Georgia wrongful death damages are measured by “the full value of the life of the deceased,” which includes both economic and intangible elements. This is distinct from other states that measure damages from the survivors’ perspective.
Economic damages include the income the deceased would have earned over their remaining life expectancy, the value of benefits and retirement contributions they would have accumulated, and the value of household services and contributions they would have provided. Calculating these requires economic experts who consider the deceased’s age, health, education, career trajectory, and earning history. Intangible elements include the deceased’s loss of enjoyment of life’s pleasures and experiences they would have had. This encompasses everything from relationships and family experiences to hobbies, travel, and personal fulfillment. While subjective, Georgia law recognizes these intangible losses as real and compensable. Your attorney will present evidence of who the deceased was as a person—their relationships, interests, goals, and what they valued—to help the jury understand the magnitude of what was lost.
Damages Available in Macon Surgical Error Wrongful Death Cases
Georgia’s wrongful death statute provides for specific categories of damages that differ significantly from personal injury damages. Understanding what compensation is available helps families evaluate settlements and prepare for trial.
The primary recovery in a Georgia wrongful death case is the full value of the life of the deceased as defined under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-2. This includes the present value of the deceased’s earnings over their expected remaining lifetime, considering their age, health, occupation, skills, and work-life expectancy. Economic experts calculate these figures using actuarial tables, income history, education credentials, and career trajectory evidence. For a 45-year-old surgeon who died from a surgical error, this figure could be several million dollars. For a retired person or someone with limited income, the economic component is lower but still significant when considering the value of services and life contributions.
The full value of life also includes the intangible value of the life lived—what the deceased would have experienced, enjoyed, and contributed to others. This is not measured from the survivors’ perspective of what they lost, but from the deceased’s perspective of what they were deprived of experiencing. Georgia juries have awarded substantial sums for the intangible value of life, recognizing that human life has worth beyond earning capacity. Evidence supporting this component includes testimony about the deceased’s character, relationships, hobbies, faith, community involvement, goals, and what brought them joy. Photographs, videos, social media posts, and testimony from friends and family help the jury understand the deceased as a full person.
Separate from the wrongful death claim, Georgia law allows the estate to bring a survival action under O.C.G.A. § 51-4-5 for damages the deceased personally suffered before death. This includes compensation for the deceased’s pain and suffering from the time of the surgical error until death, medical expenses incurred treating complications from the surgical error, and any other losses the deceased personally experienced before dying. If the patient lingered for days or weeks suffering from surgical complications before death, the survival action damages can be substantial. These damages belong to the estate and are distributed according to the will or intestacy laws, separate from wrongful death proceeds.
Georgia law also allows recovery of full medical and funeral expenses through the wrongful death claim. This includes all costs associated with the final illness and death, such as emergency room treatment, additional surgeries attempting to correct the error, intensive care costs, medications, rehabilitation, and funeral and burial or cremation expenses. These are considered economic damages and are fully compensable. Families should preserve all bills and receipts related to these expenses.
In cases involving egregious conduct, Georgia law permits punitive damages under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1. These damages are designed to punish the defendant and deter similar conduct rather than compensate the family. Punitive damages require clear and convincing evidence that the defendant’s actions showed willful misconduct, malice, fraud, wantonness, oppression, or that entire want of care which would raise the presumption of conscious indifference to consequences. In surgical error cases, punitive damages might be available if the surgeon was impaired by drugs or alcohol during surgery, performed surgery despite knowing they lacked the necessary skill or training, or deliberately falsified medical records to cover up the error. Punitive damages are capped at $250,000 in most cases but are not capped when the defendant’s conduct involved specific intent to harm or when the defendant was under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or other substances.
Time Limits for Filing a Surgical Error Wrongful Death Claim in Georgia
Georgia law imposes strict deadlines for filing wrongful death claims arising from medical malpractice. Understanding these deadlines is critical because missing them typically means losing your right to pursue compensation permanently, regardless of how strong your case may be.
The Standard Two-Year Statute of Limitations
Under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33, Georgia requires that wrongful death claims based on medical malpractice be filed within two years from the date of death. This deadline is firm and applies to wrongful death claims regardless of when the surgical error occurred or when the family discovered the error. The clock starts on the date the patient died, not the date of the surgery or the date the family learned that malpractice caused the death.
For example, if a patient underwent surgery on January 15, 2023, and died from complications on March 20, 2023, the family would have until March 20, 2025, to file a wrongful death lawsuit. Even if the family did not learn until December 2023 that a surgical error caused the death, the filing deadline remains March 20, 2025, measured from the date of death. This rule differs from standard medical malpractice injury claims where the statute of limitations may be tolled for late discovery, but Georgia courts apply the death date rule strictly in wrongful death cases.
