When a Brooklyn family discovers their father’s will has been rejected by the Surrogate’s Court, the grief of sudden loss is immediately compounded by legal chaos. Often, the culprit is a small stack of papers purchased from a Legal Document Preparation Service (LDPS). The father believed he was being deliberate. He paid a modest fee, received a bound document, and assumed he had protected his legacy. But because software or a non-attorney typist generated the document, a crucial step in the signing ceremony was missed. Now, the state will dictate how his assets are divided—completely ignoring the very document he paid to create.
What LDPS Actually Means for Your Estate
In the legal field, LDPS stands for Legal Document Preparation Service—or sometimes Legal Document Preparation Software. These businesses or online platforms generate forms based on the data you provide. They operate under a strict, legally required disclaimer: they are not attorneys, they do not represent you, and they cannot offer legal advice.
This distinction is not merely a matter of professional pride. It is a matter of fiduciary duty. When we take on a client, we act as a fiduciary—legally obligated to protect your interests, foresee contingencies, and ensure your generational wealth is structured properly. An LDPS has no such duty. Their only obligation is to type your answers into a standardized template and print the result. They do not ask if your chosen beneficiary is receiving Medicaid. They do not inquire if your real estate is held as joint tenants or tenants in common. They simply hand you a document and leave the burden of execution entirely on your shoulders.
The Unforgiving Nature of Estate Execution
The rules governing how a will must be signed are exceptionally strict. The Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) does not care what you intended to do. It only cares what you can prove you did according to statute. Under EPTL §3-2.1, a will must be signed at the physical end of the document, and the testator must explicitly declare to at least two witnesses that the document is their will.
This specific declaration is known as publication. When families use an LDPS, they typically receive instructions telling them to sign in front of a notary. But a notary is not enough. If the creator of the will signs the document in front of two bank tellers but fails to explicitly say, “This is my will,” the document is legally invalid. We frequently see LDPS-generated wills fail in Surrogate’s Court simply because software cannot supervise a signing ceremony to ensure publication occurred.
Furthermore, an LDPS often fails to include a properly drafted self-proving affidavit. Without this vital component, the executor is forced to track down the original witnesses years or even decades after the document was signed. If those witnesses have died or moved away, proving the validity of the will becomes an expensive, uphill battle.
The Hidden Costs in Surrogate’s Court
People turn to an LDPS under the illusion of cost savings. A form might cost $100, while retaining a private attorney costs more. However, the true cost of estate planning is not measured at the drafting stage. It is measured during probate.
When an LDPS document contains contradictory clauses, vague beneficiary designations, or improper attestation, the burden shifts to the executor under SCPA Article 14. Fixing a flawed will requires formal court proceedings, witness depositions, and sometimes the appointment of a guardian ad litem to protect the interests of unknown heirs. A document that cost $100 to generate can easily cost an estate tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees to defend.
If the court ultimately throws the will out, the estate falls into intestacy. An administrator must be appointed, costly surety bonds must be posted, and the assets are distributed according to an inflexible state formula. The careful stewardship the deceased intended is entirely erased by a procedural technicality.
Why Legacy Requires Counsel, Not Just Forms
Estate planning is not the act of filling out paperwork. It is the deliberate structuring of a family’s future. Stewardship. It requires understanding the nuances of tax exposure, creditor protection, and family dynamics. Software cannot look you in the eye and ask the difficult questions about who should serve as a conservator for a disabled child, or how to fairly distribute a closely held family business without destroying it.
A prudent estate plan requires human judgment. We look at the totality of your assets—your deeds, your beneficiary designations, your business operating agreements—and ensure they work in harmony. If you place your trust in a document preparation service, you act as your own attorney, with all the risks that entails.
If you or a family member previously used an LDPS or an online form to create a will or trust, do not wait for a crisis to uncover its flaws. Bring your existing documents to our Manhattan office for a statutory compliance review. We will determine if your current plan actually meets the strict requirements of New York law.



