OPINION
1. INTRODUCTION
We granted review to determine whether a surviving spouse’s wrongful death proceeds should be included within the decedent’s augmented estate as property of the surviving spouse, thereby offsetting the surviving spouse’s elective share. The superior court included the wrongful death proceeds in the augmented estate on the theory that it was property owned by the surviving spouse at the decedent’s death. Because we conclude that any interest in wrongful death proceeds is not owned by the surviving spouse at the time of the decedent’s death, we reverse the decision of the superior court. However, because proceeds from survivorship claims should be classified as probate assets, we remand to the superior court to determine what portion, if any, of the settlement agreement represented payment for the decedent’s survivorship claims, and to include that amount within the augmented estate.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Florian Maldonado, Jr., the decedent, died testate on November 28, 1999 due to meso-thelioma, a type of lung cancer caused by exposure to asbestos. He was survived by his wife, Barbara Maldonado, and two minor children, Jaden and Cherish Maldonado. Florian adopted Jaden and Cherish before his marriage to Barbara and was the children’s sole legal parent.
On November 22, 1999 Florian executed a will devising to Barbara “her elective share, homestead allowance, and family allowance as provided by AS 13.12.202,
Before he died, Florian filed suit in Washington against numerous asbestos manufacturers and suppliers alleging injury from asbestosis, and some of these claims were settled before his death. After Flori-an died, the estate’s personal representative added claims against these defendants for wrongful death. Shortly thereafter, the estate settled these claims for approximately $945,000. The settlement agreements purported to resolve all claims against the defendants, including wrongful death, “surviving personal injury” claims, loss of consortium, and other claims. Barbara and the guardian ad litem (GAL) then agreed to distribute forty percent of the net settlement proceeds to Barbara and thirty percent to each of the children.
Pursuant to the will, Barbara sought to collect her elective share of the decedent’s augmented estate under AS 13.12.202. The GAL argued that Barbara’s interest in the wrongful death proceeds should be included in the decedent’s augmented estate under AS 13.12.207, on the theory that Barbara owned this interest at the time of Florian’s death, and accordingly moved for partial summary judgment on this issue. Barbara opposed the motion.
We granted Barbara’s petition for review on this issue.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, determining whether there are any genuine issues of material fact and whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
IV. DISCUSSION
Whether a surviving spouse’s interest in a wrongful death recovery is included in the decedent’s augmented estate for the elective share calculation is an issue of first impression in Alaska. Barbara argues that the superior court erred in concluding that her interest in a wrongful death recovery is property that she owned at the time of her husband’s death. The GAL counters that such a property interest is owned at death by the surviving spouse and should be included in the augmented estate. Resolution of this question turns on interpretation of Alaska’s elective share statute.
A. Alaska’s Elective Share Law
An elective share statute entitles a surviving spouse to choose to take as provided by the decedent’s will or to take a statutory percentage of the decedent’s augmented estate. Alaska’s elective share law entitles the surviving spouse to take an elective share equal to one-third of the decedent’s augmented estate.
An augmented estate consists of the sum of foui’ types of property: (1) the decedent’s net probate estate;
The drafters of the Uniform Probate Code (UPC) gave two primary justifications for augmenting the probate estate to include various forms of property not actually owned by the decedent at death, when calculating the elective share:
(1) to prevent the owner of wealth from making arrangements which transmit his property to others by means other than probate deliberately to defeat the right of the surviving spouse to a share, and (2) to prevent the surviving spouse from electing a share of the probate estate when the spouse has received a fair share of the total wealth of the decedent either during the lifetime of the decedent or at death by life insurance, joint tenancy assets and other nonprobate arrangements.[15]
The elective share amount under the augmented estate calculation thus attempts to strike a balance between under- and over-inheritance to the surviving spouse.
In 1990 the elective share and augmented estate provisions of the UPC were overhauled with the goal of bringing “elective-share law into line with the contemporary view of marriage as an economic partnership.”
