Can You Sue on Behalf of a Dead Person?

You cannot sue “on behalf of” a dead person directly — their legal claims pass to their estate. In New York, the court-appointed personal representative (an executor or administrator) brings the lawsuit, and surviving family members may also have a separate wrongful death claim for the financial support they lost. EPTL §5-4.1

Last updated June 2026
Laurence P. Banville, New York personal injury attorney
Laurence P. Banville Managing Partner · NY & D.C. Bars
The bottom line: Yes — but not as the dead person themselves. When someone dies, their legal claims pass to their estate, and in New York the court-appointed personal representative (an executor or administrator) is the one who actually files the lawsuit. Surviving family members may also have a separate wrongful death claim for the support they lost.

What it really means to sue on behalf of someone who died

A person who has died cannot file a lawsuit, and they cannot appoint someone to do it for them after death. Instead, New York law lets the deceased person’s estate step into their shoes. The estate is a legal entity created to handle what the person left behind, which includes any legal claims they had while alive and certain claims that arise from how they died.

So the accurate way to think about it is this: you are not suing “for” the dead person as an individual, you are pursuing a claim that now belongs to their estate or to their surviving family. A single death can create two different claims, handled by different people in different ways.

Who is actually allowed to bring the lawsuit

In New York, only the personal representative of the estate can sue on the estate’s behalf. That is the executor named in the will, or, if there is no will, an administrator appointed by the Surrogate’s Court. A spouse, child, or parent cannot simply file in their own name — they first need the court to grant them authority, called letters testamentary or letters of administration.

  • Executor — named in the deceased’s will and confirmed by the Surrogate’s Court.
  • Administrator — appointed by the court when there is no will, usually a close family member.

Once appointed, that representative has the legal standing to file and settle claims connected to the death. EPTL §5-4.1

The two claims a death can create

When a person dies because of someone else’s negligence, New York recognizes two separate claims, and it helps to keep them straight:

  1. Wrongful death. This compensates the surviving family for the financial losses caused by the death — lost income and support, loss of parental guidance, and funeral and medical expenses. New York’s wrongful death statute generally requires this to be filed within two years of the date of death. EPTL §5-4.1
  2. Survival action. This is the claim the deceased person had themselves before dying — for example, the conscious pain and suffering they endured between the injury and death. It “survives” them and is pursued by the estate.

Both are typically brought by the same personal representative, but they recover different things and the money is distributed differently.

Deadlines you cannot afford to miss

The clock matters. A wrongful death claim in New York must generally be started within two years of the death. The underlying injury claim may carry its own deadline — many personal injury cases run three years CPLR §214, while medical malpractice runs roughly two and a half years CPLR §214-a. If a government entity is involved, a Notice of Claim is usually due within 90 days GML §50-e. Because getting a representative appointed by the Surrogate’s Court takes time, families should not wait until a deadline is near.

What to do if you’re in this position

If you have lost a family member and believe someone else is at fault, the practical first steps are to determine who can serve as the estate’s representative, begin the Surrogate’s Court process to obtain that authority, and preserve evidence and records before deadlines run. Every situation turns on its own facts, and outcomes vary — what one family recovers tells you little about another, and prior results do not guarantee any future outcome. Speaking with a New York attorney early helps protect both the family’s wrongful death claim and the estate’s survival claim. To understand how this works when the person you would be suing has also died, see the related questions below.

Frequently asked questions

Can a family member sue directly for someone who died?

Not in their own name automatically. A surviving spouse, child, or parent must first be appointed by the Surrogate's Court as the executor or administrator of the estate. Once they have that authority, they can bring the claim for the estate and, where it applies, for the family.

What is the difference between a wrongful death claim and a survival action?

A wrongful death claim compensates surviving family members for financial losses caused by the death, such as lost support and funeral costs. A survival action recovers what the deceased person suffered before dying, like conscious pain and suffering. Both are usually brought by the same estate representative but recover different things.

How long do I have to file in New York?

A wrongful death action in New York must generally be filed within two years of the date of death. The underlying injury claim may have its own deadline, and shorter notice rules can apply when a government entity is involved. Because getting appointed as representative takes time, it is best not to delay.

Who receives the money from a wrongful death case?

Wrongful death recoveries are distributed to the surviving family members based on the financial loss each one suffered. Survival action recoveries become part of the estate and pass according to the will or New York's intestacy rules. The amounts depend entirely on the facts, and prior results do not guarantee any outcome.

Do I need a will to bring the lawsuit?

No. If there is no will, a close family member can ask the Surrogate's Court to appoint them as administrator of the estate. That appointment gives them the legal standing to pursue claims connected to the death.

Laurence P. Banville

Reviewed by Laurence P. Banville, Esq.

Managing Partner, Banville Law · New York & D.C. Bars

Laurence Banville is a New York personal injury attorney and the Managing Partner of Banville Law. Born in County Wexford, Ireland, he earned his law degree summa cum laude from University College Dublin and once defended insurance companies in product-liability litigation — experience he now uses for injured New Yorkers. He has been named to the Irish Legal 100 and the Irish Echo’s Top 40 Under 40, and is an AVVO Rated attorney.

NY Bar D.C. Bar Irish Legal 100 AVVO Rated AAJ Member

Read Laurence’s full bio →

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