When a Manhattan resident passes away, the immediate aftermath is rarely as orderly as they intended. A landlord might seal an apartment until a court-appointed executor emerges. A bank manager will instantly freeze accounts the moment they learn of the account holder’s death. Surviving family members are left holding a folder of assorted financial statements, a death certificate, and perhaps an original will—unsure of what to do next. Paralysis. This is usually the exact moment families walk into our office for an initial probate consultation.
Our objective during this first meeting is not to overwhelm you with legal theory. We focus on establishing clarity and determining your immediate legal standing. Surrogate’s Court requires methodical action—the initial consultation serves as the blueprint for everything that follows.
Legal Triage and Determining Standing
The first phase of our meeting is an exercise in legal triage. We are not just reviewing paperwork—we are assessing the precise procedural posture of the estate. The path forward depends entirely on what documents the decedent left behind.
If you bring an original will, we look to Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) § 1402 to confirm who holds the legal standing to offer that will for probate. Usually, this is the nominated executor. Families are often surprised to learn that beneficiaries—or even creditors under specific circumstances—can initiate the proceeding if the executor fails to act.
If the decedent did not leave a will, the conversation shifts. We are no longer discussing probate—we are discussing intestate administration. Here, we follow the strict priority outlined in SCPA § 1001 to determine who has the right to serve as the estate administrator. This statute dictates an absolute hierarchy, starting with the surviving spouse, followed by children, then grandchildren. If multiple siblings share equal priority, we must determine whether they will serve as co-administrators or if certain siblings will formally renounce their right to serve.
The Artifacts of a Financial Life
Clients frequently ask how they should prepare for an initial meeting. I tell them to bring the artifacts of the decedent’s financial life. To give you accurate advice, we need to see the raw materials.
The most critical item is the original will. A photocopy is legally insufficient. Under New York law, if the original will was last known to be in the decedent’s possession and cannot be found after their death, the court presumes the decedent destroyed it with the intent to revoke it. Overcoming that presumption is an expensive, uphill battle requiring a specific legal proceeding.
Occasionally, a family knows a will exists, but it is locked in the decedent’s bank vault. The bank will not simply hand it over to a grieving child. In these instances, our first procedural step is to petition the court under SCPA § 2003 for an order merely to open the safe deposit box, inventory the contents, and retrieve the document.
Beyond the testamentary documents, you should bring:
- An original death certificate with a raised seal.
- A preliminary list of known assets, including real estate deeds, bank statements, and brokerage accounts.
- Information regarding any known debts, mortgages, or outstanding judgments against the decedent.
- A complete family tree detailing all immediate relatives.
Mapping the Family Tree and Jurisdiction
The family tree is often the most heavily scrutinized part of the consultation. To probate a will, Surrogate’s Court must obtain jurisdiction over all individuals who would have inherited if the will did not exist—these individuals are known as distributees.
We must identify every distributee, locate their current addresses, and determine their legal capacity. The court requires these individuals to either sign a formal Waiver and Consent—agreeing to the probate of the will—or be served with a Citation, which acts as a summons to appear in court if they wish to object. This requirement applies regardless of what the will actually says. Even if a child was deliberately disinherited twenty years ago, they still possess the right to be notified of the proceeding. Mapping this out in our first meeting allows us to anticipate delays in obtaining signatures or locating estranged relatives.
Managing Timelines and Fiduciary Expectations
A significant portion of our consultation is spent managing expectations regarding timelines. Surrogate’s Court does not move at the speed of modern banking. From the moment we file the petition to the day the court issues Letters Testamentary—the decree granting the executor legal authority to touch the decedent’s assets—several months may pass.
We also use this time to outline the fiduciary duties the executor or administrator will assume. Serving as a fiduciary is a job, not an honorific title. The role requires gathering assets, protecting property, paying legitimate debts, filing final personal tax returns, and eventually distributing the remainder to the beneficiaries.
We explain the statutory seven-month period under SCPA § 1802 during which creditors can present claims against the estate. An executor who distributes estate funds to beneficiaries before this period expires does so at their own personal peril. If a valid creditor surfaces in month six and the estate accounts are empty, the executor may be held personally liable for that debt. Understanding these rules from day one prevents catastrophic errors later.
Identifying Potential Red Flags
Finally, we actively look for red flags. As we review the family dynamic and the nature of the assets, we assess the risk of litigation. We look for specific warning signs:
- Was the will executed very late in life, or while the decedent was hospitalized, raising potential questions of testamentary capacity?
- Does the will heavily favor one child over another, particularly a child who acted as the primary caregiver?
- Are there complex business interests, such as a stake in a closely held LLC, that require immediate preservation?
- Are there blended family dynamics, such as a second spouse and children from a first marriage, who may have conflicting financial interests?
Identifying these issues during the initial consultation allows us to pivot our strategy immediately. If we anticipate a will contest under SCPA Article 14, we prepare for it from day one—gathering evidence of capacity and drafting the necessary affidavits rather than being blindsided months into the administration process.
The initial weeks following a death are chaotic, but the legal process that follows requires deliberate, methodical action. If you are holding an original will and a death certificate, your priority is to determine your legal standing and obligations. Gather the decedent’s financial artifacts and schedule a procedural assessment with our office so we can map out exactly what Surrogate’s Court will require of you.