This case requires us to determine whether the wrongful death proceeds realized by Barbara from the settlement with the asbestos manufacturers and suppliers are part of the augmented estate. We consider first whether the proceeds are part of the net probate estate, under AS 13.12.204. Next, we consider the GAL’s argument that they are part of the surviving spouse’s property under AS 13.12.207.
B. Wrongful Death Proceeds to a Spouse Are Not Included in the Net Probate Estate.
We first consider whether proceeds or unlitigated claims of a surviving spouse under Alaska’s wrongful death statute are included within the decedent’s net probate estate, the first category of property in the augmented estate calculation. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that they are not.
An action for wrongful death in Alaska, which was created by statute,
However, as in this case, when the decedent is survived by a spouse, children, or other dependents, the compensation recovered “shall be exclusively for [their] benefit.”
As a consequence of this statutory scheme, we have held that wrongful death proceeds are included in the net probate estate when the decedent is not survived by a spouse, children, or other dependents, but that the proceeds are excluded from the net probate estate when the decedent is survived by such individuals.
C. The Surviving Spouse’s Interest in Wrongful Death Proceeds Is Not Property Owned at Decedent’s Death.
We turn next to the question of whether the wrongful death proceeds can be included under the last category of property within the augmented estate: property owned by the surviving spouse at the decedent’s death.
As mentioned above, the augmented estate includes “the surviving spouse’s property and nonprobate transfers to others.”
(1) property that was owned by the decedent’s surviving spouse at the decedent’s death, including
(A) the surviving spouse’s fractional interest in property held in joint tenancy with the right of survivorship;
(B) the surviving spouse’s ownership interest in property or accounts held in co-*726 ownership registration with the right of survivorship; and
(C) property that passed to the surviving spouse by reason of the decedent’s death, but not including the spouse’s right to homestead allowance, family allowance, exempt property, or payments under 42 U.S.C. 301-1397Í (Social Security Act); and
(2) property that would have been included in the surviving spouse’s nonprobate transfers to others, other than the spouse’s fractional and ownership interests included under (1)(A) or (B) of this subsection, had the spouse been the decedent.
(Emphases added.) Thus, the statute includes both property owned by the surviving spouse at the time of the decedent’s death and property that passed to the surviving spouse by reason of the decedent’s death. The value of the surviving spouse’s property under AS 13.12.207 will be applied to satisfy the elective share before probate assets or nonprobate transfers are touched.
It may well be that a recovery under the wrongful death statute would qualify as “property” under the probate code, regardless of whether the recovery has been reduced to actual proceeds or whether it remains an unlitigated interest. Property is defined expansively as “anything that may be the subject of ownership, and includes both real and personal property and an interest in real or personal property,”
But we need not decide whether to extend the holding of these cases to the present controversy, because even if the wrongful death proceeds are “property” under the probate code, we conclude today that they could not have been owned by the surviving spouse at the time of the decedent’s death, as is required under AS 13.12.207. We reach this conclusion because the wrongful death statute, AS 09.55.580,
Similarly, wrongful death proceeds are not “property that passe[s] to the surviving spouse by reason of the decedent’s death.”
The Second Circuit came to a similar conclusion in an estate tax ease.
We reject the GAL’s attempt to analogize wrongful death proceeds to life insurance proceeds. The payout under a decedent’s life insurance policy represents a nonprobate transfer that is added back into the augmented estate, regardless of whether the beneficiary was the surviving spouse
Alaska legislators looked to the Uniform Probate Code in revising Alaska’s probate laws.
The commentary to the UPC discusses thirty-four examples of property in the augmented estate,
The legislative history behind Alaska’s adoption of its augmented estate provisions is likewise devoid of any reference to a surviving spouse’s interest in wrongful death recovery.
Although it is difficult to determine legislative intent through omissions, we are satisfied that the lack of any mention of wrongful death proceeds within the augmented estate, either by the drafters of the UPC in them extensive commentary, or by Alaska legislators in their discussions of the proposed law, provides support for today’s holding.
