Being appointed a guardian in Kings County is not the finish line — it is the starting line. When a Brooklyn court signs an order appointing you as guardian, you take on a set of legal, financial, and personal responsibilities that the court will monitor for as long as the guardianship lasts. Whether you are caring for an aging parent in Bay Ridge, a sibling with a disability in Flatbush, or a minor child in Bensonhurst, the duties attached to your appointment are precise and enforceable.
This page explains exactly what a guardian must do once appointed, which Brooklyn court oversees your case, and how the duties differ depending on whether you serve under Mental Hygiene Law Article 81 (adults), SCPA Article 17 (minors), or SCPA Article 17-A (developmentally disabled persons). At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. guides Brooklyn families through every stage — from the petition to the annual report.
First, Know Which Court Is Watching You
In Kings County, the court that supervises your guardianship depends entirely on who you are protecting. This is the single most important thing to get right, because the duties, forms, and reporting calendars all flow from it.
| Who needs a guardian | Governing law | Brooklyn court that hears it |
|---|---|---|
| An incapacitated adult (illness, dementia, injury) | MHL Article 81 | Supreme Court, Kings County |
| A minor’s person or property | SCPA Article 17 | Kings County Surrogate’s Court |
| A developmentally / intellectually disabled person (often a child turning 18) | SCPA Article 17-A | Kings County Surrogate’s Court |
Note the distinction carefully: adult Article 81 guardianships are filed and supervised in the Supreme Court of Kings County — not the Surrogate’s Court. Guardianships of minors and of developmentally disabled individuals go to the Surrogate’s Court. Filing or reporting in the wrong forum delays your case and can expose you to challenges from interested parties. For a deeper look at the adult track, see our Article 81 guardianship page; for children, see guardianship of minors.
The Core Fiduciary Duty: Act for Them, Not for Yourself
Every guardian — under any of the three statutes — is a fiduciary. That means you must always act in the best interests of the person under your care (in Article 81 cases, the law calls this person the incapacitated person, or IP). You cannot mix your money with theirs, you cannot profit from your role beyond court-approved compensation, and you cannot make decisions that benefit you at their expense.
Under Article 81, the powers a Kings County Supreme Court justice grants you are deliberately limited to the least restrictive intervention tailored to the person’s actual needs. A Brooklyn guardian may be appointed only over property management, only over personal needs, or over both — and your duties are confined to whatever powers the order spells out. If the order does not give you a power, you do not have it. Reading and re-reading your appointing order is itself a duty.
Duties of an Article 81 Guardian (Adults) in Kings County
If you serve over an incapacitated adult, your obligations under MHL Article 81 are detailed and time-sensitive. The Supreme Court in Kings County expects strict compliance.
Reporting Obligations
- Initial report — within 90 days. After your commission is issued, you must file an initial report inventorying the IP’s assets and describing their condition and living arrangements.
- Annual reports — every year. You must file an annual report on the IP’s personal and financial status. The court examiner reviews these, and incomplete or late filings draw scrutiny.
Personal-Contact Obligations
- Visit at least four times per year. A personal-needs guardian must visit the incapacitated person no fewer than four times annually. For Brooklyn families, this often means regular visits to a residence in Brooklyn Heights, a rehab facility near Coney Island, or a nursing home in Sheepshead Bay. These visits are not a formality — the court relies on them to confirm the person is safe and well cared for.
Financial and Personal-Needs Duties
- Manage property prudently, keep the IP’s funds separate, and maintain meticulous records of every receipt and disbursement.
- Make decisions about medical care, residence, and daily needs only within the scope the order grants.
- Post a bond if the court requires one to protect the IP’s assets.
- Seek court approval before taking major actions the order does not already authorize — for example, selling the IP’s home or making gifts.
Duration
An Article 81 guardianship generally lasts for the life of the incapacitated person unless the court terminates it because capacity is restored, the person dies, or a less restrictive arrangement becomes appropriate.
Duties of a Guardian Under SCPA Article 17 and 17-A
When the Kings County Surrogate’s Court appoints you over a minor (Article 17) or a developmentally disabled person (Article 17-A), your fiduciary core is the same — loyalty, prudence, separation of funds, and honest record-keeping — but the framework differs.
