For a beneficiary awaiting distribution, probate can feel like a black box: a will exists, your name may be in it, yet nothing arrives. Understanding how a will is actually probated in Brooklyn removes much of that mystery and shows you where to apply pressure when the process stalls.

Where Brooklyn Probate Happens

Probate in New York takes place in the Surrogate’s Court of the county where the decedent was domiciled. A Brooklyn resident’s estate is handled by the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. The court’s role is to confirm that the will is valid and to grant the executor legal authority to administer the estate. Until that authority is granted, no beneficiary can be paid, no matter how clear the will appears.

Step One: Filing the Petition

The person named as executor files a probate petition along with the original will and a certified death certificate. The petition identifies the decedent, the named beneficiaries, and the distributees — the relatives who would inherit under New York’s intestacy rules if there were no will. Those distributees matter even when a will exists, because they must be notified.

Step Two: Notice and Citation

Under the SCPA, interested parties receive notice. Distributees who do not sign a waiver must be served with a citation directing them to appear in the Surrogate’s Court if they wish to object. This is the stage at which a beneficiary or an excluded heir can raise concerns about the will’s validity. For a beneficiary awaiting distribution who simply wants the estate to proceed, the goal is usually to secure waivers and consents so the process moves without a contest.

Step Three: Letters Testamentary

Once the court is satisfied the will is valid and notice is complete, it admits the will to probate and issues Letters Testamentary. These letters are the executor’s proof of authority. Banks, brokerages, and transfer agents will not release a decedent’s assets without them. For beneficiaries, the issuance of letters is the real starting gun — only now can the executor begin collecting the property that will eventually be distributed.

Step Four: Collecting Assets, Paying Debts, and Distributing

After receiving letters, the executor marshals the estate’s assets, pays valid debts and any taxes, and then distributes what remains to the beneficiaries named in the will. The EPTL governs how the estate’s property is allocated, and the SCPA governs the executor’s accounting and the procedures for closing the estate. Distribution is the last step, which is precisely why beneficiaries wait.

What Can Delay Distribution

  • Will contests or objections raised after citation.
  • Difficulty locating distributees or assets.
  • Outstanding creditor claims or estate tax matters.
  • An executor who is slow, unresponsive, or self-dealing.

When delay crosses into neglect, beneficiaries have remedies in Surrogate’s Court, including petitioning to compel an accounting or, in serious cases, to remove the fiduciary.

Consult a New York Attorney

This overview describes general New York Surrogate’s Court procedure and is not legal advice. Filing requirements and deadlines vary with the facts of each estate. Speak with a licensed New York attorney before relying on this information.

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