Search St. Clair County MI Probate Records, Estates, Guardianships & MiCOURT Cases
Use official St. Clair County, Michigan court resources to find probate case records, estate and trust information, guardianship and conservatorship guidance, mental health court information, Michigan probate forms, court schedules, courthouse location, and copy-request next steps without relying first on private record sites.
If you are searching for St Clair County MI Probate Court, choose the task closest to what you need. Probate users usually need one of six paths: case search, estate filing, certified copies, Michigan probate forms, guardianship or conservatorship help, or mental health proceeding guidance.
📂 Search probate case records or schedules
Use this for: probate case lookup, court schedules, estate docket details, guardianship records, and basic case-status checking.
Best official path: start with the St. Clair County Court Schedules and Records page, then use MiCOURT probate case records when available.
Before acting: verify the case number, party name, estate name, case type, and whether full documents must be requested directly from the court.
St. Clair County MI Probate Court Quick Facts Before You Search
The official St. Clair County Probate Court page explains that the Probate Court handles legal matters involving families, property, and people who need help making decisions. The court lists wills and estates, guardianships, conservatorships, and mental health cases as key responsibilities. It also makes clear that Probate Court does not handle criminal cases, traffic tickets, divorces, custody disputes, or civil lawsuits.
That distinction matters. A user searching for St Clair County MI Probate Court may actually need an estate file, a will, a trust supervision record, adult guardianship, minor guardianship, conservatorship, mental health proceeding, public guardian contact, adoption contact, or Michigan probate form. Those are not the same as circuit civil cases, district traffic tickets, divorce filings, or Friend of Court matters.
What This St. Clair County MI Probate Court Guide Covers
Official St. Clair County Probate Court Path in Michigan
The St. Clair County Probate Court is the local court path for decedent estates, trust supervision, guardianships, conservatorships, and certain mental health proceedings. The official St. Clair County Courts jurisdiction page states that Probate Court handles decedent estates and the supervision of trusts, guardianships and conservatorships, and cases involving the mentally ill.
The Probate Court page describes the court’s goal as protecting people’s rights while ensuring personal, financial, and legal needs are handled fairly and according to Michigan law. That is not filler language. It tells you how to think about probate: the court is not only about property after death. It also handles living persons who may need legal protection, including adults who cannot make personal decisions, minors, people who cannot manage money, and residents who may need court-ordered mental health treatment.
Estates, Wills & Trusts
Use Probate Court for estate administration, probate of a will, personal representative issues, trust supervision, and disputes involving estate or trust handling.
Estate-file pathGuardianship & Protection
Use Probate Court for guardianship, conservatorship, developmental disability guardianship, mental health proceedings, and protected-person court supervision.
Protected-person pathCore rules before you search or file
- Use St. Clair County, Michigan sources; do not confuse this court with St. Clair County in another state.
- Use the St. Clair County Court Schedules and Records page for official record and schedule links.
- Use MiCOURT for probate case records when the case type is available online.
- Use Michigan SCAO probate forms from the official Michigan Courts form index.
- Do not use Probate Court for criminal cases, traffic tickets, divorces, custody disputes, or ordinary civil lawsuits.
How to Search St. Clair County Probate Court Records Online
A good probate search starts with the correct case type. Estate records, guardianship cases, conservatorship matters, trust supervision, adoptions, and mental health proceedings do not all have the same public access rules. Some may appear in online case search. Some may require direct court contact. Some may be restricted by law.
Confirm that your case is a probate matter
Use Probate Court for estates, trusts, guardianships, conservatorships, and mental health proceedings. If your matter is divorce, child custody, paternity, traffic, criminal, landlord-tenant, small claims, or general civil, use the proper Circuit, Family, or District Court path instead.
Open St. Clair County Court Schedules and Records
The official schedules and records page links users to Probate Case Records and Probate Schedules. This is the cleanest local starting point before jumping to private search sites.
Use MiCOURT case search carefully
Search by case number when possible. If you do not have a case number, search by full legal name, estate name, filing year, guardian name, conservator name, or attorney name. Exact details reduce false matches.
Check the case type and court before acting
Do not assume the first matching name is your case. Compare party names, file type, case number, hearing date, and court location before requesting copies or filing papers.
Call Probate Court for restricted or official copies
If you need certified records, letters, sealed documents, protected-person records, or older documents, contact St. Clair County Probate Court directly at the official phone number.
