If a guardianship petition has been filed against you or a loved one in Dutchess County, you can contest it — and the law is built to protect the person whose rights are at stake. Under New York’s Mental Hygiene Law (MHL) Article 81, an adult guardianship petition is heard in the Supreme Court, Dutchess County, and the person named in the petition — the alleged incapacitated person, or “AIP” — has powerful procedural rights. These include the right to counsel, the right to a hearing, the right to be present, the right to demand a jury, and the right to insist that the petitioner prove incapacity by clear and convincing evidence. A guardianship is never automatic. The court must find both that the person is incapacitated and that a guardian is actually necessary before it appoints anyone. This article explains how to contest a guardianship in Dutchess and what every AIP needs to know.
Which Court Hears Your Case in Dutchess County
The first thing to understand is that the right court depends on the type of guardianship.
- Adult incapacity (MHL Article 81): Heard in the Supreme Court, Dutchess County. This is the proceeding most people mean when they talk about contesting a guardianship of an elderly parent or an adult who has suffered illness or injury.
- Minors (SCPA Article 17): Guardianship of an infant or minor is generally brought in the Dutchess County Surrogate’s Court (and may also proceed in Supreme or Family Court).
- Adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities (SCPA Article 17-A): Brought in the Dutchess County Surrogate’s Court.
This distinction matters. An Article 81 adult-incapacity matter is a Supreme Court proceeding — it is not a Surrogate’s Court case. If you have been served with Article 81 papers, your hearing will be in the Supreme Court. The SCPA Article 17 and 17-A proceedings, which concern minors and individuals with developmental disabilities, are the matters that belong in the Surrogate’s Court.
The Legal Standard: Why Petitioners Don’t Win Automatically
Article 81 is designed to be hard to satisfy on purpose. The Legislature built it around the least restrictive alternative principle in MHL §81.02 — the idea that a court should impose only the specific powers a person genuinely needs and no more. A guardian’s authority is tailored, not blanket.
To appoint a guardian of the person (personal needs) or of the property (financial affairs), the Supreme Court must find:
- That the person is likely to suffer harm because they cannot manage their personal needs or property and cannot adequately understand and appreciate that inability; and
- That the appointment is necessary — that no less restrictive alternative will protect the person.
The burden of proof is clear and convincing evidence, a demanding standard far higher than the “more likely than not” test used in ordinary civil cases. Importantly, the court can grant limited powers. The AIP retains every right and power the court does not specifically transfer to a guardian.
The Court Evaluator: An Independent Investigator
In every Article 81 case, the court appoints a Court Evaluator under MHL §81.09. This neutral investigator interviews the AIP, reviews the allegations, explains the AIP’s rights, and files a written report with recommendations to the court. The Court Evaluator is not the petitioner’s ally and not the AIP’s advocate — the role is to give the judge an independent picture. A thorough, accurate evaluation often becomes the turning point in a contested case, which is why having your own attorney engage with the evaluator early is so valuable.
Rights of the AIP — Your Toolkit for Contesting
The AIP is not a bystander. Under Article 81, the AIP has the right to:
| Right | What It Means in Practice |
|---|---|
| Right to counsel | The AIP may retain a lawyer, and the court can appoint counsel. Independent counsel argues your position. |
| Right to a hearing | The petitioner must prove the case at a hearing in the Supreme Court, Dutchess County. |
| Right to be present | The AIP can attend and participate; the hearing may be held where the AIP resides if needed. |
| Right to present evidence | The AIP may call witnesses, submit records, and cross-examine the petitioner’s witnesses. |
| Right to a jury | The AIP may demand a jury trial on the issue of incapacity. |
| Clear and convincing standard | The petitioner — not the AIP — carries the heavy burden of proof. |
To learn how the proceeding works from the petition forward, see our overview of Article 81 guardianship and our general guardianship overview.
How to Actually Contest the Petition
Contesting an Article 81 guardianship in Dutchess generally means doing some combination of the following:
- Challenge the evidence of incapacity. Insist on the clear-and-convincing standard. Vague claims of “memory problems” or family disagreement are not enough; the petitioner must show functional limitations that create a likelihood of harm.
- Show that less restrictive alternatives already exist. If the AIP signed a valid durable power of attorney, health care proxy, or created a living trust while they had capacity, a guardianship may be unnecessary. Supported decision-making and a representative payee for benefits are also recognized alternatives. See alternatives to guardianship.
- Argue for limited rather than plenary powers. Even if some help is warranted, the court can tailor a narrow order under §81.02 instead of stripping all rights.
- Object to the proposed guardian. The AIP can argue that the petitioner’s chosen guardian is unsuitable and propose a more appropriate person, or contest the need for any guardian at all.
- Work with the Court Evaluator. Provide records, references, and a clear account of how the AIP manages their life.
A contested guardianship is a serious, fact-intensive proceeding. If a guardian is appointed, the obligations are ongoing — guardians must file an initial report and annual accountings with the court. Understanding those duties helps frame what is really at stake; see guardian duties and our page on contested guardianship.
A Note on Court Costs
Do not rely on a flat number you read online. Filing fees and related court costs in Article 81 matters are set by statute and the court, and they should be confirmed with the Supreme Court, Dutchess County, or with your attorney before you file or respond. What is predictable is the work: a contested case involves investigation, a hearing, and often expert input.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is an Article 81 guardianship handled in Surrogate’s Court in Dutchess?
No. Adult incapacity guardianship under MHL Article 81 is a Supreme Court, Dutchess County matter. The Surrogate’s Court handles SCPA Article 17 (minors) and Article 17-A (adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities).
What does the petitioner have to prove?
That the AIP is likely to suffer harm because of an inability to manage personal needs or property, that the AIP cannot adequately appreciate that limitation, and that a guardian is necessary — all by clear and convincing evidence under Article 81.
Can a power of attorney stop a guardianship?
Often, yes. A valid durable power of attorney or health care proxy executed while the person had capacity may make an Article 81 guardianship unnecessary, because it provides a less restrictive alternative under MHL §81.02.
Does the AIP get their own lawyer?
Yes. The AIP has the right to retain counsel, and the court may appoint counsel. The AIP can also demand a hearing and even a jury on the question of incapacity.
Talk to a Dutchess County Guardianship Attorney
Whether you are opposing a petition or worried one is coming, the rights of the AIP are real — but they have to be asserted, on the record, in the Supreme Court, Dutchess County. Russel Morgan, Esq. and the team at Morgan Legal Group guide Dutchess families through contested Article 81 proceedings and the alternatives that can avoid them entirely.
Schedule a confidential consultation: https://calendly.com/russel-morgan/30min
Further reading from Morgan Legal Group: New York elder-law planning.