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Corpus Christi Legal Guardianship Attorneys
Protecting Your Loved Ones When They Need It Most
Watching a loved one struggle to manage their own affairs—whether an aging parent showing signs of dementia, a child with special needs approaching adulthood, or a family member facing a sudden incapacity—is one of life’s most difficult experiences. You want to step in and protect them, but the legal path forward often seems confusing and intimidating.
At Barton & Associates, Attorneys at Law, we understand the delicate balance between respecting a loved one’s autonomy and ensuring their safety and well-being. We are here to guide you through the legal process of guardianship with compassion, clarity, and skilled advocacy.
As your trusted Family Law Corpus Christi resource, we help families throughout Nueces County navigate the complexities of Texas guardianship law. Whether you are in Calallen, Flour Bluff, or anywhere in the Coastal Bend, we are here to help you protect the people you love most.
What is Legal Guardianship in Texas?
Guardianship is a legal relationship created by a court that gives one person the authority and responsibility to make decisions for another person who is unable to make those decisions for themselves due to incapacity or age.
Think of guardianship as a vital legal safety net. It is designed to protect individuals who cannot protect themselves from harm, neglect, or exploitation. At its core, it is an act of love guided by the principle of the ward’s best interests.
However, guardianship is also a serious step that removes certain rights from the ward. Because of this, Texas law requires courts to consider less restrictive alternatives before granting guardianship, and to tailor the guardianship to the specific needs of the individual whenever possible.
Guardianship of the Person vs. Guardianship of the Estate
Texas law recognizes two primary categories of guardianship, each serving a distinct function.
Guardianship of the Person allows the guardian to make non-financial decisions for the ward. This includes decisions about medical care and treatment, living arrangements and residence, daily care, safety, and well-being, and educational and social activities.
Guardianship of the Estate grants authority to manage the ward’s financial affairs. This includes managing bank accounts and income, paying bills and debts, handling investments and real estate, and filing taxes and reporting to the court.
In some cases, the court may appoint the same individual to serve in both roles. Alternatively, different individuals may be appointed as guardian of the person and guardian of the estate, depending on what the court determines to be in the ward’s best interest.
When Is Guardianship Necessary in Corpus Christi?
Guardianship may be appropriate in a variety of situations common to families in the Coastal Bend.
Guardianship of a Minor
When a minor child is left without a parent who can provide care—due to death, incapacity, incarceration, or abandonment—the court may appoint a guardian to assume responsibility. This ensures the child’s physical, emotional, and educational needs are met.
Common scenarios include both parents being deceased, a parent being incarcerated or missing, evidence of abuse, neglect, or abandonment, or the child living in an unstable or unsafe environment.
In these cases, someone close to the child—such as a grandparent, aunt, uncle, or even a family friend—may file for guardianship to provide care and stability.
For children who are twelve or older, their preference regarding who should be their guardian may be taken into account. This is typically shared in court during a private interview or through a written statement.
Guardianship of an Incapacitated Adult
Adult guardianship in Texas applies when an incapacitated person is unable to care for their physical health or manage their financial affairs due to conditions such as dementia, stroke, brain injury, severe mental illness, or intellectual disability.
To qualify for guardianship of an adult, the applicant must establish that the proposed ward is unable to understand or communicate decisions, lacks the ability to provide for their basic needs, and may be vulnerable to exploitation or harm without intervention.
Common scenarios include an aging parent with worsening dementia who forgets to pay bills, cannot make safe medical decisions, and leaves the stove on; an adult child with a severe intellectual disability whose parents can no longer provide care; or a family member who has suffered a traumatic brain injury and cannot manage their affairs.
Types of Guardianship in Texas
Texas law provides several types of guardianship, each designed to fit different circumstances and levels of need.
Full Guardianship
A full guardianship grants the guardian complete authority over either the person, the estate, or both. This may be appropriate if the ward is unable to make or communicate responsible decisions regarding any aspect of their life.
Full guardianship is typically a last resort after less restrictive alternatives have been deemed insufficient.
Limited Guardianship
When the ward can still handle certain decisions but needs help with others, the court may grant a limited guardianship. This is a tailored arrangement that outlines exactly what areas the guardian controls.
Examples of limitations include the guardian only making medical decisions and not financial ones, the ward managing monthly income but not investments, or the guardian handling living arrangements but not educational choices.
