Pushmataha County Dissolution Of Marriage

Pushmataha County dissolution of marriage records go back to 1907 and are kept at the District Court in Antlers. This rural county in southeastern Oklahoma processes all divorce filings through the Court Clerk's office. Whether you need to search for an old case or file a new petition, the Antlers courthouse is where everything happens. The clerk maintains both current and historical dissolution records, and staff can help you locate files by party name or case number. Pushmataha County is one of the smaller counties in the state, so the office tends to be less crowded than larger courthouses.

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Pushmataha County Overview

Antlers County Seat
~$252 Filing Fee
FD Case Prefix
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Pushmataha County Court Clerk Office

Court Clerk Tina Freeman oversees all dissolution of marriage records in Pushmataha County. The office is on Southwest 3rd Street in Antlers. You can walk in during business hours to request copies or search for case files. The staff handles everything from pulling old paper records to issuing certified copies of decrees.

CourtPushmataha County District Court
Court ClerkTina Freeman
Address203 S.W. 3rd St., Antlers, OK 74523
Phone(580) 298-2274
HoursMonday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM
WebsiteOSCN - Pushmataha County

Call ahead if you plan to visit. The office is small and sometimes the clerk steps out for court proceedings. Having names and approximate dates ready will save time when you get there.

How to Search Dissolution Of Marriage Records

Start with the Oklahoma State Courts Network. It is free to use. Select Pushmataha County from the dropdown, enter a last name, and search. Divorce cases carry the FD prefix in the case number. The docket shows you filing dates, hearing schedules, and the current status of the case. Some documents can be viewed online. Others require a trip to the courthouse.

On Demand Court Records is another option. ODCR pulls from the same court data but sometimes has document images that OSCN does not. Basic searches are free on ODCR as well. Both systems cover electronic records from roughly the mid-1990s forward.

Pushmataha County has historical records that go back to 1907. Those older files exist only on paper at the courthouse in Antlers. If you need a dissolution record from before the mid-1990s, you will have to visit in person or send a written request by mail. The clerk charges $5 per name for each seven-year period searched when no case number is provided, per Title 28 Section 31.

Filing for Dissolution Of Marriage in Pushmataha County

Residency comes first. One spouse must have lived in Oklahoma for six months and in Pushmataha County for 30 days before filing. The petition goes to the District Court in Antlers. Under Title 43 Section 101, Oklahoma law gives 12 grounds for dissolution of marriage. Most people file under incompatibility. That is the no-fault option and it keeps things straightforward.

Fault-based grounds are also available. These include adultery, abandonment for a year, extreme cruelty, habitual drunkenness, gross neglect of duty, and others. Proving fault requires evidence, which can make the case take longer.

After the petition is filed and the other spouse is served, an automatic temporary injunction goes into effect under Title 43 Section 110. Neither side can hide assets, drain accounts, or move children out of state without court permission. This protection stays in place until the case wraps up.

When minor children are involved, the court imposes a 90-day waiting period from the date of service before it can finalize the dissolution, per Title 43 Section 107.1. Cases without children have a 10-day wait. Both parents must attend a parenting class if kids are part of the case. The court then addresses property division, child support, and custody.

Oklahoma law bars remarriage for six months after the dissolution is granted. That is in Title 43 Section 127.

Pushmataha County Dissolution Records Access

These records are public. The Oklahoma Open Records Act guarantees access. You do not have to be named in the case to request a copy. The clerk gives copies to anyone who pays the fee. Sealed cases are the exception, but judges rarely seal dissolution files unless there are safety issues.

A complete case file usually includes the petition, summons, proof of service, temporary orders, financial disclosures, a parenting plan if children are involved, the settlement agreement or trial transcript, and the final decree. The decree is the most requested document. It spells out property division, custody arrangements, and any support obligations. People need certified copies for name changes, insurance updates, and property transfers.

OSCN has electronic docket entries online. The full file with all attachments sits at the courthouse. Pushmataha County's paper records go back to statehood in 1907. That makes this one of the better counties for historical research if you are tracing a family dissolution from the early 1900s.

Copy Fees and Costs

Copy fees follow state law. The first page is $1.00. Each page after that is $0.50. These rates are set in Title 28 Section 31. Certification costs $0.50 per document. Authentication for out-of-state use is $5.00 per certificate.

Search fees are $5.00 per name for each seven-year block when the clerk has to look up a case without a case number. Filing a new dissolution petition costs around $252. OSCN searches are free, so use that first to avoid paying search fees at the courthouse.

Legal Resources for Dissolution Of Marriage

Legal Aid Services of Oklahoma offers free legal help for income-qualifying residents. They cover family law cases, including dissolutions. Pushmataha County is a rural area with limited local attorneys, so Legal Aid can be a critical resource for people who cannot afford private counsel.

The Oklahoma Bar Association has a referral service that can connect you with family law attorneys who serve southeastern Oklahoma. Their website has free guides that walk you through the dissolution process. Self-help forms from the Oklahoma Supreme Court are also available for people handling their own cases.

Getting legal help in a rural county like Pushmataha can feel harder than in a metro area. But the free online tools and statewide legal aid programs help close that gap. OSCN gives you the same free access to court records that someone in Oklahoma City or Tulsa has.

Pushmataha County Court Records

Below is the OSCN search portal used for looking up dissolution of marriage cases in Pushmataha County.

OSCN docket search for Pushmataha County dissolution of marriage records

Select Pushmataha County from the dropdown, type the last name, and click search to pull up matching dissolution cases.

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Nearby Counties

Not sure if the case was filed in Pushmataha County? Check nearby counties. Dissolution cases are filed where the petitioner lived at the time.