Trent Speckhals Argues "Full Value of Life" En Route to $5M Verdict in Car Crash Trial

Javascript is required to watch this video

If you have enabled JavaScript and still cannot play the video, please contact support.

A plaintiff can recover “the full value of a deceased’s life” in a Georgia wrongful death suit. However, where the bulk of a damage claim is for non-economic value, or what made the lost life at the heart of a case special, the damages argument becomes more complicated. In a wrongful death case involving a 22-year-old hairstylist and mother of two, Trent Speckhals’ closing argument emphasized the importance of non-economic damages and helped deliver a hefty award.

Fatima Bird died in a late night, 2008 head-on wreck with Otis South, a drunk driver traveling the wrong way on I-20 in Douglas County, Georgia. 

In closings of last month’s trial, defense attorneys asked jurors to award Bird's family between $500,000 and $1 million for the loss of the part-time hairstylist and mother of two young children. 

However, Speckhals Law’s Trent Speckhals highlighted the special nature of the non-economic underlying the case. “We live in a society where a Ferrari car, a Ferrari, recently sold for $54 million. Think about that. A silver dollar just sold for $10 million. Why were they so expensive? It’s because our society puts great value in rare and unique things,” Speckhals said, arguing a $10 million award for Bird’s death might not be enough. “Is there anything more rare and unique than an individual person?”

Calling the case “about a life that will never be,” Speckhals reminded jurors of testimony from Bird’s family and friends, and the possibilities that had been cut short by the fatal wreck. “At 22, her future held all sorts of promises. We don’t know exactly what her life would have become,” Speckhals said, noting Bird’s love for hairstyling, the law, and forensics could have led her along a variety of careers.

Speckhals added Bird’s potentially most tragic loss fell with the life she would never share with her children, who were 2 and 10 months old when their mother died. “She’s never going to hear the four most beautiful words a mother could hear,”Speckhals said. “She never got to hear, ‘I love you, Mommy.”

The jury awarded $5.35 million.

View Similar Clips

More from the Proceeding
Mitchell v. Administrator of the Estate of South
More from Industry
Transportation
More from Practice Area
Transportation

Suggest a Trial

Want to see a trial that you don't see in our list of upcoming trials?

Suggest a Case

CVN Essentials

The most important and informative moments of each trial

CVN Essentials

Video Library

Unlimited access to thousands of hours of past coverage of high stakes civil litigation

Video Library

  • Follow Us
  • Contact Us
  • 4901 Olde Towne Parkway
  • Suite 100
  • Marietta, GA 30068
  • 877-834-8627
  • 404-935-0321

Copyright 2024 Courtroom Connect.