What St. Clair County Probate Records May Help You Confirm
Probate records are useful because they connect the court, case number, parties, filing type, fiduciary authority, court orders, and next steps. A name-only search is weak. A case number, estate name, letters, order, guardian appointment, or conservator file is much stronger.
How it helps: Confirms the exact estate file and avoids confusion with similar names.
Next step: Use it when requesting copies, letters, orders, or hearing details.
How it helps: Shows whether an estate proceeding, will, petition, or personal representative matter may exist.
Next step: Ask whether you need a plain copy, certified copy, or other court-issued document.
How it helps: Identifies court appointment and supervision involving personal or medical decisions for a minor or adult.
Next step: Verify whether reports, orders, and protected-person documents are public or restricted.
How it helps: Shows court supervision over money, assets, accounts, and property management.
Next step: Ask whether annual accounts, inventories, and orders require direct court request.
Wills, Estates, Personal Representatives and Trust Supervision in St. Clair County
The official Probate Court page explains that when a person dies and leaves property, the Probate Court may be asked to probate or legally administer the estate. The court appoints a personal representative to collect assets, pay debts and expenses, and distribute remaining property according to law or the person’s will.
The court may also supervise trusts. When a trust is under court supervision, the court ensures the trust is managed properly, its terms are followed, and disputes involving the trust can be resolved. That means a St. Clair County probate search may involve a decedent estate, but it may also involve a supervised trust, trust dispute, fiduciary duty question, inventory, accounting, or order connected to estate assets.
Use this path when the deceased person left a will and court action is needed to appoint authority or administer property.
Use this path when a person died intestate and property must be handled under Michigan law.
Use this path when someone needs legal authority to collect assets, pay debts, handle estate business, and distribute property.
Use this path when the court must supervise a trust, resolve a dispute, or ensure trust terms are followed.
St. Clair County Guardianship, Conservatorship and Annual Reporting Help
The St. Clair County Probate Court decides whether a person is unable to manage daily personal needs or financial matters. If needed, the court appoints a guardian or conservator to protect and care for that person. The court may appoint a guardian or conservator for a minor or an adult. For developmental disability cases, the court follows Michigan’s Mental Health Code.
The official Probate Court page also lists Guardian and Conservator Workshops presented by the Probate Register and Probate Court staff. These workshops are meant to help guardians and conservators understand court procedures, complete annual reports and accounts properly, and understand legal responsibilities. Users should RSVP using the court’s listed phone instructions and verify current dates before attending.
May involve personal care, medical decisions, residence, and daily needs for a minor or adult who cannot care for themselves.
May involve money, assets, accounts, property, bills, reporting, and court-supervised financial decisions.
May follow Michigan Mental Health Code procedures and can involve guardian of the person, estate, or both.
Guardians and conservators may need to file reports or accounts. Missing deadlines can create court problems.
Mental Health Cases and Probate Court Proceedings in St. Clair County
The official St. Clair County Probate Court page states that the Probate Court has jurisdiction over mental health proceedings. If a St. Clair County resident is mentally ill and poses a danger to themselves or others, the court may order the individual to receive mental health treatment. If the court determines that the individual is a person requiring treatment, it decides the type and duration of treatment required by law.
Mental health court processes are not the same as ordinary estate paperwork. They can involve emergency facts, medical information, personal liberty, treatment orders, protected records, and strict legal standards. If someone is in immediate danger, use emergency services instead of waiting on a web search or form download.
May involve a person alleged to need mental health treatment under Michigan law.
May involve guardianship proceedings under the Michigan Mental Health Code.
St. Clair County Courts also lists a problem-solving Mental Health Court connected with Community Mental Health for eligible criminal-offense cases.
If there is immediate danger to self or others, use emergency response first. Court forms are not an emergency-response substitute.
St. Clair Probate Court vs Circuit, Family, District and County Clerk Records
The St. Clair County Courts page separates court jurisdictions clearly. Probate Court handles decedent estates, trust supervision, guardianships, conservatorships, and cases involving the mentally ill. The 31st Circuit Court handles felony matters, larger civil cases, appeals, and family division matters such as divorces, paternity, child support, juvenile, some guardianship matters, and name changes. The 72nd District Court handles traffic, landlord-tenant, small claims, misdemeanors, and smaller civil matters.
Correct path: St. Clair County Probate Court.
OFFICIAL LINK: Probate CourtCorrect path: St. Clair County Court Schedules and Records page, then MiCOURT probate links.
