Your request can be submitted at our front counter, mailed to the Maricopa Municipal Court, 39600 W Civic Center Plaza, Maricopa, AZ 85138 or emailed. The form must be filled out completely otherwise it will not be processed. Your request must specify your name/agency and information requested.
Through the government website, you can place an order with the General Register Office (GRO). While civil marriage registers contain key information like both spouses' names and when they were married, a marriage certificate is a full record of the union.
You can make a marriage records search request in person at the clerk's office. Requests can also be made online. Visit the court's clerk's website, navigate the public record request page, complete an online form, and submit it.
Who can obtain Marriage Records in Arizona? Since marriage records are sensitive documents, the public is not allowed to have access to certified copies.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT PROTECTIVE ORDERS: PUBLIC ACCESS: Only the information contained in the served protective order, not the petition, will be entered into the state computer system and will be made public on the internet.
California. Certificates of marriage are public. However, confidential marriage certificates are not open to public inspection except upon order of the court issued upon a showing of good cause.
Marriage Licenses and Divorce Decrees are available from the Maricopa County Clerk of the Superior Court. Family Court and Probate records are available at various Justice Court and Maricopa County Court locations. Adoption records are available at the Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records.
Counsel shall file an original and two copies of the joint status report at the District Court Clerk's Office. The report shall be filed with the Clerk ninety (90) days after the issue has joined, or in the alternative, as directed by the Court.
The statement produced by the experts after the meeting, the joint statement, helps to direct the focus of all stakeholders on the unresolved issues and make better use of the expert time and evidence.
A Resolution Statement is a detailed description of the position. a party proposes to resolve all the issues in a Family Law case. The Resolution Statement is one part of the fact sharing process required by Rule 49 of the Arizona Rules of Family Law Procedure.