I am sorry for your tragic loss. I know financial remuneration can never compensate for a life lost and, as such, a discussion of limits, "value" and such are somewhat out of place. Unfortunately, these determinations do come into play and must be addressed. I have to tell you that there are far too many factual details that would have to be covered, insurance contracts to look at, defendant's circumstances to consider, etc., to be able to give you an idea of what may be payable in the circumstances. Yes, there are typically maximums in coverage and reaching those maximums then leads to other questions. Assuming you have an attorney, I suggest a scheduled, sit-down consultation with your attorney, to review the insurance coverage, any other likely source of funds or liability (such as other insurance coverage), the strengths of the case and, if any, the weaknesses, the possible risks and advantages of going to trial, etc. A polite, calm discussion should provide you the reassurance you need (as often good attorneys nevertheless assume you understand the enough about advice being given and need some prompting to communicate more effectively about the case). If you meet with the attorney and remain concerned about the advice, then you should consider a second opinion, but understand that changing attorneys can create new issues (legal work already done by someone else, time constraints of preparing the case, fee splitting, etc.). So, you will find attorneys cautious in taking over a case. If you are working without an attorney, you should immediately reconsider....
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