When a loved one can no longer make decisions for themselves — whether an aging parent in Riverdale, an adult child with developmental disabilities in Fordham, or a minor whose parents are no longer able to care for them — a legal guardian can step in to protect what matters most. At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. has guided Bronx families through New York’s guardianship courts for years, combining deep statutory knowledge with genuine compassion for each family’s circumstances.
Why The Bronx Has Its Own Guardianship Landscape
Guardianship in New York is not a single proceeding — it is a framework of distinct legal tracks, each heard in a different court depending on who needs protection.
| Track | Who It Covers | Governing Law | Court in The Bronx |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adult guardianship (incapacitated person) | Adults who cannot manage personal needs or property due to incapacity | MHL Article 81 | Supreme Court, Bronx County |
| Minor guardianship (person or property) | Children whose parents are absent, deceased, or unfit | SCPA Article 17 | Bronx County Surrogate’s Court |
| Developmentally disabled person (18+) | Intellectually or developmentally disabled individuals, often at the transition from childhood | SCPA Article 17-A | Bronx County Surrogate’s Court |
Understanding which courthouse handles your matter — and why — is the first thing our firm clarifies for every Bronx family we meet.
Adult Guardianship Under MHL Article 81: Supreme Court, Bronx County
For an adult alleged to be incapacitated, New York’s Mental Hygiene Law Article 81 governs the proceeding, and it is filed in Supreme Court, Bronx County — not the Surrogate’s Court. The standard requires clear and convincing evidence that the person cannot manage their property or personal needs and is likely to suffer harm because they cannot appreciate the consequences of that inability.
The process begins with an Order to Show Cause and Verified Petition. The court then appoints a Court Evaluator — and frequently independent counsel — to investigate and report on the alleged incapacitated person’s (AIP’s) actual condition. The AIP has an absolute right to attend the hearing and to contest the proceeding. Any powers ultimately granted must represent the least restrictive intervention tailored to that individual’s specific needs, whether over personal decisions, property management, or both.
Once appointed, a guardian must file an initial report within 90 days, submit annual reports thereafter, and visit the incapacitated person at least four times per year. Learn more on our guardian duties and Article 81 guardianship pages.
Alternatives Courts Expect You to Have Considered
Before filing, New York courts want to see that less intrusive options were explored. These include a durable Power of Attorney under GOL § 5-1513, a Health Care Proxy, a Living Trust, a Supplemental Needs Trust, or a Supported Decision-Making agreement. We walk every client through these options on our alternatives to guardianship page.
Minor and Article 17-A Guardianship: Bronx County Surrogate’s Court
When a child needs a guardian of their person or property, or when a young adult with a developmental disability turns 18, the proceeding is brought in Bronx County Surrogate’s Court under SCPA Article 17 or SCPA Article 17-A respectively. These plenary proceedings carry their own evidentiary standards and reporting requirements — distinct from the Article 81 track. See our guardianship of minors page for a full breakdown.
Speak With a Bronx Guardianship Attorney
Whether your matter belongs in Supreme Court on the Grand Concourse corridor or in the Surrogate’s Court, Morgan Legal Group is ready to help. Schedule a 30-minute consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. and get clarity on the right path forward for your family.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: guardianship law in New York.