What Your New York Will Should Never Contain

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A few years ago, a new client came to my office with his mother’s will. He was distraught. She had passed away a month earlier, and the family had just held a beautiful service for her in Manhattan. But when the will was finally read, he found a paragraph detailing her very specific wishes for a different kind of funeral—a ceremony and burial he could no longer give her. The will was located and read too late. It was a painful, and entirely avoidable, moment of regret for the family.

A Last Will and Testament is one of the most powerful legal documents a person can create. It is your instruction manual for the transfer of your assets after you are gone. But its power has limits. A will is not a diary, a letter of instruction for your funeral, or a control panel for the lives of your beneficiaries. Including the wrong provisions can, at best, create confusion. At worst, it can trigger disputes that end up in Surrogate’s Court, eroding the very legacy you hoped to protect.

Assets Your Will Doesn’t Control

Many people assume a will governs every asset they own. This is a fundamental misunderstanding. A significant portion of a person’s wealth often passes to heirs by “operation of law” or by contract—entirely outside the probate process and beyond the reach of a will.

Attempting to direct these assets in your will is like trying to change the direction of a river with a bucket. The legal current is simply too strong. Here are the most common examples:

  • Property Held in Joint Tenancy: If you own a home or a bank account with another person as “joint tenants with right of survivorship,” that property automatically passes to the surviving owner. Your will has no say in the matter.
  • Retirement Accounts and Life Insurance: Your 401(k), IRA, and life insurance policies are controlled by the beneficiary designation forms you filled out, sometimes decades ago. Those forms are contracts with the financial institution. The funds are paid directly to the named person, regardless of what your will says. When the two documents conflict, the beneficiary form almost always prevails.
  • Assets Held in a Trust: If you’ve placed assets into a living trust, they are governed by the terms of the trust, not the will. The trust is a separate legal entity, and its instructions for distribution are paramount.

The work here is not to write a will that tries to override these instruments. The work is to conduct a deliberate audit of all your assets and beneficiary designations to ensure they are aligned with your will. Mismatches are a primary source of estate litigation.

Provisions That Invite Conflict or Are Unenforceable

Beyond assets, certain instructions or conditions written into a will are legally problematic. Your intentions may be good, but the execution can create consequences you never intended for your family.

Legally Questionable Conditions

I have seen wills that try to control beneficiaries from the grave. A gift might be conditioned on the heir marrying someone of a certain faith, pursuing a particular career, or never selling the family home. While you have broad discretion, New York courts can—and often do—invalidate conditions that are deemed to violate public policy. For example, a clause that unreasonably restrains marriage or encourages divorce will likely be struck down by a judge, leaving the gift to be given outright, free of the condition you intended.

The goal is to provide for your loved ones, not to create a legal puzzle for them to solve. Unconditional gifts are almost always the more prudent path.

Care for Your Pets

Your pets are family. I understand that. But under New York law, they are considered property. You cannot leave money or assets directly to an animal in your will—the bequest will fail. The law, however, provides a better tool for their stewardship.

Instead of a simple clause in a will, the proper instrument is a pet trust. Under New York Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 7-8.1, you can create a legally enforceable trust to provide for the care and maintenance of your pets. You can appoint a trustee to manage the funds and a caregiver to look after the animal, ensuring they are cared for exactly as you wish for the rest of their life. It’s a deliberate and powerful way to protect them.

Confidential Digital Information

Finally, never include passwords, account numbers, or other sensitive digital information directly in your will. Once a will is submitted for probate, it generally becomes a public record. Including your passwords is like posting them on a courthouse bulletin board. Instead, this information should be compiled in a separate, private memorandum. You can then direct your executor to this document in the will, without revealing the sensitive data itself.

Stewardship. That is the heart of this work. It means creating a clear, legally sound plan that protects your family from confusion, conflict, and regret. A will is a central part of that plan, but its effectiveness depends as much on what you leave out as what you put in.

If you are unsure whether your current will contains problematic provisions, the next step is a straightforward review. We can schedule a confidential call to analyze your existing documents against your intentions and the realities of New York law.

DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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