About Dustin C.
Dustin C. Paseur earned a Bachelor of Arts in Advertising and Marketing from the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, graduating in 1997. He returned to formal legal study a few years later and received his Juris Doctor from Birmingham School of Law in 2009. Those two degrees bookend a transition from a communications and marketing background into the practice of law.
After law school Paseur was admitted to the Alabama State Bar in 2009 and began practicing in the state. He maintained his bar membership continuously and built experience in the local court systems. Early years in practice involved handling matters that come through municipal and county dockets, giving him regular exposure to the procedural rhythms of smaller courts and the expectations of bench and bar.
In 2016 Paseur took on judicial responsibilities that broadened his perspective on the law. He served as a Municipal Court Judge for the City of New Hope, presiding over cases that ranged from traffic offenses to municipal ordinance disputes. In the same year he also served as a Special Probate Judge in Madison County, hearing probate matters that required familiarity with estate administration and guardianship issues. Those roles put him on both sides of the bench and informed how he approaches court work.
Colleagues and court staff have noted his steady, workmanlike approach to case management and legal procedure. He is familiar with the practical demands of small-jurisdiction litigation and the administrative side of running court calendars. That practical orientation has shaped his practice and how he advises clients, particularly in matters that involve local government ordinances, traffic and municipal citations, and probate proceedings.
Paseur continues to practice in Alabama and remains a member of the Alabama State Bar. His work remains centered on matters that arise in municipal and probate courts, handling cases and advising clients on issues tied to local judicial processes and estate administration. He focuses his practice on municipal and probate matters.