Limited guardianship supports autonomy while providing structured support where necessary.
Temporary Guardianship
Temporary guardianship is a short-term legal arrangement used when immediate action is needed to protect an individual or their property. It is most commonly used in emergency situations where the proposed ward faces an imminent risk to their safety, health, or financial well-being.
Key features of temporary guardianship in Texas include a duration that typically lasts no more than sixty days, though extensions may be possible in limited situations. The court may only grant powers necessary to address the specific emergency, and a hearing is typically required within ten days of filing.
Standby Guardianship
A standby guardian is designated in anticipation of the current guardian becoming unable to serve. It is a proactive legal tool often used by aging parents of adult children with disabilities.
Important distinctions include that the court must approve the standby guardian in advance, authority does not transfer unless the current guardian is incapacitated or deceased, and it ensures continuity without interruption in care.
Successor Guardianship
Successor guardianship is used when the existing guardian can no longer fulfill their role. Rather than beginning the process from scratch, a qualified replacement can be named through court approval to avoid disruption in the ward’s care or asset management.
Co-Guardianship
Texas law allows courts to appoint more than one person to serve as guardian, either jointly or with distinct responsibilities. This can allow for division of duties and shared accountability, though co-guardianship can lead to delays if disagreements arise.
Who Can Serve as Guardian in Texas?
To be appointed as a guardian, you must meet specific qualifications set by the Texas Estates Code.
Basic Qualifications
You must be at least eighteen years old. You must be a United States citizen, a permanent resident, or legally present in the country. You must be of sound mind. You must not have certain felony convictions, though some exceptions may apply. You must not have conflicts of interest with the ward.
Priority of Appointment
Texas courts follow a priority order for who may serve as guardian. The order generally looks first to a person previously designated by the proposed ward in a written declaration, followed by the spouse, then a parent, then an adult child, then other close relatives, and finally a qualified individual, nonprofit, or governmental entity if no family is available.
However, even if someone has priority, the judge will always decide based on the proposed ward’s best interest.
Private Professional Guardians
When no suitable family member is available—or when conflicts among relatives make appointment difficult—the court may appoint a private professional guardian. These individuals are certified by the state and may serve in complex guardianship cases involving high-value estates or contested appointments.
The Guardianship Process: What to Expect in Nueces County
Establishing guardianship requires strict compliance with Texas law and involves a sequence of filings, evaluations, notices, and hearings. Here is what you can expect when working with Barton & Associates.
Step 1: Initial Consultation and Case Evaluation
We begin by listening to your story and evaluating whether guardianship is the appropriate solution for your loved one. We will discuss the circumstances, review any existing legal documents, and help you understand the options available.
We also explore whether less restrictive alternatives might be sufficient, as Texas law requires courts to consider these before granting guardianship.
Step 2: Filing the Guardianship Application
The guardianship process officially begins when an application is filed in the probate court of the county where the proposed ward resides. In Corpus Christi, this means filing in Nueces County probate court.
The application must include the name, age, and address of the proposed ward; a detailed description of why guardianship is necessary; the proposed guardian’s qualifications and relationship to the ward; whether the guardianship is for the person, the estate, or both; and an estimate of the value of the ward’s assets if seeking estate guardianship.
Step 3: Court Appointment of an Attorney Ad Litem
After the application is filed, the probate judge appoints an attorney ad litem to represent the proposed ward. This lawyer’s job is to ensure the ward’s rights are protected throughout the legal proceedings.
The attorney ad litem will meet with the proposed ward in person, review medical records and financial documents, interview the applicant and family members, and provide an independent report to the court.
Step 4: Medical Evidence and Capacity Evaluation
A key part of the guardianship process is the requirement for medical proof of incapacity. A licensed physician must evaluate the proposed ward and complete a Certificate of Medical Examination.
This report must be completed within one hundred twenty days of filing the application. It must include a diagnosis and description of the incapacity, describe the effect of the condition on daily functioning, state whether the incapacity is temporary, permanent, or progressive, and confirm the need for guardianship.
Step 5: Criminal Background Check and Guardian Training
Before being appointed, all proposed guardians must undergo a criminal background check and complete a state-approved training course.
The training covers the legal duties of a guardian, the rights of the ward, alternatives to guardianship, and reporting requirements.
The Texas Judicial Branch Certification Commission provides a free online guardianship training module. A certificate of completion must be filed with the court before appointment.
