Calumet County Court Docket Search

Calumet County Court Docket searches are handled through the county clerk of courts in Chilton and supported by the statewide Wisconsin Circuit Court Access portal. Calumet County is a useful county for family and civil research because the clerk office can handle records, forms, court information, and language access from the same general place. If your docket touches divorce, legal separation, family court, or a municipal matter, the county provides a clear path from the online search to the request for copies. That makes it easier to stay organized when a record needs both a docket view and a paper file.

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Calumet County Court Docket Search

The county clerk of courts is listed through the Calumet County government website, and the office is at 206 Court Street in Chilton. The phone number is (920) 849-1414 and the fax number is (920) 849-1483. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The county research also notes that the clerk of circuit court handles civil, criminal, family, traffic, ordinance, and probate-related records and that the same office is the place to go for court forms and jury information.

Wisconsin Circuit Court Access is the best online starting point. Calumet County cases can be searched by party name or case number, and the public portal shows docket information rather than the actual file. That is enough to confirm a hearing date, a filing history, or a status change. If the search leads you to a family matter, the county's separate family and paternity page gives you a more specific set of local instructions.

Calumet County also has municipal courts in Brillion, Reedsville, and New Holstein, which matters if the case is not in circuit court. If your record started as a city or village ordinance matter, you need the municipal court path rather than the circuit court path. That distinction is important because a docket search is only useful when it matches the right court system.

Note: In Calumet County, the right office depends on whether the case is circuit court or municipal court, so the court type matters as much as the party name.

Calumet County Court Docket Requests

Calumet County asks for in-person requests at the clerk of the circuit court office and notes that a valid ID is required for record viewing. That is a practical detail because the county treats access and copies as separate steps. Standard copies are $1.25 per page and certified copies are $5. Divorce and legal separation filings have their own fee structure, with $184.50 for cases without children or maintenance and $194.50 for cases with children or maintenance. Fees can be paid by cash, check, or money order, and cards are accepted with an additional fee.

The county also says you will be charged $0.25 per page if you fail to supply copies at the time of filing. That kind of detail matters because it can change the total cost of a filing or request. If you are filing a family case, the clerk page and the family and paternity page give you the procedural notes you need before you walk in. That helps reduce surprises and keeps the request aligned with the case type.

For broader access policy, Wis. Stat. § 19.31 and SCR 72 explain why a docket may be public even when a specific document is not. That is the basic line between a public case summary and a certified copy.

Calumet County Court Docket Services

Calumet County has a strong family court support structure. The county research says the Supporting Children During Divorce program requires parents with minor children to attend a co-parenting class. That is a useful detail if your docket includes divorce or legal separation, because the docket may show program participation or related scheduling steps. The county also offers a Language Assistance Program that serves people with limited English proficiency and includes interpreter services for deaf and hard of hearing persons.

The county also has a Foreclosure Mediation Program. That program helps homeowners facing a mortgage foreclosure action and gives both sides a voluntary, confidential way to discuss resolution. If your docket touches foreclosure, that service can explain why the case includes a mediation date rather than a straight court hearing. Calumet County also notes expunging court records assistance, which is helpful when a case history is more sensitive than a standard civil file.

The office is still a records office first. It can provide court forms, court records for civil, criminal, family, traffic, and ordinance cases, civil judgment and lien docket information, pay-fee help, and jury information. That is the core of Calumet County Court Docket work.

  1. City of Brillion and Village of Reedsville Municipal Court, 201 North Main Street, Brillion.
  2. City of New Holstein Municipal Court, 2110 Washington Street, New Holstein.

Calumet County Court Docket Images

The Calumet County government website is the first image source. It is the general county landing page that leads to the clerk office and related court services.

Calumet County Court Docket government website page

That image is useful because it shows the county entry point for court information and office links.

The Calumet County Family and Paternity page is the second image source. It carries the more detailed instructions for family matters, which is where many docket questions begin.

Calumet County Court Docket family and paternity page

That page is especially useful when a docket involves divorce, legal separation, custody, or paternity steps.

Statewide Court Docket Rules

Calumet County follows the same statewide access framework that governs every Wisconsin court docket. The Director of State Courts office supports court administration, the DOJ Crime Information Bureau maintains criminal history records, and the State Public Defender handles eligible criminal defense work. Those offices help explain the larger structure around a docket search without replacing the county clerk.

For the public record rule, Wis. Stat. § 19.31 and SCR 72 remain the key statewide guides. They explain why a docket may be open while certain documents remain limited. That is the practical difference between seeing a case and getting the papers behind it.

If you need the fastest route, use WCCA first, use the clerk office for copies, and use the family and paternity page when the case is domestic. That sequence matches the county's own structure.

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