- Article 17 (minors): Guardianship typically ends when the minor turns 18. A guardian of the property must account to the Surrogate for how the child’s funds were managed and may need court permission to spend principal.
- Article 17-A (developmentally disabled persons): This is a more plenary form of guardianship than Article 81, often sought by Brooklyn parents as a child with an intellectual or developmental disability approaches adulthood. The guardian makes broad decisions for the person, but still answers to the Surrogate’s Court and must always act in the person’s best interest.
Because Article 17-A grants broader authority than Article 81 and is harder to tailor, courts and counsel increasingly ask whether a less restrictive alternative would serve the family better. We discuss those options below and on our alternatives to guardianship page.
A Quick Duties Checklist for Brooklyn Guardians
- ☐ Read your appointing order and confine yourself to its granted powers.
- ☐ File the initial report within 90 days (Article 81).
- ☐ File annual reports on time.
- ☐ Visit the person at least four times a year (Article 81 personal-needs guardian).
- ☐ Keep the protected person’s funds separate from your own.
- ☐ Maintain receipts and a clear ledger of all transactions.
- ☐ Get court approval before major or unusual actions.
- ☐ Cooperate with the court evaluator, court examiner, and any counsel for the person.
Were Alternatives to Guardianship Considered?
Before any Brooklyn court grants a guardianship, it wants to know whether a less restrictive tool could meet the same need. Guardianship removes legal autonomy, so judges in both the Supreme Court and the Surrogate’s Court favor alternatives when they fit. The most common are:
- Durable Power of Attorney under GOL §5-1513, letting a chosen agent handle finances.
- Health Care Proxy, naming someone to make medical decisions.
- Living Trust or Supplemental (Special) Needs Trust, to hold and manage assets — often vital for an Article 17-A family preserving benefits eligibility.
- Supported Decision-Making, where the person keeps legal authority but receives structured help.
If these were available and properly executed earlier, a court may decline to impose a guardianship at all. When a guardianship is genuinely necessary — or when family members disagree — our contested guardianship page explains how disputes are resolved.
How the Brooklyn Process Reaches Appointment
Article 81 cases begin with an Order to Show Cause and a Verified Petition. The Kings County Supreme Court then appoints a court evaluator — and often independent counsel for the AIP — to investigate and report. The alleged incapacitated person has the right to be present and to a hearing, and incapacity must be proven by clear and convincing evidence: that the person cannot manage property and/or personal needs and is likely to suffer harm because they cannot adequately appreciate the consequences. Only after that showing does the court issue an order — and your duties begin.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which Brooklyn court handles guardian reporting for an adult?
For an adult Article 81 guardianship, all filings — including your initial 90-day report and annual reports — go to the Supreme Court, Kings County, not the Surrogate’s Court. Minor and Article 17-A guardianships report to the Kings County Surrogate’s Court.
How often must a Brooklyn guardian visit the person under their care?
An Article 81 personal-needs guardian must visit the incapacitated person at least four times each year. The court relies on these visits, documented in your annual report, to confirm the person’s safety and well-being.
When is my first report due after appointment?
Under MHL Article 81, you must file an initial report within 90 days of your commission, followed by an annual report each year thereafter. Missing these deadlines can prompt the court examiner to flag your case.
Can I be paid as a guardian in Kings County?
A guardian may receive court-approved compensation, but you may never take money beyond what the order or the court allows, and you must keep the protected person’s funds entirely separate from your own. Self-dealing is a breach of your fiduciary duty.
What if guardianship may be more than we need?
Discuss alternatives first. A durable Power of Attorney (GOL §5-1513), Health Care Proxy, living trust, or Supported Decision-Making may meet the need without removing the person’s autonomy. Brooklyn courts prefer the least restrictive option that protects the individual.
Talk With a Brooklyn Guardianship Attorney
Guardian duties are real obligations with real deadlines, and the court will hold you to them. If you have been appointed — or are about to petition — attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group can help you meet every requirement in Kings County. Schedule a 30-minute consultation to map out your responsibilities and protect the person who is depending on you.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: New York elder-law planning.