Step 6: Providing Legal Notice to Interested Parties
Texas law requires that all interested parties receive notice of the guardianship application. This includes the proposed ward through personal service, the spouse, adult children, and other close relatives, and any current caregivers.
Proper notice ensures that everyone affected has an opportunity to participate or raise objections.
Step 7: The Guardianship Hearing
Once all documentation is in place and notice requirements are met, the court will set a formal hearing date.
At the hearing, the applicant provides testimony supporting the need for guardianship, the physician’s certificate is presented as evidence, the attorney ad litem presents their findings, and other family members may contest or support the application.
If the judge is satisfied with the evidence, the court will issue a formal order appointing the guardian.
Step 8: Bond and Oath of Guardianship
Once the court approves the appointment, the guardian must take a formal oath and may be required to post a bond.
The bond amount is set by the judge based on the value of the ward’s estate. It serves to protect the ward in case of mishandling or misuse of funds.
Step 9: Issuance of Letters of Guardianship
After the oath is taken and any required bond is posted, the county clerk issues Letters of Guardianship. These letters serve as legal proof of the guardian’s authority to act on behalf of the ward.
Without these letters, institutions such as banks, medical offices, and government agencies will not recognize the guardian’s authority.
Step 10: Post-Appointment Responsibilities
Guardianship does not end with court approval. Guardians have ongoing duties including filing an initial inventory of assets for guardians of the estate, submitting annual reports on the ward’s well-being, filing annual accountings detailing financial transactions, renewing Letters of Guardianship annually, and notifying the court of any major changes.
Failure to comply with these duties may result in removal as guardian or other penalties.
Less Restrictive Alternatives to Guardianship
Texas law requires courts to consider less restrictive alternatives before granting a full guardianship. Some of these include:
Medical Power of Attorney: Allows an agent to make healthcare decisions if the principal becomes unable to do so. This can eliminate the need for guardianship over the person.
Durable Power of Attorney: Allows an agent to manage financial affairs. This can eliminate the need for guardianship of the estate.
Supported Decision-Making Agreement: An informal arrangement where a supporter helps an individual with disabilities understand and make their own decisions. Texas has expanded recognition of these agreements.
Special Needs Trust: Allows management of funds for a disabled individual without full guardianship.
Appointment of a Representative Payee: For Social Security or other benefits, a representative payee can manage benefits without court involvement.
We help families explore all available alternatives before pursuing guardianship.
Why Choose Barton & Associates for Your Guardianship Case?
Guardianship matters require a unique combination of legal expertise, local knowledge, and genuine compassion. At Barton & Associates, we bring all three to every case.
Deep Local Knowledge
We have spent decades practicing in the Corpus Christi area. We know the local probate judges, the court personnel, and the procedures that govern guardianship cases in Nueces County. This familiarity allows us to navigate the process efficiently and effectively.
Experience with Complex Family Dynamics
Guardianship cases often arise from difficult family circumstances and can sometimes create tension among relatives. We have extensive experience handling these sensitive situations with the care and discretion they deserve.
Up-to-Date Knowledge of Texas Law
Texas guardianship law is complex and subject to change. We stay current on statutory requirements, procedural rules, and case law developments to ensure your case is handled correctly.
Respected in the Legal Community
Our reputation in the Corpus Christi legal community matters. When we present a case, judges and opposing counsel know that we are prepared, ethical, and committed to our clients. That respect translates into credibility that benefits the families we represent.
Compassionate Guidance
We understand that seeking guardianship of a loved one is emotionally challenging. You are not just navigating legal complexities; you are trying to protect someone you love. We provide clear, honest guidance and compassionate support throughout the process.
Frequently Asked Questions About Legal Guardianship in Corpus Christi
When considering guardianship, families in the Coastal Bend often have the same critical questions. Here are the answers you are searching for.
1. What is the difference between guardianship and power of attorney?
A power of attorney is created voluntarily by an individual while they still have capacity. It allows them to choose who will make decisions for them in the future. Guardianship is imposed by a court after the individual has lost capacity and did not previously execute a power of attorney. If a valid power of attorney exists and is sufficient to meet the individual’s needs, guardianship may not be necessary.
2. How long does the guardianship process take in Nueces County?
The timeline varies depending on the complexity of the case, whether the proposed ward contests the guardianship, and the court’s docket. An uncontested guardianship typically takes two to four months from filing to appointment. Contested cases can take significantly longer.
