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Plantation sits at the geographic heart of Broward County—west of Fort Lauderdale, north of I-595, east of I-75, and surrounded by major business and medical districts. Home to over 85,000 residents in approximately 37,000 households, Plantation is a hub of corporate offices, professional centers, major shopping districts, and family neighborhoods. According to the Florida Department of Health, Florida sees over 50,000 preventable deaths annually, and Broward County contributes thousands of these. From crashes on Broward Boulevard, University Drive, and State Road 7 to fatal incidents at apartment complexes and shopping centers, deaths at HCA Florida Westside Hospital, and accidents on I-595 and the Florida Turnpike, these tragedies leave Plantation families navigating both grief and a complicated legal system.
Florida’s Wrongful Death Act provides a path forward. It can’t bring your loved one back, but it can hold the responsible party accountable and provide financial support for survivors.
At Madalon Injury Law, our Fort Lauderdale accident attorneys and Broward accident attorneys represent wrongful death families throughout Plantation and across Broward County. We understand Plantation’s unique character—its corporate corridors, dense road network, shopping districts, and the specific legal landscape these create. We handle the legal fight while you focus on healing.
If you’ve lost a loved one due to negligence in Plantation, call us for a free consultation. We don’t get paid unless you win.
Plantation occupies a strategic location in central Broward County that creates wrongful death patterns distinct from coastal Broward cities like Fort Lauderdale or Hollywood, and different from western planned communities like Pembroke Pines.
Plantation’s Location and Boundaries:
Plantation is positioned:
This central position means Plantation sits at the intersection of major Broward County traffic flows. Commuters traveling between Fort Lauderdale, Miami-Dade, and western Broward all pass through or near Plantation.
Plantation Population and Demographics:
Plantation has approximately 85,000-93,000 residents across about 37,000 households. The city’s character includes:
Plantation’s Distinct Character:
Unlike Hollywood (beach city), Pembroke Pines (planned residential community), or Coral Springs (master-planned suburban), Plantation has a more mixed-use commercial/residential character:
How Plantation’s Geography Affects Wrongful Death Patterns:
This mixed-use, central-Broward character creates specific wrongful death risks:
Plantation’s Position in Broward County:
According to the Florida Department of Health, Broward County sees thousands of preventable deaths annually. According to the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (FLHSMV), Florida exceeds 3,500 traffic fatalities annually, with Broward County consistently ranking among the state’s deadliest counties.
While Plantation doesn’t publish city-specific wrongful death statistics, the city’s central location, dense road network, and commercial activity make it a significant contributor to Broward County’s wrongful death numbers.
“Plantation’s central location in Broward County means it sees commuters from across South Florida, dense commercial activity, and a crisscrossing road network that creates wrongful death risks at almost every major intersection. Understanding this geography is the first step to building a strong case.”
Sources: Florida Department of Health, FLHSMV, U.S. Census Bureau
Plantation’s road network combines high-speed highways with dense urban arterials. Each road type creates different wrongful death risks.
Broward Boulevard runs east-west through the heart of Plantation, connecting Fort Lauderdale to western Broward. The corridor through Plantation includes major office buildings, shopping centers, and the Plantation City Hall area.
Why Broward Boulevard creates wrongful death risk in Plantation:
Notable Broward Boulevard sections in Plantation:
University Drive runs north-south through Plantation as one of the city’s busiest corridors. The road serves shopping centers, restaurants, professional offices, and residential areas.
Why University Drive is dangerous:
Notable University Drive sections in Plantation:
Sunrise Boulevard runs east-west through northern Plantation, connecting east Broward to Sawgrass Mills and beyond.
Why Sunrise Boulevard creates risk:
State Road 7 (also called US-441) runs north-south through eastern Plantation as a major commercial corridor.
Why State Road 7 is dangerous:
Pine Island Road runs north-south through Plantation, connecting to surrounding cities.
Pine Island Road risk factors:
These corridors serve Plantation’s neighborhoods and commercial areas with significant local traffic.
I-595 forms Plantation’s southern border. The highway connects east Broward (Port Everglades, Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport) to west Broward.