2. Policy behind wrongful death recovery
We also find that the policy behind wrongful death recovery militates against including the proceeds within the augmented estate and thereby offsetting the surviving spouse’s inheritance under the elective share. Wrongful death recovery must not be viewed as a form of inheritance or as a property transfer from one spouse to another, or from a parent to a child. Rather, it is an action in tort with the primary purpose of compensating the spouse and any dependents for the losses that they have suffered as a result of the death.
D. The Superior Court on Remand Must Determine What Portion, If Any, of the Recovery Was Attributable to Survivorship Claims.
The above analysis regarding wrongful death claims does not apply to survivor-ship claims. Alaska Statute 09.55.570 permits all causes of action held by a person to survive that person’s death, and allows the action to be pursued by the personal representatives of the estate. The survival action comes into existence at the time of injury and may compensate the victim only for the period between the time of injury and the time of death. Unlike wrongful death claims, surviv-orship claims are wholly derivative of the decedent’s pre-existing causes of action and compensate the estate only for those injuries suffered by the decedent prior to the death; the claims do not compensate the survivors for their own harms.
We have recognized that “[a]ny survivor-ship damages would become part of the decedent’s estate.”
The record is unclear regarding what portion, if any, of the settlements with the asbestos manufacturers and suppliers can be attributed to survivorship claims. While the parties and even the superior court refer to the proceeds solely as wrongful death proceeds, the settlement agreements themselves suggest otherwise. One settlement released the defendant from “all claims for surviving personal injury, loss of consortium, or wrongful death.” The other two settlement agreements purport to settle all wrongful death claims as well as all claims brought by Flori-an prior to his death. These agreements describe both the claims brought by Florian prior to death and the injuries suffered by him, in addition to the wrongful death injuries suffered by family members.
From this language, it may well be that some portion of the $945,000 in settlements compensated the estate for Florian’s surviving causes of action. However, the settlement agreements and the remainder of the record give no clue as to what that portion might be. On remand, the superior court should determine what portion, if any, of the recovery under the settlement agreements is attributable to Florian’s surviving claims, in distinction to the parties’ wrongful death claims. That amount which is deemed sur-vivorship claim recovery should be included in the augmented estate for the purposes of determining Barbara’s elective share. However, that amount which is deemed wrongful death recovery should be excluded.
Y. CONCLUSION
Because wrongful death proceeds are not property owned by the surviving spouse at the time of the decedent’s death, they should not be included within the augmented estate under the elective share statutes. We therefore REVERSE the superior court’s decision to treat all of the settlement proceeds as part of the augmented estate. We REMAND for determination of what portion, if any, of the settlement is attributable to survivorship claims; only that amount may be included within the augmented estate.
Notes
1. AS 13.12.202(a) gives the surviving spouse the right of election "to take an elective share amount equal to one-third of the augmented estate."
2. AS 13.12.402 entitles the surviving spouse to a
3. AS 13.12.404(a) provides that "the decedent's surviving spouse and minor children ... are entitled to a reasonable allowance in money out of the estate for their maintenance during the period of administration.”
. The consequence to Barbara of this legal determination is substantial. The net assets of the probate estate total around $110,000. The inclusion of Barbara's interest in the wrongful death proceeds, $378,000, would therefore dramatically increase the decedent's augmented estate under the probate code. While Barbara's one-third elective share of the augmented estate would accordingly increase in value, the funds used to satisfy her elective share amount would come primarily, if not solely, from her settlement proceeds. See AS 13.12.209(a) and infra n. 37. In other words, she would receive little-to-no distribution from the net assets of the probate estate under the will. In contrast, if Barbara's interest in the settlement is not considered part of the augmented estate, then the settlement amount would be not charged against Barbara, but received in addition to her elective share.