3. How much does guardianship cost?
Costs include court filing fees, attorney’s fees, the attorney ad litem fee, physician’s examination fees, and the cost of any required bond. While guardianship involves upfront costs, it is an investment in protecting your loved one from harm, neglect, or financial exploitation.
4. Can a guardianship be modified or terminated?
Yes. If the ward’s condition improves, or if a less restrictive alternative becomes available, the guardianship can be modified or terminated. This requires filing a motion with the court and presenting evidence that the guardianship is no longer necessary or should be limited.
5. What happens if the proposed ward opposes the guardianship?
If the proposed ward contests the guardianship, the case becomes contested and may proceed to a trial. The proposed ward has the right to legal representation and to present evidence. The burden is on the applicant to prove by clear and convincing evidence that guardianship is necessary.
6. Can siblings disagree about who should be guardian?
Yes, disputes among family members are not uncommon. When this happens, the court will decide based on what is in the ward’s best interest. Having experienced legal counsel is essential in contested cases.
7. Do I need an attorney to file for guardianship?
Yes. Guardianship proceedings are complex and must strictly comply with the Texas Estates Code. Errors in filing or procedure can result in delays or dismissal of your case. Having an experienced attorney is essential to navigating the process successfully.
8. What are the annual reporting requirements?
Guardians of the person must file an annual report detailing the ward’s condition and living situation. Guardians of the estate must file an annual accounting of all financial transactions. These reports are reviewed by the court and must be approved. Failure to file can result in removal as guardian.
9. Can a guardian move the ward to another state?
Moving a ward out of Texas generally requires court approval. The guardian must file a motion and demonstrate that the move is in the ward’s best interest. The court will consider factors such as proximity to family, quality of care, and the ward’s preferences.
10. What happens to the guardianship if the guardian dies?
If a guardian dies, the court will appoint a successor guardian. This is why it is important to consider standby or successor guardianship planning when the guardianship is established. If no successor is named, the court will appoint someone appropriate, often after a hearing.
11. What is a pre-existing guardianship from another state and how is it handled when someone moves to Corpus Christi?
When a person subject to an existing guardianship order from another state moves to Texas — or when a guardian relocates to Texas and wishes to transfer the proceeding here — Texas law provides a mechanism for recognizing and registering the foreign guardianship under Texas Estates Code Chapter 1354. The guardian files the foreign guardianship order with the Nueces County Probate Court, along with a certified copy of the Letters of Guardianship from the originating state. Upon registration, the Nueces County court can recognize the foreign order and issue Texas Letters of Guardianship that allow the guardian to act with full authority under Texas law. This is more efficient than starting a new guardianship proceeding from scratch, which would require re-establishing the ward’s incapacity through the full Texas evidentiary process. However, Texas courts are not bound to simply accept a foreign guardianship without scrutiny — they review the order to ensure it was entered with proper procedural protections for the ward and that it is consistent with Texas Estates Code requirements. If the foreign order was entered without adequate notice to the ward or without proper capacity evaluation, the Texas court may decline to register it and require a new proceeding. Families in the Coastal Bend who have moved from other states with a parent or other ward under an existing guardianship order should consult with a Nueces County attorney before assuming the existing order automatically carries legal authority in Texas — and before acting on the ward’s behalf with Texas financial institutions or healthcare providers who will require Texas Letters of Guardianship before honoring the guardian’s authority.
12. What is a supported decision-making agreement in Texas and how does it differ from guardianship?
A supported decision-making agreement is a written arrangement in which a person with a disability — who retains legal capacity — designates one or more supporters to help them understand information, consider options, and communicate decisions about their own life. Texas enacted supported decision-making legislation under Texas Estates Code Section 1357.001 et seq., which provides legal recognition and framework for these agreements as a less restrictive alternative to guardianship. The critical distinction from guardianship is that in a supported decision-making agreement, the person with a disability retains all legal decision-making authority — the supporter helps them think through decisions but does not make decisions on their behalf. A guardian, by contrast, has the legal authority to make decisions for the ward. This distinction matters enormously for individuals who can participate in decisions with assistance but who would lose significant autonomy under a guardianship. Adults with intellectual disabilities, traumatic brain injuries, or autism spectrum disorders who can communicate and engage with decisions given appropriate support are often better served by a supported decision-making agreement than by guardianship. Texas courts are now required to consider supported decision-making agreements as an alternative to guardianship before granting a guardianship petition, and a petitioner who has not considered whether a supported decision-making agreement would be sufficient may find the court asking that question directly. For families in Corpus Christi considering guardianship of an adult child or family member with a disability, understanding whether a supported decision-making agreement could meet the person’s actual needs — while preserving more of their autonomy — is a threshold conversation we have with every family before recommending whether to file a guardianship application.
