Serving New York Families · Estate Planning · Probate · Guardianship📞 (888) 529-1315
MLGMorgan Legal GroupGuardianship Law — Rockland, NYSchedule a Consultation

When a loved one can no longer care for themselves — whether a parent with advancing dementia in Suffern, a sibling with a developmental disability in Spring Valley, or a grandchild whose parents are no longer able to provide for them in Nanuet — a court-appointed guardian may be the most important protective step your family can take. At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. has guided Rockland County families through every track of New York guardianship law, matching each case to the correct court, the correct statute, and the least intrusive remedy the law allows.

Who We Serve in Rockland County

Rockland’s communities — from the Hudson riverfront villages of Haverstraw and Stony Point to the suburban corridors of Clarkstown and Ramapo — are home to an aging population and a growing number of families navigating disability transitions, particularly young adults with intellectual disabilities turning eighteen. We understand that a family in Rockland faces the same legal framework as one in Manhattan, but works within distinct local institutions: Supreme Court, Rockland County for adult incapacity proceedings, and Rockland County Surrogate’s Court for minor and developmental-disability guardianships.

The Three Guardianship Tracks — and Which Court Handles Each

Track Statute Court
Adult incapacitated person (18 +) NY Mental Hygiene Law, Article 81 Supreme Court, Rockland County
Minor’s person or property SCPA Article 17 Rockland County Surrogate’s Court
Developmentally / intellectually disabled person SCPA Article 17-A Rockland County Surrogate’s Court

Important: adult Article 81 proceedings are never filed in Surrogate’s Court. That distinction matters in Rockland, where families sometimes assume all guardianship work flows through the same courthouse.

How Morgan Legal Group Approaches Your Case

Under MHL Article 81, the standard for appointing a guardian is clear and convincing evidence that a person cannot manage their property or personal needs and is likely to suffer harm as a result. The court’s mandate is the least restrictive intervention — powers are tailored to actual need, not granted wholesale.

Our process reflects that mandate:

Learn more about each proceeding: guardianship overview | Article 81 guardianship | guardianship of minors.

Schedule a Consultation

Every Rockland County family’s situation is different. Book a 30-minute consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq. to discuss the right path forward.

Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: guardianship law in New York.