Why I-595 is dangerous:
Notable I-595 sections affecting Plantation:
I-75 runs along Plantation’s western edge, connecting Miami-Dade to northern Broward and beyond.
Why I-75 is dangerous:
The Florida Turnpike runs through eastern Plantation as a high-speed toll road.
Why the Turnpike is dangerous:
Among Plantation’s high-traffic intersections:
“Plantation’s road network creates a perfect storm of wrongful death risk: high-speed interstates on the borders, dense commercial arterials in the center, and dozens of major intersections handling massive daily traffic volumes.”
Source: FLHSMV
Plantation’s mixed commercial/residential character produces specific wrongful death scenarios.
Motor vehicle crashes account for a significant portion of Plantation wrongful deaths. Common scenarios include:
According to FLHSMV, Florida has the highest pedestrian death rate in the nation. Plantation contributes due to:
Plantation continues to see development—new commercial buildings, residential redevelopment (including Plantation Walk), and infrastructure projects. Construction wrongful deaths can occur from:
According to OSHA, construction falls remain a leading cause of workplace deaths nationwide.
Liability: Workers’ compensation covers most workplace deaths, but third-party claims allow families to pursue full damages against general contractors, property owners, equipment manufacturers, and other responsible parties.
Plantation’s medical facilities (HCA Florida Westside Hospital and others) and proximity to major Broward medical districts create medical malpractice wrongful death exposure. Common scenarios:
According to research from Johns Hopkins Medicine, medical errors are a leading cause of death in the United States.
Medical malpractice cases in Florida require pre-suit investigation under Florida Statute 766, including obtaining a medical expert affidavit before filing.
Plantation’s senior community and surrounding facilities serve elderly residents. Common nursing home wrongful deaths involve:
The Florida Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) oversees Florida facilities. Families can review inspection reports and file complaints.
Manufacturers can face liability for defective vehicles, medical devices, consumer products, and other items causing wrongful death.
Plantation’s mixed-use character—with major shopping centers, apartment complexes, corporate offices, and commercial districts—makes premises liability wrongful deaths particularly relevant to this Broward County city. This is one of the categories that distinguishes Plantation from more residential cities.
Plantation hosts major retail destinations including Westfield Broward Mall, The Fountains, the redeveloping Plantation Walk, and dozens of strip shopping centers along major arterials.
Wrongful death scenarios at shopping centers:
Liability: Property owners, mall management, security companies, and sometimes specific tenants can face liability when negligence contributes to wrongful death. Florida law requires property owners to provide reasonably safe premises and reasonable security based on the circumstances.
Plantation has numerous mid-rise apartment complexes and condominium communities. Apartment complex wrongful deaths can involve:
Inadequate Security:
Swimming Pool Drownings:
Falls:
Fire and Carbon Monoxide:
Liability: Property owners, management companies, and sometimes maintenance contractors can face liability for inadequate security, defective conditions, or failure to maintain safe premises.
Plantation hosts numerous corporate offices and professional centers. Wrongful deaths at corporate properties can involve:
Plantation has hotels serving business travelers and visitors. Hospitality wrongful deaths can include:
Premises liability wrongful death cases require proving:
Evidence often includes:
Insurance companies aggressively defend premises liability cases. Plantation wrongful death lawyers familiar with retail, residential, and commercial property cases are essential to recovery.
“Plantation’s massive shopping centers, dense apartment complexes, and corporate office districts create premises liability wrongful death scenarios that don’t dominate other Broward cities. We handle the full spectrum—from shopping center parking lot incidents to apartment complex security failures to corporate property accidents.”
When wrongful death occurs in Plantation, victims are typically taken to one of several Broward County hospitals. Understanding these facilities helps families gather evidence and pursue cases.
Location: 8201 W Broward Blvd, Plantation, FL 33324
HCA Florida Westside Hospital (formerly known as Plantation General Hospital) is the primary hospital located in Plantation. The facility provides:
Wrongful death relevance:
Location: 6401 N Federal Hwy, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308
While located in Fort Lauderdale, Broward Health Imperial Point serves northern Broward and provides emergency and surgical services.