13. What is a special needs trust and when is it a better alternative to guardianship of the estate for a Corpus Christi family?
A special needs trust — also called a supplemental needs trust — is a legal arrangement in which assets are held by a trustee for the benefit of a person with a disability, to supplement rather than replace government benefits including Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income. Unlike guardianship of the estate, which requires court supervision of every significant financial transaction, annual accountings filed with the Nueces County Probate Court, and court approval for major expenditures, a properly drafted special needs trust can be administered with significantly more flexibility by a trustee who has direct authority to make spending decisions within the trust’s terms. Special needs trusts are particularly valuable when a person with a disability is receiving or will receive Medicaid benefits, because assets held in a properly structured special needs trust do not count against the asset limits for Medicaid eligibility — whereas assets held in the ward’s own name or under a guardianship of the estate would affect eligibility. When the primary need is to manage an inheritance, a personal injury settlement, or other funds for a disabled individual’s benefit without disrupting their government benefits, a special needs trust administered by a qualified trustee is frequently a better tool than guardianship of the estate. Guardianship of the estate remains appropriate when the ward’s income and assets require active oversight, when there is risk of financial exploitation, or when the ward’s financial affairs are complex enough to require a court-supervised framework. Many Corpus Christi families use both: a guardianship of the person to handle healthcare and daily living decisions, and a special needs trust to manage assets, combining the protective elements of each without the full overhead of guardianship of the estate.
14. How does the incapacitated parent situation work in Nueces County when an adult child needs to manage a parent with Alzheimer’s or dementia?
When a parent’s cognitive decline progresses to the point where they can no longer manage their own affairs — making unsafe financial decisions, forgetting medications, unable to understand medical treatment options — adult children in Corpus Christi frequently face the difficult transition from informal caregiving to formal legal intervention. If the parent previously executed a valid durable power of attorney and healthcare directive while still competent, those documents may allow the designated agent to manage financial and medical decisions without court involvement — and if they are comprehensive and current, that is almost always the less burdensome path. When no valid power of attorney exists, or when the parent revokes or contests existing documents, or when third parties such as financial institutions or healthcare facilities refuse to honor informal arrangements, a guardianship petition in Nueces County Probate Court becomes necessary. The medical evidence requirement is particularly important in dementia and Alzheimer’s cases: the Certificate of Medical Examination must be completed within 120 days of filing by a licensed physician who has actually evaluated the parent, and it must describe the diagnosis, the degree of cognitive impairment, and how the condition affects the parent’s ability to manage their affairs. Nueces County Probate Court sees a significant volume of elder guardianship cases involving cognitive decline, and the process is well-established. One consideration specific to dementia cases is the progressive nature of the disease — courts sometimes grant limited guardianship initially, with the expectation that the scope will need to expand as the condition worsens, requiring a return to court to modify the order. Planning for that trajectory at the outset, including choosing an appropriate successor guardian, is part of the comprehensive guidance we provide to families navigating this situation.
15. What happens when no family member is willing or able to serve as guardian in Corpus Christi?
When the Texas Estates Code priority list of family members has been exhausted — because all eligible family members are unwilling, disqualified, have conflicts of interest with the ward, or are themselves unavailable — Texas courts can appoint a private professional guardian. Private professional guardians in Texas must be certified by the Texas Health and Human Services Commission and must comply with continuing education and reporting requirements administered through the Guardianship Certification Program. They charge fees for their services, typically billed hourly or as a monthly retainer, which are paid from the ward’s estate. The Nueces County Probate Court maintains relationships with certified professional guardians practicing in the Coastal Bend who can be appointed when no suitable family member exists. In cases where the ward’s estate is insufficient to pay a professional guardian’s fees, the Texas Department of Aging and Disability Services — now operated through the Health and Human Services Commission — can serve as guardian of last resort for incapacitated adults who have no one else and whose estates cannot support a private professional guardian. This public guardianship option carries its own application and screening process and is not guaranteed, but it exists specifically to prevent incapacitated adults from falling through the legal safety net entirely. For families in which siblings disagree about who should serve, or in which a family member who would otherwise be appropriate has a financial conflict of interest with the ward’s estate, a private professional guardian is sometimes the court’s preferred solution — providing neutral, professionally accountable oversight without the interpersonal dynamics that make family-member guardianship unworkable.
