When a Brooklyn family loses a parent, the named executor often assumes their first task is walking into the local bank with a death certificate and a will. They expect to close the accounts, divide the funds among their siblings, and mourn in peace. They quickly learn the branch manager cannot help them. A will is merely a statement of wishes until a judge validates it. The moment a property owner passes away, the family enters the jurisdiction of Surrogate’s Court.
The machinery of the court system does not move on its own. It requires formal petitions, strict adherence to deadlines, and precise legal filings. We do not just process paperwork. We act as the bridge between a deceased person’s final wishes and the legal reality of asset transfer.
Translating Final Wishes Into Legal Authority
Naming someone as an executor in a will does not automatically grant them power. Under New York law—specifically SCPA Article 14—a will must be formally proven in court before anyone has the authority to act. Until the Surrogate’s Court issues Letters Testamentary, the executor has no legal standing. They cannot sell the family home, pay the final utility bills, or distribute inheritances.
This waiting period is often highly volatile. Grief compounds the stress of frozen assets. Our role in these early weeks is to secure the estate, identify the probate assets, and prepare the petition to the court. This requires deliberate action. A single error in notifying the necessary parties—including family members who were intentionally disinherited—can stall the entire administration for months.
When a person dies without a will, the process is called administration rather than probate, but the legal hurdles remain equally strict. In these cases, we look to EPTL §4-1.1, which dictates the exact hierarchy of who inherits and who has the right to serve as the estate’s administrator. We guide families through this rigid structure, proving kinship and securing the necessary court approvals to move forward.
Shielding the Fiduciary from Personal Liability
Appointing an executor, administrator, or trustee creates a strict legal obligation. Fiduciary duty is not a casual responsibility. It means you are legally bound to act in the best interests of the estate, placing the rights of creditors, tax authorities, and beneficiaries entirely above your own convenience.
Executors often do not realize they can be held personally liable if they mismanage the estate. New York law grants creditors a strict seven-month window from the issuance of letters to file claims against the deceased. If an executor distributes cash to the heirs before satisfying a legitimate creditor claim or paying the final income taxes, that executor may have to pay the debt out of their own pocket. There is no room for guesswork.
We protect the executor from this exact exposure. We ensure every debt is validated, every tax return is filed, and every asset is accounted for before a single dollar moves to a beneficiary. Prudent management is the only way to protect the fiduciary. We plan for every contingency, ensuring the executor is never left holding the bag for a debt they did not know existed.
Managing Family Friction and Beneficiary Expectations
Inheritance often brings out the deepest fractures within a family. Beneficiaries generally want their share immediately. They do not understand why the real estate hasn’t been listed for sale, or why the brokerage account hasn’t been liquidated and dispersed. They call the executor demanding answers, creating immense personal friction during an already difficult time.
Stewardship.
That is what estate administration requires, and it is what we provide. As counsel for the executor, we absorb that family friction. We communicate directly with the beneficiaries, explaining the legal timeline and the constraints placed upon the estate by the Surrogate’s Court. When a beneficiary threatens a will contest, demands an early distribution, or questions the valuation of an asset, they speak to us.
By acting as a buffer, we help preserve the family’s relationships. In cases where a beneficiary is a minor or incapacitated, we coordinate with court-appointed guardians or conservators to ensure their share is handled legally and safely. The goal is to honor the legacy of the deceased without allowing the administration process to tear the surviving family apart.
Closing the Estate: The Final Accounting
An estate cannot simply fade away—it must be formally concluded. The executor must provide a full accounting of every penny that entered and exited the estate during their tenure as custodian. This includes gains on investments, costs of property maintenance, legal fees, and creditor payoffs.
We draft the final accounting and secure legal releases from every beneficiary. This guarantees that once the final checks are cut, the beneficiaries cannot return years later to sue the executor for mismanagement. Generational wealth transfer is a highly intentional process. When executed correctly, it sets up the next generation for success rather than entangling them in endless litigation.
Handling an estate is a heavy burden. No one should have to figure out the rules of Surrogate’s Court through trial and error. If you have been named as an executor in a loved one’s will, schedule a 30-minute review of the document with our office to map out the required court filings and secure your legal authority to act.





