Legal Question in Wills and Trusts in New York

Did Grandmother have a will?

I am wondering if there is a way to find out if my paternal grandmother ever had a will. I have checked with the Surrogate's Court in the county where she lived, but nothing was on file there.

Her attorney has long since passed away and I am pretty sure that the practice was closed when he died although I have no confirmation of that. Even if the will was dissolved, would there be some record somewhere of it being written up in the first place? Would her attorney's files have been passed onto someone else? Would I be able to see them?

Thank you in advance for any information that you might be able to provide.


Asked on 4/01/02, 1:48 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Sarah Klug Law Office of Sarah Scova Klug PLLC

Re: Did Grandmother have a will?

Check with your grandmother's friends and even clergy members regarding the will. Perhaps the trust department of your grandmother's local bank or a local trust company may be holding the original if they were designated as the exector. Did your grandmother have a safe deposit box? (The NYS Dept. of Tax & Finance can issue a release of lien allowing the safe deposit box to be opened.)

Good luck.

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Answered on 4/03/02, 4:22 pm
Timothy Violette Law Office of Timothy P. Violette

Re: Did Grandmother have a will?

Checking the Surrogates Court is the most effective way to find a will. Attorneys usually do not keep the original will, only a copy, which often does not even have the witness signatures on it. A will can be destroyed by the testator at any time; we often tell our clients not to put the will in a safe deposit box but to keep it availabe. After checking the Court and relatives, hiring a private investigator may be helpful. Other than the original will, did you search Surrogates to see if her estate was settled without a will? If not, have her date of death available and check again. Thea amount of time and effort put into finding a will, if one exists, is naturally related to the value of finding one. If it's worth your while, get the investigator.

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Answered on 4/01/02, 2:13 pm


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