. Mount Juneau Enters., Inc. v. City & Borough of Juneau,
. Carr-Gottstein Props., L.P. v. Benedict,
. AS 13.12.202(a). The Alaska elective share statute only applies to a surviving spouse if the decedent died domiciled within Alaska. Id. The elective share is obtained independently from the
. See Unif. Probate Code, Art. II, Pt. 2, gen. cmt. (Pre-1990 Version), 8 U.L.A. 292 (1998).
. AS 13.12.203. The net probate estate "includes the value of the decedent’s probate estate, reduced by funeral and administrative expenses, homestead allowance, family allowances, exempt property, and enforceable claims.” AS 13.12.204.
. AS 13.12.203. See also AS 13.12.205 (identifying non-probate transfers to non-spouses that are included in augmented estate).
. AS 13.12.203. See also AS 13.12.206 (identifying non-probate transfers to surviving spouse that are included in augmented estate).
. AS 13.12.203. See also AS 13.12.207 (identifying surviving spouse’s property held at time of decedent’s death that is included in augmented estate).
. AS 13.12.203.
. AS 13.06.050(39).
15. Unif. Probate Code § 2-202 cmt. (Pre-1990 Version), 8 U.L.A. 299 (1998).
. Unif. Probate Code, Art II, Pt. 2, gen. cmt. (Revised 1990 Version) (amended 1993), 8 U.L.A. 93 (1998). Professor Lawrence Waggoner describes the 1990 revisions to the UPC's elective share law as using a mechanical formula to ”implement[] the partnership theory by approximation." Lawrence W. Waggoner, Marital Property Rights in Transition, 59 Mo. L.Rev. 21, 52 (1994).
. Rep. Parnell, Sponsor Statement for House Bill (H.B.) 308, 19th Leg., 2d Sess. (1996), in House Jud. Comm. File, H.B. 308. See also 1996 House Journal 2661 (rejecting Rep. Finkelstein’s proposed amendment to H.B. 308 to include § 2-202 of revised UPC establishing accrual theory of election).
. AS 13.12.205, .207, as amended by ch. 75, § 3, SLA 1996; see House Jud. Comm. Mins., H.B. 308 (Oct. 16, 1995) (testimony of Jerry Kurtz).
. See 1996 House Journal 2661 (rejecting proposed amendment to establish accrual theory of election); see also House Jud. Comm. Mins., H.B. 308 (Oct. 16, 1995) (testimony of Bob Manly) (explaining that H.B. 308 did not include accrual theoiy of election because majority of Alaskan state bar probate committee did not believe in favoring longer marriages over shorter ones).
. As a result, we find Barbara's request to settle the present dispute on marriage-as-economic-partnership grounds unconvincing.
. Koski v. Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Co., 6 Alaska 334, 335 (D.Alaska 1921) ("At common law there was no civil action for death by wrongful act; such action is purely a creature of statute.”). See also Hanebuth v. Bell Helicopter Int'l,
. In re Estate of Pushruk,
. AS 09.55.580(a).
. Pushruk,
. Id. See also Horsford v. Estate of Horsford,
. AS 09.55.580(a).
. Pushruk,
. As a result, even though the action is based on the injury caused to the decedent, a wrongful death action brought by surviving beneficiaries should not be viewed as a derivative action; rather, it is an "independent and distinct” cause of action. Walls v. Am. Optical Corp.,
. AS 09.55.580(c).
. Horsford,
. See AS 13.12.203, .207 (identifying surviving spouse's property held at time of decedent’s death that is included in augmented estate). The superior court included the proceeds within the augmented estate solely under this theory. In addition, the appellees limit their arguments on appeal to the inclusion of the proceeds under this sub-category of property.
. Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. DeShong, 77 P.3d 1227, 1234 (Alaska 2003) (quoting Muller v. BP Exploration (Alaska) Inc.,
. Guin v. Ha,
. AS 13.12.203. See also AS 13.12.207.
. Unif. Probate Code, Art II, Pt. 2, gen. cmt. (Revised 1990 Version) (amended 1993), 8 U.L.A. 93 (1998). See supra nn. 16-19 and accompanying text.