OFFICIAL LINK: Schedules & RecordsCorrect path: Michigan Courts SCAO Probate Court Forms.
OFFICIAL LINK: Probate FormsCorrect path: St. Clair County Clerk / Register of Deeds for circuit court records and payments, not probate filings.
OFFICIAL LINK: County ClerkFree St. Clair County Probate Search vs Paid Court Copies
Basic probate case searching may be free through official court pages and MiCOURT. But official copies, certified copies, letters, filing fees, petition fees, and record retrieval may involve court costs. Paying a court for an official service is different from paying a private website that may show an incomplete public-data summary.
Use official search first. If you need a document for a bank, title company, insurer, government agency, benefit claim, real estate transfer, trust dispute, estate administration, guardianship proof, or legal proceeding, ask Probate Court what type of document is required.
Use the official St. Clair County Probate Court page, court schedules and records page, and MiCOURT before paying private sites.
Copy, certification, letters, orders, and file-document requests may involve official court costs.
Estate, trust, guardianship, conservatorship, and mental health filings may have filing or service-related costs.
A private probate-record page is not the court and may not provide current, complete, or certified information.
Why a St. Clair County Probate Case May Not Appear Online
No online result does not automatically mean no probate case exists. The filing may be new, older, restricted, sealed, searched under a wrong spelling, in a different court division, or not available through the portal category selected. Protected-person and mental health records can also have privacy limits.
Common reasons a probate search fails
- Wrong case type: The matter may belong in Circuit, Family, District, Friend of Court, or County Clerk records instead of Probate Court.
- Wrong name: Try full legal name, estate name, maiden name, middle name, alternate spelling, guardian name, conservator name, or case number.
- Recent filing: A new estate, trust, guardianship, or conservatorship may not appear online immediately.
- Restricted record: Mental health, adoption, minor, developmental disability, sealed, or protected-person records may not be fully public.
- Older file: Historical probate files may require direct court, clerk, or archive assistance.
- Document image limits: A portal may show a case summary but not the full document or certified copy.
Michigan Probate Forms, St. Clair County Workshops and Filing Help
The St. Clair County Probate Court page links users to Michigan Probate Court Forms from the Michigan Courts website. These SCAO forms are the safer starting point than random private PDFs. Probate forms can include estate forms, guardianship forms, conservatorship forms, mental health forms, trust-related forms, annual reports, accounts, petitions, notices, and orders.
The official Probate Court page also lists Guardian and Conservator Workshops presented by the Probate Register and Probate Court staff. Workshop topics include court procedures, annual reports and accounts, and legal responsibilities. Because workshop dates and RSVP procedures can change, verify directly through the official Probate Court page or phone number before planning to attend.
Use official statewide forms for estates, guardianship, conservatorship, trust, mental health, and related probate matters.
Use local workshops to understand court procedures, annual reports, accounts, and legal responsibilities.
Use the St. Clair County Court Directory for official room numbers, judge listings, department contacts, and related court offices.
If the case is disputed, high-value, involves real estate, protected persons, or mental health, use legal help instead of guessing from forms.
🏛️ Probate Court
Official local Probate Court page for jurisdiction, hours, address, phone, forms link, workshops, and probate information.
Open Probate Court📄 Michigan Probate Forms
Official Michigan Courts SCAO probate form index for estates, guardianships, conservatorships, and related filings.
Open SCAO Forms🔎 MiCOURT Case Search
Michigan court case search route where probate records may be available depending on case type and access rules.
Open MiCOURTOfficial St. Clair County MI Probate Court Links, Records and Contacts
Use these official and trusted resources first. This is how you avoid wrong court divisions, outdated private pages, unofficial forms, and incomplete record summaries.
🏛️ St. Clair Probate Court
Official local page for probate jurisdiction, estate and trust information, guardianship, conservatorship, mental health proceedings, hours, address, and phone.
Open Probate Court🔎 Court Schedules & Records
Official St. Clair County page linking to probate case records and probate schedules.
Open Schedules & Records📞 Court Directory
Official department directory with probate phone, room listings, judge listings, public guardian, mental health court, and related court contacts.
Open Court Directory📄 Michigan Probate Forms
Official SCAO probate court forms from Michigan Courts.
Open Michigan Forms🧾 MiCOURT Case Search
Michigan case search system for available court case information.
Open MiCOURT Search🧭 Michigan Legal Help
Plain-language Michigan legal information for probate courts, estates, guardianships, conservatorships, and self-help resources.
