When a partner in a professional firm—law, accounting, or medicine—passes away, their family faces a difficult question: What was their stake in the business actually worth? They know the annual income, but that figure rarely reflects the value locked inside the firm itself. The partnership agreement might specify a buyout formula, but it was likely written to protect the firm, not the family. A lifetime of work becomes a contractual negotiation.
In my practice, I’ve seen surviving spouses left to decipher complex capital accounts and buy-sell agreements. They are grieving while trying to secure the financial legacy their partner worked to build. This is an avoidable situation. The conversation about a partner’s compensation is not just about salary—it is about the stewardship of a major family asset.
Beyond Salary: Understanding a Partner’s Stake
For most professionals, income is straightforward. For a partner, it is multifaceted. It is not a simple paycheck, but a combination of a salary or draw, a share of the firm’s profits, and an equity or capital account representing their ownership interest. This distinction is the foundation of any prudent estate plan for a professional.
An equity partner’s compensation reflects ownership. Their capital account—the money invested and retained in the firm—is an asset that belongs to their estate. A non-equity partner, by contrast, may have a title and a high income but no ownership stake to pass on. For our clients who are partners, we do not just ask what they make. We ask for the partnership or operating agreement. That document, more than any tax return, tells the real story.
The Partnership Agreement: Your First, Involuntary Estate Plan
Most partners do not realize they already have an estate plan for their largest asset: the partnership agreement. These documents almost always contain provisions that dictate what happens upon a partner’s death, disability, or retirement. They typically address:
- Valuation: How is a partner’s interest valued? Is it book value, a multiple of earnings, or another formula? These formulas often prioritize the firm’s continuity, which may not align with a fair market valuation for your family.
- Buyout Terms: Are the surviving partners obligated to buy out the deceased partner’s share? Is the firm the purchaser? Is the payout a lump sum or a multi-year installment plan?
- Funding: Is the buyout funded by the firm’s cash flow, or is there a life insurance policy in place for liquidity? An unfunded obligation can put both the firm and the grieving family in a precarious position.
The terms of this agreement are legally binding. If your will or trust says one thing but the partnership agreement says another, the agreement usually wins. We insist on reviewing these documents as a core part of the estate planning process. We are looking for conflicts and contingencies before they become a problem for your family in a Manhattan Surrogate’s Court.
Integrating Your Practice into Your Legacy
The goal is to ensure your business interests and your personal estate plan work together. A properly drafted trust, for example, can be structured to receive the proceeds from a partnership buyout. This allows for professional management of the funds, protects the assets from creditors, and distributes the inheritance according to your wishes over time.
The trustee you name has a fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of your beneficiaries. This includes properly accounting for the buyout payments. Under New York law, specifically Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) § 11-A-4.9, clear rules dictate how a trustee must allocate receipts from an entity like a partnership between income and principal. This is not a minor detail—it determines how much money is available to a surviving spouse for living expenses versus how much is preserved for the next generation.
Your professional success is a key part of your legacy. It requires the same deliberate, intentional planning as any other significant asset. Stewardship. It is about making sure the value you created in your professional life transitions smoothly to become a source of security for your family.
The first step is often the simplest: placing your partnership agreement and your current will or trust side-by-side. If you are a partner in a professional firm, our work begins with a confidential review of these documents to identify the gaps between your business succession plan and your family’s legacy.



