A man from Brooklyn calls my office. His mother recently passed, and her will names him as the executor. He’s organized, he’s diligent, and he sees the task ahead as a project to be managed. “The will seems straightforward,” he tells me. “Do I really need a lawyer to file the papers with the Surrogate’s Court?”
Legally, the answer is no. Any person named as an executor can petition for probate on their own. But in my decades of practice, I’ve seen that what is legally possible is not always prudent. The role of an executor is not that of a project manager—it is the role of a fiduciary. That single word, fiduciary, changes everything. It means you are held to the highest standard of care under the law, and you can be held personally liable for mistakes.
The Executor’s Personal Risk
When you accept the role of executor, you are stepping into a position of profound trust. The court, the beneficiaries, and the creditors all depend on you to act with diligence, loyalty, and impartiality. This isn’t just about distributing assets according to the will. It’s about becoming a temporary custodian of a person’s entire legacy.
The process begins with petitioning the court to probate the will and grant you “Letters Testamentary”—the official documents that give you authority to act. From there, your duties include:
- Marshaling and inventorying all of the decedent’s assets.
- Notifying all interested parties, including beneficiaries and potential heirs.
- Paying all legitimate debts, taxes, and administrative expenses.
- Managing estate assets, which might include a business, real estate, or an investment portfolio.
- Providing a formal accounting to the beneficiaries.
- Distributing the remaining assets as directed by the will.
A misstep at any of these stages can expose you to personal financial liability. If you distribute assets to beneficiaries before satisfying a legitimate creditor’s claim—even one you didn’t know about—that creditor could sue you directly. If you make a poor investment decision with estate funds or sell a property for less than fair market value, a beneficiary could sue you for breaching your fiduciary duty.
When Self-Representation Is Unwise
While a very simple estate—say, one with a single bank account, a clear will, and cooperative beneficiaries—might be handled without counsel, my experience shows such cases are rare. Certain factors dramatically increase the risk and make legal representation essential.
Family Disputes: The most common complication is not legal, but human. Grief can bring out old resentments. If you anticipate any disagreement among beneficiaries, or if someone was unexpectedly disinherited, a will contest is a real possibility. Defending the will and your actions as executor requires compliance with the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) and its strict rules of evidence and procedure.
Complex Assets: An estate holding more than a simple home and bank account presents immediate challenges. Does it include a family business in Manhattan? A partial interest in commercial real estate? A valuable art collection that requires a specialized appraisal? These assets require careful management and valuation, often under court supervision. Mishandling them is a classic breach of fiduciary duty.
Creditors and Taxes: An executor is responsible for filing the decedent’s final income tax returns and, if applicable, estate tax returns. Failing to identify and pay all legitimate debts before closing the estate is a critical error. An attorney performs a diligent search for creditors and confirms all tax obligations are met before any distributions are made to heirs.
An Attorney Is Your Shield, Not Just Your Guide
An executor is entitled to a commission for their work, a fee set by New York law under SCPA § 2307. This underscores that the role is a formal, demanding job with significant responsibilities. The legal fees for the estate’s attorney are paid from the estate’s assets, not from the executor’s own pocket. Given the personal liability at stake, it is one of the most sensible expenses an estate can incur.
At our firm, we don’t just file paperwork. We serve as counsel to the executor to shield them from liability. We manage communications with contentious beneficiaries, interface with the IRS, and ensure every court filing is precise. We create a deliberate, documented process that demonstrates the executor has fulfilled their fiduciary duty at every step. Stewardship.
The goal is to allow the executor to honor their loved one’s wishes without putting their own financial future at risk. It’s about ensuring the final chapter of a person’s life is closed with dignity and correctness.
If you have been named an executor and are uncertain about the road ahead, the most prudent first step is to understand the full scope of your duties. I invite you to schedule a consultation where we can review the will and the estate’s potential complexities, giving you a clear picture of what the role truly requires.


