When a Brooklyn family loses a parent, they often assume transferring the family home is a simple matter of paperwork. They locate the original deed in a safe deposit box, gather a certified death certificate, and expect a county clerk to simply update the public record. Instead, they hit a wall. Property ownership does not change just because someone passed away. The transition requires deliberate legal authority, and that authority almost always runs through Surrogate’s Court.
At Morgan Legal Group, I see families attempt to handle real estate transfers informally, only to create massive title defects that surface years later when they finally try to sell the home. Changing a deed after a death is not an administrative update. It is a formal conveyance of real estate—and it demands strict adherence to state law.
The Myth of the Automatic Transfer
Many families believe a will automatically transfers real estate the moment a person dies. It does not. While a will dictates who should receive the property, it does not execute the transfer itself. A deed is a living instrument. It requires a living signature to pass marketable title to the next owner.
The only exception is when the property is owned jointly with the right of survivorship. If two spouses hold title as joint tenants, the surviving spouse absorbs the deceased spouse’s interest by operation of law. In these situations, we do not necessarily need to draft a new deed immediately, though it is prudent to file the death certificate with the county to clear the public record.
If the deceased owned the property individually, or as a tenant in common with another party, the property is legally frozen. You cannot cross a deceased person’s name off a deed. You cannot use a power of attorney—that authority extinguishes the second the principal takes their last breath. A completely new deed must be drafted, and someone must be legally authorized by a judge to sign it.
Securing Authority Through Surrogate’s Court
Because a deceased property owner cannot sign a new deed, the state must appoint a custodian to step into their legal shoes. If your loved one left a will, we file a petition for probate. Under Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) Article 14, the court examines the will, notifies the legal heirs, and ultimately issues Letters Testamentary to the named executor.
If there is no will, the family must pursue an administration proceeding instead. The court issues Letters of Administration to a close family member, granting them the authority to distribute the estate according to New York’s intestacy statutes.
Only when you have these official letters in hand do you possess the legal capacity to alter the property’s ownership. Under Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 11-1.1, a duly appointed fiduciary holds the specific power to take possession of, manage, and sell or distribute the estate’s real property. Without that court decree, any attempt to transfer the home is void.
Executing the Fiduciary Deed
Once the court grants authority, we move to the conveyance itself. We do not amend the old deed—we draft an entirely new instrument. Depending on the underlying court proceeding, this will be either an Executor’s Deed or an Administrator’s Deed.
This document is highly specific. It must recite the historical chain of title, reference the exact file number from Surrogate’s Court that granted the fiduciary their power, and explicitly convey the property to the rightful beneficiaries. We frequently see families try to download generic quitclaim deeds from the internet to handle this transfer. Using an improper deed type can sever existing title insurance policies and create a cloud on the title, rendering the home unsellable.
Transferring real estate in New York also requires filing specific tax forms alongside the deed. Even if the transfer is a direct inheritance exempt from transfer taxes, we must still prepare and file form TP-584 for the state and form RP-5217. In the five boroughs, this involves managing the Automated City Register Information System (ACRIS) to generate the necessary cover pages and municipal tax documents.
The Trust Alternative: Bypassing the Court
The probate process is deliberate, but it is rarely fast. Depending on the county, securing the authority just to sign a new deed can take seven to nine months. Many of our clients prefer to spare their children this delay by utilizing a revocable living trust.
When you place your home into a trust during your lifetime, you change the fundamental mechanics of the transfer. The trust owns the property, not you individually. Because a trust does not die, the property is never frozen. Upon your passing, your successor trustee immediately steps into their role. They can execute a Trustee’s Deed the very next day, transferring the property to your heirs or selling it on the open market without asking a judge for permission.
Stewardship.
It is a deliberate choice to handle the legal heavy lifting now so your family does not have to endure the court system later.
Handling real estate after a loss requires precision and a clear understanding of your fiduciary duties. If you are holding an outdated deed and need to secure the proper authority to transfer your family’s real estate, do not attempt to force a transfer outside the legal system. Schedule a deed review and probate consultation with our office. We will examine the current title, identify the necessary court filings, and outline the exact legal steps required to protect your legacy.



