The Urban Legend and the Real-World Problem
The story of Walt Disney being cryogenically frozen is a persistent urban legend. It’s a compelling narrative, but untrue—he was cremated in 1966. Yet the myth endures because it touches on a fundamental human desire: to control one’s legacy. What if this wasn’t a myth? What if a client in our Manhattan office sat down and told me his primary goal was to have his remains cryopreserved? This is not a theoretical exercise; my firm has had to address precisely this kind of planning.
For the family left behind, such a request can create immense emotional and legal turmoil. Without clear, legally sound instructions, an unconventional wish becomes a source of conflict, litigation, and expense. The core of the issue is not whether the wish itself is valid, but whether the legal and financial structures are in place to execute it. Stewardship of a legacy means anticipating these challenges and creating a deliberate plan that protects both your wishes and your family.
Your Body, Your Property, and the Surrogate’s Court
In the eyes of the law, there is no in-between state. A person is either alive or legally deceased. Once a doctor makes a declaration of death, the legal machinery of estate administration begins. For cryopreservation to be successful, a team must act within minutes. The New York Surrogate’s Court, which oversees the probate of a will, moves on a timeline of months, not minutes.
Relying on a will to communicate your desire for cryopreservation is a critical mistake. A will is often not read until days or weeks after the disposition of the body. By then, it is far too late. The legal instrument for expressing these wishes must be separate and immediately accessible. Under New York Public Health Law § 4201, you have the right to appoint an agent in a written instrument to control the disposition of your remains. This document, properly executed, gives your designated agent the legal authority to act swiftly and decisively, overriding the default hierarchy of family members who would otherwise be in charge.
Without this specific appointment, the law dictates a priority list of decision-makers—a surviving spouse, then adult children, then parents. If they disagree on a radical course of action like cryopreservation, the result is often a painful and public court battle. Intentional planning removes this ambiguity.
Funding the Future: Trusts Over Wills
A wish without funding is just an idea. Cryopreservation is an expensive undertaking, with significant upfront costs and ongoing fees for maintenance. These funds must be available immediately upon death, free from the delays of the probate process. A simple bequest in a will is insufficient because those assets are frozen until the court validates the will and appoints an executor.
The prudent instrument for this is a trust. A properly structured trust, often funded with life insurance, can provide the necessary liquidity the moment it’s needed. The trustee, operating under a strict fiduciary duty, can be directed to disburse funds to the chosen cryonics organization without waiting for a court order. This separates the funding for your final wishes from the rest of your estate, allowing your executor to manage the distribution of your other assets according to your will without complication.
This isn’t about the validity of cryonics. As an attorney, my role is not to judge the wish, but to build a legal framework that has the best chance of effectuating it. It is about honoring a client’s final directive through sound legal and financial planning. It’s about ensuring a legacy, no matter how unusual, is managed with dignity and precision, not left to chance and family conflict.
If your vision for your legacy includes instructions outside the ordinary, they must be documented in a legally binding and practical way. I invite you to schedule a confidential review of your estate plan with our firm. We can assess whether your documents are structured to make your final wishes an enforceable reality.




