When an adult in Queens — a parent in Flushing, a spouse in Forest Hills, a relative in Jamaica or Astoria — can no longer manage their own finances or personal care because of dementia, a stroke, a brain injury, or another condition, the family often discovers that nobody has legal authority to step in. If no power of attorney or health care proxy is already in place, New York provides a path: an Article 81 guardianship under the Mental Hygiene Law (MHL). This page explains how that process works in Queens County, which court hears it, the legal standard you must meet, and the responsibilities a guardian carries afterward.
At Morgan Legal Group, attorney Russel Morgan, Esq., guides Queens families through guardianship from the first petition to the annual reporting that follows. The first thing every family should understand is also the most commonly misunderstood: where the case is filed.
The #1 Rule: Adult Article 81 Cases Go to Supreme Court, Not Surrogate’s Court
This is the single most important jurisdictional fact in New York guardianship law. An adult guardianship of an incapacitated person under MHL Article 81 is heard in the Supreme Court of the county where the alleged incapacitated person resides. For a Queens resident, that means the Supreme Court, Queens County — not the Surrogate’s Court.
Surrogate’s Court handles different guardianship tracks entirely. We cover those below, because Queens families frequently confuse them. But for an adult who has lost capacity — the classic “my elderly mother can no longer pay her bills or make medical decisions” situation — the case belongs in Supreme Court under Article 81.
| Who Needs a Guardian | Governing Law | Queens Court |
|---|---|---|
| Adult who became incapacitated | MHL Article 81 | Supreme Court, Queens County |
| Minor’s person or property | SCPA Article 17 | Queens County Surrogate’s Court |
| Developmentally / intellectually disabled person (often a child turning 18) | SCPA Article 17-A | Queens County Surrogate’s Court |
If you are unsure which track fits your family, our guardianship overview walks through each one, and our guardianship of minors page covers the Surrogate’s Court routes in detail.
What “Incapacity” Means Under Article 81
New York deliberately set a high bar. The law does not let a court strip an adult’s rights simply because relatives think the person is making poor choices. To appoint a guardian, the court must find — by clear and convincing evidence — two things:
- The person cannot manage their property and/or personal needs, and
- The person cannot adequately understand and appreciate the nature and consequences of that inability, so they are likely to suffer harm.
“Clear and convincing evidence” is a demanding standard — higher than the ordinary “more likely than not” used in most civil cases. The petition must show real, documented functional limitations, not a diagnosis alone. A person can have early-stage Alzheimer’s and still retain capacity for many decisions; the court looks at what the individual can actually do.
How an Article 81 Case Proceeds in Queens
The Article 81 process is structured to protect the rights of the alleged incapacitated person (AIP) at every step.
Step 1 — Order to Show Cause and Verified Petition
A guardianship is commenced by an Order to Show Cause together with a Verified Petition filed in Supreme Court, Queens County. The petition identifies the AIP, describes the specific functional limitations, lists the powers requested, and names the proposed guardian. The Order to Show Cause sets a hearing date and directs how the AIP and interested parties must be served.
Step 2 — Appointment of a Court Evaluator
The court appoints a Court Evaluator — an independent investigator who meets with the AIP, reviews records, interviews family and caregivers, and reports back to the judge on whether a guardian is truly needed and, if so, with what powers. In many cases the court also appoints counsel for the AIP, especially when the person objects. The Court Evaluator is one of the most important safeguards in the system; their report heavily influences the outcome.
Step 3 — The Hearing
The AIP has the right to be present and to a hearing. Whenever possible, the judge wants to see and hear from the person directly — sometimes the hearing is held at the AIP’s home or care facility in Queens if attending court is not feasible. The petitioner must prove incapacity by clear and convincing evidence. If the AIP or another party opposes the petition, the matter becomes a contested guardianship, which can require testimony and a more extensive evidentiary hearing.
Step 4 — Tailored, Least-Restrictive Powers
If the court grants a guardianship, the powers it awards must be the least restrictive intervention necessary — narrowly tailored to the AIP’s actual, demonstrated needs. The court may appoint:
- a guardian of the property (to manage finances, pay bills, handle assets), and/or
- a guardian of the personal needs (to make decisions about medical care, housing, and daily life).
