Connecticut Probate Court System: Jurisdiction and Proceedings

Connecticut's probate courts operate as a distinct tier within the state judiciary, handling matters that range from estate administration and guardianship to conservatorship and civil commitment. Authorized under Connecticut General Statutes Title 45a, these courts function independently from the Superior Court system, with jurisdiction defined by statute rather than general civil authority. Understanding the structure and procedural framework of the probate system is essential for attorneys, fiduciaries, family members, and researchers navigating Connecticut's legal landscape, which is described in broader terms at /index.


Definition and scope

Connecticut's probate court system comprises 54 courts distributed across the state's probate districts, each presided over by a judge of probate elected to a four-year term by district voters (Connecticut Judicial Branch – Probate Court Administrator). This configuration makes Connecticut probate judges distinctly different from Superior Court judges, who are appointed by the General Assembly.

Jurisdiction is defined by Connecticut General Statutes § 45a-98, which grants probate courts authority over:

  1. Decedents' estates — testate (with a will) and intestate (without a will)
  2. Trusts — including testamentary trusts and certain inter vivos trusts
  3. Guardianship of minors
  4. Conservatorship of adults who lack capacity
  5. Adoptions
  6. Civil commitment proceedings under C.G.S. § 17a-498
  7. Change of name petitions
  8. Removal of disabilities of minority

Scope limitations: Probate courts in Connecticut do not exercise general civil jurisdiction. Disputes involving contested property titles that require common-law determinations, complex tort claims arising from fiduciary conduct, or constitutional challenges to statutes are not within probate court authority and must be brought in the Superior Court. Federal matters — including federal estate tax disputes before the U.S. Tax Court or bankruptcy proceedings involving an estate — fall entirely outside probate court jurisdiction and are not covered by this reference.


How it works

Probate proceedings in Connecticut are initiated by filing a petition with the probate court in the district where the decedent was domiciled at death, where the minor or incapacitated person resides, or where the relevant property is located. Filing fees are set by statute under C.G.S. § 45a-109 and scale with estate value; the minimum fee for estate administration is established at $25 for estates under $10,000, with graduated fees applying to larger estates (Connecticut Probate Court Administrator – Fee Schedule).

The procedural sequence for a standard decedent's estate follows these phases:

  1. Petition and appointment — A petitioner files for appointment of executor (if a will exists) or administrator (intestate estates). The court reviews the will's formal validity under C.G.S. § 45a-251.
  2. Notice — Statutory notice must be published and served on interested parties; creditors receive notice under C.G.S. § 45a-395.
  3. Inventory — The fiduciary must file a sworn inventory of estate assets within two months of appointment under C.G.S. § 45a-341.
  4. Claims period — Creditors have a defined period, typically 150 days from the date of notice, to present claims against the estate.
  5. Administration and accounting — The fiduciary manages assets, pays debts, and files a final accounting for court approval.
  6. Distribution — The court issues a decree of distribution, transferring assets to beneficiaries or heirs.

Appeals from probate court decisions are taken to the Superior Court under C.G.S. § 45a-186, not directly to the Appellate Court. This two-stage appellate pathway distinguishes probate matters from standard civil litigation.

For the regulatory framework governing Connecticut courts and professional conduct within them, see /regulatory-context-for-connecticut-us-legal-system.


Common scenarios

The probate courts handle a defined set of recurring matter types, each governed by specific statutory procedures:

Estate administration (testate vs. intestate): When a Connecticut decedent leaves a valid will, the executor named in the instrument petitions for admission of the will to probate. When no will exists, the court appoints an administrator and applies intestacy succession rules under C.G.S. § 45a-437 through § 45a-439. The fundamental distinction is that testate distribution follows the testator's expressed intent; intestate distribution follows statutory priority — spouse, descendants, parents, and collateral heirs in that order.

Conservatorship: Adults who are incapable of managing their personal care or financial affairs may be subject to conservatorship petitions filed by family members, physicians, or public officials. The court must find by clear and convincing evidence that the respondent lacks decision-making capacity before appointing a conservator, a standard codified at C.G.S. § 45a-650.

Guardianship of minors: Petitions arise when parents die, are incapacitated, or voluntarily relinquish guardianship. The court applies a best-interest-of-the-child standard consistent with Connecticut's family law framework. Related proceedings involving children may also intersect with Connecticut Family Court Procedures.

Trusts: Probate courts exercise supervision over testamentary trusts and retain jurisdiction to modify, terminate, or remove trustees under C.G.S. § 45a-175. Purely private inter vivos trusts not subject to court registration fall partially outside mandatory probate oversight unless a dispute requires judicial resolution.


Decision boundaries

Practitioners and parties must assess whether a matter belongs in probate court or an adjacent forum before filing:

Factor Probate Court Superior Court
Subject matter Estates, trusts, guardianship, conservatorship General civil, contested property, tort
Jurisdictional basis C.G.S. Title 45a (statutory) Constitutional and general statutory
Presiding officer Elected judge of probate Appointed judge
Appeal route Superior Court (de novo) Appellate Court
Jury availability Not available Available in most civil matters

Probate courts do not conduct jury trials. When a probate matter generates a contested factual dispute that one party seeks to resolve before a jury, that party must pursue the issue through the Superior Court appeal or a separately filed civil action. This limitation is a structural feature of Connecticut's bifurcated court system, consistent with the Connecticut Court Structure as organized under Article Fifth of the Connecticut Constitution.

Matters involving Connecticut Administrative Law Agencies — such as the Department of Social Services in Medicaid-related estate recovery — intersect with probate proceedings but are governed by separate administrative procedures not adjudicated within the probate court.


References

📜 5 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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