Bexar County, Texas contains twenty-seven judicial districts, two probate courts, one county court, and fifteen county courts at law.
The Writ of Possession allows for the possession of the property, after a deputy has posted written notice notifying the tenant a writ has been issued. By law, we are required to give a minimum of 24 hours notice before enforcing the writ.
To request a non-jury court setting or hearing, please contact the presiding court clerk at 210-335-2000 for more information. To request a setting or hearing before a jury, please contact the jury assignment clerk at 210-335-2520.
Probate Court No. 2 offers remote hearings for most of the uncontested matters. The Zoom Log In Information is located on the FIAT/Notice template.
Writs of garnishment in Bexar County, TX are commonly used in cases involving unpaid debts, such as credit card debt, medical bills, or unpaid child support. This mechanism allows a judgment creditor to collect on a debt owed by a debtor who has failed to satisfy a court judgment voluntarily.
Please contact us at VTC@bexar. for inquiries or assistance.
To request a non-jury court setting or hearing, please contact the presiding court clerk at 210-335-2000 for more information. To request a setting or hearing before a jury, please contact the jury assignment clerk at 210-335-2520.
The Bexar County Clerk's Office is able to provide copies of a marriage license and copies of a Declaration of Informal Marriage certificates if the documents were recorded in Bexar County. The Bexar County Clerk's Office can provide a copy of a marriage license issued in Bexar County from 1837 to the present day.
An agreed divorce has 3 basic phases: Step 1 is preparing a petition and filing it; Step 2 is notice to your spouse, and Step 3 is the waiting period, preparing an agreed decree, and finalizing the divorce. Before you file a divorce in Bexar County, you have to make sure that your case meets legal residency rules.
The Vital Statistics Section does maintain public indexes of Texas marriages since 1966 and Texas divorces since 1968. We are unable to issue verifications for marriages before 1966 and divorces before 1968.