. Alaska Statute 13.12.209 mandates that, before other components of the net probate estate or nonprobate transfers are applied to satisfy the elective share, probate assets passing to the surviving spouse, nonprobate transfers to the surviving spouse, and the property of the surviving spouse under AS 13.12.207 should be applied to satisfy the elective share. Alaska Statute 13.12.207(b) designates the decedent’s death as the time to value the surviving spouse’s property.
. AS 13.06.050(39).
. AS 13.12.203.
. Anderson v. State ex rel. Cent. Bering Sea Fishermen’s Ass'n,
. For additional discussion of this statute, see supra Part IV.B.
. See supra n. 28. See also Walls v. Am. Optical Corp.,
. For example, AS 09.55.580(a) entitles the personal representative to bring the action "when the death of a person is caused by the wrongful act or omission of another." Similarly, the surviving spouse and children are entitled to damages "which will fairly compensate for the injury resulting from the death." AS 09.55.580(c); see Kulawik v. ERA Jet Alaska,
. AS 09.55.580(a).
. The facts of this case provide a dramatic example of the application of these differing statutes of limitation. The time period in which Florian could have filed claims against the asbestos manufacturers and suppliers for his injury began to run pursuant to the ordinary discovery rule. See John’s Heating Serv. v. Lamb,
. AS 13.12.207(a)(1)(C).
. Connecticut Bank & Trust Co. v. United States,
. Id.
. Id.
. AS 13.12.207. The comments to the revised UPC make clear to include within the augmented estate life insurance proceeds payable to the survivor, even if the life insurance contract is owned by another person, because the proceeds can rightly be considered property owned by the survivor at the time of decedent’s death. See Unif. Probate Code § 2-207 cmt., exs. 29-30 (amended 1993), 8 U.L.A. 119-120 (1998).
. AS 13.12.205(1)(D) (including value of decedent's nonprobate transfers to others, including life insurance benefits, within augmented estate). See also Unif. Probate Code § 2-205 cmt., ex. 8 (amended 1993), 8 U.L:A. 109 (1998).
. Cf. Reynolds v. Sisco Group, Inc.,
. See supra nn. 17-19 and accompanying text.
. See Unir Probate Code §§ 2-205 — 2-207 cmts. (amended 1993), 8 U.L.A. 107-20 (1998).
. Id. § 2-207 cmt. Eight of these examples consider the properties of life insurance policies and irrevocable inter vivos trusts. Id. The ninth considers a joint tenancy. Id.
. See House Jud. Comm. File, H.B. 308; House Jud. Comm. Mins., H.B. 308 (Oct. 16, 1995); House Jud. Comm. Mins., H.B. 308 (Jan. 19, 1996); Senate Jud. Comm. Mins., H.B. 308 (Mar. 29, 1996); 1996 House Journal 2661.
. The primary purpose of amending the definition of augmented estate was to address the problem of a decedent effectively disinheriting his or her spouse by purchasing life insurance policies benefitting someone other than the surviving spouse. See House Jud. Comm. Mins., H.B. 308 (Oct. 16, 1995); see also House Jud. Comm. Mins., H.B. 308 (Jan. 19, 1996) (testimony of Bob Manly).
. In re Estate of Pushruk,
. AS 09.55.580(c); see also Kulawik v. ERA Jet Alaska,
. We also note the practical risks posed to the surviving spouse if wrongful death proceeds were included within the augmented estate, such as the risk of the probate court overvaluing an unlitigated claim and the risk that a debtor is fully or partially judgment-proof.
. See 2 Dan B. Dobbs, The Law of Torts § 295, at 805 (2001) ("In contrast to the wrongful death action, the survival action does not create a new claim for the benefit of survivors. Instead, it merely reverses the common law rule that a cause of action abates with the death of either party.”).
. Horsford v. Estate of Horsford,
. See AS 09.55.580(a); supra Part IV.B.
