I often meet with families who believe their affairs are in order because they have a will tucked away in a safe deposit box. But a will only answers one question: who gets what after you die. It does nothing to address the far more common question of who takes control if you are alive but unable to make decisions for yourself.
For a business owner in Nassau County, an unexpected illness can freeze bank accounts, halt operations, and leave a family scrambling. Without a plan for incapacity, your loved ones must petition a court to have you declared incompetent and appoint a guardian. This is a public, expensive, and emotionally draining process that can be avoided.
More Than a Map for Your Assets
An estate plan is not a single document. It is a set of instructions for your family that addresses both your death and your potential incapacity. A will is a critical piece, but it is only activated by your passing. The real work of stewardship involves planning for the contingencies of life.
A Durable Power of Attorney and a Health Care Proxy are essential for these situations. A Power of Attorney allows you to designate an agent to handle your financial and legal affairs if you cannot. This person can pay bills, manage investments, and run your business without court intervention. A Health Care Proxy empowers an agent to make medical decisions on your behalf, ensuring your wishes are respected when you cannot voice them yourself.
These are not just forms. Selecting these fiduciaries is one of the most important decisions you will make. You are appointing custodians for your life’s work and your well-being.
The Surrogate’s Court Is Not Your Default Plan
Many people assume a will allows their family to bypass the courts. The opposite is true. In New York, a will must be validated by the Surrogate’s Court in a process called probate. Your will becomes a public record, and your executor must formally account for every asset and debt before anything can be distributed.
While probate is straightforward for simple estates, it can become a lengthy and expensive ordeal if the will is challenged. The formal requirements for a valid will are strict. Under New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 3-2.1, a will must be in writing, signed at the end by the testator, and witnessed by at least two individuals who also sign their names. A small mistake in this ceremony can invalidate the entire document, leaving your estate to be divided by state law, not your wishes.
For many of our clients, a revocable living trust is a more prudent vehicle for transferring a legacy. Assets held in a trust pass outside of probate, allowing for a private and efficient administration managed by a trustee you selected. This structure provides continuity, protects privacy, and can be designed to protect assets for beneficiaries for generations.
Stewardship Is an Intentional Act
This work is about being intentional. It is about deciding, with a clear mind, how you want your family to be cared for and what kind of legacy you want to leave. It is a process of making deliberate choices rather than leaving them to chance or the discretion of a court.
A well-crafted plan does more than distribute property. It can protect a child with special needs, ensure a family business transitions to the next generation, or shield an heir’s inheritance from their own potential creditors or divorces. It provides a framework for your designated fiduciaries to act with clarity and authority, guided by their legal and moral duty to carry out your instructions.
This is not about paperwork. It is about building a structure strong enough to withstand life’s uncertainties and protect the people you care about most. It is the highest form of stewardship.
The first step is to gain clarity on where you stand today. I invite you to schedule a confidential review of your existing estate documents with our firm so we can assess how they align with your family’s needs and long-term goals.




