Contested Probate in New York City: A Checklist for Challenging or Defending a Will

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Most wills sail through New York’s Surrogate’s Court uncontested. But when a family member believes a will does not reflect the true wishes of the person who died, the process becomes adversarial. Whether you are an executor defending a will or a relative thinking about objecting, this checklist explains how contested probate works in New York City.

Who Can Contest a Will

Only an “interested party” with standing may object—generally a distributee who would inherit under intestacy (EPTL Article 4) or a beneficiary under a prior will, whose share would change if the offered will were rejected. A friend or distant relative who would take nothing either way usually cannot contest.

The Recognized Grounds for a Challenge

  • Improper execution — the will fails the formalities of EPTL §3-2.1, such as proper witnessing.
  • Lack of testamentary capacity — the testator did not understand the nature of the act, the property, or the natural objects of their bounty.
  • Undue influence — someone overpowered the testator’s free will, a frequent claim where a caregiver or one child receives an outsized share.
  • Fraud — the testator was deceived into signing.
  • Forgery or revocation — the signature is not genuine, or the will was validly revoked.

Checklist Before You Object

  1. Confirm you have standing as an interested party.
  2. Request SCPA 1404 examinations—pre-objection depositions of the attorney-drafter and the attesting witnesses—to assess whether real grounds exist.
  3. Review the decedent’s medical records and prior wills.
  4. Weigh any in terrorem (no-contest) clause, which can forfeit a gift if you challenge and lose, though New York recognizes limited safe-harbor exceptions.
  5. File written objections within the time the court allows after citation.

Checklist for the Executor Defending the Will

  1. Secure the original will and the drafting attorney’s file.
  2. Identify and prepare the attesting witnesses.
  3. Gather evidence of the testator’s capacity around the signing date.
  4. Document that the testator acted freely—independent counsel and no-suspicious-circumstances facts help.
  5. Consider whether early mediation could resolve the dispute before costly litigation.

Why NYC Estates Draw More Contests

New York City real estate, co-op shares, and family businesses can make a single estate worth a great deal, which raises the stakes and the temptation to fight. Blended families, late-in-life marriages, and last-minute changes to a long-standing plan are common triggers in Brooklyn, Queens, and Manhattan estates alike. The higher the value, the more likely a disappointed heir is to test the will.

What Happens If a Will Is Rejected

If the court denies probate, the estate may pass under an earlier valid will or, absent one, by intestacy under EPTL Article 4. That is rarely what anyone wanted, which is why both sides should understand the downside before litigating.

Consult a New York Attorney

Will contests turn on tight deadlines, evidence, and the specific record built during SCPA 1404 exams. Before you file or respond to objections in any NYC Surrogate’s Court, speak with a New York attorney who handles contested estates.

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DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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