Open Michigan Legal HelpPhone, fax and courthouse contact details
201 McMorran Blvd.
Room 2700
Port Huron, MI 48060
Phone: 810-985-2066
Fax: 810-985-2179
St. Clair County lists Circuit, Family and Probate Court hours as Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Courts are closed on weekends and designated court holidays.
The court directory lists probate judges and probate court department contacts. Verify the current judge, division, and room number on the official Court Directory before visiting.
Ask: “Is my issue an estate, trust, guardianship, conservatorship, mental health case, adoption, or copy request, and what documents should I bring?”
St. Clair County Probate Court Map and Port Huron Courthouse Location
The official Probate Court page lists the St. Clair County Probate Court at 201 McMorran Blvd., Room 2700, Port Huron, MI 48060. Before visiting, call the Probate Court if you need a specific file, court copy, hearing confirmation, guardianship workshop detail, mental health proceeding information, or help finding the correct form.
St. Clair County Probate Court — Port Huron, Michigan
Address: 201 McMorran Blvd., Room 2700, Port Huron, MI 48060
St. Clair County MI Probate Court FAQs
Where is St. Clair County Probate Court in Michigan?
St. Clair County Probate Court is listed at 201 McMorran Blvd., Room 2700, Port Huron, MI 48060. The official phone number is 810-985-2066, and the fax number is 810-985-2179.
What does St. Clair County Probate Court handle?
The court handles wills and estates, trust supervision, guardianships, conservatorships, and mental health proceedings. The official page says Probate Court does not handle criminal cases, traffic tickets, divorces, custody disputes, or civil lawsuits.
How do I search St. Clair County probate case records?
Start with the official St. Clair County Court Schedules and Records page, which links to Probate Case Records and Probate Schedules. You may also use MiCOURT case search where probate records are available.
What are the St. Clair County Probate Court hours?
St. Clair County lists Circuit, Family and Probate Court hours as Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Courts are closed on weekends and designated court holidays. Always verify hours before visiting on holidays or weather-affected days.
Where do I find Michigan probate forms for St. Clair County?
Use the official Michigan Courts SCAO Probate Court Forms page. St. Clair County Probate Court links users to Michigan Probate Court Forms, which is safer than using old forms from private websites.
Does St. Clair County Probate Court handle guardianships?
Yes. The court handles guardianships for minors and adults, including situations where someone needs help with personal or medical decisions. It also handles developmental disability guardianship matters under Michigan’s Mental Health Code when applicable.
Does St. Clair County Probate Court handle conservatorships?
Yes. The court handles conservatorships when someone needs a court-appointed person to manage money or property. Conservators may have reporting and accounting duties, so use official forms and court instructions.
Does Probate Court handle mental health proceedings?
Yes. The official Probate Court page says the court has jurisdiction over mental health proceedings and may order treatment when legal standards are met. If there is immediate danger, use emergency services first.
Why can’t I find a St. Clair County probate case online?
The case may be new, older, restricted, sealed, searched under the wrong spelling, in a different court division, or not available through the online record category. Contact Probate Court directly if the record matters for legal or financial use.
Can Probate Court staff give legal advice?
No. Court staff can usually help with procedural information, forms, records, schedules, and routing, but they cannot tell you what legal strategy to use. If the estate, trust, guardianship, or mental health matter is disputed or high-risk, speak with a Michigan attorney.
Best Way to Use St. Clair County MI Probate Court Records and Filing Resources
The best path is simple: confirm that your matter is truly probate; use the official St. Clair County Probate Court page for jurisdiction, hours, address, phone, workshops, and form links; use the Court Schedules and Records page or MiCOURT for case lookup; and contact Probate Court directly when you need official copies, restricted records, or filing guidance.
That order protects you from the biggest mistakes: using Probate Court for divorce or traffic issues, trusting private record sites too early, filing with outdated forms, assuming a case summary is a certified record, missing guardianship reporting duties, or treating mental health proceedings like ordinary estate paperwork. For St Clair County MI Probate Court searches, official verification is the whole point.
Important Notice: This article is an independent informational guide and is not St. Clair County Probate Court, St. Clair County Government, MiCOURT, Michigan Courts, a court office, or a law firm. Probate laws, forms, court hours, record access, copy rules, workshop dates, mental health procedures, guardianship duties, and local court practices can change. Always verify urgent or official matters directly with St. Clair County Probate Court, Michigan Courts, MiCOURT, or a qualified Michigan attorney before acting.