Location: 3501 Johnson Street, Hollywood, FL 33021
Severely injured Plantation trauma victims may be transported to Memorial Regional Hospital in Hollywood, Broward County’s southern Level 1 Adult Trauma Center.
Location: 1600 S Andrews Avenue, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316
Plantation trauma victims may also be transported to Broward Health Medical Center, Broward County’s other Level 1 Adult Trauma Center.
Location: 2950 Cleveland Clinic Blvd, Weston, FL 33331
Cleveland Clinic Florida’s main Florida campus is located just west of Plantation in Weston. The facility serves western Broward residents and may treat Plantation patients for specialized care.
Location: 5301 SW 31st Avenue, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33312
The Broward County Medical Examiner’s Office investigates deaths throughout Broward County, including Plantation.
When autopsies are required:
Florida law (Florida Statute 406) requires medical examiner investigation in:
What the medical examiner does:
Why autopsy reports matter in wrongful death cases:
Autopsy reports are public records in Florida (with some exceptions). Families can request copies from the Broward County Medical Examiner’s Office. Reports typically take weeks to complete.
“HCA Florida Westside Hospital handles many Plantation emergencies, with severe trauma cases transferred to Memorial Regional or Broward Health Medical Center. Medical records and Broward County Medical Examiner autopsy reports are critical evidence in Plantation wrongful death cases.”
Plantation wrongful death cases proceed under Florida’s Wrongful Death Act, codified at Florida Statutes Chapter 768, specifically Sections 768.16 through 768.26.
Under Florida Statute 768.20, only the personal representative of the deceased’s estate can file a wrongful death lawsuit. This is true whether the death occurred in Plantation, anywhere in Broward County, or anywhere else in Florida.
The personal representative:
Plantation wrongful death cases require opening probate in Broward County Circuit Court, Probate Division (Broward County Courthouse, 201 SE 6th Street, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301).
Florida Statute 768.21 divides wrongful death damages between survivors and the estate.
Survivors who can recover:
The estate can recover:
Economic damages:
Non-economic damages:
Punitive damages: Punitive damages are rare in Florida wrongful death cases. They require proof of intentional misconduct or gross negligence—a higher standard than ordinary negligence. Most wrongful death cases proceed on compensatory damages only.
Under Florida Statute 95.11, wrongful death lawsuits must be filed within two years of the date of death. This is one of the shortest statutes of limitations in Florida personal injury law (compared to four years for most personal injury cases).
The deadline is strictly enforced. Missing it means losing the right to sue permanently. Limited exceptions exist (such as for cases involving murder or manslaughter), but these are narrow.
The two-year clock runs from the date of death, not from when a personal representative is appointed. If probate is delayed, families risk missing the filing deadline. Plantation wrongful death cases require prompt action.
Florida uses pure comparative negligence under Florida Statute 768.81. If the deceased was partially at fault for their own death, damages are reduced by their fault percentage—but recovery is still possible.
Example: If damages total $1,000,000 and the deceased was 25% at fault: $1,000,000 × 75% = $750,000 recovery
Insurance companies aggressively try to maximize the deceased’s fault percentage to reduce payouts. Common defense arguments include:
Strong legal representation is critical to minimizing fault attribution.
In wrongful death cases, the plaintiff must prove the case by a preponderance of the evidence—meaning it’s more likely than not that the defendant’s negligence caused the death. This is the civil standard for all Florida cases. It is significantly lower than the criminal “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard.
Sovereign Immunity Caps: If the lawsuit is against a Florida government entity (City of Plantation, Broward County, State of Florida, government employees acting within their employment), damages are capped at:
Higher recovery requires the Florida Legislature to pass a claims bill—a slow, uncertain process.
Notice requirements differ when suing government entities. Failure to comply with notice provisions can bar the claim entirely.
Medical Malpractice Caps: Florida previously imposed caps on non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases. The Florida Supreme Court has struck down many of these caps as unconstitutional. Current law is complex and case-specific.
