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3 answers

Well, presuming that you are meaning a Decree of Absolute Divorce, the answer is maybe.

Depending on the state and the jurisdiction of the decree, court records are often available online. Whether there is a cost for it will depend on the jursidction. In my jurisdiction, the docket sheet information is available for free to the general public, and the members of the bar can log in and look at copies of the actual documents, which have been scanned into the system.

If you are needing a copy for some official purpose, then probably no. Most official uses of a decree would require a certified copy. For that you need to contact the clerk of the court that issued the decree. They will probably charge you something for this.

2007-01-03 05:57:53 · answer #1 · answered by Phil R 5 · 2 0

if the solictors that handled ur divorce don't offer on-line service, u may have 2 choice but 2 go there in person.
it's worth asking them and b prepared 2 pay a covering fee.
ring them and ask, eh?
:)
good luck hope u get that copy ok.

2007-01-03 05:57:10 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you need to go the solicitor who dealt with your divorce

2007-01-03 06:39:35 · answer #3 · answered by cookie 3 · 0 0

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