Contact Cardon Law

Cardon Law helps with estate planning, trusts, disability planning, business owner planning, asset protection planning, and trust administration after someone dies. If your matter fits one of those areas, briefly tell us what you need help with below.

Please do not include highly sensitive personal, financial, or legal details in this form.

Note: Contacting the firm does not create an attorney-client relationship.

Give Us a Call

385-438-3914

Send Us an Email

info@cardon-law.com

Come Find Us

470 West 220 South
Ste. 103 (Street-Side Entrance)
Pleasant Grove, UT 84062

Frequently Asked Questions

These questions can help you decide whether Cardon Law may be the right fit and what to expect before reaching out. You do not need to know exactly what kind of planning you need before contacting the firm. Start with a brief explanation of your situation, and we can determine whether the firm may be able to help.

Who is Cardon Law a good fit for?

Cardon Law is a good fit for individuals, families, trustees, surviving spouses, business owners, founders, and real estate investors who need help with estate planning, trusts, disability planning, or the next steps after someone dies.

The firm is especially helpful when the situation involves more than a basic will or trust. That may include business interests, real estate, blended families, asset protection concerns, trustee responsibilities, or questions about who should be able to make decisions if something happens.

Jeff helps clients think through how a plan will work in real life: who has authority, when they can act, how assets are handled, how a business or investment property will be managed, and how to make things clearer for the people left in charge.

Cardon Law generally does not handle unrelated legal matters such as criminal defense, divorce, custody disputes, personal injury claims, landlord-tenant disputes, bankruptcy, or general litigation.

What happens after I contact Cardon Law?

After you contact Cardon Law, the firm will review the information you provide and decide whether your situation is something they may be able to help with.

If it looks like a good fit, the next step is usually a consultation or follow-up conversation. That gives you a chance to explain your situation, ask questions, and better understand what kind of planning or legal help may be needed.

Do I need to know what kind of planning I need?

No. You do not need to know the legal category before contacting Cardon Law.

Many people reach out because something has changed, their plan feels outdated, someone has died, a business or property situation has become more complicated, or they simply know they need to get organized. It is enough to briefly explain what prompted you to reach out.

What should I include in my message?

Include a short explanation of what is going on and what kind of help you are looking for.

For example, you can mention whether you want to create a new plan, update an old plan, review a trust, handle the next steps after someone has died, plan for a business, or address concerns about disability, asset protection, taxes, or family decision-making.

You do not need to include every detail in the contact form. Avoid sending highly sensitive personal, financial, or legal information until you have spoken with the firm.

Can Cardon Law review my existing plan?

Yes. Cardon Law can review an existing estate plan or trust to help determine whether it still fits your family, assets, business interests, and goals.

A review may be helpful if your family situation has changed, your assets have grown, you bought or sold a business, you acquired real estate, someone has died, you moved, or your documents have not been updated in several years.

Can Cardon Law help after someone dies?

Yes. Cardon Law helps trustees, surviving spouses, beneficiaries, and families understand what needs to happen after someone dies.

This may include reviewing the trust, explaining trustee responsibilities, helping with required steps in the trust administration process, answering beneficiary questions, and helping the person in charge understand what must happen before assets are distributed.

Pardon our dust. We are updating the Cardon Law website. Some pages and resources may change as we continue improving the site.