The Five-Year Statute of Repose
In addition to the two-year statute of limitations, Georgia imposes a five-year statute of repose under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-71. This means that regardless of when death occurred or when it was discovered, no medical malpractice action can be brought more than five years after the date of the negligent act or omission. The statute of repose provides an absolute deadline that cannot be extended.
In surgical error cases, the five-year repose period typically runs from the date of the surgery. If a surgeon made an error during a procedure on April 10, 2020, and the patient died from related complications on May 15, 2024, the family would face competing deadlines: the two-year wrongful death statute gives them until May 15, 2026, but the five-year repose period expires on April 10, 2025. The earlier deadline controls, so the lawsuit must be filed by April 10, 2025. This situation is rare because most surgical error deaths occur relatively soon after the procedure, but families must be aware that both deadlines apply.
Exceptions and Special Circumstances
Georgia law provides limited exceptions to the statute of limitations in medical malpractice cases. If the defendant surgeon or hospital fraudulently concealed the malpractice—such as by altering medical records, lying about what occurred during surgery, or actively misleading the family about the cause of death—the statute of limitations may be tolled under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-96 until the fraud is discovered or should have been discovered through reasonable diligence. Proving fraudulent concealment requires clear and convincing evidence and typically involves expert testimony about what records show and testimony from witnesses about what the defendants said or did to hide the truth.
Another exception applies when the patient was a minor at the time of the surgical error and death. Under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-73, if the patient was under age five at the time of the negligent act, the claim must be filed before the child’s tenth birthday or within the standard time limits, whichever gives more time. This exception recognizes that parents may not immediately recognize medical negligence in very young children and provides additional time to investigate and file claims. However, once the child turns ten, this extension no longer applies even if the standard statute of limitations has not yet expired.
Why Acting Quickly Matters
Even though families have up to two years to file a wrongful death claim, waiting too long creates serious risks. Evidence deteriorates or disappears over time, including physical evidence like surgical instruments or pathology samples, electronic records that may be deleted or overwritten after routine retention periods expire, and memories of witnesses who may forget crucial details or become unavailable. Medical experts need time to thoroughly review records, research the standard of care, and prepare detailed opinions. Defense attorneys immediately begin building their case and securing their own experts. Starting late puts you at a disadvantage.
Additionally, many surgical error wrongful death cases require extensive investigation before filing. Your attorney must obtain and review hundreds or thousands of pages of medical records, consult with medical experts to determine whether malpractice occurred, identify all potentially liable parties including surgeons, anesthesiologists, nurses, and hospitals, gather evidence of damages including financial records and testimony about the deceased, and prepare the detailed expert affidavits required under Georgia’s medical malpractice procedural rules. This process typically takes several months even when pursued diligently. Families who wait until shortly before the two-year deadline often find that attorneys cannot take their cases because insufficient time remains to properly investigate and prepare the claim.
Selecting the Right Macon Surgical Error Wrongful Death Lawyer
The attorney you choose to represent your family in a surgical error wrongful death claim will significantly impact both the outcome of your case and your experience throughout the legal process. Medical malpractice litigation is among the most complex and challenging areas of law, requiring specific knowledge, resources, and courtroom skill.
Medical Malpractice Experience Matters
General personal injury attorneys, even highly skilled ones, often lack the specialized knowledge necessary to successfully prosecute surgical error cases. Look for an attorney or firm with a demonstrated track record of handling medical malpractice cases specifically. These cases require understanding complex medical concepts and terminology, knowing how to work with medical experts and translate their testimony for juries, familiarity with surgical procedures and hospital protocols, experience navigating Georgia’s specific medical malpractice procedural requirements, and relationships with qualified medical experts in relevant specialties who can credibly testify.
Ask potential attorneys about their specific experience with surgical error cases: how many they have handled, what results they achieved, whether they have taken cases to trial or primarily settle, and what medical specialties they have sued. An attorney who primarily handles car accidents may be excellent at that work but unprepared for the medical and scientific complexities of a surgical malpractice case.
Resources and Financial Capability
Surgical error wrongful death cases are expensive to litigate. Properly investigating and prosecuting these claims requires substantial upfront investment that your attorney must be willing and able to make. Necessary expenses include medical expert review and testimony fees (often $15,000-$50,000 per expert), medical record retrieval and organization, economic experts to calculate damages, medical illustration and demonstrative evidence, deposition costs, court filing fees, and potential trial expenses. Quality medical experts charge substantial fees for their time reviewing records, preparing reports, and testifying.
Choose a firm with the financial resources to fund these expenses through trial without requiring you to pay costs upfront. Life Justice Law Group advances all case costs and expenses, which are only repaid if we recover compensation for your family. Firms without adequate resources may be forced to settle cases prematurely rather than investing what is necessary to maximize your recovery at trial.
