When most people think about a will, they picture a single document. What they rarely picture is everything that document must work alongside — powers of attorney, health-care proxies, trusts, beneficiary designations, and the court process that follows death. At Morgan Legal Group, “total” is not a marketing word. It is a commitment: attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. coordinates every moving part of your estate plan under one roof, serving clients across New York City, Long Island, Westchester, the Hudson Valley, and Upstate New York.
What “Total” Planning Actually Means
A piecemeal estate plan is a plan waiting to fail. A will drafted without accounting for your beneficiary designations can be overridden by the very accounts it was meant to control. A health-care directive missing from your file leaves family members guessing during a crisis. “Total” means none of those gaps exist in your plan when we are done.
Our practice covers:
| Planning Layer | What It Does | Key Governing Law |
|---|---|---|
| Will drafting | Directs property, names executor, nominates guardians | EPTL §3-2.1 |
| Execution & attestation | Two-witness signing ceremony, publication, residence addresses | EPTL §3-2.1 |
| Codicils & amendments | Updates existing wills without full redrafting | EPTL §3-2.1 |
| Living will / health-care proxy | End-of-life medical decisions — a separate document from a property will | NY Public Health Law |
| Intestacy analysis | Shows what happens to your estate if you die without a valid will | EPTL Article 4 |
| Surrogate’s Court probate | Guides your executor through admitting the will and settling the estate | NY SCPA |
Why New York’s Execution Rules Demand Attention
New York imposes specific formalities under EPTL §3-2.1. A single misstep can render a will invalid:
- The testator must sign at the end of the will — or direct another person to sign in their presence.
- The testator must declare the document is their will (known as “publication”) to each witness.
- At least two attesting witnesses must sign within a 30-day period, adding their residence addresses.
- Witnesses must either witness the testator’s signature directly or hear the testator acknowledge a signature already made.
See the complete breakdown on our NY will requirements page.
Protecting Your Surviving Spouse
Even a carefully drafted will cannot override New York’s spousal right of election. Under EPTL §5-1.1-A, a surviving spouse may claim a minimum elective share of the estate regardless of what the will states. Total planning accounts for this from the start — not as an afterthought.
What Happens Without a Will
Dying without a valid will in New York means EPTL Article 4 governs who inherits. The state’s formula distributes assets to next of kin in a fixed order that may not reflect your wishes. Unmarried partners, close friends, and stepchildren receive nothing under intestacy. A will — properly executed under New York law — prevents that outcome.
Work With Russel Morgan, Esq.
Russel Morgan has guided New York families through every stage of the estate-planning process, from the first conversation about drafting a will to navigating Surrogate’s Court probate. If you are ready to cover every base in a single, coordinated plan, schedule a consultation below.
Book a 30-Minute Consultation →
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: why estate planning is so important.