I once worked with a family whose patriarch, a successful Brooklyn business owner, passed away without a will. He had always intended to “get around to it.” Instead, his business operations froze, his assets were locked, and his family was forced into a lengthy, public, and expensive process in Kings County Surrogate’s Court. For over a year, a judge—not his family—made the critical decisions about the legacy he had spent a lifetime building.
This is the default. When a New Yorker dies without a plan, the state does not leave a vacuum. It imposes its own plan.
The Plan New York State Writes for You
Many people believe their property will automatically pass to their spouse or children in the way they would want. This is rarely the case. The state’s plan, known as the law of intestacy, is rigid and impersonal. It is codified in New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law—specifically, EPTL § 4-1.1.
This statute dictates a strict formula for distribution. If you have a spouse and children, your spouse inherits the first $50,000 of your assets and then half of the remainder. Your children inherit the other half. The law makes no distinction between an 18-year-old and a 40-year-old, a spendthrift and a financially prudent child. It does not account for special needs, family dynamics, or your specific intentions for a particular asset. The state’s plan is a blunt instrument. An intentional estate plan is the only way to replace it with your own.
Stewardship. That is what this work is truly about. It is the deliberate act of organizing your affairs to protect and provide for the people you care about, according to your own values.
The Core Documents of a Deliberate Legacy
An estate plan is not a single document. It is a set of legal instructions that work in concert to manage your assets and affairs during your life and after. Most plans are built on a few foundational pillars.
Last Will and Testament
A will is your fundamental instruction to the Surrogate’s Court. It names an executor—the person or institution you trust to be the fiduciary responsible for gathering your assets, paying your debts, and distributing the remainder to your named beneficiaries. A will is also the only document where you can nominate a guardian for your minor children. Without it, the court will make that decision, and it may not be the person you would have chosen.
A will does not avoid probate. It is the primary document submitted to the court to initiate probate. It is a public document, and the process can be slow and costly.
Revocable Living Trust
For many of my clients, a trust is the central vehicle for their estate plan. A revocable living trust is a private agreement you create during your lifetime. You transfer your assets—real estate, brokerage accounts, business interests—into the trust and appoint a trustee to manage them. During your lifetime, you serve as your own trustee, retaining full control.
Upon your incapacity or death, your chosen successor trustee steps in. Because the assets are owned by the trust, not by you personally, they bypass probate entirely. This process is private, efficient, and allows for far more nuanced control over how and when your beneficiaries receive their inheritance.
Contingency Planning for Incapacity
A common oversight is planning only for death while ignoring the possibility of incapacity. What happens if an accident or illness leaves you unable to manage your own financial or medical affairs? Without a plan, your family’s only option is to petition the court to appoint a conservator or guardian—another public, expensive, and stressful legal proceeding.
We prepare for this contingency with two key documents:
- A Durable Power of Attorney appoints an agent you trust to handle your financial matters—pay bills, manage investments, file taxes—if you are unable to do so yourself.
- A Health Care Proxy appoints an agent to make medical decisions on your behalf, but only if you cannot communicate your own wishes. This is your voice when you don’t have one.
These documents are not about ceding control. They are about ensuring that if control is ever lost, it passes to a specific person you have deliberately chosen, not one chosen by a court.
Building an estate plan is a foundational act of responsibility. It replaces the state’s generic rules with your own prudent and intentional design for your family’s future.
A logical first step is to create a simple inventory of your assets and, more importantly, to think about the people you would entrust with critical fiduciary duties. When you are ready to formalize those intentions, our firm is prepared to schedule a confidential meeting to discuss the structure of your legacy.





