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FOL. VIEstate Planning

N.J.S.A. 3B:3-2 (Execution of Wills)

FOL. VI

Estate Planning

N.J.S.A. Title 3B

Sussex County Estate Planning Lawyers — Serving Newton and All 24 Sussex Municipalities

Sussex County estate planning attorney — Avery & Avery Wills, trusts, probate administration, and inheritance-tax planning across all 20 Sussex courts.

New Jersey Wills Statute — N.J.S.A. 3B:3-2
a. ... a will shall be: (1) in writing; (2) signed by the testator or in the testator's name by some other individual in the testator's conscious presence and by the testator's direction; and (3) signed by at least two individuals, each of whom signed within a reasonable time after each witnessed either the signing of the will ... or the testator's acknowledgment of that signature or acknowledgment of the will. — N.J.S.A. 3B:3-2(a). Holographic wills permitted under subsection (b); writings intended as wills may be probated under N.J.S.A. 3B:3-3 (probate of writings intended as wills).

Statute text reproduced for educational reference. Verify against the official New Jersey Legislature publication before relying on any citation in legal proceedings.

Also in Estate Planning

A Former Judge. A Father-Son Trial Firm. Fifty Years of New Jersey Practice.

Sussex County wills, probate qualification, executor / administrator appointments, and minor guardianships go through the Sussex County Surrogate’s Court at Sussex County Judicial Center, 43-47 High Street, Newton, NJ 07860 ((973) 579-0920). Will contests and contested probate matters escalate to Sussex County Superior Court — Chancery Division, Probate Part at Sussex County Judicial Center, 43-47 High Street, Newton, NJ 07860.

Avery & Avery, Esqs. drafts wills, revocable living trusts, powers of attorney, advance directives, and elective-share planning for Sussex County residents.

For a free estate-planning consultation, call (201) 943-2445.

Sussex County in detail. Sussex County’s 24 municipalities — including Newton, Sparta, Vernon, Hopatcong, and Hardyston — funnel matters through the Sussex Judicial Center on High Street in Newton. Routes 15, 23, and 206 carry the practice’s traffic and DWI volume; Sussex is geographically large but municipal-court volume is comparatively light.

Estate-planning practice in this county runs probate at the County Surrogate’s Office and contested matters at the Chancery Division — Probate Part.

Sussex’s lighter docket allows closer attention to individual matters — useful where strategic positioning around specific suppression issues matters more than calendar speed.

Documents We Draft for Sussex Residents

  • Last Will and Testament under N.J.S.A. 3B:3-1 et seq. — two- witness statutory execution
  • Revocable Living Trust — probate-avoidance vehicle for Sussex homeowners with significant real estate
  • Durable Power of Attorney under N.J.S.A. 46:2B-8.1
  • Advance Directive for Health Care (Living Will + Health Care Proxy) under N.J.S.A. 26:2H-53
  • Pour-over wills for trust-based plans
  • Special Needs Trusts for disabled beneficiaries

NJ Estate + Inheritance Tax

NJ eliminated estate tax for decedents dying on or after January 1, 2018. NJ inheritance tax under N.J.S.A. 54:34-1 et seq. still applies, with exemptions by class:

  • Class A: spouse, civil union partner, parents, descendants — fully exempt
  • Class C: siblings, children-in-law, civil-union partners of children — first $25,000 exempt; 11-16% above
  • Class D: all other beneficiaries — 15-16% from dollar one above $500
  • Class E: charity, government — exempt

Federal estate tax (currently above $13.6M individual exemption) applies to a small minority of Sussex estates.

Sussex Probate Process

  1. Death — death certificate from Sussex municipal vital records
  2. Will located — executor petitions Sussex County Surrogate’s Court for probate
  3. Surrogate qualifies executor — Letters Testamentary issue; fee bond may be required
  4. Notice to beneficiaries under R. 4:80-6 within 60 days
  5. NJ inheritance tax return filed with NJ Division of Taxation within 8 months
  6. Distribution + Final accounting — informal among Class A beneficiaries; formal accounting on demand or on contested estates

Average uncontested probate: 9-15 months from death to closing.

Will Contests and Caveats

Contested probate routes to Sussex County Superior Court — Chancery Probate Part. Standard grounds: lack of testamentary capacity, undue influence, forgery, or improper execution. The leading NJ undue-influence case is In re Estate of Stockdale, 196 N.J. 275 (2008).

Why Avery & Avery for Sussex Estate Planning

  • Multi-generational practice — Robert (1976) and John (2012) cover both initial planning and probate / contested-estate work
  • Cross-county property planning — many Sussex estates include cross-county real estate (e.g. Sussex primary + Sussex / Cape May vacation property); we handle the multi-county ancillary probate
  • Will contests — we both draft and contest wills; that dual perspective shows up in defensible drafting

Schedule a Free Sussex Estate Planning Consultation

Call (201) 943-2445 or submit through the form.

See also: Sussex County Lawyer, Estate Planning Practice.

Frequently asked questions

General educational answers. Every matter has facts that change the analysis — for advice on your situation, call the firm.

Do I need a will if I do not have substantial assets?

Yes. Without a will, intestacy law (N.J.S.A. 3B:5-1 et seq.) controls who inherits — and the result often surprises clients. A will also names guardians for minor children, names an executor of your choosing, and can avoid the increased cost and procedural delay of an intestate administration.

What is the difference between a will and a revocable living trust?

A will takes effect at death and goes through Surrogate-Court probate (typically routine in New Jersey). A revocable trust is a living legal entity that holds title during your lifetime and distributes outside probate at death. Trusts add lifetime cost and administrative complexity, but offer privacy, planned incapacity management, and out-of-state real-estate avoidance.

What is a Power of Attorney and why do I need one?

A Power of Attorney (N.J.S.A. 46:2B-8.1 et seq.) authorizes another person to act on your behalf in financial matters. A "durable" POA survives your incapacity. Without one, family members must petition the Chancery Division for a guardianship, which is slower, more expensive, and creates a public record. A financial Power of Attorney does not authorize medical decision-making — for that you also need an Advance Directive / Healthcare Proxy under the New Jersey Advance Directives for Health Care Act (N.J.S.A. 26:2H-53 et seq.).

What is the New Jersey estate tax / inheritance tax?

New Jersey eliminated its state estate tax effective January 1, 2018, but retains the New Jersey Inheritance Tax (N.J.S.A. 54:34-1 et seq.) on transfers to non-Class A beneficiaries (i.e., not spouse, child, grandchild, parent, or stepchild). Federal estate tax applies above the federal exemption, which under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act is $15 million per individual for 2026 (indexed annually). High-value estates and gifts above $19,000 per recipient may still trigger reporting; we recommend reviewing your plan as exemptions, indexing, and family-circumstance changes accumulate.

Can a will be challenged in New Jersey?

Yes. Common contest grounds include lack of testamentary capacity, undue influence, duress, fraud, and improper execution. Contests are filed in the Probate Part of the Chancery Division (R. 4:80-7). The proponent of a properly-executed will receives a presumption of validity; contestants bear the burden of rebutting it by clear and convincing evidence.