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When a child in Brooklyn needs an adult to make decisions for them — because a parent has died, is unavailable, or because the child has inherited money or property — New York law provides a clear path. Guardianship of a minor’s person, property, or both is governed by Article 17 of the Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act (SCPA), and in Brooklyn these petitions are filed in the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. This is a fundamentally different proceeding from adult incapacity guardianship, and getting the court and the statute right from the start saves families weeks of delay.

At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. guides Brooklyn families through minor guardianship from the first petition to the final accounting. This page explains who needs an Article 17 guardianship, how the process works in Kings County, what duties follow appointment, and how minor guardianship differs from the adult and disability tracks.

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What Is Guardianship of a Minor?

In New York, a person under the age of 18 is an infant (the statutory term for a minor). A minor cannot legally hold and manage significant property, sign binding contracts, or — in the absence of a living parent — have an adult with clear legal authority to consent to schooling, medical care, and day-to-day decisions. A court-appointed guardian fills that gap.

Article 17 recognizes two distinct kinds of guardianship, and a single person may serve in one or both roles:

Because a minor’s situation is presumed to be temporary — every child eventually turns 18 — a minor guardianship under Article 17 automatically terminates when the child reaches majority, unless the court ends it sooner. Any guardianship funds are then turned over to the young adult.

Which Brooklyn Court Hears Minor Guardianship Cases?

This is where many families and even some attorneys go wrong, so it is worth stating plainly.

Type of guardianship Governing statute Brooklyn court
Minor’s person or property (under 18) SCPA Article 17 Kings County Surrogate’s Court
Intellectually/developmentally disabled person (often a child turning 18) SCPA Article 17-A Kings County Surrogate’s Court
Adult who has become incapacitated MHL Article 81 Supreme Court, Kings County

Minor guardianships and Article 17-A disability guardianships both belong to the Surrogate’s Court. An adult who has lost capacity — for example, an elderly Brooklyn resident with advanced dementia, or someone disabled by a stroke or accident — is not a Surrogate’s Court matter. That is an Article 81 proceeding heard in Supreme Court, Kings County. If a family files an adult incapacity case in the Surrogate’s Court, it will be misdirected. For the adult track, see our Article 81 guardianship page; for the full landscape, see our guardianship overview.

Brooklyn is the most populous county in New York State, and the Kings County Surrogate’s Court handles a heavy volume of minor and estate matters serving neighborhoods from Bay Ridge and Sunset Park to Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brownsville, Flatbush, Coney Island, and Williamsburg. Filing in the correct court — and preparing a complete petition — keeps your case moving in a busy courthouse.

How the Article 17 Process Works in Kings County

While every family’s facts differ, an Article 17 minor guardianship in Brooklyn generally follows these steps:

1. Determine jurisdiction and the right guardianship type

Guardianship of a minor’s person is typically sought where the child lives — Brooklyn, for a child residing in Kings County. Guardianship of the property follows where the minor or the property is connected to the county. We confirm at the outset whether you need person, property, or both.

2. Prepare and file the petition

The proceeding is commenced by a verified petition filed in the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. The petition identifies the minor, the proposed guardian, the relationship between them, the parents (living or deceased), and the property at issue if it is a property guardianship. Supporting documents commonly include the child’s birth certificate, any death certificates of the parents, and a description of the assets to be managed.

3. Notice to interested parties

The law requires that interested persons — most importantly the minor’s living parents and, depending on the facts, the child if old enough — receive notice and an opportunity to be heard. A child 14 or older has the right to nominate his or her own guardian, and the court gives that choice serious weight. Where parents are alive, their consent or their explained absence is central to the case.

4. Court review and any hearing

The Surrogate reviews the petition to ensure the appointment serves the best interests of the child — the governing standard in minor guardianship. The court examines the fitness of the proposed guardian. In property cases, the court is especially protective of the minor’s funds.

5. Bond and restrictions on the property

For guardianship of the property, the court typically requires the guardian to post a bond (or directs that funds be deposited in a restricted account) so the child’s money cannot be withdrawn without court permission. This protects the inheritance until the minor turns 18.

6. Appointment, letters, and ongoing oversight

Once satisfied, the court issues Letters of Guardianship, the official document proving the guardian’s authority. A property guardian remains accountable to the court and must account for the funds. For a deeper look at post-appointment obligations, see guardian duties.

Duties of a Minor’s Guardian

Appointment is the beginning, not the end, of a guardian’s responsibility. Core duties include:

A guardian who mismanages a minor’s funds can be held personally liable, which is why the bond and the court’s accounting requirements exist.

How Minor Guardianship Differs From Adult and Disability Guardianship

Families often confuse the three New York tracks. The differences are not cosmetic — they decide which courthouse you walk into.

If a Brooklyn child with a developmental disability is nearing 18, families should plan ahead, because the appropriate path shifts from Article 17 to Article 17-A.

Should You Consider Alternatives First?

Guardianship is a court-supervised arrangement, and for some families lighter tools are enough — especially for managing a minor’s inheritance. Common planning alternatives, several of which avoid court oversight, include:

For adults, the planning alternatives to guardianship are different and include a durable Power of Attorney (General Obligations Law §5-1513), a Health Care Proxy, and Supported Decision-Making. We explain all of these on our alternatives to guardianship page. Thoughtful estate planning by a parent today often spares a child a guardianship proceeding tomorrow.

When Minor Guardianship Becomes Contested

Most minor guardianships are cooperative, but disputes arise — for instance, when two relatives each seek to be guardian, when a parent objects to a non-parent’s petition, or when the suitability of a proposed property guardian is challenged. These matters require careful advocacy in the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. Learn more on our contested guardianship page.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Brooklyn court handles guardianship of a minor?
Guardianship of a minor’s person or property under SCPA Article 17 is filed in the Kings County Surrogate’s Court. Adult incapacity cases under Mental Hygiene Law Article 81 are instead heard in Supreme Court, Kings County — not the Surrogate’s Court.

Do I need a property guardian if my child inherited money?
Often, yes. A minor cannot legally manage significant assets. To access and manage an inheritance, settlement, or insurance proceeds left to your child, a court usually requires appointment as guardian of the property under Article 17, frequently with a bond or a restricted account.

Can my teenager choose who becomes their guardian?
A minor who is 14 or older has the right to nominate a proposed guardian in the petition, and the Surrogate gives that choice meaningful weight, though the court’s ultimate decision is governed by the best interests of the child.

When does a minor guardianship end?
A guardianship under SCPA Article 17 generally ends automatically when the child turns 18. Property held for the minor is then turned over to the young adult, subject to any final accounting the court requires.

What is the difference between Article 17 and Article 17-A?
Article 17 covers guardianship of a minor under 18 and ends at majority. Article 17-A is a more permanent guardianship for a person with an intellectual or developmental disability, often sought as such a child approaches 18. Both proceed in the Surrogate’s Court.

Speak With a Brooklyn Guardianship Attorney

Whether you need to care for a child who has lost a parent, manage an inheritance for your own son or daughter, or plan ahead for a child with a disability turning 18, the path runs through the Kings County Surrogate’s Court — and the details matter. Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group prepare complete petitions and guide Brooklyn families through every step.

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Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: understanding New York guardianship.