16. What is the difference between a guardian ad litem and an attorney ad litem in a Texas guardianship proceeding and what do each of them do?
Both roles are court-appointed representatives who appear in a guardianship proceeding, but they serve fundamentally different functions and should not be confused. An attorney ad litem is an attorney appointed by the court to represent the proposed ward’s legal interests throughout the proceeding. The attorney ad litem’s duty is to advocate for what the proposed ward wants — not what the court or the petitioner thinks is best for them, but what the ward themselves expresses as their preference. The attorney ad litem must meet personally with the proposed ward, explain the nature of the guardianship proceeding, and present the ward’s stated position to the court. If the ward wants to contest the guardianship, the attorney ad litem is obligated to advocate for that position. An attorney ad litem is required in every Texas guardianship proceeding and is appointed automatically when the application is filed. A guardian ad litem, by contrast, is not an attorney advocate for the ward’s expressed wishes — a GAL is a neutral investigator appointed by the court in some cases to assess the proposed ward’s circumstances and report findings to the court, making a recommendation about what arrangement would best serve the ward’s best interest. A GAL may be appointed in addition to an attorney ad litem in particularly complex cases or when the court needs an independent investigative report about the ward’s living situation, care needs, and family dynamics. The distinction matters practically: if you are involved in a contested guardianship proceeding in Nueces County, understanding that the attorney ad litem represents the ward’s voice — not the court’s preference — and that a GAL’s recommendation is advisory rather than binding, gives you a clearer picture of how each participant’s role affects the proceeding’s outcome.
17. How does the Nueces County Probate Court monitor guardianships after they are established and what triggers court intervention?
The Nueces County Probate Court’s oversight role does not end when Letters of Guardianship are issued — it continues for the life of the guardianship through a structured annual review process and through the court’s authority to intervene at any point when a problem is brought to its attention. Guardians of the person must file an annual report with the court within sixty days of the anniversary of the guardianship’s establishment, detailing the ward’s current condition, living situation, health status, and any significant changes during the year. Guardians of the estate must file an annual accounting documenting every financial transaction — every receipt, every expenditure, every investment — along with a current inventory of the ward’s assets. Both reports are reviewed by a court investigator or the judge, and the court issues an order approving or questioning the guardian’s conduct. The court can require a hearing, demand additional documentation, or order corrective action if the reports raise concerns. Beyond the annual cycle, intervention can be triggered at any time by a complaint from the ward, a concerned family member, a healthcare provider, or any interested person who reports suspected abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation of the ward. Texas Adult Protective Services also has independent authority to investigate reports of elder abuse and exploitation and can report findings to the probate court. When a guardian is found to have misappropriated assets, failed to provide adequate care, or violated their fiduciary duties, the court can remove the guardian, appoint a successor, surcharge the guardian for losses to the estate, and refer the matter to law enforcement. The ongoing court oversight structure is one of the reasons guardianship — despite its administrative burden — provides protection that informal caregiving arrangements cannot replicate. Call us at 361-800-6780 for a free consultation if you have concerns about an existing guardianship or need to establish one for a loved one in Corpus Christi.
Take the First Step Toward Protecting Your Loved One
If you have a loved one who can no longer make safe decisions for themselves, do not wait until a crisis forces your hand. The legal process takes time, and having guardianship in place before an emergency occurs provides peace of mind and ensures continuity of care.
At Barton & Associates, we are here to guide you through every step of the guardianship process with compassion, clarity, and skilled advocacy. Let us help you protect the people you love most.
Call our office today at 361-800-6780 to schedule a confidential consultation. You can also complete the online Free Consultation form on our website, and a member of our team will reach out to you promptly.
On-site Consultations are by appointment only. We look forward to meeting you and helping you navigate this important legal journey.
Main Category: Family Law Corpus Christi
Barton & Associates, Attorneys at Law
5110 Wilkinson Dr Suite 210, Corpus Christi, TX 78415
Office: 361-800-6780