Bellefontaine Neighbors · North County

Just south of
home.

Bellefontaine Neighbors is a city of about 10,400 residents, and a large share of them are at the age where the questions about wills, trusts, beneficiary deeds, durable powers of attorney, and the orderly transfer of a paid-off home become urgent rather than theoretical. The phone calls we get from this city skew accordingly. Many of them open with a recent doctor visit, a recent diagnosis, or the realization that the spouse who handled the paperwork is no longer able to.

49 YearsSame Office · Same Phone
MOState Bar Admissions
FreeInitial Consultation · Same-Day Reply
From Bellefontaine Neighbors

Five minutes north on
U.S. 67.

Bellefontaine Neighbors sits directly south of Florissant on the Lindbergh corridor. Our office is about five minutes up U.S. Highway 67. For most residents, that is the closest law office north of the city line.

The Courts

Where Bellefontaine Neighbors
cases get decided.

Three courts decide Bellefontaine Neighbors matters — the city’s own municipal bench plus the county Circuit and Probate divisions in Clayton.

Municipal

Bellefontaine Neighbors Municipal Court

City Hall · Bellefontaine Neighbors, MO 63137

Ordinance violations, traffic citations from Lindbergh, Chambers, Bellefontaine Road, and the residential grid, plus minor misdemeanors and accident citations from inside city limits.

County Circuit

St. Louis County Circuit Court

105 South Central Avenue · Clayton, MO 63105

Felony filings, dissolution, contested civil matters, and probate. About twenty minutes south. Most Bellefontaine Neighbors estate and injury cases past the small-claims line route here.

Probate

St. Louis County Probate Division

105 South Central Avenue · Clayton, MO 63105

Estate administration, conservatorships, guardianships. Same Clayton building. Bellefontaine Neighbors generates a steady probate caseload because of the city’s demographics.

Verify Before Relying Court addresses, hours, and procedural information above are believed accurate but may change. Verify current details with the court directly — addresses, dockets, filing windows, and clerk hours can change without notice. Statute citations and procedural references on this page were believed accurate at the time of writing; Missouri law changes regularly.

What We See Most

Eight practices,
one phone number.

Bellefontaine Neighbors work skews heavily toward estate planning and probate — the city’s senior population is one of the highest concentrations in North County — with steady traffic, injury, and the routine criminal-defense work the residential grid generates.

The Senior-Heavy Grid

Why estate planning
leads the docket.

Bellefontaine Neighbors is a city of about 10,400 residents, and a large share of them are at the age where the questions about wills, trusts, beneficiary deeds, durable powers of attorney, and the orderly transfer of a paid-off home become urgent rather than theoretical. The phone calls we get from this city skew accordingly. Many of them open with a recent doctor visit, a recent diagnosis, or the realization that the spouse who handled the paperwork is no longer able to.

Missouri’s beneficiary-deed statute — RSMo §461.025 — is one of the more useful planning tools for a working family whose largest asset is the house itself. A properly drafted beneficiary deed keeps the property out of probate and transfers it to named beneficiaries on death. Many Bellefontaine Neighbors estate calls end with a beneficiary deed plus a short will plus durable powers of attorney for finances and healthcare. That is the standard package for a North County retiree who owns one home and wants to keep things simple.

We do, of course, also handle the traffic, injury, and criminal-defense matters that come out of any city — the Lindbergh and Chambers corridors generate their share of rear-end collisions, careless-driving citations, and the occasional DWI — but the through-line for Bellefontaine Neighbors is the estate work, and the courthouse the city’s probate cases ultimately land in is the same St. Louis County Probate Division in Clayton we appear in regularly.

Opening questions for a Bellefontaine Neighbors estate call: whether the home is in one name or two, whether anyone has already started using a power of attorney, whether there are out-of-state children, and whether the family has been told a trust is required (it usually is not). English or Spanish · Hablamos español.

For most Bellefontaine Neighbors families, the right plan is the smallest one that works — a beneficiary deed, a short will, and the two powers of attorney. That is the package, not a trust.
Common Questions from Bellefontaine Neighbors

Bellefontaine Neighbors legal FAQ —
straight answers.

The questions Bellefontaine Neighbors residents and businesses ask most often. General information; specific facts always change the analysis.

What court handles felony cases for Bellefontaine Neighbors residents?

Felony charges originating in Bellefontaine Neighbors are filed in the St. Louis County Circuit Court at 105 South Central Avenue, Clayton. Initial appearances, preliminary hearings, and bond review are heard there before the case is assigned to a trial division. We appear in St. Louis County regularly.

Where is Bellefontaine Neighbors’s municipal court located?

The Bellefontaine Neighbors Municipal Court at City Hall handles ordinance violations. Speeding citations, careless-and-imprudent tickets, accident citations, and minor ordinance matters are heard there rather than at the St. Louis County Circuit Court.

How far is your office from Bellefontaine Neighbors?

Our office at 580 N. U.S. Highway 67, Suite 4 in Florissant is about 5 minutes south of Florissant on Lindbergh / U.S. 67. Many Bellefontaine Neighbors clients meet us in person; others handle the entire matter by phone and video, with in-home signings available for estate planning.

What is a Missouri beneficiary deed?

A beneficiary deed under RSMo §461.025 lets a Missouri homeowner name who receives the property on death, outside probate. It is one of the most cost-effective planning tools available and is signed and recorded with the recorder of deeds.

Does my Bellefontaine Neighbors home have to go through probate?

Not if it is properly titled — joint tenancy, trust ownership, or a recorded beneficiary deed all keep the home out of probate. We review the deed at the first meeting and recommend the smallest plan that achieves the goal.

Neighboring Communities

Nearby cities we also serve.

Bellefontaine Neighbors · Free Consultation

Counsel five minutes
north of home.

(314) 831-9350
Most calls returned the same business day
Call · Free Consultation