A family in Carroll Gardens loses its matriarch. She was a savvy investor and a beloved figure in the neighborhood, but she only left behind a simple, decade-old will. Her children, now adults with families of their own, assumed her affairs were in order. Instead, they discovered her brownstone, her investment accounts, and her legacy were now subject to the public and protracted process of the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. For the next year or more, control is out of their hands.
This is a story I have seen play out countless times. Many hardworking New Yorkers believe that a last will and testament is the beginning and end of estate planning. A will is often just the starting point. For families with significant assets like real estate, it is an insufficient tool for the job. A will is a set of instructions for the court. It does not avoid probate; it guarantees it. The process is public, can be expensive, and invites challenges from disgruntled heirs.
True estate planning is not about documents. It is an act of stewardship. It’s about creating a deliberate, private, and efficient transition of responsibility from one generation to the next.
Beyond Dividing Assets: Appointing a Custodian
When I sit down with a family, our first conversation is rarely about numbers. It’s about people. Who in your life has the judgment, integrity, and temperament to manage your affairs if you cannot? Who would be the right custodian for your children’s inheritance until they are mature enough to handle it themselves?
This person is your fiduciary—your executor, your trustee, your agent under a power of attorney. Choosing them is arguably the most critical decision in your plan. This is not an honorary role. It comes with a strict legal standard of care known as a fiduciary duty. This individual will be responsible for marshalling assets, paying debts and taxes, managing investments, and making distributions, all while acting solely in the best interests of the beneficiaries. A poorly chosen fiduciary can cause irreparable family conflict; a well-chosen one ensures your intentions are carried out faithfully.
We often discuss creating a team of fiduciaries—perhaps a family member for personal decisions and a corporate trustee for financial management. The goal is to build a structure of support and oversight that protects your legacy and the people it is meant to benefit.
The State Has a Plan, Even If You Don’t
Many assume that if they die without a will, their property will simply pass to their spouse or children in an orderly fashion. This is a dangerous miscalculation. If you do not have a will, New York State has one for you. The rules are laid out in our Estates, Powers and Trusts Law—specifically EPTL § 4-1.1.
This statute dictates a rigid hierarchy of who inherits your property. For example, if you have a spouse and children, your spouse inherits the first $50,000 and half of the remainder, with the rest split among your children. This formula rarely aligns with a family’s actual needs or wishes. It makes no provision for a lifelong partner to whom you are not married, for a favorite niece, or for a charitable cause. It treats all children equally, regardless of their age, needs, or financial maturity. Relying on the state’s default plan is a failure of intention.
A well-crafted plan, often centered around a revocable living trust, replaces the state’s generic formula with your specific instructions. It keeps your affairs private, bypasses the delays of Surrogate’s Court, and provides a framework for managing assets for beneficiaries who may not be ready for a lump-sum inheritance.
Planning for Contingency, Not Just Certainty
A solid estate plan is not a static document. It is a dynamic strategy that anticipates life’s uncertainties. What happens if your chosen guardian for your minor children passes away? What if a beneficiary develops a disability, and an inheritance would disqualify them from essential government benefits? What if your trustee is no longer able to serve?
These are the contingencies we plan for. We build in layers of protection by naming successor trustees and guardians. We use supplemental needs trusts to hold assets for beneficiaries with special needs. We incorporate provisions that give a trustee flexibility to adapt to changing circumstances and laws. This is the difference between a simple set of documents and a resilient, generational plan. It is about ensuring your legacy can withstand the unexpected. Stewardship.
The work we do is about more than asset protection; it is about providing a clear path forward for the people you care about most during a difficult time. It is a final, profound act of caring for your family.
The first step is not to draft a document, but to create a clear inventory of what you are responsible for—your assets, your liabilities, and your people. I invite you to schedule a confidential session with my firm where we can map out the components of your legacy and discuss who you would entrust with its future.




