When a Manhattan family loses a parent, the initial shock is rapidly interrupted by a barrage of practical demands. The hospital needs a funeral home designated immediately. The bank freezes the checking account used to pay the mortgage. Relatives start asking about the apartment. In the days following a death, families are forced to make permanent decisions while operating in a state of exhaustion. At Morgan Legal Group, P.C., we see the consequences of rushed actions—and the relief that comes with deliberate, measured steps. The transition of a lifetime of assets does not happen overnight. It requires prudence.
Secure the Tangible Environment
The very first priority is physical stewardship. If the deceased lived alone, secure their residence immediately. Lock the doors, forward the mail, and remove any obvious valuables, cash, or sensitive financial documents to a safe location. This is not about distrusting neighbors or family members; it is about preserving the estate and preventing early misunderstandings.
Before you even look for financial accounts, you must address the funeral arrangements. Sometimes, the deceased has left legally binding instructions regarding their remains or appointed an agent to control the disposition of their body. If no such document exists, New York law provides a strict hierarchy of who holds this right, starting with the surviving spouse, followed by adult children.
Next, you must locate the original will. A photocopy will not suffice for the court. You will also need to order original death certificates. I always advise families to request at least ten copies from the funeral director. Financial institutions, life insurance companies, the IRS, and the court will each demand an original or a certified copy before they will speak with you.
Understand the Illusion of Immediate Authority
A common misconception is that being named executor in a will grants you immediate control over the deceased’s assets. It does not. Authority. That is what you lack until a judge says otherwise. Until the Surrogate’s Court formally admits the will to probate and issues Letters Testamentary, the nominated executor has absolutely no legal power to sell property, distribute funds, or empty bank accounts.
Under the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA) Article 14, the will must be proven valid before any fiduciary power is granted. Attempting to bypass this reality—such as using a deceased parent’s debit card or logging into their online banking to pay utility bills—can trigger fraud alerts and severely complicate the eventual probate process. You must wait for the court’s decree. Until then, your role is simply to gather information and protect the physical property.
Triage the Financials
Once the immediate environment is secure, we shift to financial triage. Your job in the first few weeks is to collect data. Gather bank statements, life insurance policies, retirement account statements, and real estate deeds. Do not use your personal funds to pay the deceased’s credit card bills, medical debts, or unsecured loans. The estate is responsible for its own liabilities.
If there is not enough money in the estate to cover the debts, the creditors take the loss. Paying a debt from your own pocket rarely results in reimbursement, and it is entirely unnecessary. We sit down with families to separate the urgent liabilities—like keeping the property insured and the heat running in an empty house—from the unsecured debts that must wait for the formal claims process.
Determine the Legal Path Forward
Not every death requires a lengthy court intervention. If your loved one engaged in intentional, generational estate planning, their assets might bypass the courthouse entirely. Real estate held in a properly funded living trust, bank accounts with designated beneficiaries, and life insurance policies pay out directly to the named individuals outside of probate. Court involvement is only required for assets held solely in the deceased’s name with no joint owner or beneficiary designation.
If you cannot find a will, or if you know for certain that one was never drafted, the estate will proceed through an administration proceeding rather than probate. In these situations, state law dictates who inherits the assets and who has the right to step forward as the estate’s administrator. Under EPTL §4-1.1, the rules of intestate descent are rigid—they do not account for personal relationships or verbal promises made prior to death. Whether we are filing a will for probate or petitioning for administration, our role is to act as a custodian of the process, ensuring the court receives exactly what it needs to grant you the authority to act.
Manage Beneficiary Expectations
Once the probate or administration petition is filed, a waiting period begins. This is often the most difficult phase for families. Beneficiaries frequently expect immediate payouts, assuming the money will be distributed within weeks of the funeral. Setting realistic expectations is a critical part of your fiduciary duty.
In New York, creditors have seven months from the date the court appoints an executor to file claims against the estate. Prudent executors will not distribute the bulk of the estate assets until this seven-month window closes. Distributing funds too early leaves the executor personally liable if a valid creditor surfaces and the estate lacks the funds to pay them. When we represent an estate, we handle beneficiary communications directly. We inform the heirs of the legal timeline, explaining that the delay is a statutory requirement, not an executor’s personal choice. This removes the friction from family gatherings and places the burden of explanation squarely on our firm.
The weeks following a loss should be reserved for family, not legal anxiety. If you are holding an original will, a stack of confusing financial statements, and wondering what to do next, do not attempt to file the court paperwork yourself. Bring the documents to our office. We can schedule a preliminary estate review to examine the will, identify the probate assets, and map out the exact timeline required to settle the estate legally and efficiently.



