When a family loses someone to another person’s negligence, one of the first
questions is a practical one: who has the legal right to pursue a claim? Georgia
law provides a clear answer — but the rules are specific, and the details matter.


Adult children whose parent dies Adult children do not have the right to file a wrongful death claim for a deceased parent if a surviving spouse exists — even if the spouse chooses not to pursue a claim. The spouse’s right is exclusive at that tier.
When the surviving spouse doesn’t want to file The spouse holds the right, but cannot be compelled to exercise it in most circumstances. If a surviving spouse declines to pursue a claim, adult children do not automatically step into that role. Courts have rarely granted exceptions; this situation requires careful legal analysis.
Unmarried partners Georgia’s wrongful death statute does not recognize unmarried partners as having standing to file. Only legal spouses — not longterm partners, even those with shared children — hold that spousal priority.
Estranged family members Estrangement does not affect legal standing. A surviving spouse who was separated but not divorced retains priority. A parent who had no relationship with the deceased may still hold standing if no spouse or children survive.


The wrongful death claim must be filed within two years of the date of
death under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33. This deadline is strict.
Criminal prosecution tolling If criminal charges were filed against the person responsible for the death, the two-year clock may be paused while the criminal case proceeds — potentially extending the window by several years. This is not automatic; the specific circumstances determine whether tolling applies.
Government entity shortened notice requirements If the death involved a government entity a city vehicle, county employee, governmentowned property ante-litem notice must be filed within 6 months (municipal) or 12 months (state), regardless of the two-year wrongful death deadline. These notice requirements are prerequisites to filing suit. Missing them permanently bars the claim.
We evaluate which deadlines apply based on the specific facts of each case. Families should contact us as soon as they are ready the earlier the better, because evidence matters as much as timing.

Understanding who can file and when is the first step. We are here to answer those questions, explain your family’s rights, and take the legal process off your hands. There is no obligation and no cost to speak with us. You pay nothing unless we win your case.