When a Brooklyn family loses a parent who left behind a house, a business, and a two-page document downloaded from the internet, the next eighteen months belong to Surrogate’s Court. I see this scenario repeatedly. A well-intentioned patriarch tries to keep things straightforward by drafting a basic will, only to inadvertently spark a bitter, protracted dispute among his children over how to divide illiquid assets. Estate planning is not about filling in blanks on a standardized form. Stewardship.
True stewardship requires a deliberate look at what you own, who you are leaving it to, and the unintended consequences of transferring wealth to the next generation. Determining the kind of will you need is the first step in protecting your family from unnecessary conflict.
The Limitations of a Basic Will
Many clients walk into our office asking for a simple will. They assume that because their desires are straightforward—leave everything to the spouse, and if the spouse is gone, to the children—the legal instrument should be equally brief. A simple will dictates the outright distribution of assets upon your death. It names an executor, identifies your beneficiaries, and outlines exactly who gets what.
For a young adult whose only assets are a checking account and some personal property, this might suffice. But for most individuals who have spent decades building a life in New York, an outright distribution is rarely prudent. A simple will fails to account for statutory obligations and complex family dynamics. Consider the spousal right of election. Under Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) §5-1.1-A, a surviving spouse has an absolute right to claim a statutory share of the estate—generally one-third—regardless of what a simple will dictates. If your document does not account for this, or if you are part of a blended family with children from a prior marriage, a basic will offers only a false sense of security.
A basic document also fails to protect your assets from a beneficiary’s future creditors, nor does it account for an heir who might lack the financial maturity to inherit a lump sum outright.
Incorporating Testamentary Trusts for Generational Protection
When outright distribution poses a risk to your legacy, we look toward a more sophisticated instrument: a will containing testamentary trusts. This is a will that legally creates a trust upon your death, rather than distributing assets directly into the hands of your heirs.
If you have minor children, you cannot simply leave funds directly to them. Minors lack the legal capacity to manage property. Without a trust provision in your will, the Surrogate’s Court will appoint a property guardian under SCPA Article 17. This process requires annual accountings, expensive bonds, and strict judicial oversight until the child turns eighteen—at which point they receive the entire sum immediately. By embedding a testamentary trust within your will, you designate a trustee to act as a fiduciary. This custodian manages the funds, making distributions for education, healthcare, and general maintenance according to your specific instructions.
We often structure these trusts to stagger distributions, ensuring children receive portions of their inheritance at ages twenty-five, thirty, and thirty-five. This intentional approach to wealth transfer prioritizes long-term stability over immediate gratification. The trustee you appoint is legally bound by a fiduciary duty to manage those assets prudently, shielding the inheritance from reckless spending, a messy divorce, or business failures.
The Pour-Over Will and Living Trusts
Before deciding on a will, we must determine whether a will should be the primary vehicle for your estate at all. A will, by definition, guarantees a trip to Surrogate’s Court. It must be probated. Your executor is required to locate witnesses, notify all legal distributees—even those you intentionally excluded under SCPA §1403—and wait for the court to issue letters testamentary. In a busy Surrogate’s Court, this process can freeze your assets for months, leaving your family without access to capital to pay ongoing expenses.
For clients seeking privacy and immediate continuity of asset management, we often build the estate plan around a revocable living trust rather than relying solely on a will. When you utilize a living trust, you still need a will—specifically, a “pour-over will.” This acts as a vital contingency safety net. If you forget to title a newly acquired asset in the name of your trust before you pass away, the pour-over will simply directs your executor to transfer that stray asset into the trust upon your death. The trust remains the primary engine of your estate plan, bypassing probate and allowing your successor trustee to assume control the moment you are gone.
Clarifying the “Irrevocable Will” Misconception
I occasionally hear clients ask about creating an “irrevocable will” to guarantee their wishes cannot be challenged. In legal reality, there is no such thing. A will is inherently ambulatory—it can be changed, amended via codicil, or completely revoked at any point during your lifetime, provided you maintain the legal capacity to do so.
When people ask for an irrevocable will, they are usually confusing it with an irrevocable trust. An irrevocable trust is a separate entity created during your lifetime to remove assets from your taxable estate or to protect them from creditors and long-term care recovery. Once you transfer property into an irrevocable trust, you generally relinquish control over those assets. It is a highly effective tool for deliberate asset protection, but it serves a vastly different purpose than a last will and testament.
Historically, some couples executed “joint and mutual wills” that contained contractual language making them binding after the first spouse’s death. We strongly advise against this practice today. Locking a surviving spouse into an inflexible arrangement prevents them from adapting to new financial realities, changes in tax law, or shifting family circumstances over what could be decades of remaining life.
Choosing the right testamentary instrument dictates whether your family inherits a smooth transition of wealth or a prolonged legal burden. It requires a careful audit of your assets, your family dynamics, and your ultimate goals. If you are relying on an outdated document or are unsure if your current plan aligns with your family’s reality, schedule a 30-minute review of your existing will at our Madison Avenue office. We will sit down, examine your existing instruments, and determine exactly what adjustments are required to secure your legacy.