A person who only struggles with finances should not lose authority over personal decisions, and vice versa. This tailoring principle is at the heart of Article 81.
A Guardian’s Ongoing Duties
Being appointed is not the end — it is the beginning of a continuing, court-supervised responsibility. Under Article 81, a guardian must:
- File an initial report within 90 days of appointment;
- File annual reports accounting for finances and the person’s wellbeing;
- Visit the incapacitated person at least four times per year;
- Act always in the incapacitated person’s best interests and within the powers the court granted.
An Article 81 guardianship generally lasts for the person’s life unless the court terminates or modifies it (for example, if the person recovers capacity). Our guardian duties page explains the reporting and accounting obligations in practical detail, so newly appointed Queens guardians know exactly what the court expects.
Consider the Alternatives First — Courts Prefer Them
New York courts expect families to explore less drastic options before asking to remove an adult’s legal rights. Guardianship is meant to be a last resort. If the person still has capacity, these tools can avoid a court proceeding entirely:
- Durable Power of Attorney (General Obligations Law §5-1513) — lets a trusted agent manage finances.
- Health Care Proxy — names someone to make medical decisions.
- Living Trust — manages assets without court involvement.
- Supplemental / Special Needs Trust — preserves benefits for a disabled loved one.
- Supported Decision-Making — assistance that keeps the individual in charge of their own choices.
The catch: most of these must be signed while the person still has capacity. Once capacity is lost, Article 81 may be the only remaining option. See our alternatives to guardianship page for guidance, and act early if a Queens loved one is showing early signs of decline.
How Queens Cases Differ From the Surrogate’s Court Tracks
Because so many families arrive confused, here is the practical distinction:
- A minor needing a guardian (for a person under 18, or to hold property a child inherited) goes to Queens County Surrogate’s Court under SCPA Article 17.
- A developmentally or intellectually disabled person — often a young adult turning 18 whose parents need continuing authority — goes to Queens County Surrogate’s Court under SCPA Article 17-A, a more plenary (broader) standard than Article 81.
- An adult who lost capacity later in life goes to Supreme Court, Queens County under MHL Article 81.
Filing in the wrong court costs time and money. This is exactly the kind of threshold question worth confirming with counsel before anything is filed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which Queens court handles an adult Article 81 guardianship?
The Supreme Court, Queens County. Adult guardianships of an incapacitated person under MHL Article 81 are heard in Supreme Court — not the Surrogate’s Court. The Surrogate’s Court handles guardianships of minors (SCPA Art. 17) and of developmentally disabled persons (SCPA Art. 17-A).
What does the petitioner have to prove?
By clear and convincing evidence, that the person cannot manage their property and/or personal needs and cannot adequately appreciate the consequences, so they are likely to suffer harm. A diagnosis alone is not enough; the court looks at actual functional limitations.
Who is the “Court Evaluator”?
An independent investigator the court appoints to meet with the alleged incapacitated person, review the situation, and report to the judge on whether a guardian is needed and what powers are appropriate. The court often also appoints counsel for the AIP, who has the right to be present and to a hearing.
What are a guardian’s ongoing responsibilities?
File an initial report within 90 days, file annual reports, and visit the incapacitated person at least four times per year, always acting within the court-granted powers and in the person’s best interests. The guardianship generally lasts for the person’s life unless terminated.
Can we avoid guardianship altogether?
Often yes — if the person still has capacity. A durable Power of Attorney (GOL §5-1513), Health Care Proxy, living trust, or supported decision-making can prevent the need for a court case. These must be executed before capacity is lost, so plan early.
Talk to a Queens Guardianship Attorney
Article 81 cases move quickly once filed and involve strict reporting duties afterward. Whether you need to petition the Supreme Court, Queens County for a loved one, respond to a contested guardianship, or simply confirm which track fits your family, Morgan Legal Group can help. Schedule a consultation with Russel Morgan, Esq.: calendly.com/russel-morgan/30min.
This page is general information about New York law and is not legal advice. Filing fees and court details should be confirmed with the court or your attorney.
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: how Article 81 guardianship works.