Trial Experience and Willingness
Insurance companies and hospitals track which attorneys actually take cases to trial versus which attorneys always settle. Defense attorneys make lower settlement offers to attorneys they know will not go to trial because they face no risk of a larger jury verdict. Your attorney must have genuine trial experience in medical malpractice cases and a demonstrated willingness to take cases to verdict when fair settlement cannot be reached.
Ask about the attorney’s trial history: when was their last medical malpractice trial, what were the results, how many malpractice cases have they tried to verdict, and what is their approach to settlement versus trial. An attorney who has never tried a medical malpractice case to verdict or whose last trial was many years ago may not command the respect necessary to negotiate maximum settlements. Insurance companies know which attorneys have the skill and determination to win at trial, and they reserve their best settlement offers for those attorneys.
Communication and Compassion
Beyond technical legal skill, your attorney should communicate clearly and regularly about your case’s progress, be accessible when you have questions or concerns, explain legal concepts and options in understandable terms without condescension, and treat you and your family with genuine compassion and respect. Losing a loved one to a preventable surgical error creates profound grief and often anger. You need an attorney who understands the emotional weight of your situation while maintaining the professional focus necessary to build the strongest possible case.
During your initial consultation, assess whether the attorney listens carefully to your story, answers your questions thoroughly, explains their approach to your case clearly, and seems genuinely invested in helping your family. Trust your instincts about whether this is someone you can work with through what may be a year or more of litigation. The attorney-client relationship in a wrongful death case is particularly important because you will be discussing painful details about your loved one’s death and reliving difficult memories as the case progresses.
How Life Justice Law Group Handles Macon Surgical Error Wrongful Death Cases
Our approach to surgical error wrongful death claims combines thorough investigation, aggressive advocacy, and compassionate client service. We understand that no amount of money can bring back your loved one, but we are committed to securing the full justice and compensation your family deserves.
We begin every case with a comprehensive investigation. Our team immediately requests and reviews all relevant medical records including surgical notes, anesthesia records, pathology reports, nursing notes, hospital policies and procedures, previous medical history, and autopsy reports if available. We work with qualified medical experts in the relevant surgical specialty to review these records and determine whether the standard of care was violated and whether that violation caused your loved one’s death. This expert review typically takes several weeks but is essential to understanding exactly what happened and whether you have a viable claim.
Once our investigation confirms medical negligence, we identify all potentially liable parties. Surgical error cases often involve multiple defendants including the primary surgeon who made the error, assisting surgeons who may have contributed to or failed to prevent the error, anesthesiologists and nurse anesthetists responsible for anesthesia care, surgical nurses who may have violated safety protocols, the hospital or surgical center where the procedure occurred, and medical device manufacturers if defective equipment contributed to the error. Georgia law allows injured parties to pursue claims against all parties whose negligence contributed to the harm, and we thoroughly investigate every potential source of liability and recovery.
We build your case for maximum recovery by retaining the best available experts, developing comprehensive damage evidence including economic analysis of lost earnings and life value, gathering testimony and evidence about who your loved one was and what their life meant, and preparing demonstrative evidence and medical illustrations to clearly explain complex medical concepts to a jury. We invest whatever is necessary to present the strongest possible case, whether in settlement negotiations or at trial. Our goal is to recover the full value your family is entitled to under Georgia law, not merely a quick settlement that undervalues your claim.
Throughout the process, we keep you informed with regular updates about case progress, explanations of legal developments and what they mean for your case, honest assessments of your case’s strengths and settlement value, and preparation for depositions, mediation, and trial if necessary. You will have direct access to your attorney and our team whenever you have questions or concerns. We understand this is one of the most difficult experiences of your life, and we are committed to making the legal process as clear and manageable as possible while you focus on healing and supporting your family.
Contact a Macon Surgical Error Wrongful Death Lawyer Today
If your loved one died due to a preventable surgical error, you deserve answers, accountability, and just compensation. The legal system provides a path to justice, but Georgia’s strict time limits mean you must act without unnecessary delay. Every day that passes makes evidence harder to preserve and witnesses harder to locate.
Life Justice Law Group offers free consultations to Macon families who have lost loved ones to surgical errors. During this confidential meeting, we will listen to what happened, review any medical records or documentation you have, explain your legal rights and options under Georgia law, and provide an honest assessment of whether you have grounds for a wrongful death claim. You are under no obligation, and the consultation costs nothing regardless of whether you decide to hire us. We handle all surgical error wrongful death cases on a contingency fee basis, which means you pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for your family. We advance all case costs and expenses, which are only repaid from the recovery. If we do not win your case, you owe nothing for our services or the expenses we invested. This arrangement ensures that every Georgia family has access to experienced legal representation regardless of their financial situation.
Call Life Justice Law Group today at (480) 378-8088 or complete our online contact form to schedule your free consultation. Let us help your family pursue the justice and compensation you deserve while you focus on healing and honoring your loved one’s memory.
