Non-Adversarial (Non-Contentious) Proceedings
The Role of an Attorney in Non-Adversarial (Non-Contentious) Proceedings

Unlike traditional lawsuits, these proceedings emphasize judicial supervision and fact-finding, making skilled legal representation critical to protecting individual rights and property.
1. Probate and Estate Proceedings
Probate matters are the most common form of non-adversarial proceedings. Although many probate cases are administered by courts or court-appointed officials (and, in some systems, notaries public acting under court authority), legal counsel becomes indispensable when estates are complex or contested.
• Will Interpretation
The application of inheritance law requires precision. An attorney evaluates the formal validity of a will, including compliance with statutory execution requirements, capacity, and form—particularly in cases involving foreign or atypical wills. Where testamentary language is unclear, the attorney advocates for an interpretation that best protects the client’s inheritance rights, consistent with the decedent’s intent.
• Mandatory Heirs and Lifetime Gifts
Disputes frequently arise over statutory inheritance rights and the treatment of gifts made during the decedent’s lifetime. An attorney must calculate the full value of the estate, including qualifying lifetime transfers, and determine whether protected heirs have received their legally required share. If those rights have been impaired, the attorney initiates legal actions to reduce gifts or recover estate assets, often transforming a routine probate proceeding into a contested property matter.
2. Property Ownership and Partition Matters
When co-owners of real property cannot agree on how to allocate or use jointly owned assets—such as a family home or undeveloped land—court-supervised partition proceedings may be necessary.
• Structuring the Partition
An attorney advises whether the property should be divided physically (where feasible) or through a sale with distribution of proceeds. Where physical division may reduce the property’s value or utility, attorneys rely on expert testimony from appraisers, surveyors, or engineers to demonstrate that sale and monetary division is the only fair and economically viable solution.
• Boundary Disputes
Boundary determinations, though often viewed as outdated, remain common. These cases require attorneys to blend property law principles—ownership, possession, and adverse use—with practical evidence such as surveys, land registry records, and historic boundary markers. Effective representation ensures that a client’s real property rights are fully protected, down to the smallest portion of land.
3. Status-Related Matters and Family Law Oversight
Non-adversarial proceedings also address some of the most sensitive areas of life, including limitations on legal capacity and the extension or modification of parental authority.
• Protection of Individual and Civil Rights
In cases involving legal capacity—where courts assess whether an individual can independently manage personal or financial affairs—the attorney plays a critical role as a safeguard against abuse. Attorneys ensure that any restriction on legal capacity is narrowly tailored, evidence-based, and proportionate, rather than broadly or arbitrarily imposed. This protects both the dignity of the individual and their assets from potential exploitation, including by family members.
Key Distinction: Litigation vs. Non-Adversarial Proceedings
The attorney’s role differs significantly between litigation and non-adversarial matters. In litigation, the adversarial system prevails: the court decides based on arguments and evidence presented by opposing parties. In non-adversarial proceedings, however, the inquisitorial or investigative approach dominates—the court actively establishes facts on its own initiative, particularly in family-related and status matters, to safeguard public and individual interests.
