By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Probate Litigation Intake Forms: What Every Probate Attorney Needs to Capture at Client Intake

Probate litigation is unlike most areas of civil practice. The deadlines are jurisdictionally rigid, the evidence is often locked inside medical records and financial institutions, the parties are family members with decades of grievance layered beneath the legal dispute, and the decedent — the one person who could resolve the central question — is not available to testify. Every piece of information you fail to capture at the initial consultation becomes a fact you have to chase down later, often under deadline pressure and almost always at greater cost to the client.

A general civil litigation intake form will not work here. Probate disputes require specific data points that general forms do not contemplate — the decedent's domicile at death, the existence and dates of prior wills, the timeline of cognitive decline relative to document execution, and the identity of every person who stood to gain or lose from the contested instrument. A purpose-built probate litigation intake form captures all of this in a structured format that drives your case evaluation from the first meeting.

Matter type: classifying the dispute before you go deeper

Probate litigation is a broad category that encompasses fundamentally different types of disputes, each with its own elements, burden of proof, and procedural posture. Your intake form should classify the matter type at the outset because every subsequent section — what evidence matters, what deadlines apply, who the interested parties are — depends on it.

The major matter types your form should cover:

Many probate matters involve more than one of these categories simultaneously — a will contest paired with a petition to remove the executor, for example, or accounting objections that evolve into a breach of fiduciary duty claim. Your form should allow the attorney to check multiple types and add notes on how they intersect.

Decedent and grantor information

In probate litigation, the decedent is the central figure even though they are not a party to the case. The information you capture about them drives every aspect of the dispute — which state's law governs, who the potential parties are, what documents exist, and what the estate looks like.

Client's relationship to the decedent

Your client's standing to bring or defend a probate action depends entirely on their relationship to the decedent and their interest in the estate. This section of the intake determines whether the client has a viable claim before you invest hours in case evaluation.

Interested parties and family dynamics

Probate matters revolve around the family and the estate — the interpersonal dynamics matter as much as the legal issues. Understanding who the interested parties are, who has aligned with whom, and what the history of conflict looks like is essential to case strategy — and to advising the client on whether litigation, mediation, or settlement is the right path. While the probate intake form focuses on capturing the key parties involved in estate administration, practitioners handling contested matters should maintain a detailed party map in their case file.

Grounds for challenge: building the theory of the case at intake

If the matter involves a will or trust contest, the intake form needs to capture the factual basis for each potential ground of challenge. This is where the attorney begins to evaluate the strength of the case, and the more detail the form elicits, the more efficient that evaluation becomes.

The overlap between probate litigation and estate planning intake is significant but the direction is reversed — estate planning captures the client's wishes going forward, while probate litigation reconstructs what happened and whether the resulting documents reflect the decedent's actual intent. Elder law intake shares the capacity and guardianship dimensions, particularly when the dispute involves a living incapacitated person rather than a decedent.

Estate assets: what is at stake

The composition and value of the estate determines whether the litigation is economically justified, what discovery will look like, and where the disputes over distribution will center. Your intake should capture a comprehensive asset inventory:

Evidence and timeline: the facts that will make or break the case

Probate cases are won or lost on the evidentiary record, and much of that evidence is time-sensitive. Medical records can be destroyed after retention periods expire. Bank statements may be purged. Witnesses' memories fade. Your intake form should identify what evidence exists and initiate preservation immediately.

Procedural status and deadlines

Probate deadlines are often shorter and less forgiving than general civil litigation deadlines. Missing an objection deadline can waive the client's right to challenge a will entirely — no extension, no excuse. Your intake form must capture the procedural posture immediately so you can calendar the critical dates before the consultation ends.

Why a generic litigation intake form fails in probate

A general civil litigation intake form will capture the client's contact information, a description of the dispute, and the basic procedural posture. It will not ask about the decedent's domicile, the existence of prior wills, the timeline of cognitive decline, or whether the contested document contains a no-contest clause. It will not prompt the attorney to calculate the objection deadline or identify assets that passed outside probate. It will not capture the family dynamics that determine whether the case settles in three months or goes to trial in three years.

Probate litigation requires a form built for probate litigation — one that walks the attorney through every category of information that drives case evaluation, evidence preservation, and strategic planning from the very first meeting.

If you handle estate disputes alongside estate planning or elder law, each practice area has its own intake requirements, and the Legal Bundle includes all three alongside 35 other legal practice areas.

Probate litigation intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Matter classification, decedent information, grounds for challenge, estate assets, evidence and timeline, procedural status, heirs, and family dynamics. Built for probate litigation attorneys.

View Probate Litigation Forms