Flower Mound Municipal Court Warrants
The Flower Mound Municipal Court
The Town of Flower Mound Municipal Court handles Class C misdemeanors and traffic citations filed within the town. It is the court that issued any town warrant against you and the only court that can recall it — and in Flower Mound, warrant enforcement runs through the town’s own Deputy Town Marshals.
Flower Mound straddles the Denton–Tarrant county line, and its municipal court is the front door for tickets written by town police and code officers. It does not handle felonies or Class A and B misdemeanors — those move through the Denton County courts. One detail worth knowing: the people who serve and enforce town warrants are Deputy Town Marshals, so an unresolved case here is not just a number in a database. Note the court’s address carefully, and confirm the details of your case before you act.
Town of Flower Mound Municipal Court4150 Kirkpatrick Ln
Flower Mound, TX 75028
(Note: 2121 Cross Timbers Rd is Town Hall, not the court.)
Phone: 972-874-3370
Case & warrant search: municipalrecordsearch.com/flowermoundtx
What this court handles: Class C misdemeanor and traffic offenses inside the Town of Flower Mound. When a case is left open, the court can issue an alias warrant on a citation you never answered, or a capias pro fine warrant once a fine or judgment goes unpaid.
How to check for a Flower Mound warrant
Three reliable ways exist to learn whether the Flower Mound Municipal Court has a warrant in your name: search the town’s online case-and-warrant record system, call the court clerk, or have a defense lawyer confirm it quietly before the marshals do.
- Search the town’s record system. Flower Mound publishes case and warrant records at municipalrecordsearch.com/flowermoundtx, where you can look up a name or citation.
- Call the court clerk. The Flower Mound Municipal Court at 972-874-3370 can confirm a citation, the case status, the balance owed, and whether the 50-percent capias pro fine option is available on your case.
- Ask a lawyer to check confidentially. A defense attorney can verify a warrant and the amount for you, so you know where things stand before a Deputy Town Marshal makes contact.
For every other way to run a warrant search across North Texas, see our guide on how to find out if you have a warrant.
What warrants the Flower Mound court issues
A municipal court issues only municipal-level warrants, not felony warrants. In Flower Mound, those are tied to Class C and traffic cases — usually an alias warrant, a capias pro fine warrant, or a warrant after a failure to appear, all enforced by the town marshals.
- Alias warrant
- Issued when you were cited but never entered a plea or appeared, so the case stayed open. It compels a first appearance on the underlying ticket before the town pursues enforcement.
- Capias pro fine
- Issued after a judgment, when a fine or court cost goes unpaid. In Flower Mound this is the warrant where the 50-percent-now, balance-within-90-days option can apply — available up to twice on a given case — so clearing it may not require paying the whole amount at once.
- Failure to appear
- Issued when you miss a scheduled Flower Mound setting. A missed date can add its own failure-to-appear charge on top of the original citation.
How to clear a Flower Mound warrant
Clearing a Flower Mound town warrant follows a short, predictable path: confirm the warrant and amount, choose how to resolve it — including the capias pro fine partial-payment option where it applies — get a lawyer’s help with a walk-through or motion to recall if you want it, then close out the case on its scheduled date.
- Confirm the warrant and the amount with the Flower Mound court. Verify the citation, the case status, and the balance through municipalrecordsearch.com/flowermoundtx or the clerk at 972-874-3370 — and ask whether the 50-percent capias pro fine option applies to your case.
- Decide your path: pay in full, post a bond for a court setting, or request an ability-to-pay hearing under Code of Criminal Procedure Art. 45.045. Paying satisfies a fine-only warrant — and on a capias pro fine, Flower Mound may accept 50 percent now with the balance due within 90 days, usable up to twice per case; a bond reopens the case for a new date; an ability-to-pay hearing lets the court consider alternatives such as a payment plan or community service. See Code of Criminal Procedure, Chapter 45.
- Ask a defense lawyer about a walk-through or a motion to recall. Counsel can sometimes arrange a bond in advance or ask the court to recall the warrant, so you re-engage with the case instead of being arrested by a marshal.
- Resolve the case on the scheduled date. Lifting the warrant does not end the citation — appear on the new setting and finish the underlying matter.
For the general framework that applies in any court, read how to lift a warrant and bond vs. surrender.
How a lawyer helps with a Flower Mound warrant
A defense lawyer can confirm a Flower Mound warrant, tell you whether the capias pro fine 50-percent option is on the table, arrange release in advance where the court allows it, and appear with you to resolve the citation — so the town marshals never turn it into a surprise arrest.
L and L Law Group is a Frisco criminal-defense firm led by Co-Founding Partners Reggie London and Njeri London, and the firm handles matters across Denton County. For a Flower Mound case, that can mean verifying the warrant through the court, advising whether to pay in full, use the partial-payment option, post a bond, or request an ability-to-pay hearing, filing a motion to recall when it fits, and standing with you if an appearance is needed. This site is an educational resource; when you want hands-on help, the firm can take it from confirmation to resolution. Learn more at the L&L Law Group team.
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Flower Mound warrant FAQ
Can I pay a Flower Mound warrant in part instead of all at once?
On a capias pro fine, Flower Mound may allow you to pay 50 percent now and the remaining balance within 90 days, and that option can be used up to twice on a given case. It does not apply to every warrant type, so confirm with the court clerk at 972-874-3370 whether your specific case qualifies before relying on it.
Who enforces warrants in Flower Mound?
Town warrants are served and enforced by Deputy Town Marshals, separate from a routine police stop. That makes it worth resolving a Flower Mound warrant proactively — through payment, a bond, or an ability-to-pay hearing — rather than waiting for a marshal to act on it.
How do I check for a warrant in Flower Mound?
Search the town’s case-and-warrant records at municipalrecordsearch.com/flowermoundtx, or call the Flower Mound Municipal Court at 972-874-3370 to confirm a citation and the amount owed. A defense lawyer can also check confidentially before you contact the court directly.
What is a Flower Mound capias pro fine warrant?
A capias pro fine is a warrant the town court issues after a judgment when a fine or court cost goes unpaid. Because the case is already decided, clearing it focuses on satisfying the balance — sometimes through the 50-percent partial-payment option — or requesting an ability-to-pay hearing the court will accept.
Where is the Flower Mound Municipal Court located?
The court is at 4150 Kirkpatrick Ln, Flower Mound, TX 75028. It is a separate address from Town Hall at 2121 Cross Timbers Rd, so confirm you are heading to the Kirkpatrick Lane court building before a setting or a warrant appearance.
This page is general legal information about Texas law, not legal advice for your specific situation. Statutes and court procedures change; verify current requirements with the relevant court or a licensed Texas attorney. Last reviewed June 19, 2026.