Most Plantation wrongful death cases have no damage caps. Cases against private individuals, businesses, or property owners proceed without statutory limits.
Plantation wrongful death cases often involve multiple liable parties:
Identifying all liable parties maximizes available insurance coverage and assets for recovery.
Plantation wrongful death cases proceed through Broward County Circuit Court using a specific legal process.
Within days of death, file a petition for administration in Broward County Circuit Court, Probate Division.
The court appoints a personal representative (typically the surviving spouse or, if none, the heir selected by family). This takes 4-8 weeks if uncontested—longer if family members dispute the appointment.
Critical: Florida’s two-year wrongful death statute runs from the date of death, not from probate appointment. Don’t delay opening probate.
Plantation wrongful death lawyers investigate the case:
Before filing a lawsuit, attempts are typically made to resolve the case with the at-fault party’s insurance company. Pre-suit settlements can occur if liability is clear and damages are documented.
The personal representative files the wrongful death complaint in Broward County Circuit Court (Broward County Courthouse, 201 SE 6th Street, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301).
The complaint identifies defendants, describes the cause of action, and requests damages.
Both sides exchange evidence through:
Discovery typically takes 6-12 months in Plantation wrongful death cases.
Broward County courts require mediation before trial in most wrongful death cases. A neutral mediator (often a retired Broward County judge) facilitates settlement negotiations.
The vast majority of Plantation wrongful death cases settle at or before mediation. Settlement is faster, cheaper, more certain, and more private than trial.
If mediation fails, the case proceeds to trial in Broward County Circuit Court.
A jury of 6-12 people drawn from Broward County hears evidence and decides:
Plantation wrongful death trials typically last 3-10 days depending on complexity.
Once a settlement or verdict is reached and paid:
If you’ve lost a loved one in Plantation:
What if my loved one died at a Plantation shopping center or mall?
Shopping center wrongful deaths can give rise to premises liability claims against the property owner, management company, security company, and sometimes specific tenants. Common scenarios include parking lot crashes, slip-and-falls, escalator accidents, falling objects, and inadequate security incidents like assaults or homicides. Evidence includes maintenance records, security incident reports, prior complaints about hazards, surveillance footage, and witness statements. Westfield Broward Mall, The Fountains, Plantation Walk, and dozens of strip shopping centers throughout the city all generate premises liability cases.
What if my loved one died at a Plantation apartment complex?
Apartment complex wrongful deaths often involve inadequate security (assaults, robberies, homicides in parking lots, common areas, or units), swimming pool drownings, falls due to defective stairs or balconies, and fire or carbon monoxide deaths. Property owners and management companies can be held liable for failing to maintain reasonably safe premises. Evidence includes maintenance records, prior security incidents, lease documents, inspection reports, and surveillance footage. Inadequate security cases often require proving the property owner knew or should have known about prior criminal activity.
Can I sue the City of Plantation for wrongful death?
Yes, but Florida’s sovereign immunity caps damages at $200,000 per person and $300,000 per incident. Higher recovery requires the Florida Legislature to pass a claims bill. Notice requirements differ from suing private parties. City liability might arise from dangerous road conditions, inadequate signage, traffic signal failures, or negligence by city employees. These cases require lawyers experienced in suing Florida government entities.
What if my loved one died on I-595 or I-75 near Plantation?
Highway crashes near Plantation typically proceed under Florida law in Broward County Circuit Court, regardless of which exit was nearest. Crashes on I-595 frequently involve commercial trucks, port traffic, and high-speed merge collisions. I-75 crashes often involve cross-county commuters between Miami-Dade and Broward. Trucking companies, employers, vehicle manufacturers, and impaired drivers can all face liability. These cases often require accident reconstruction experts.
What if my loved one died at HCA Florida Westside Hospital?
Medical malpractice wrongful death cases against HCA Florida Westside Hospital (or any Florida hospital) require pre-suit investigation under Florida Statute 766. You must obtain a medical expert affidavit before filing suit. Common malpractice scenarios include misdiagnosis, surgical errors, anesthesia errors, medication errors, and hospital-acquired infections. Medical records, expert testimony, and Florida pre-suit procedures are critical to these cases.
