Search Logan County Dissolution Of Marriage

Logan County dissolution of marriage records are managed by the Clerk of Courts in Bellefontaine. The Court of Common Pleas Domestic Relations Division handles all dissolution cases filed in the county. If you need to find a dissolution of marriage record in Logan County, you can visit the courthouse, call the Clerk's office, or check online case search tools. The county seat of Bellefontaine sits in the western part of Ohio and serves a largely rural population. Records for dissolution cases include the joint petition, separation agreement, and the final decree signed by the judge.

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Logan County Quick Facts

Bellefontaine County Seat
~45,000 Population
3rd District Court of Appeals
6 Months Residency Required

Logan County Clerk of Courts Office

The Logan County Clerk of Courts is the custodian of all dissolution of marriage records filed in the county. The office sits at the Logan County Courthouse in Bellefontaine. All domestic relations cases, including dissolutions, divorces, and legal separations, pass through this office. The Clerk keeps the full case file for each dissolution, which holds the petition, the separation agreement, financial disclosures, and the court's final order.

To reach the Clerk's office, call during regular business hours. The courthouse is open Monday through Friday. Staff can help you locate a case by name or case number. If you know the approximate year the dissolution was filed, that speeds up the search. Walk-in requests are welcome, and the staff can pull records while you wait for recent cases.

Logan County is part of the Third District Court of Appeals, which covers a stretch of western Ohio counties. If a dissolution case is appealed, those records go through the Third District. The Ohio Clerk of Courts Association lists contact details for all 88 county clerks, including Logan County.

Dissolution Of Marriage Filings in Logan County

Filing for dissolution of marriage in Logan County follows the same rules as the rest of Ohio. Under ORC Section 3105.63, both spouses must jointly file a petition with a complete separation agreement. The agreement has to cover property division, spousal support, and child custody if kids are involved. At least one spouse must have been an Ohio resident for six continuous months before the filing date.

After the petition is filed, the court schedules a hearing. This hearing must happen between 30 and 90 days from the filing date. Both spouses show up and confirm under oath that they agreed to all terms freely. The judge reviews the agreement. If it looks fair and voluntary, the court grants the dissolution and enters a decree. That decree is the final record of the case, and it becomes part of the permanent file at the Clerk of Courts.

Note: Unlike divorce, dissolution of marriage in Ohio does not require a separate 90-day county residency period, so you can file in any county where you live.

How to Get Logan County Dissolution Records

There are a few ways to get dissolution of marriage records from Logan County. The most direct route is an in-person visit. Go to the Clerk of Courts office at the courthouse in Bellefontaine during business hours. Bring your photo ID. Give the staff the names of both parties and any other case details you have. They can search the index and pull the file.

Mail requests work too. Send a written request to the Logan County Clerk of Courts at the courthouse in Bellefontaine, Ohio. Include the full names of both spouses, the approximate date, and a self-addressed stamped envelope. Add a check or money order for copy fees. Standard Ohio county rates apply. Most counties charge around $1.00 per page for certified copies with an added certification fee.

Online tools may be available through the Clerk's website. Many Ohio counties offer some level of case search online, though the depth of information varies. Logan County may provide docket entries and basic case information through their system. For a certified copy, you will still need to contact the office directly. The Ohio State Bar Association has resources that explain your rights to access public court records.

Logan County Dissolution Record Costs

Copy and certification fees in Logan County follow standard Ohio rates. Call the Clerk's office to get the exact current fees. In most Ohio counties, you can expect to pay about $1.00 per page for copies and $1.00 per document for certification. Some offices accept cash, checks, and money orders. Credit card acceptance varies. Always call ahead to check what forms of payment they take.

Filing fees for a new dissolution case in Ohio generally range from $300 to $400. The exact amount depends on whether children are part of the case and what local court costs apply. Ohio law under ORC Chapter 3105 sets the framework, but each county's court can add local fees for services like mediation or parent education classes.

Historical Records and State Resources

Logan County has maintained court records since its formation. Older dissolution and divorce records may be stored in a separate archives area or on microfilm. For records that go back many decades, contact the Clerk's office to ask about availability and any special procedures for older files.

The Ohio Bureau of Vital Statistics keeps abstract indexes of divorces and dissolutions from 1954 to the present. These abstracts are not the full decree. They list names, dates, and the county. If you need the actual court documents, the Logan County Clerk of Courts is where to go. The Ohio History Connection holds some older records that have been transferred from county offices after 50 years.

Nearby County Dissolution Records

Logan County borders several other Ohio counties. If your dissolution case was filed in a neighboring county, here are links to those pages:

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