If your son or daughter has an intellectual or developmental disability and is approaching or has passed their 18th birthday, you obtain legal authority to continue making decisions for them in Brooklyn by petitioning for SCPA Article 17-A guardianship in the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. When a child turns 18, the law treats them as a legal adult — even when a serious disability means they cannot manage their own medical care, finances, or daily safety. Article 17-A is the New York statute designed specifically for parents (and other family members) of individuals with intellectual disability, developmental disability, or traumatic brain injury, and in Brooklyn that petition is filed and heard in the Surrogate’s Court of Kings County. This guide explains who qualifies, how the Brooklyn process works, what guardians can do, and the less-restrictive alternatives the court expects you to consider first.
Two Different Guardianship Laws — Choosing the Right One
New York has two separate adult-guardianship tracks, and filing under the wrong one wastes months. The distinction turns on the nature of the disability and on which Brooklyn court hears the case.
| Feature | SCPA Article 17-A | MHL Article 81 |
|---|---|---|
| Who it’s for | Intellectual disability, developmental disability, or TBI | Anyone whose functional limitations cause likely harm |
| Brooklyn court | Kings County Surrogate’s Court | Supreme Court, Kings County |
| Standard | Disability certified by professionals; guardianship in the person’s best interest | Incapacity proven by clear and convincing evidence |
| Scope of powers | Plenary (person and/or property) | Least restrictive powers tailored to actual needs |
| Typical petitioner | Parent of a disabled adult child | Family, friend, or institution of an incapacitated adult |
For a developmentally or intellectually disabled adult child, Article 17-A is almost always the right vehicle, and it belongs in Surrogate’s Court. By contrast, an Article 81 proceeding — for adults whose incapacity arises from conditions like dementia, stroke, or brain injury without a lifelong developmental disability — is a Supreme Court matter, not a Surrogate’s Court one. Getting the court right at the outset is essential; our guardianship overview walks through how to evaluate which path fits your family.
Who Qualifies for SCPA 17-A in Brooklyn
To grant 17-A guardianship, the Kings County Surrogate must find that the person:
- Has an intellectual disability, developmental disability, or traumatic brain injury, and
- Because of that condition, is unable to manage their own affairs and would benefit from a guardian, and
- Guardianship is in the person’s best interest.
The petition must be supported by certifications from qualified professionals — generally one physician and one licensed psychologist, or two physicians, depending on the diagnosis — attesting to the condition. The Surrogate’s Court reviews these certifications closely. Even under Article 17-A, modern New York practice increasingly asks whether full guardianship is truly necessary or whether a tailored, limited arrangement better serves the young adult’s autonomy.
The Brooklyn Article 17-A Process, Step by Step
- Prepare the petition. A parent or other interested person files a verified petition in the Kings County Surrogate’s Court seeking guardianship of the person, the property, or both.
- File the professional certifications. The medical and psychological certifications described above are filed with the petition.
- Notice to interested parties. The disabled person and close relatives receive notice of the proceeding so they can appear or object.
- Guardian ad litem (when needed). The court may appoint a guardian ad litem to independently evaluate the petition and report on the person’s best interests.
- The hearing. The Surrogate’s Court holds a hearing; the disabled person has the right to be present. The court determines whether the statutory standard is met.
- Decree and appointment. If granted, the court issues a decree appointing the guardian(s) and may name standby guardians to step in if the primary guardian later cannot serve.
We do not quote specific filing fees or court street addresses here — those should be confirmed directly with the Kings County Surrogate’s Court or with counsel, because they change and vary by filing type.
What a 17-A Guardian Can Do — and Must Do
An Article 17-A guardian of the person can make decisions about medical treatment, residence, education, and daily care. A guardian of the property manages money and assets. The court can appoint different people to each role. To understand the recurring obligations that come with the appointment, review our page on guardian duties — guardians are accountable to the court and must always act in the person’s best interest.
A note on the difference between the two statutes: in an Article 81 case, the law imposes detailed ongoing reporting — an initial report within 90 days, annual reports, and a requirement that the guardian visit the incapacitated person at least four times per year. Those specific Article 81 duties are a useful benchmark for any guardian’s diligence, though Article 17-A’s reporting framework is structured differently. Whichever applies to your family, plan for guardianship to be a long-term, lifelong responsibility unless the court later terminates it.
Consider the Alternatives First
New York courts — and good counsel — favor the least restrictive arrangement that meets the person’s needs. Depending on your adult child’s abilities, one or more of these tools may avoid the need for full guardianship, or narrow it:
- Durable Power of Attorney (General Obligations Law §5-1513) — lets the person appoint an agent for financial matters, if they can understand and sign it.
- Health Care Proxy — appoints someone to make medical decisions.
- Supplemental (Special) Needs Trust — protects assets while preserving eligibility for Medicaid and SSI; vital for a disabled child.
- Living Trust — manages property without a guardianship of the estate.
- Supported Decision-Making — a formal arrangement where the person keeps legal authority but receives help from trusted supporters.
Because some individuals with mild disability can validly execute a power of attorney or health care proxy, these options are worth a careful look. Our guide to alternatives to guardianship explains when each one fits — and when guardianship really is the right protection.
Frequently Asked Questions
My child turns 18 next month. When should we file?
Many Brooklyn parents file an Article 17-A petition shortly before or around the 18th birthday so that decision-making authority continues without a gap. Starting early gives time to gather the required professional certifications.
Do we go to Surrogate’s Court or Supreme Court?
For a developmentally or intellectually disabled adult child under SCPA Article 17-A, you file in the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. Only adult incapacity cases under Mental Hygiene Law Article 81 go to Supreme Court, Kings County.
Can two parents serve together?
Yes. The court can appoint co-guardians and can also name standby guardians who take over if a primary guardian later becomes unable to serve.
Is guardianship permanent?
Article 17-A guardianship generally continues for the person’s life unless the court modifies or terminates it because circumstances change. It is a lasting commitment, which is why exploring alternatives first matters.
Speak With a Brooklyn Guardianship Attorney
Protecting a disabled adult child’s future is one of the most important steps a Brooklyn family can take. Morgan Legal Group helps parents choose the right path — SCPA 17-A guardianship, Article 81, or a less-restrictive alternative — and guides each petition through the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. To discuss your family’s situation with Russel Morgan, Esq., schedule a consultation:
Book a 30-minute consultation →
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: understanding New York guardianship.