What if my loved one died at a Plantation corporate office or business district?
Corporate property wrongful deaths can involve falls, elevator accidents, parking garage incidents, and inadequate security. Property owners owe a duty of reasonable care to invitees (customers, clients, visitors) and licensees. Liability depends on whether the owner met that duty given the circumstances. Plantation’s Broward Boulevard corporate corridor and University Drive office complexes generate these cases.
How long do Plantation wrongful death cases take?
Pre-suit settlements: 6 months to a year. Cases that file suit and settle: 1-2 years. Cases going to trial in Broward County: 2-3+ years. Appeals can add another 1-2 years. Plantation cases proceed in Broward County Circuit Court, which has heavy caseloads. Mediation requirements often lead to settlement before trial. Timeline depends on case complexity, disputed liability, court schedules, and insurance company cooperation.
What if the at-fault driver in a Plantation crash was uninsured or underinsured?
Check whether your loved one had uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage on their own auto policy. Florida UM/UIM coverage often applies to wrongful death and can provide substantial recovery even when the at-fault driver lacks coverage. You can also sue the at-fault driver personally, though collection from individuals without assets is difficult. Multi-party cases sometimes uncover other liable parties (employers, bars under dram shop liability, vehicle manufacturers) with insurance or assets.
What if my loved one was killed in a Plantation construction accident?
Workers’ compensation provides limited benefits for workplace deaths—typically funeral expenses and a portion of lost wages. However, third-party wrongful death claims allow families to pursue full damages against general contractors, property owners, equipment manufacturers, subcontractors, and other parties not protected by workers’ comp immunity. These claims can recover far more than workers’ comp alone. OSHA reports, safety records, and expert testimony are critical.
Can adult children recover in a Plantation wrongful death case?
Florida law restricts adult children’s recovery. Adult children (25+) can only recover for mental pain and suffering if there is no surviving spouse. If a spouse survives, adult children typically cannot recover unless they were partly or wholly dependent on the deceased. This is one of the most counterintuitive aspects of Florida wrongful death law and surprises many families.
How are Plantation wrongful death settlements distributed?
Survivors’ damages (loss of support, companionship, mental pain/suffering) are distributed to each entitled survivor per Florida Statute 768.21. Estate damages (lost earnings, medical/funeral expenses) are distributed per the deceased’s will or Florida intestacy law. The personal representative collects all damages and distributes them under Broward County probate court oversight. Settlements involving minor survivors require court approval.
Do Plantation wrongful death settlements get taxed?
Generally no. Under IRS rules, wrongful death compensation for personal injury or death is not taxable income. Punitive damages (if awarded) and pre-judgment interest may be taxable. Florida has no state income tax. Consult a tax professional for case-specific advice.
What if my loved one died in a hit-and-run in Plantation?
Hit-and-run wrongful deaths can still result in recovery. Even if the at-fault driver isn’t identified, your loved one’s uninsured motorist coverage often applies. If the driver is later identified, you can sue them and any liable third parties (employers, insurance carriers). Plantation Police Department and Broward Sheriff’s Office investigate hit-and-runs. Surveillance footage from nearby businesses is often critical.
What if my loved one was killed in a swimming pool drowning at a Plantation property?
Swimming pool drownings can give rise to wrongful death claims. Florida law has specific pool safety requirements: fencing, self-closing gates, alarms, and safety equipment. Property owners, pool maintenance companies, and others can face liability for failing to maintain required safety measures. Apartment complex pools, hotel pools, and residential pools all generate cases. Evidence includes pool inspection records, maintenance logs, witness statements, and autopsy reports.
Can I file a wrongful death claim if my loved one was partially at fault?
Yes. Florida uses pure comparative negligence under Florida Statute 768.81. Even if your loved one was partially at fault, you recover damages reduced by their fault percentage. For example, 30% fault on $1 million in damages results in $700,000 recovery. Insurance companies aggressively try to maximize the deceased’s fault percentage—which is why strong legal representation is critical.
What if my loved one was killed by a drunk driver leaving a Plantation bar?
