When a Brooklyn family clears out a parent’s home after a sudden death, the physical cleanup is only half the battle. The real challenge begins when the mail arrives—a stray 1099 from a forgotten brokerage, a dividend check from a stock purchased in the 1990s, or a safe deposit box key with no bank name attached. When a deceased individual leaves behind fragmented financial records, the next nine months belong to Surrogate’s Court. Tracking down missing money is less about forensic accounting and more about understanding the legal levers available to an estate fiduciary.
The Fiduciary’s Duty to the Legacy
A nominated executor or appointed administrator does not simply distribute funds handed to them. They carry a strict fiduciary duty to identify, secure, and manage all property belonging to the decedent. I often remind clients that estate administration is an act of stewardship. You act as the custodian of a lifetime of labor. If the decedent was not deliberate about consolidating their accounts, the burden falls on the family to reconstruct their financial footprint.
This duty extends far beyond checking the deceased’s wallet. It requires a prudent review of their entire economic life. If an executor fails to locate and secure these assets, beneficiaries can hold them personally liable for breach of fiduciary duty. The law expects diligence—and diligence requires knowing exactly where to look and how to compel institutions to cooperate.
Legal Tools for Uncovering Hidden Accounts
Under New York law, specifically Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) § 2103, an estate fiduciary holds the authority to institute a discovery proceeding. This is a powerful tool when you suspect money exists but cannot access it—or when you believe another individual is wrongfully withholding estate property.
A SCPA § 2103 proceeding allows the executor to compel banks, financial institutions, or uncooperative family members to appear in court, answer questions under oath, and deliver property to the estate. I have seen cases where an aging parent transferred a $250,000 brokerage account to a neighbor or caregiver shortly before death. The discovery proceeding is the mechanism we use to claw those funds back into the estate where they rightfully belong.
The Practical Search for Missing Funds
Before invoking the power of the court, the practical search begins. We instruct families to secure the deceased’s tax returns for the past three to five years. Schedule B (Interest and Ordinary Dividends) is often the most accurate map of a scattered financial life. Every line item points to an institution holding funds.
We also search the New York State Comptroller’s Office of Unclaimed Funds. Financial institutions must turn over dormant accounts to the state after a statutory period of inactivity—typically three years for bank accounts. While recovering these funds is straightforward once you hold court-issued Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration, the administrative delay can frustrate families trying to pay final expenses or settle estate debts.
Physical storage presents another common hurdle. If a family finds a safe deposit box key but no authorized signers remain on the account, the bank will refuse entry. In these instances, we petition the court under SCPA § 2003. This statute allows the Surrogate’s Court to issue an order permitting the box to be drilled and inventoried in the presence of a bank officer. The primary purpose of this initial entry is strictly to locate a Last Will and Testament or a cemetery deed—the bank will not allow you to walk out with cash or jewelry until the full probate process is underway.
The Threat of Digital Obscurity
We increasingly deal with estates where the wealth is entirely invisible. Digital assets represent a severe administrative hurdle. Cryptocurrency wallets, online-only banking, and digital payment platforms do not send paper statements to the decedent’s mailbox.
If the deceased was not intentional about leaving a digital inventory or naming a digital fiduciary, those assets may be permanently lost. The Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL) Article 13-A governs the administration of digital assets, but the law only helps if we know the assets exist. Without a paper trail, a six-figure Bitcoin wallet or an online brokerage account can simply vanish upon the owner’s death.
Tax Implications and Intestacy Complications
Locating money left behind carries strict tax implications. If an executor discovers a $500,000 investment account a year after the estate tax return is filed, they cannot quietly distribute the funds. They must amend the tax returns. If the estate was already near the New York estate tax cliff, a newly discovered asset can trigger severe tax liabilities. This requires careful coordination with legal counsel to maintain compliance.
The situation becomes even more fraught if the deceased died intestate—without a will. In these matters, any discovered funds must be distributed strictly according to the state’s laws of intestacy under EPTL § 4-1.1. Even if the family knows the decedent intended for a specific Chase savings account to go to a particular grandchild, the law ignores those wishes. The newly found money will be divided among the closest living relatives exactly as the statute dictates.
Preventing the Financial Scramble
The scramble to locate missing assets is usually the symptom of a deeper issue. It points to a lack of generational planning. When assets are properly aligned with an estate plan—such as being retitled into a revocable living trust—the trustee already holds legal title.
Stewardship.
That is the difference between a deliberate plan and a reactive one. A trust does not die, and it does not misplace its assets. The successor trustee simply steps into the role and administers the funds according to the terms of the document. There is no hunt. There is no court-ordered discovery. The transition of wealth is immediate and private. A deliberate plan ensures that every dollar earned over a lifetime reaches its intended beneficiary without being eroded by investigative costs, court fees, or state escheatment.
If you currently serve as an executor struggling to locate a parent’s scattered accounts, or if you want to ensure your own children never face this administrative burden, action is required before a crisis hits. I encourage you to schedule a complete asset alignment review with our office to evaluate your current financial footprint and establish a clear legal architecture for your family’s future.



