Calumet County Family Court Records

Calumet County Family Court Records begin with a WCCA search, but the public docket is only the first stop. The clerk office in Chilton keeps the official file, and the local family and paternity pages explain what has to be filed, copied, and paid before a divorce or other family case moves ahead. That makes the county easy to work in once you know the rules. If you are looking for a divorce, custody, support, or paternity matter, the clerk, the county forms, and the statewide docket all fit together. The search is cleaner when you know where each part belongs.

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Calumet County Family Court Records Overview

Use Wisconsin Circuit Court Access when you need a quick public search for Calumet County Family Court Records. The portal lets you search by county and then by party name or case number. It shows the case summary, including the filing date, case type, party names, and current status. That is enough to confirm whether a file exists and whether it is still active.

The online result is not the full file. Pleadings and judgments are not available online, and juvenile, sealed, and confidential records stay out of public view under Rule 70. A three-letter minimum applies to name searches, so short guesses will not do much. If you want the actual document set, the clerk office still controls the file.

That split between docket and paper record matters in Calumet County. WCCA is useful for finding the case, while the clerk office is where you get copies, verify a status, or ask about a request that needs more than the public index can give. For Family Court Records work, that is the normal workflow and the fastest one.

Search Calumet County Family Court Records

Start with the full party name or the case number if you have it. A name search is enough for many Family Court Records questions, but a case number is the cleanest path. Calumet County uses the statewide WCCA rules, so the search result will show the docket summary rather than the document images. That is helpful when you only need to confirm a filing or check the status of a hearing.

If you are searching a divorce or custody matter, keep the year in mind. Older filings can be easier to narrow when you know the approximate date range. The clerk office can also tell you whether a record is public or restricted. That is useful when a family case includes sealed material or other information the portal will not show.

Once you have the case number, you can move from search to request without much delay. Calumet County Family Court Records are easier to pull when the clerk can match the file on the first pass. That is one reason the online docket is more than a convenience. It is the key to getting the right paper record from the start.

Calumet County Clerk and Filing Room

The Calumet County Clerk of Circuit Court is Kayla Bembenek at 206 Court St, Chilton, WI 53014-1198, with phone (920) 849-1414. The office handles records for all case types, not just Family Court Records, and it coordinates document flow between the court, outside agencies, and the public. That makes it the main local stop when you need a case verified or a document copied.

Calumet County's Family and Paternity page is the one to read before you file. It explains the required forms, including the confidential petition addendum, the joint petition forms, and the summons and petition forms for a sole filing. The page also says the clerk wants an original plus the required extra copies. If you fail to bring those copies, the county charges a $0.25 per page penalty for the copies the office has to make for you.

The county also builds a scheduling conference into the process. When a filing is accepted, the office gives a date for an Order for Appearance that fits the 120-day waiting period. If the parties later settle everything, they can call the office to get a hearing date for the final divorce. That local process keeps Family Court Records moving in a straight line instead of leaving the case to guesswork.

When you need a live family-law contact, the county directory and local pages point to the Family Court Commissioner at (920) 849-1414, ext. 377. That office fits the same workflow as the clerk when a case needs a temporary order, scheduling help, or another step that belongs inside the Family Court Records file.

Calumet County Family Court Records Images

The Calumet County homepage at co.calumet.wi.us shows the county's official home for Family Court Records and other local government services.

Calumet County Family Court Records official county website

Use the county home page when you want the broadest official starting point for local contacts and notices.

The Calumet County Clerk of Circuit Court page shows the office that holds the local Family Court Records file.

Calumet County Family Court Records clerk of circuit court page

This is the page to use when you need the clerk's address, phone line, and general record duties in one place.

The Calumet County Family and Paternity page explains the filing packet and the local form rules for Family Court Records.

Calumet County Family Court Records family and paternity page

That page is the clearest local guide for petitions, summonses, copies, and the filing order.

The Calumet County Family Court Services page shows the class and mediation side of Family Court Records work.

Calumet County Family Court Records family court services page

Use it when the case includes co-parenting, mediation, or another service tied to the family case file.

Calumet County Filing Fees and Class

Calumet County sets a filing fee of $184.50 for a family case without children or maintenance, and $194.50 when children or maintenance are involved. Payment can be made with cash, check, or money order payable to the Clerk of Courts, and credit or debit cards are accepted with an added convenience fee. That fee structure is one of the most practical parts of Calumet County Family Court Records work because it tells you what to bring before you walk in the door.

The county also requires parents with minor children to attend the co-parenting class. The class costs $20 per parent, and the Family Court Services page says parents may register together or separately if they prefer. That is a small detail, but it matters in a real family case. If the parents are not in the same room well, the county still gives them a way to satisfy the requirement without making the process worse.

Do not overlook the timing. Calumet County uses the 120-day waiting period to schedule the first conference, and that conference is part of the local Family Court Records path. It is easy to think the filing is the whole job, but in this county the filing, the copies, the class, and the conference all fit together. If one part is missing, the record does not move as smoothly as it should.

Note: Bring your copies when you file in Calumet County, because the clerk charges extra if the office has to make them for you.

Calumet County Family Court Records and Chapter 767

Wis. Stat. Chapter 767 governs divorce, paternity, custody, support, and related family orders in Calumet County. The residency rule still applies, which means a party must live in Wisconsin for six months and in Calumet County for thirty days before filing for divorce. That rule is part of the basic filing check, and it is the sort of thing the clerk office sees every day in Family Court Records work.

Calumet County also treats family cases as part of a wider court system. The clerk office handles all case types, and the county's local legal resource page at the Wisconsin State Law Library Calumet County directory links the child support agency, family court commissioner, register in probate, sheriff, legal aid resources, language assistance, and mediation support. That keeps the search path local and official without pushing you to a third-party site.

The county's family resources are also practical. The law library page points to support for domestic abuse survivors, free legal answers, and conflict resolution services. Those links do not replace the clerk, but they make the Family Court Records process easier when the case needs service help, mediation, or a place to ask the next question. When you combine WCCA, the clerk, the family and paternity page, and the law library directory, you get the full Calumet County picture.

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