Florida’s dram shop law (Florida Statute 768.125) allows claims against bars or restaurants that served alcohol to: (1) a person they knew was habitually addicted to alcohol, or (2) a person under the legal drinking age. Standard intoxication doesn’t trigger dram shop liability under Florida law (which is more restrictive than many states). The drunk driver remains personally liable and may face criminal charges separately from the civil wrongful death case.
What if my loved one died from medical malpractice at a Plantation hospital?
Florida medical malpractice cases require strict pre-suit procedures under Florida Statute 766. You must serve notice of intent to sue and obtain a medical expert affidavit confirming reasonable grounds before filing suit. The pre-suit investigation period is itself constrained by deadlines. Medical malpractice cases require lawyers familiar with these specialized procedures—general personal injury lawyers without medical malpractice experience often miss critical deadlines or procedures.
Can I sue a Plantation property management company for inadequate security?
Yes, if the property owner or manager failed to provide reasonable security given the circumstances. Florida requires “reasonable” security based on the property type, location, and known risks. Apartment complexes, shopping centers, hotels, and commercial properties can face inadequate security claims when assaults, homicides, or other crimes occur due to security failures. Evidence includes prior crime reports for the property, security incident records, security industry standards, and witness statements.
What if my loved one was killed in a crash on Broward Boulevard or University Drive?
Plantation’s busiest arterials—Broward Boulevard, University Drive, Sunrise Boulevard, and State Road 7—account for many of the city’s traffic wrongful deaths. These cases proceed under Florida law in Broward County Circuit Court. Liability investigation includes police reports, traffic signal timing analysis, witness statements, surveillance footage from nearby businesses, vehicle data, and accident reconstruction. Multi-party claims often include the at-fault driver, their employer (if commercial vehicle), bars (if alcohol involved), and vehicle manufacturers (if defect contributed).
The unexpected death of a loved one is devastating. Florida’s wrongful death laws, Broward County probate, tight deadlines, and aggressive insurance companies make an already painful situation overwhelming. At Madalon Injury Law, we represent wrongful death families throughout Plantation and Broward County. We handle the legal fight while you focus on grieving and healing.
We Understand Plantation
We’ve handled wrongful death cases throughout Plantation and Broward County involving:
We Know Broward County Courts
Plantation wrongful death cases proceed in Broward County Circuit Court. We practice there regularly. We understand:
We Coordinate with Plantation Police and Local Investigators
Plantation wrongful death cases often involve coordination with:
We know how to obtain reports, work with investigators, and preserve evidence before it disappears.
We Work with Top Experts
Plantation wrongful death cases require expert testimony:
We have relationships with top experts in their fields.
We Navigate Broward County Probate
Plantation wrongful death cases require opening probate in Broward County. We coordinate with probate counsel (or handle probate ourselves) to:
We Fight Insurance Companies
We see through insurance company tactics:
We’ve represented Plantation families against major insurance carriers and know how to push back.
We’re Prepared for Trial
When settlements aren’t fair, we take cases to trial in Broward County Circuit Court. We know:
We Work on Contingency
You pay nothing upfront. No retainer. No hourly fees. We only collect if we recover for you. This contingency model means Plantation families can pursue their cases regardless of financial circumstances. The same approach used by our Fort Lauderdale accident attorneys and Broward accident attorneys.
We Treat Your Family with Compassion
Wrongful death cases are different from other legal matters. You’re not just a client—you’re a grieving family. We treat you with respect, compassion, and care:
Contact Plantation Wrongful Death Lawyers
If you’ve lost a loved one due to negligence in Plantation, you’re facing one of life’s hardest experiences. You shouldn’t navigate Broward County courts, Florida’s wrongful death laws, and insurance companies alone.
The Plantation wrongful death lawyers at Madalon Injury Law represent families throughout Plantation and Broward County. We understand Plantation’s geography, its dangerous road network, its commercial and residential character, and the legal landscape these create. We have the experience to handle even the most complex Plantation wrongful death cases.
Call us today for a FREE consultation.
No fees unless we win.
Contact Madalon Injury Law