When a family loses someone on a Robertsdale road — on US-90, AL-59 (the primary north-south corridor), Baldwin County Highway 104, and the US-90/AL-59 intersection at the center of the city — the grief is immediate and the legal questions are urgent. Who is liable? What can the family do under Alabama law? And how does an Alabama wrongful death case actually work?
At Simmons Law, Chris Simmons personally handles wrongful death cases for families throughout Baldwin County, including Robertsdale. He knows the roads where these tragedies happen and he understands an Alabama legal framework that most families have never encountered before.
Alabama's Wrongful Death Law Is Different From Every Surrounding State
Alabama Code § 6-5-410 is a punitive wrongful death statute — not a compensatory one. That distinction changes everything. In Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, and Mississippi, wrongful death damages are calculated based on the economic value of the deceased's life: lost wages, lost companionship, survivor grief. In Alabama, the jury decides how much to punish the defendant for the wrongfulness of their conduct.
This means an Alabama wrongful death verdict can be very different from what a family would receive in a neighboring state for the same crash. The damages go to the deceased's estate — not directly to surviving family members — and the amount is determined by the jury's assessment of how reckless or negligent the defendant was. A driver who ignored federal safety regulations or ran a red light at high speed faces more exposure than one who made an ordinary mistake.
Fatal Crash Patterns in Robertsdale
Robertsdale sits at the crossroads of US-90 and AL-59, two of Baldwin County's busiest corridors. The US-90/AL-59 intersection handles a high volume of commercial vehicle traffic moving between Mobile and the beach communities. Distribution and warehouse trucks use Robertsdale as a staging point, and during summer beach season AL-59 carries beach traffic at a pace the road was not designed for.
Alabama Law That Applies to This Case
Alabama's respondeat superior doctrine — when a commercial driver causes a fatal crash while working, both the driver and the employer are liable. In Robertsdale's warehouse and distribution corridor, identifying the employing company and establishing the driver was on the clock is a critical first step.
The Two-Year Deadline Under Alabama Law
Alabama Code § 6-2-38 gives families two years from the date of death to file a wrongful death claim. This deadline is absolute. Alabama courts do not extend it for hardship, grief, or delay in learning about legal rights. Missing it means permanent loss of the right to pursue accountability.
The practical deadline is far earlier than two years. Traffic camera footage overwrites within weeks. Witness memories fade. Physical crash scene evidence disappears. South Baldwin Regional Medical Center in Foley (~15 minutes) is the nearest hospital with emergency surgery capability. The sooner a family contacts Chris Simmons, the more evidence can be preserved.
How Chris Simmons Handles Wrongful Death Cases in Robertsdale
Chris Simmons is a personal injury attorney licensed in Alabama, representing families in Mobile County and Baldwin County. He handles every wrongful death case personally — not a paralegal, not a case manager. When a family from Robertsdale calls Simmons Law, Chris Simmons answers.
Simmons Law takes wrongful death cases on a contingency fee basis. There is no fee unless the case resolves in the family's favor. The initial consultation is free. Chris Simmons can be reached directly at (251) 306-8333.
