When a Manhattan software developer, a gallery artist, or a commercial real estate founder dies unexpectedly, the immediate aftermath is rarely just about dividing bank accounts. Their family inherits copyrights, unliquidated equity, brand identity, and unfinished projects. If the creator never established a formal structure for these assets, the next nine months belong to Surrogate’s Court. Judges and appointed fiduciaries—who likely have zero background in the decedent’s industry—must suddenly place a monetary value on imagination and future royalties.
Historical precedents show how massive creative legacies survive the sudden loss of their architects. When Walt Disney died in December 1966, he left behind an empire of intellectual property, a revolutionary theme park in California, and roughly 27,000 acres of secretly purchased swampland in Florida. The survival of that empire—and the seamless continuation of projects he never lived to see completed—was not a fortunate accident. It was the result of deliberate stewardship and highly intentional legal foresight.
The Weight of Intellectual Property in an Estate
Most traditional estate plans focus heavily on real estate, investment portfolios, and liquid assets. For creators and business founders, intellectual property often represents the most valuable—and the most fragile—piece of their legacy. Copyrights, trademarks, patents, and name-and-likeness rights do not evaporate at death. They persist, and whoever takes the helm must actively manage, protect, and monetize them.
Under New York law—specifically the broad grants of authority in EPTL §11-1.1—fiduciaries receive statutory powers to take possession of, manage, and preserve a decedent’s property. However, managing a portfolio of copyrights, negotiating licensing deals, or running a functioning production company requires far more than standard administrative competence. It requires a specific, documented mandate. If a will or trust is silent on how creative assets should be handled, an executor might be forced to liquidate them prematurely to satisfy outstanding debts or distribute equal cash shares to impatient heirs.
Disney’s estate avoided this fragmentation because the succession of his business interests was structured to prevent a vacuum of leadership. Control of the corporate entities passed seamlessly to his brother, Roy O. Disney, and a core group of executives who fundamentally understood the creative vision. The transition was smooth because the legal mechanics were already in place.
Avoiding the Public Spectacle of Probate
The public nature of probate is an enemy to business continuity and creative privacy. When a prominent figure passes away, the last thing the family or the company board wants is a public inventory of assets, private debts, and internal valuations sitting in the county clerk’s office for reporters and competitors to dissect.
In New York, when a will is submitted for probate under SCPA Article 14, the entire proceeding becomes a matter of public record. Anyone can walk into the courthouse and request to see the filings. For a high-net-worth individual or a public figure, this lack of privacy is entirely unacceptable. Furthermore, the probate process invites severe delays. A business cannot pause its payroll, halt its contract negotiations, or freeze its development pipeline while waiting weeks or months for a judge to officially issue Letters Testamentary to an executor.
By using revocable living trusts and deliberate corporate structuring, founders can keep their shares, voting rights, and intellectual property out of the court system entirely. A trust acts as a private custodian. Upon the grantor’s death, the successor trustee steps in immediately. There is no public filing, no delay in authority, and no interruption in business operations. The brand remains stable, and the family is protected from external scrutiny.
Appointing a Creative Fiduciary
I frequently tell clients who hold significant intellectual property that their spouse or eldest child might be the perfect person to manage their financial trust, but the absolute wrong person to manage their creative legacy.
Stewardship.
This is the core principle of a well-drafted estate plan for a visionary. The skills required to invest a life insurance payout prudently are entirely different from the skills required to decide whether an unfinished manuscript should be published, or whether a beloved character should be licensed for a new commercial product.
For clients with complex creative or business assets, we frequently structure trusts that separate financial fiduciaries from creative fiduciaries. A special trustee—sometimes referred to as a “literary executor” or “IP trustee”—can be appointed specifically to manage the publication, licensing, and archiving of creative works. This prevents a grieving family member from having to negotiate complex royalty agreements or make subjective decisions about the artistic integrity of the deceased’s work. It places the burden of those decisions on an industry professional bound by a strict fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of the beneficiaries.
The Florida Project and Generational Vision
At the time of his passing, Walt Disney was deeply involved in “The Florida Project”—the massive, covert land acquisition that would eventually become Walt Disney World. He had used a complex web of shell companies to purchase the land anonymously, preventing regional price gouging.
If his estate had been disorganized, or if his assets had been tied up in a protracted, public court battle, the entire Florida expansion could have collapsed. Creditors could have panicked. Shareholders could have forced a sale of the land. Instead, because the corporate and estate structures were sound, Roy Disney was able to step out of his planned retirement, take control of the entities, and push the project to completion.
We do not leave the survival of a life’s work to the default rules of state intestacy. We build a framework that protects the assets from creditors, shields them from public probate, and dictates exactly how the legacy should be utilized for generational benefit. A founder’s death should be a transition of power, not the dissolution of an empire.
Protecting a creative or corporate legacy requires more than a standard will; it demands a deliberate legal strategy built specifically for your intellectual property and business interests. Schedule a beneficiary and fiduciary audit with our firm to review the succession provisions of your existing corporate shares and creative assets.



