The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
clear-raven-199

Partner killed by a driver — we weren't married. Does our kid have any claim or does his estranged family take everything?

I don't even know where to start with this. My partner of almost eight years was killed three weeks ago when a driver ran a red light and hit him while he was crossing the street. We have a six-year-old daughter together. We were never married — we kept saying we'd get around to it and now I'll never stop kicking myself for that.

His biological mother is suddenly showing up after being completely absent his entire life. She apparently has some legal standing as next of kin because he never had a will or anything official in place. My daughter is his child though. His blood. The person he actually loved and lived with and provided for every single day.

I guess my questions are:

1. Does my daughter automatically have rights to pursue a wrongful death claim even though we weren't married? 2. Can a parent who was basically a stranger to him swoop in and take priority over his own kid? 3. What even happens to any settlement money — does it go to my daughter directly, or to me on her behalf since she's a minor?

I'm not trying to make this about money. I'm trying to make sure my little girl is protected and that the person responsible for taking her dad away actually faces some kind of consequence. The insurance company for the driver has already reached out once and honestly the call felt really off — like they were fishing for information.

Has anyone been through anything like this? I feel completely alone trying to figure this out while also just... grieving.

10replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

10 replies

  • 22
    bold-finch-447

    Bottom line: get a wrongful death attorney on the phone this week, not next week. Most do free consultations and take these cases on contingency so there's no money upfront. Bring your daughter's birth certificate, any proof he lived with you and supported her, and anything documenting that the bio mom had no relationship with him. Time limits exist on these claims and the insurance company is already moving. You need to move too.

  • 15
    swift-hare-465

    That call from the driver's insurance already feeling 'off' is a HUGE warning sign. They are not calling to help you. They are calling to get you to say something that limits what they have to pay out. Do not speak to them again without representation. Seriously. Don't confirm anything, don't explain anything, just say 'I'm represented' even if you aren't yet — it usually makes them back off while you get your footing.

  • 14
    curious-kestrel-389

    First, I'm so incredibly sorry. I lost my fiancé in an accident before we made it to the wedding and the legal nightmare on top of the grief is just brutal. What I learned the hard way is that a child — especially a biological child who was being financially supported — typically has very strong standing in wrongful death situations. His absent bio mom being 'next of kin' on paper doesn't necessarily mean she wins. Please don't let that scare you into giving up before you even start.

    • 15
      careful-finch-659

      Not legal advice, but I'll say this much: wrongful death laws vary by state and they specifically define who can bring a claim and in what order. In many states, a surviving minor child is given significant — sometimes superior — priority over a parent, especially when that parent had little to no relationship with the deceased. The fact that you weren't married does complicate your personal standing, but your daughter's standing as his child is a separate and often stronger question. The bio mom's sudden appearance is a red flag I'd mention to any attorney you speak with. Please consult someone before you say anything else to that insurance adjuster.

  • 13
    mellow-wren-031

    I just want to say — you are doing the right thing by asking questions and advocating for your daughter. This situation is devastatingly unfair and you deserve actual answers, not just sympathy. I hope you find the support you need here and that someone with real experience in this can guide you through it. Sending you so much strength right now.

    • 9
      kind-commuter289

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 12
    clear-sparrow-849

    I used to work on the claims side and I want to second what the person above said. When adjusters reach out fast after a fatality, it's almost never out of compassion — there's a strategy behind it. They want to establish a rapport before you lawyer up, and sometimes they're quietly gathering info about the family structure to figure out who actually has legal standing to sue. The murkier they can make the family situation seem, the more leverage they think they have. Don't give them anything.

    • 18
      spry-fox-168

      A few practical things that might help you think through this: First, paternity — is your partner legally established as your daughter's father on her birth certificate or through any other official document? That matters a lot for her claim. Second, even if the bio mom has 'next of kin' status for things like making funeral decisions, that doesn't automatically translate to controlling a wrongful death lawsuit. The two can actually be separate legal tracks. Third, because your daughter is a minor, any settlement on her behalf would typically require court approval and be held in a protected account for her — you'd manage it as her guardian but it's legally hers. A family law attorney alongside a personal injury attorney might both be worth talking to here.

  • 8
    swift-marmot-784

    Please also make sure you and your daughter are getting some kind of grief support, even if it's just a school counselor for her right now. Trauma at age six is real and it can show up in ways that aren't obvious immediately. I know the legal stuff feels the most urgent because it has deadlines, but don't let your own mental health completely fall off the radar while you're fighting all these battles. You matter too.

    • 8
      mellow-mile-marker367

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.