Search Calumet County Dissolution Of Marriage

If you need Calumet County Dissolution Of Marriage records, the county directory, the court forms page, and the statewide tools work together. The county page points to the right local desks. The forms page points to the right packets. The state portals handle the public summary and the general law. That makes the search easier when you are not sure whether you need a decree, a certificate, or a filing packet for a new case. This page puts those options in one place so you can find the record path that fits your need.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Calumet County Dissolution Of Marriage Records

The Calumet County legal resources page is the best local starting point because it lists the Clerk of Court at 920-849-1414, the County Clerk at 920-849-1458, the Family Court Commissioner at 920-849-1414 ext. 377, and the Register of Deeds at 920-849-1441. It also points to the Child Support Agency, the sheriff, and the victim and witness program. That matters because divorce records often touch more than one office. The clerk keeps the file. The child support office helps with related support work. The register of deeds handles newer certificates. The county directory is here: Calumet County legal resources.

Calumet County Dissolution Of Marriage records can also be checked in WCCA at wcca.wicourts.gov. The public portal shows case summaries and docket history, not document images. That makes it useful as a first stop, especially if you need to confirm the case type or the filing path. But if you need the decree or the file itself, the clerk office remains the final source. The county forms and self-help pages also matter because they tell you which forms the county expects and where the filing lands.

The local legal resource image and page are here: Calumet County legal resources.

Calumet County Dissolution Of Marriage legal resources

That county directory pulls together the court, support, and record offices that matter most in a family case search.

Calumet County Dissolution Of Marriage Forms

Calumet County follows the statewide family law forms system. The court forms page at Wisconsin Court System family forms says the forms are standardized across Wisconsin circuit courts and must be used in the proper eFiling format. The self-help page at Wisconsin Divorce Self-Help gives the forms assistant, the basic guide, and the steps for a new divorce or legal separation case. Those resources matter when you are preparing a filing because they reduce the chance of using the wrong packet or the wrong version.

The county directory shows that Calumet County also has language assistance support through the Clerk of Circuit Court, a child support agency, a family court commissioner, and mediation and domestic abuse resources through local providers. The forms section lists divorce, mediation, court order modification, and contempt among the available guides. That is useful because family cases do not always end at the judgment. They often continue through modification, enforcement, or child support work. The local resource list is part of the process, not just a side note.

The county law library page is here: Calumet County legal resources.

Those county contacts and guides help you match the right filing step to the right office before you appear at the courthouse.

Calumet County Dissolution Of Marriage Copies

For certificates, Calumet County follows Wisconsin's statewide vital records system. The Wisconsin Department of Health Services page at Wisconsin Vital Records Office explains that orders can be made by mail, online through VitalChek, or by phone at 877-885-2981. The state fee is $20 for the first certified copy and $3 for each extra copy of the same certificate. Applicants must show direct and tangible interest and current identification. The state office is at P.O. Box 309, Madison, WI 53701-0309, and the customer service number is 608-266-1373. The Wisconsin Court System homepage at wicourts.gov sits above the WCCA summary and the statewide forms pages.

That certificate is different from the divorce decree. In Calumet County, divorces finalized before January 1, 2016 require the decree from the Clerk of Circuit Court in the county where the divorce was granted. For divorces on or after January 1, 2016, the Register of Deeds can issue a certificate. That split matters because a certificate is not the same thing as a court order. If a school, employer, bank, or other office asks for proof, it matters which document they want. The register handles the certificate side. The clerk handles the court file side.

The state portal and law page are here: Wisconsin Court System and Wisconsin Statutes Chapter 767.

If you need to order from the state, use the state vital records page first. If you need the actual judgment, use the clerk office tied to the case.

Calumet County Dissolution Of Marriage Rules

Calumet County cases follow Wisconsin Statutes Chapter 767. Section 767.301 controls residence. Section 767.315 sets the no-fault ground. Section 767.335 adds the 120-day waiting period before final hearing or trial. Section 767.13 covers impoundment of records. Section 767.41 addresses custody and physical placement. Those sections are part of the case file from the start, which is why the clerk and family court commissioner matter so much in a divorce search. The file is built from those steps, then stored by the court.

Calumet County Dissolution Of Marriage searches are easier if you keep the tools in order. Use WCCA for the public case summary. Use the forms page when you are preparing a filing. Use the county directory when you need local phone numbers or support services. Then use the clerk office or the register of deeds for the record itself. That is the cleanest way to avoid asking one office for something another office controls.

The county page also lists mediation, domestic abuse help, and child support-related forms. Those resources matter because a divorce case often keeps moving after the judgment. If you need a modification, contempt, or support issue handled, the county's own guide points you in the right direction.

In practice, Calumet County's record path is simple once you separate the case file, the public summary, and the certificate.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results