When a Brooklyn family loses a parent, the immediate aftermath is rarely a seamless transition of wealth. It usually begins with a frantic search through home office drawers for an original Will, a stack of incoming medical bills, and a locked safe deposit box that no one knows how to access. Grief is heavy enough without the sudden realization that the deceased’s assets are effectively frozen. The legal machinery of the Surrogate’s Court waits for no one, and families are forced to act while still mourning.
At Morgan Legal Group, P.C., we step into these situations regularly. Clients ask what they are legally required to do in the immediate wake of a death. The answer is rarely a single action. It is a sequence of deliberate steps designed to protect a legacy and transition assets to the next generation without unnecessary loss.
The First Days Are for the Family
A common misconception is that you must file legal paperwork the moment someone passes away. The law does not require you to rush to court on day one. The initial days belong to the family, funeral arrangements, and securing the physical property.
If the person lived alone, secure their residence. Lock the doors, forward their mail to a trusted family member, and ensure that no one—not even well-meaning relatives—starts removing personal items from the home. A sibling might take a watch or a piece of art, thinking they are merely taking a keepsake. In the eyes of the law, they are removing assets from an estate before a legal custodian has been appointed.
You will also need death certificates. The funeral home typically orders these, but families routinely underestimate how many they need. We advise securing ten to fifteen original copies. Financial institutions, life insurance companies, and government agencies demand original certificates before they even confirm whether an account exists.
Locating the Directives and Unlocking the Box
Once the immediate practical matters are settled, the next phase is locating the estate planning documents. You are looking for the original Last Will and Testament.
In New York, a photocopy of a Will is essentially useless unless you are prepared to undergo a highly burdensome legal proceeding to prove the original was not intentionally destroyed. The Surrogate’s Court demands the original document, complete with wet-ink signatures and the original staples intact. If the staples have been removed and replaced, the court demands an affidavit explaining exactly why.
Often, families discover the original Will is locked inside a safe deposit box at a local bank. The bank will not let you access the box simply because you are a child of the deceased or hold a death certificate. To retrieve the Will, we must file a specific petition under the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA § 2003) to obtain an order merely to open the box, inventory its contents, and extract the document.
Separating Probate from Non-Probate Assets
Before filing anything with the court, we must determine what actually belongs to the estate. Not every asset a person owns is subject to court oversight.
Assets with designated beneficiaries—such as life insurance policies, 401(k)s, or IRAs—transfer directly to the named individuals. Similarly, bank accounts held jointly with rights of survivorship become the sole property of the surviving owner the moment the first owner dies. These are non-probate assets.
For these accounts, the process is administrative rather than judicial. Beneficiaries must contact the respective financial institutions, request the necessary claim forms, and submit them alongside an original death certificate. While this sounds straightforward, corporate legal departments frequently reject claim forms for minor clerical errors. Securing the funds requires persistent follow-up.
Initiating the Court Process
If the deceased owned assets solely in their own name with no designated beneficiary—such as a house, an individual brokerage account, or a privately held business—court intervention is mandatory.
If a Will exists, we file for probate under SCPA Article 14. This is the process of proving the Will is valid and formally appointing the Executor named in the document. If there is no Will, the estate falls to the laws of intestacy under EPTL § 4-1.1, and an Administrator must be appointed. Either way, the court’s ultimate job is to issue Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration. These physical documents grant the appointed fiduciary the legal authority to step into the shoes of the deceased.
Without these Letters, you cannot close a bank account. You cannot sell the deceased’s house. You cannot sign a tax return on their behalf. You are legally powerless to manage their affairs.
This process takes time. The court must notify all legal heirs—even those who were intentionally disinherited under the Will—giving them an opportunity to object to the proceedings. The timeline from filing the petition to receiving the Letters can span from several weeks to many months, depending on the court’s backlog and family dynamics.
The Burden of Fiduciary Duty
Being named an Executor or Administrator is frequently viewed as an honor. It is not. It is a job, and it carries strict legal liability.
Stewardship.
That is the actual role of the fiduciary. You are a custodian of the assets, legally bound to act in the best interests of the estate and its beneficiaries. Your duties include gathering all financial assets, appraising real property, identifying and paying legitimate creditors, filing final personal income taxes, and potentially filing estate tax returns.
Executors who act imprudently can be held personally liable. In New York, creditors generally have seven months from the date Letters are issued to present their claims against the estate under SCPA § 1802. If you distribute money to beneficiaries before this period expires, or before paying off a known creditor, you can be forced to pay those debts out of your own pocket. We spend significant time advising fiduciaries on how to protect themselves from liability while efficiently settling the estate.
Every action taken must be deliberate. You must maintain separate estate accounts, keep meticulous records of every penny spent, and eventually provide a full accounting to the beneficiaries before the estate can be formally closed. This is not a process to be rushed or handled informally.
Moving Forward with Prudent Action
The transition of a lifetime of assets—whether a modest family home or a massive investment portfolio—requires disciplined legal execution. The decisions made in the initial weeks dictate how smoothly the estate is settled and whether the deceased’s legacy is preserved or diminished by avoidable disputes.
If you are facing the administrative burden of a recent loss, schedule an estate settlement briefing with our office to review the original documents and determine the precise filings required.



