The Role of the Probate Court in New York: What the Surrogate’s Court Actually Does
What the New York probate court (Surrogate’s Court) does: admitting wills, appointing executors, handling creditor claims, and supervising estate administration.
LONG ISLAND ESTATE PLANNING LAWYER
What the New York probate court (Surrogate’s Court) does: admitting wills, appointing executors, handling creditor claims, and supervising estate administration.
How New York’s homestead exemption protects the family home during probate, what it shields from creditors, and how spouses and heirs claim it.
What probate really costs in New York: Surrogate’s Court filing fees, attorney fee structures, and how creditor claims affect the final bill.
A NY probate attorney explains how probate works step by step in Surrogate’s Court, from filing the will to paying creditors and distributing assets.
A first-timer’s step-by-step walkthrough of probate in a New York Surrogate’s Court, from filing the petition to closing the estate and distributing assets.
Live outside New York but inherit from a NY estate? Learn how out-of-state heirs handle Surrogate’s Court probate, creditor claims, and remote signing.
How probate fraud and undue influence claims work in New York Surrogate’s Court, who can object to a will, and what creditors and heirs must prove.
A NY probate attorney explains when a surviving spouse must act: the spousal right of election, creditor claims, deadlines, and Surrogate’s Court steps.
How to sell a decedent’s real estate during New York probate: executor authority, creditor claims, closing pitfalls, and SCPA rules explained by a NY attorney.
How creditor claims fit into the New York probate timeline: the seven-month rule, executor duties, payment priority, and what families should expect.
How long does probate take in New York? Most estates settle in 9-18 months. A NY probate attorney explains the timeline, creditor claims, and what causes delays.
A New York probate attorney explains how clear estate planning prevents Surrogate’s Court disputes, creditor claims, and will contests under EPTL and SCPA.
How estate accounting and inventory work in New York probate: SCPA filing rules, what the fiduciary must report, creditor claims, and deadlines.
How jointly held and beneficiary-designated assets pass outside NY probate, and what it means for creditors, the spouse’s right of election, and estate claims.
How New York’s small estate (voluntary) administration under SCPA Article 13 works, who qualifies, and how creditors get paid. A NY probate attorney explains.
No will in New York? Learn how intestate succession under EPTL distributes an estate, who inherits, and how creditors get paid in Surrogate’s Court.
What does a personal representative do in New York? Duties of executors and administrators under the EPTL and SCPA, including creditor claims and liability.
How to choose a New York probate attorney: what to ask, fees, Surrogate’s Court experience, and why creditor-claims skill matters for your estate.
Guardianship protects a living person who can’t manage their affairs; probate settles a deceased person’s estate. Here’s how the two differ under NY law.
How to close a New York probate estate and make final distribution: creditor claims, accountings, releases, and Surrogate’s Court steps explained by a NY attorney.
How to remove or replace a New York executor or administrator: grounds under SCPA 711 & 719, the process in Surrogate’s Court, and creditor protections.
How to contest a will in New York: the legal grounds, who can object, the SCPA 1404 and 1410 process, deadlines, and what creditors should know.
Ancillary probate lets executors of an out-of-state decedent transfer New York real estate. Learn the SCPA steps, creditor claims, and how to start.
New York probate gets delayed by will contests, missing heirs, creditor claims, and tax issues. Here’s why Surrogate’s Court estates stall and how to prevent it.
A New York probate attorney explains how to open a probate estate in Surrogate’s Court, file the will, qualify as executor, and handle creditor claims.
How heir disputes and estate litigation work in New York Surrogate’s Court: will contests, the spousal right of election, creditor claims, and accountings.
A New York probate attorney explains which assets pass through Surrogate’s Court, what skips probate, and how creditor claims affect the estate.
Formal vs. summary administration in New York explained: when small estate (SCPA Article 13) applies vs. full administration, and what creditors should know.