Home > Legal services in St. Louis, MO > Sandberg Phoenix & von Gontard P.C. Review

Sandberg Phoenix & von Gontard P.C.

Legal services in St. Louis, MO
Reviews: 6 | Overal Rating: Average
Excellect
3
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Average
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Bad
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Awful
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Wednesday 8AM–5PM
Thursday 8AM–5PM
Friday 8AM–5PM
Saturday Closed
Sunday Closed
Monday 8AM–5PM
Tuesday 8AM–5PM

Reviews

Review Left On 02/26/2020
kate ewing

Sandberg Phoenix is a great place to work! As a values-driven organization, all firm members truly do put people, clients and communities first.
Review Left On 02/26/2020
Bill Dauben

I have dealt with multiple people in this organization. Never for personal use but for business purposes. Everyone I have been in contact with has been extremely professional and easy to work with.

The office is downtown and has amazing views of the arch and downtown.

They have a very large office and I do not know how many attorneys they have, but they have a bunch.
Review Left On 02/26/2020
Eli Karabell

Sandberg, Phoenix and Von Gontard is an excellent choice for a prime law firm. Mixing small firm client care with big firm expertise, Sandberg Phoenix truly knows how to deliver results for there clients. Almost every sort of law is practiced by Sandberg Phoenix and they take tremendous pride and care to meet each and every of there clients needs. I highly recommend Sandberg Phoenix and Von Gontard P.C. - EBK l, Karabell Industries LLC
Review Left On 11/26/2019
Gabriel Murphy

This firm employs attorneys who have been found guilty of sealing and fraud by the bar association. So imagine the sort of ethics they have when it comes to dealing with you and billing your file, as noted by other reviewers of this law firm.
Review Left On 02/26/2018
Dave Jenn

Decent
Review Left On 02/26/2015
Velvety Velvetpaws

It was hard to apply the two star rating, because there is more than one aspect to this review. When I first encountered lawyers from Sandberg Phoenix, it was at a introductory seminar about trust funds and inheritance related issues, in connection with business ownership. At that time, I was deeply impressed with the quality of the representatives of this law firm. So I decided to see if they could help us with our estate and business needs. As I explained to the lawyer what our situation is and what our company does, he said he found that the business sounded very interesting. So I ventured to invite him to come see it, whenever he could take the time. Some weeks later, he did tour our facilities. He told me that in order to work out a proper legal frame work for all our worldly possessions, he would put together a quote and submit it to us for approval. We agreed to this mode of cooperation.
A few weeks later, I took some papers to their offices downtown, and I met another lawyer of that team. We introduced ourselves and made some small talk, to be courteous, then talked also briefly about what should happen next, then the lawyer took me back to my car, which was parked on the street behind their block. I thought, wow, what wonderful and considerate folks!
Then, we got 2 invoices, one for the time spent by the one lawyer for his courtesy visit to our business, the other for the time I spent giving the other lawyer my papers and making polite conversation, and for his reading up on some legal regulations pertaining to the issue at hand. Total incurred: about 2,000 $ give or take a few!!! And we had not gotten any service from them yet whatsoever!
I have several gripes with this: 1) I wish they would be up front to tell customers when the invoicing clock starts to tick. After all, we are the ones who pay. I would not make a syllable of small talk, if it were at the tune of 400 bucks/hour!
2) Why do so-called experts in a legal field have to first read up and smarten up about their supposed field of expertise? We are experts in our field at my business, and we know it to the last iota, since that is why the industry considers us to be the experts! We would never dream of expecting a customer to pay for us to read and know all about whatever we need to know to serve this industry we work for!
3) What happened to the "we will submit an estimate and a proposal first" promise???
The way they work is what I would label the "separation of offices" model: The layers have to only report how much time they spent with whom, then the invoicing office simply invoices the time to that customer. What the lawyers fail to communicate is what portion of the time was actually spent working on the legal files. And the lawyers may not get to see the invoice, or sign off on it before it goes out, so even if they wanted to make a correction, they cannot.
Anyhow, once I'm burnt I won't go back...this was a breech of my trust. There are thousands of law firms out there, and hopefully a few who operate by a fair invoicing standard!
All things considered, I'd rather do business with lawyers who occupy normal office space, and not those high-end, extremely costly and hip downtown digs, where they need to invoice even potty time to pay for their luxury accommodations!

It caused me to lose my trust in this business.

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