Selling New York House or Condo Apartment Belonging to Parent, Husband, Wife, or Loved One After Death
"Do I need to obtain Letters of Administration over my Parent's Estate before selling their Brooklyn or Manhattan house or condo apartment?"
Issue
: Whether a decedent’s
only heir(s) can properly complete a real estate transfer without court approval,
over two years after decedent passed away, and what risks it would impose upon
the stakeholders.
Analysis. “If a decedent’s only asset is [Brooklyn or Manhattan] real property [house or condo apartment] , there is nothing to administer because title devolves by operation of law and vests in the decedent’s distributees [heirs] immediately on his or her death [if no Will was left].” Charles J. Groppe, et al., 1 Harris N.Y. Estates: Probate Admin. & Litigation § 4:19 (6th ed. 2013), citing Matter of Shoukas, 3/23/92 N.Y.L.J. 32 , col. 6 (Sur. Ct. Queens Co.). Debtors of the estate may file a claim against the real property [house or condo apartment], however, for up “18 months from the date when letters were issued to the original fiduciary[, assuming] […] such letters were granted within 2 years after the date of the death of the decedent.” N.Y. S.C.P.A. 1903(1). A Brooklyn or Manhattan Surrogate’s Court real estate proceeding avoids this possibility by attaining a judicial order to sell the property. Nonetheless, it is not necessary. See Shoukas . After this above stated period expires, “the title of a purchaser or mortgagee from the distributee or devisee of the decedent which was acquired before the proceeding was instituted cannot be affected in any way by the proceeding.” N.Y. S.C.P.A. 1903(1); see also N.Y. C.L.S. E.P.T.L. § 3-3.8.
If your parent passed away over TWO-YEARS AGO without a Will, with one or more heirs-at-law, the estate has no debts not previously disclosed, and the estate’s only remaining asset is this residential real property [house or apartment] being sold, then you can sell the real property directly to a buyer without first proceeding to Brooklyn or Manhattan Surrogate's Court to obtain Letters of Administration over your loved one's estate.
Conclusion.
Creditors would have already made their claims known to the
estate and the decedent’s heirs within two (2) years of your loved one's passing if they existed. Since real property (house or condo apartment] title
automatically passed to the decedent’s sole heirs at his/her death, an affidavit of
heirship and no debt should be sufficient to sell such real property without any need
for a judicial order on the matter.
This would be an arms-length transaction consented to by the decedent’s heirs and distributees, so a Brooklyn or Manhattan court order is not necessary for the house sale to occur.
Please call our Brooklyn or Manhattan offices at 718-407-4461 or 212-920-5224 to discuss how we can assist you with this selling process before
hiring a broker or real estate attorney. Hiring a broker or real estate attorney not familiar with New York estate law to represent you in your house or condo apartment sale will likely lead to disastrous consequences that will cost you more money in the long-run. If your real estate broker's or real estate attorney's mistake forces you to proceed you Brooklyn or Manhattan Surrogate's Court to obtain Letters of Administration you will encounter substantial administrative delays, incur a hefty filing fee up to $1,250.00, and will likely need to retain an attorney to oversee the cumbersome process.
Bohm Law Firm - Brooklyn Probate and Estate Planning Lawyer







