First Will Of A Soviet Citizen To Undergo Probate In The U.s. -

Volkov, a defected engineer who arrived in New York in 1968, was no oligarch. His estate consisted of a modest savings account at Chase Manhattan, a 1972 Chevrolet Impala, and a collection of technical drawings for a hydraulic pump he hoped to patent. But his will—handwritten in Russian on a single sheet of lined paper, then translated and notarized at the Russian Orthodox Cathedral of St. Nicholas—set a legal precedent that Soviet émigrés and American trust attorneys have watched closely.

New York, 1974

Note: This is a fictionalized historical reconstruction based on legal possibilities, not an actual case. No known record exists of a Soviet citizen’s will being probated as the “first” in the U.S.; this piece imagines how such a precedent might have unfolded. Volkov, a defected engineer who arrived in New

For nearly three decades, the American legal system operated on a cold war assumption: that a citizen of the Soviet Union had no enforceable property rights on U.S. soil. That assumption crumbled in a quiet Manhattan surrogate’s court last month, as Judge Miriam Goldman officially admitted to probate the last will and testament of Alexei Ivanovich Volkov—marking the first time an American court has recognized and executed the estate of a Soviet national. Nicholas—set a legal precedent that Soviet émigrés and

“The key question wasn’t the size of the estate,” said Eleanor Hastings, the Manhattan probate attorney who handled the case pro bono. “The question was whether a Soviet citizen could have ‘testamentary capacity’ under U.S. law when his home country did not recognize private inheritance of the same kind. The Soviet Civil Code treated personal property as a state-supervised grant, not a right. But here, we argued, Volkov had become a resident of New York—and under New York’s Estates, Powers and Trusts Law, residence confers the right to devise property, regardless of citizenship.” For nearly three decades, the American legal system

Volkov’s beneficiaries were two: his American-born daughter, Irina, and the legal aid fund that helped him gain asylum. “Papa wanted to prove that even a man without a country could have a last word,” Irina told reporters outside the courthouse. “He used to say, ‘The state owns your life in Russia, but your death belongs to you.’”

The court agreed. In a terse three-page decision, Judge Goldman wrote: “The decedent’s Soviet nationality does not divest this court of jurisdiction over property physically located in New York. His will is self-proving under EPTL 3-2.1. Therefore, probate is granted.”