Search Grant County Dissolution Of Marriage

If you need Grant County Dissolution Of Marriage records, the county clerk, the register of deeds, and the statewide court tools each handle a different part of the record trail. Some people need the full file. Others need a certificate, a public case summary, or the forms that start a new family case. Grant County keeps those pieces split in a useful way, which helps when you already know the case or are still trying to find it. This page brings the local and state paths together so you can move from search to request in a clear order.

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Grant County Dissolution Of Marriage Records

The Grant County Clerk of Circuit Court is the main office for divorce decrees and the full court file. The research says that the clerk is the official custodian of all circuit court records, including dissolution of marriage cases, divorce decrees, family court motions, and related filings. It also says that the clerk office can charge $1.25 per page for copies, $5 per document for certified copies, and a $5 search fee per name if you do not provide a case number. For larger or off-site requests, prepayment may be required. That makes the clerk office the right place when you need the actual file instead of just a summary.

For a first online search, WCCA at wcca.wicourts.gov shows the public case summary. It lists the case type, the parties, the status, and the docket history. It does not provide the actual documents. That is a key distinction. WCCA is good for finding the case and checking the timeline, but the file itself still lives with the clerk. The county clerk page in the research is linked through the state court home at wicourts.gov, which is also the root page for the statewide court tools.

The official county record path is the office that keeps the papers and the docket together.

Grant County Dissolution Of Marriage legal resources

That local legal resources page gives you the county contacts and support links in one place before you call or visit.

Grant County Dissolution Of Marriage Copies

Grant County follows Wisconsin's statewide certificate-versus-decree split. If the divorce happened on or after January 1, 2016, a certified divorce certificate may be obtained from any Wisconsin Register of Deeds office. If the divorce happened before that date, the decree must be obtained from the Grant County Clerk of Circuit Court. The register of deeds does not keep the court file or the decree. It only handles the vital-records side. That is why it helps to know which document the other office actually wants before you request it.

The Wisconsin Department of Health Services page at Wisconsin Vital Records Office can also take mail, online, or phone orders through VitalChek at 877-885-2981. The state office is at P.O. Box 309, Madison, WI 53701-0309, and customer service is available at 608-266-1373. 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. That gives Grant County residents two paths, one local for newer certificates and one court-based for the older decree.

The state vital records page is here: Wisconsin Vital Records Office.

The county legal resource page is useful too because it points to forms, the clerk, and the county support services that often sit around a family case.

Grant County Dissolution Of Marriage Forms

Family law filings in Grant County use the statewide Wisconsin Court System forms. The forms page at Wisconsin Court System family forms says the same forms are used across all Wisconsin circuit courts and that they must follow the required eFiling format. The self-help page at Wisconsin Divorce Self-Help gives the forms assistant and the basic guide for new divorce or legal separation cases, as well as cases that already have a case number. That is the cleanest way to begin if you are filing or responding.

Grant County's forms and guides also matter because the county research points to court forms, the Wisconsin jury handbook, small claims procedure, traffic court, and the register of deeds vital-record applications. Those references show that the county clerk side is not just for divorce paperwork. It is also the point where people find related court and record tools when a family case overlaps with other issues. The county law library page helps you line up those services without drifting into the wrong office.

All of this sits under Wisconsin Statutes Chapter 767. The residence rule, the no-fault ground, the 120-day waiting period, the custody rules, and the record-impoundment rule all shape how a Grant County case is filed and finalized.

The statewide forms page and the county resource page together give you the fastest way to move from blank form to complete filing.

The legal resources directory is here: Grant County legal resources.

Grant County Dissolution Of Marriage forms resources

That directory is the local map for the clerk, family court, and vital records contacts tied to the case.

Grant County Dissolution Of Marriage Rules

Grant County Dissolution Of Marriage cases follow Wisconsin's statewide family law rules. Section 767.301 requires a Wisconsin residence and a county residence before filing. Section 767.315 sets the no-fault standard, so the court looks for an irretrievably broken marriage rather than blame. Section 767.335 creates the 120-day wait before final hearing or trial. Section 767.13 governs impoundment of family records. Section 767.41 covers custody and physical placement. Those rules shape the case file, the judgment, and what the clerk can release.

The clerk office remains the source for the actual court file. WCCA can help you find the case and check the docket, but it does not show the document images. If you need the decree or a certified copy, the clerk office is still the office that controls the record. If you need a newer certificate, the register of deeds or the state vital records office can usually handle it. That split is the practical center of the Grant County record process.

For a Grant County record search, the cleanest approach is to check WCCA first, use the state forms page if you are filing, and then contact the clerk or the register of deeds for the exact record you need. That keeps the request aimed at the right office from the start.

Once a judgment is entered, the six month remarriage restriction still applies under Wisconsin law, so the final order date matters as much as the filing date.

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