A family I worked with from Suffolk County built a successful manufacturing business over two generations. The founder, in his late 60s, was the sole signatory on every major bank account. One Tuesday morning, he suffered a debilitating stroke. His family was not only faced with a medical crisis—they were also locked out of the company’s finances. Payroll was due Friday. Without a durable power of attorney, they had no legal authority to sign those checks. Their first call was to the hospital; their second was to my office, facing a court proceeding just to keep the family business afloat.
This is the reality of planning that focuses only on what happens after death. A Last Will and Testament is a fundamental document. It is your direct instruction to the Surrogate’s Court on who should be your executor and how your assets should be distributed. But a will has no power while you are alive. True estate planning is not about a single document; it is the deliberate construction of a framework to protect your family and assets during life, through any potential incapacity, and for generations to come.
Beyond the Will: Planning for Contingency
When we sit down with families, the first conversation is rarely about legal instruments. It is about their life, their business, and their vision for the future. What happens if you can no longer manage your own affairs? Who has the authority to speak for you? Who will be the custodian of your legacy?
Many people assume their spouse or adult child can simply step in. The law does not make that assumption. Without legal documentation, banks, doctors, and financial institutions cannot and will not grant access or authority to a family member. This is not institutional coldness—it is a legal safeguard that, without proper planning, can paralyze a family.
Our work centers on building a plan for these contingencies. We are not just drafting documents; we are creating a clear chain of command and a set of instructions for your chosen fiduciaries. It is an act of profound responsibility to remove ambiguity and burden from your loved ones during what will inevitably be a difficult time. Stewardship.
The Critical Question of Incapacity
The most immediate threat to a family’s financial stability is often not death, but incapacity. If you cannot make decisions for yourself, someone must be empowered to do so. In New York, this authority is granted through two key documents: a Health Care Proxy and a Durable Power of Attorney.
A Health Care Proxy allows you to appoint an agent to make medical decisions on your behalf if you are unable to communicate them yourself. A Durable Power of Attorney is the financial equivalent. It grants a trusted agent the authority to manage your property, pay bills, and handle financial matters. The power of this document is immense, and its creation is governed by strict statutory requirements under New York General Obligations Law § 5-1501B.
Without these documents in place, a family like the one on Long Island must petition the court for an Article 81 guardianship proceeding. This is a public, expensive, and often emotionally taxing process where a judge decides who should manage your affairs. It is a measure of last resort, a crisis-driven outcome that intentional planning avoids entirely.
Trusts as Tools for Generational Stewardship
While a will directs assets through the court-supervised probate process, a trust operates as a private agreement for managing your legacy. A properly funded revocable living trust can allow your estate to avoid the time and expense of probate, passing assets to your heirs seamlessly.
But trusts are more than just probate-avoidance tools. They are powerful instruments for stewardship. For families with young children, a trust ensures assets are managed by a chosen trustee until the children reach an age of financial maturity. For blended families, trusts can provide for a current spouse while preserving an inheritance for children from a prior marriage. Irrevocable trusts can also be used for advanced planning, including asset protection and estate tax mitigation.
Creating a trust means appointing a trustee—an individual or institution bound by a strict fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of your beneficiaries. This is one of the most important decisions you will make. It is the selection of a conservator who will execute your wishes with integrity and care long after you are gone.
A complete estate plan provides a clear, private, and efficient set of instructions. It anticipates life’s uncertainties and protects the people you care about from unnecessary legal hurdles. It is the blueprint for your family’s future.
Our process begins not with documents, but with a conversation about your family, your assets, and your definition of legacy. The first step is to schedule a confidential consultation to map out the framework for your family’s security.


