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When an adult in White Plains, Yonkers, New Rochelle, or anywhere across Westchester County can no longer safely manage personal needs or financial affairs, family members often discover that good intentions are not enough. To make medical decisions, pay bills, protect assets, or arrange care for a loved one who can no longer do so, you may need legal authority that only a court can grant. In New York, that authority for an incapacitated adult comes through an Article 81 guardianship under the Mental Hygiene Law (MHL).

At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. guides Westchester families through this sensitive and often unfamiliar process. This page explains how Article 81 works, which court hears these cases in Westchester County, what standard the court applies, and the alternatives that may make a guardianship unnecessary.

What Is an Article 81 Guardianship?

An Article 81 guardianship is a court proceeding that allows a judge to appoint a guardian for an adult who is found to be incapacitated. The person who is the subject of the petition is called the alleged incapacitated person, or AIP.

A guardian can be appointed for two distinct areas of a person’s life:

A single guardian may hold both roles, or the court may divide them. Critically, the court grants only the specific powers the person actually needs — a principle that sets New York’s Article 81 apart from the broader, older guardianship systems.

Which Court Hears Article 81 Cases in Westchester?

This is one of the most common points of confusion, so it deserves a clear answer.

Article 81 guardianship petitions for incapacitated adults are filed in the Supreme Court — specifically, the Supreme Court, Westchester County, located in White Plains. Article 81 is not a Surrogate’s Court matter.

The distinction matters because New York routes different guardianship types to different courts:

Type of Guardianship Governing Law Court (Westchester)
Adult incapacity guardianship MHL Article 81 Supreme Court, Westchester County
Guardianship of a minor/infant SCPA Article 17 Surrogate’s Court (may also be Supreme/Family Court)
Adult with intellectual/developmental disability SCPA Article 17-A Surrogate’s Court

If you have heard that “guardianship goes to Surrogate’s Court,” that advice applies to minors (SCPA Article 17) and to adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities (SCPA Article 17-A) — not to the adult-incapacity cases governed by Article 81. For more on how these tracks compare, see our Guardianship Overview.

The Standard: Incapacity by Clear and Convincing Evidence

A Westchester Supreme Court judge cannot appoint a guardian simply because a person is elderly, ill, or making choices the family dislikes. The court must find, by clear and convincing evidence, two things:

  1. The person is likely to suffer harm because they cannot adequately understand and appreciate the nature and consequences of their inability to manage personal needs or property; and
  2. The person cannot adequately understand or appreciate that inability.

In addition, the court must determine that a guardian is necessary. This is a demanding standard, deliberately set high because a guardianship removes rights from an adult.

The Least Restrictive Alternative

The cornerstone of Article 81 is the least restrictive alternative principle under MHL §81.02. The court must tailor any guardianship to the person’s actual, demonstrated needs and impose the fewest powers necessary. If a more limited arrangement — or no guardianship at all — would protect the person, the court is required to choose that path.

This means an Article 81 guardianship is rarely “all or nothing.” A Westchester judge might, for example, grant a guardian authority over a person’s investment accounts while leaving the person free to make their own medical and lifestyle decisions.

The Article 81 Process in Westchester County

While every case is unique, an Article 81 proceeding generally follows these steps in the Supreme Court, Westchester County:

1. Filing the Petition

A qualified petitioner — often a spouse, adult child, sibling, or other interested party — files a petition with the Supreme Court describing the AIP’s condition, the functional limitations, and the specific powers requested. The court sets a hearing date, typically on an expedited schedule.

2. Appointment of a Court Evaluator

Under MHL §81.09, the court appoints a court evaluator — an independent investigator (usually an attorney) who meets with the AIP, reviews the circumstances, interviews relevant people, and reports findings and recommendations to the court. The court evaluator is the judge’s neutral eyes and ears and plays a central role in protecting the AIP’s interests.

3. The AIP’s Rights

The AIP has important due-process protections, including:

4. The Hearing and Decision

At the hearing, the judge weighs the testimony, the court evaluator’s report, and the evidence. If the clear-and-convincing standard is met and a guardian is necessary, the court issues an order appointing a guardian with carefully defined powers.

5. Commission and Ongoing Duties

Once appointed, the guardian receives a commission and must complete any required training. From there, the guardian assumes real, court-supervised responsibilities — discussed below.

A Guardian’s Ongoing Duties

Becoming a guardian is not a one-time event; it is an ongoing fiduciary role overseen by the Westchester court. Article 81 guardians generally must:

These reporting obligations exist to keep the guardian accountable. To understand what is expected of an appointed guardian in detail, visit our page on Guardian Duties.

When Article 81 Cases Become Contested

Not every guardianship proceeds smoothly. Disputes commonly arise over:

A contested Article 81 case in Westchester Supreme Court can involve competing petitions, additional testimony, and a more extensive hearing. If you anticipate conflict, experienced counsel is essential — learn more on our Contested Guardianship page.

Alternatives to Guardianship — Often the Better Path

Because guardianship removes rights and requires ongoing court supervision, it should be a last resort. In many Westchester families, a proceeding can be avoided entirely if planning was done in advance — or if a less restrictive tool fits the situation. Common alternatives include:

The key insight: a valid power of attorney and health care proxy, signed while a person still has capacity, can spare a family from ever needing a Westchester Supreme Court guardianship. Explore these options in depth on our Alternatives to Guardianship page.

Why Westchester Families Choose Morgan Legal Group

Article 81 cases are emotionally charged and legally technical. The court evaluator process, the least-restrictive-alternative standard, and the ongoing reporting duties all demand careful handling. Morgan Legal Group and attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. represent petitioners and families across Westchester County — from Mount Vernon and Yonkers to Scarsdale, Rye, Peekskill, and the communities surrounding the White Plains courthouse — with the goal of protecting the dignity and interests of the person at the center of the case.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Article 81 guardianship filed in Surrogate’s Court in Westchester?

No. Article 81 adult-incapacity guardianships are filed in the Supreme Court, Westchester County (in White Plains). Surrogate’s Court handles guardianships of minors under SCPA Article 17 and adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities under SCPA Article 17-A — these are different proceedings governed by different laws.

What does “least restrictive alternative” mean?

Under MHL §81.02, the court must grant a guardian only the specific powers the person actually needs and no more. If a limited arrangement — or no guardianship at all — can adequately protect the person, the court must choose that less intrusive option.

Who is the court evaluator and what do they do?

Under MHL §81.09, the court evaluator is an independent investigator appointed by the Westchester Supreme Court. They meet with the alleged incapacitated person, review the situation, and report findings and recommendations to the judge, helping ensure the AIP’s rights are protected.

Can a power of attorney prevent the need for a guardianship?

Often, yes. A durable power of attorney and a health care proxy signed while a person still has capacity can give trusted agents the authority to act — frequently making an Article 81 proceeding unnecessary. This is why advance planning is so valuable.

How much does an Article 81 guardianship cost in Westchester?

Court filing fees are set by statute and the court, and should be confirmed for your specific case rather than assumed. Costs also depend on whether the case is contested and on the guardian’s ongoing reporting obligations. We can review your situation and explain what to expect.


Ready to discuss an Article 81 guardianship in Westchester County? Schedule a consultation with attorney Russel Morgan, Esq. — book a 30-minute call.

Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: the Morgan Legal Group practice areas.