Most estate-planning websites lead with documents. We lead with decisions.
At Will Law Consultants, powered by the attorneys of Morgan Legal Group, the foundational question is never “do you need a will?” The foundational question is what kind of plan serves your life, your family, and your legacy in New York State? Only once we understand the answer does document drafting begin.
Attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. founded this advisory practice on a straightforward premise: the documents are only as good as the thinking behind them. A will executed in perfect compliance with EPTL §3-2.1 is worthless if it names the wrong executor, disinherits a dependent unintentionally, or ignores a spouse’s statutory right of election under EPTL 5-1.1-A.
What “Consultative” Actually Means for New York Clients
We serve clients across all of New York — from Manhattan and Brooklyn to Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, the Hudson Valley, Albany, and beyond. Our statewide reach means we understand that a family in Poughkeepsie faces different asset profiles and family dynamics than a family in Astoria — even though the same New York law governs both.
The Decisions That Matter Before You Sign Anything
| Decision | Why It Matters in New York |
|---|---|
| Will vs. trust-based plan | A will must be admitted to Surrogate’s Court at death; a revocable trust avoids that process entirely |
| Choosing an executor | The executor administers your estate — wrong choice creates delays, conflicts, or mismanagement |
| Naming a guardian | Only a will can designate a guardian for minor children under New York law |
| Funding beneficiary designations | Assets with named beneficiaries pass outside the will — the plan must account for both |
| Spousal right of election | EPTL 5-1.1-A guarantees a surviving spouse a minimum share regardless of what the will says — ignoring this creates litigation risk |
| No will at all | Dying intestate triggers EPTL Article 4 distribution, which follows a fixed statutory formula, not your wishes |
The Legal Foundation We Build On
New York will law is precise. Under EPTL §3-2.1, a valid will requires:
- The testator’s signature at the end of the instrument (or another person signing at the testator’s direction and in their presence)
- Publication — the testator must declare to witnesses that the instrument is their will
- At least two attesting witnesses, each signing at the testator’s request within a single 30-day period and adding their residence addresses
A will takes effect only at death and must be submitted to Surrogate’s Court for probate before it has legal force. We explain every step — from execution through probate filing — before you sign a single page.
We also make one distinction clearly: a living will is a health-care directive governing end-of-life medical decisions. It is a separate document from a property will and serves an entirely different legal function. Conflating the two is a common and costly mistake.
Ready to Think Before You Sign?
Schedule a consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. and let’s map the right plan for your New York estate — before we draft a single document.
Explore our services: Will Drafting Overview · NY Will Requirements · Will Execution · Codicils & Amendments · Intestacy — No Will
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: why estate planning is so important.