
By Roman Aminov,
If you have recently been appointed executor or administrator in another state or country and discovered that the decedent owned property in New York, you are likely facing a question nobody prepared you for. How do you get legal authority over assets in a state where you were never appointed? The answer is an ancillary proceeding in New York's Surrogate's Court, and while the concept is straightforward, the execution involves a handful of procedural requirements that can trip up even experienced fiduciaries.
Venue in an ancillary case follows the property. You file in the Surrogate's Court of the county where the New York asset is located. If the decedent owned a house in Suffolk County and a co-op in Queens, the court that receives the first filing keeps jurisdiction over both. Filing in the wrong county is not fatal, but it costs time and may require a transfer, so getting it right at the outset matters.
The filing fee itself is calculated based on the value of the New York property only, not the total value of the estate. New York uses a graduated fee schedule under SCPA Section 2402, starting at $45 for property under $10,000 and climbing to $1,250 for property valued at $500,000 or more. These are modest amounts relative to the property values involved, but the real cost of the proceeding lies in the preparation, coordination, and waiting.
I tell clients to think of the ancillary filing as building a bridge between two court systems. On one side, you have the home-state court that already granted authority over the estate. On the other side, you have a New York Surrogate's Court that needs to be convinced of three things. First, that a valid probate or administration is underway elsewhere. Second, that the decedent owned property in New York. Third, that the person seeking ancillary letters is the right person to receive them.
The centerpiece of that proof is the exemplified record from the domiciliary court. This is not a simple certified copy. It is a specially authenticated set of documents, often including the will, the probate decree, the letters, and supporting affidavits. The Surrogate's Court is particular about these records. They must arrive unaltered. If someone unstaples the pages to make photocopies and reattaches them, the court may reject the filing.
Beyond the exemplified record, the petition must identify every New York asset, list all interested parties (heirs, beneficiaries, and anyone with a right to serve as fiduciary), and describe any known New York creditors. The court will also require an application for a New York State tax waiver, and that step alone can add weeks or even months to the timeline.
Getting waivers signed is one of the most effective ways to accelerate an ancillary case. A waiver is a document in which an interested party, typically an heir or beneficiary, consents to the proceeding and agrees to forgo formal service of a court citation. When every interested person signs, the case can often move on a consent calendar and avoid the delays that come with contested or unresponsive parties.
But waivers are not always available. A family member may refuse to sign, an heir may be difficult to locate, or someone may live overseas with no convenient way to execute New York-compliant documents. In those situations, the court directs the petitioner to serve a citation, which is a formal notice requiring the recipient to appear or respond within a set timeframe. Service on out-of-state parties comes with extended deadlines, and if someone cannot be found at all, the court may authorize service by publication. Each of these steps adds layers of time and expense.
Even when all waivers are in hand, the ancillary fiduciary must comply with statutory notice provisions. SCPA Section 1609 requires that New York domiciliary creditors and the New York State Department of Tax and Finance receive process before ancillary letters can issue. This is not optional, and overlooking it can expose the fiduciary to personal liability for distributions made without proper notice.
In practice, the tax waiver component is often the bottleneck. The Department of Tax and Finance reviews the filing to confirm that no New York estate taxes are owed (or that they have been satisfied), and the agency does not always respond quickly. I have filed multiple cases where we needed to obtain a citation from the court directed at the department itself just to prompt a response. Patience is not just a virtue in these situations. It is a necessity.
Many families contact me because a real estate closing is pending, a co-op board is demanding documentation, or a buyer is threatening to walk away. Sometimes we get phone calls from family members who opened an estate for a decedent outside of the United States but realized that the decedent had a bank account in the US, and had either opened the account in New York or the bank has its headquarters in New York, such as JP Morgan Chase or Citibank. My approach is to coordinate closely with the out-of-state attorney handling the primary estate, the title company or co-op managing agent in New York, and the family members whose cooperation we need. The goal is always to keep the proceeding uncontested, collect waivers early, and submit a complete package to the court so there is no reason for a return or delay.
If your family is dealing with New York property as part of an out-of-state estate, working with a probate lawyer experienced in ancillary New York filings can make the difference between a proceeding that moves efficiently and one that stalls for months.
Contributed by Roman Aminov, A Senior Probate and Estate Administration Attorney.
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