A family from Manhattan recently came to my office. Their father, a retired architect with a significant art collection and a West Village co-op, had passed away suddenly. He had a will, but it was written twenty years ago. It named his late wife as the primary beneficiary and his children as alternates. The problem? One of his children was now estranged, and a grandchild he adored wasn’t mentioned at all. The remaining children were paralyzed, asking, “What do we do now? Does the old will still control everything?”
This is a situation my firm and I see far too often. The distribution of an estate is not just a financial transaction—it is the final chapter of a person’s legacy. When the instructions are unclear, outdated, or nonexistent, the process can reopen old wounds and create new ones. The person responsible for carrying out these instructions, the executor, has a fiduciary duty to get it right. But “right” depends entirely on the plan that was put in place.
The Will as the Primary Instruction
In New York, a valid will is the primary document governing asset distribution. It is your personal roadmap, telling your chosen executor precisely who gets what. This document allows you to be specific—to leave a particular piece of jewelry to a niece, to divide your investment portfolio among your children, or to make a charitable bequest to an organization that mattered to you.
The executor’s job is to follow these instructions to the letter, but their authority only extends to assets that pass through the probate estate. This is a critical distinction. Many assets are distributed outside the will’s control based on how they are titled. These include:
- Retirement Accounts (401ks, IRAs): These are distributed directly to the beneficiaries named on the account forms. If you named your ex-spouse on your IRA 15 years ago and never updated it, they will likely receive the funds, regardless of what your will says.
- Life Insurance Policies: The death benefit is paid directly to the named beneficiaries.
- Jointly Owned Property: Real estate or bank accounts held as “joint tenants with rights of survivorship” automatically pass to the surviving owner.
Stewardship means looking at the entire picture. A will that gives everything to one child can be unintentionally undermined by a joint bank account left to another. A deliberate plan coordinates all these moving parts, ensuring the final distribution reflects your actual intentions.
When There Is No Will: New York Intestacy Law
When a person dies without a will—a situation called “intestate”—New York law provides a default distribution plan. The state does not take your property, but it does impose a rigid, one-size-fits-all formula for who inherits. This formula is codified in New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 4-1.1.
The law establishes a clear hierarchy of heirs. The distribution depends entirely on which relatives survive the decedent:
- Spouse and No Children: The surviving spouse inherits the entire estate.
- Spouse and Children: The surviving spouse receives the first $50,000 of the estate, plus one-half of the remaining balance. The children inherit the other half, divided equally among them.
- Children and No Spouse: The children inherit the entire estate, divided equally.
- Parents and No Spouse or Children: The surviving parent or parents inherit the entire estate.
- Siblings and No Spouse, Children, or Parents: The siblings (or their children, if a sibling has predeceased) inherit the entire estate.
This statutory framework is inflexible. It makes no exceptions for a long-term partner to whom you were not married, a stepchild you raised as your own, or a close friend you considered family. It does not account for complex family dynamics or an estranged relative you had not spoken to in decades. Without a will, you give up your voice, and the state’s impersonal formula takes over.
The Role of the Surrogate’s Court
Whether a will exists or not, the distribution process is overseen by the Surrogate’s Court in the county where the deceased resided. If there is a will, the court validates it and formally appoints the executor in a process known as probate. If there is no will, the court appoints an administrator to manage and distribute the estate according to the intestacy laws.
The court’s involvement protects all parties—creditors, beneficiaries, and the government. The executor or administrator must inventory assets, pay outstanding debts and taxes, and then, finally, distribute the remaining property. This process can be lengthy, often taking nine months to a year or more, especially if disputes arise.
A well-drafted plan can simplify the court’s involvement, but it cannot always eliminate it. The key is to be intentional. By clearly outlining your wishes and structuring your assets in a coordinated way—sometimes using trusts to avoid probate altogether—you make the process of distribution far more efficient and less prone to conflict for the people you leave behind.
Before you can create a clear plan for distribution, you must have a complete picture of what you own. Your first step should be to compile a simple list of your major assets—real estate, bank accounts, investment accounts, and life insurance policies. For each, note how it is titled and who, if anyone, is named as a beneficiary. We can then schedule a confidential review to map those assets to your true intentions.



