I recently met with a Suffolk County couple who believed they had done everything right. They drafted a will twenty years ago when their first child was born and bought life insurance. They assumed they were prepared. Their life today, however, is unrecognizable. They now own a small business, their children are adults, and the value of their home has quadrupled. Their old will, once a source of comfort, had become a significant liability—a roadmap straight to a lengthy and public probate process in Surrogate’s Court.
This is a story I see often in my practice. Families work for decades to build something meaningful, but they treat their estate plan as a one-time task instead of what it is: the active stewardship of their legacy. An estate plan is not a document to sign and forget. It is a living framework—one designed to protect your family, preserve your assets, and transfer your values.
Beyond the Last Will
For many New York families, a simple will is not enough. A will directs the distribution of your assets, but only after it passes through probate—the court-supervised process of validating the document and settling the estate. This process can be time-consuming, expensive, and is a matter of public record. For families on Long Island with significant real estate assets or a family business, this public exposure and delay can create unnecessary hardship.
This is why we often build a family’s plan around a revocable living trust. Unlike a will, a properly funded trust does not go through probate. Assets held in the trust can be managed and distributed by your chosen successor trustee privately and efficiently. This provides continuity for a family business, protects assets from certain creditors, and allows you to set specific conditions for how and when your beneficiaries receive their inheritance.
A trust isn’t about avoiding taxes for the ultra-wealthy—it’s about control and prudence. It allows you to appoint a custodian for your legacy who can manage finances for a young adult child, provide for a relative with special needs without disrupting their government benefits, or ensure a vacation home stays in the family for generations. It transforms estate planning from a simple distribution of assets into a deliberate, intentional act of generational stewardship.
The Weight of Fiduciary Duty
One of the most profound decisions you will make in your estate plan is choosing your fiduciaries. These are the people you name to act on your behalf—your executor, your trustee, the guardian for your minor children. This is not an honorary title. It is a demanding role that carries immense legal and ethical weight, known as a fiduciary duty. This is the highest standard of care recognized by law.
Your trustee, for instance, is legally obligated to act solely in the best interests of the trust’s beneficiaries. They must make prudent investment decisions, keep meticulous records, file tax returns, and communicate transparently. Naming a person who is well-intentioned but lacks the financial acumen or emotional fortitude to handle the responsibility can lead to family conflict and mismanagement of the very assets you sought to protect.
I often advise clients to think beyond the obvious choices. Sometimes the best trustee isn’t a family member, but a corporate trustee or a trusted professional advisor who can bring impartiality and expertise to the role. The goal is to select a conservator who has the skill and integrity to execute your plan as you intended, even when—especially when—you are no longer there to oversee them.
Planning for Contingency, Not Just Finality
A common misconception is that estate planning is only about death. A prudent plan must also account for incapacity. What if a sudden illness or accident left you unable to manage your own financial or medical affairs? Without a plan, your family must petition a court to have a guardian appointed—a costly, slow, and often painful process.
To avoid this, every estate plan requires two critical documents: a Health Care Proxy and a Durable Power of Attorney. The Health Care Proxy names an agent to make medical decisions for you. The Durable Power of Attorney appoints an agent to handle your financial matters.
Under New York law, these are powerful documents with strict execution requirements. The Power of Attorney, for instance, was updated significantly in 2021. As outlined in General Obligations Law § 5-1501B, the law now requires the agent you appoint to formally sign the document, acknowledging their responsibilities. This is not a mere formality. It ensures the person you entrust with your finances understands the gravity of their fiduciary role from the outset. Planning for these contingencies is a gift to your family, sparing them from making difficult decisions during an already stressful time.
A well-constructed estate plan does more than distribute property. It provides clarity in a crisis, protects family harmony, and ensures that the legacy you’ve built continues to support the people you love. It is an act of profound responsibility.
The first step toward building this framework is understanding what you currently have. If you have an existing will or trust that hasn’t been reviewed in the last three to five years, we reserve time to conduct a complimentary review to identify any gaps created by changes in your family, your finances, or the law itself.


