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Generally
speaking,
an
owner
of
property
may
not
use
deadly
force
to
defend
the
property.
Society
values
human
life
and
bodily
integrity
much
more
than
property.
Therefore,
the
life,
health
and
safety
of
an
individual,
even
an
intruder,
is
considered
to
be
more
valuable
than
the
china
or
stereo
which
that
individual
is
trying
to
steal.
An
owner
is
not
prohibited,
however,
from
invoking
self-help
methods
in
defending
property
from
another.
An
owner
of
property
is
entitled
to
use
reasonable
force
to
prevent
someone,
or
something,
from
entering
onto
her
property
or
to
remove
something
from
her
property.
What,
under
normal
circumstances,
may
constitute
a
battery,
assault,
or
other
intentional
tort,
will
not
be
considered
unlawful
in
situations
where
it
is
performed
as a
reasonable
use
of
self-help
in
defense
of
property.
However,
the
use
of
force
calculated
to
do
great
bodily
harm,
or
cause
death,
is
not
permitted.
One
narrow
limitation
upon
the
use
of
deadly
force
is
authorized.
Where
an
intruder
threatens
personal
safety,
as
well
as a
threat
to
property,
or
where
the
intruder
is
committing
a
forcible
felony,
deadly
force
may
be
appropriate.
For
example,
if a
robber
enters
a
home
and,
while
stealing
items,
attempts
to
rape
the
homeowner,
the
owner
may
be
justified
in
shooting
the
robber.
However,
an
owner
who
witnesses
a
neighborhood
child
stealing
a
bicycle
from
the
owner's
garage,
without
any
threat
of
bodily
harm,
is
not
justified
in
shooting
that
child.
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No.
Generally,
most
states
that
recognize
a
wrongful
death
cause
of
action
limit
the
pool
of
potential
plaintiffs.
Some
states
limit
this
group
to
the
deceased's
primary
beneficiaries,
defined
as
the
surviving
spouse
and
the
deceased's
children.
Other
states
allow
the
parents
of
the
deceased
individual
to
bring
a
wrongful
death
claim.
In
addition
to
these
individuals,
some
states
recognize
the
rights
of
any
dependent,
whether
closely
related
or
not,
to
bring
a
wrongful
death
claim
provided
the
person
actually
depended
on
the
deceased
for
economic
support.
In
those
jurisdictions,
it
apparently
makes
little
to
no
sense
to
allow
the
second
cousin
once
removed
of
the
deceased,
who
saw
him
once
every
five
years
at a
family
reunion,
to
recover
for
the
loss
of
the
deceased's
future
earning
potential.
Some
states
require
any
recovery
gained
in a
wrongful
death
action
to
be
divided
amongst
the
deceased's
heirs
at
law
or
to
be
distributed
to
the
deceased's
heirs
at
law
as
it
would
be
in
any
normal
probate
proceeding.
In
these
situations,
distant
relatives
may
receive
some
"trickle
down"
of
damages,
even
though
they
were
not
financially
dependent
upon
the
deceased
during
his
life.
If
more
than
one
plaintiff
is
entitled
to
recover,
all
plaintiffs
will
share
in
the
award.
The
manner
in
which
the
award
is
divided
can
be
confusing
and
will
depend
upon
the
laws
in
the
particular
jurisdiction
where
the
matter
is
brought.
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