Find Divorce Records in Milam County

Milam County divorce records are kept at the District Clerk's office in Cameron, Texas. The District Clerk is the official custodian of all divorce case files in this central Texas county. If you need to search a divorce case, get a certified copy of a final decree, or verify that a divorce was granted here, you work through that office. Milam County is one of the oldest counties in Texas, incorporated in 1836. Divorce records date back through the 1800s. This page explains how to find records, what the process looks like, and where to get help.

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Milam County Overview

Cameron County Seat
~$350 Filing Fee
1836 County Founded
District Court Type

Milam County District Clerk

The District Clerk in Cameron maintains all divorce records for Milam County. This includes the Original Petition, case filings, temporary orders, and the signed Final Decree of Divorce. The office is located at 102 S Fannin Street in Cameron. There is also an alternate contact at Suite 5 of the same building.

Milam County was incorporated March 17, 1836, making it one of the earliest Texas counties. It was formed from the old Mexican Municipality of Milam. The county has a deep record history. FamilySearch has indexed Milam County divorce minutes from 1893 to 1944 and an index covering divorce cases from 1893 to 1993. Marriage records go back to 1874. This means historical researchers can access Milam County divorce data through online genealogy platforms for cases before modern record systems.

The District Clerk handles all current case filings as well. If you need records from recent decades, you contact the clerk directly at the Cameron courthouse.

Office Milam County District Clerk
Address 102 S Fannin, Suite 5
Cameron, TX 76520
Mailing Address P.O. Box 191, Cameron, TX 76520
Phone (254) 697-7052
Alternate Phone (254) 697-7049
Hours Monday through Friday, standard county business hours

Divorce Filing Process in Milam County

Divorces in Milam County are governed by Texas state law. The main statute is Texas Family Code Chapter 6, which covers all aspects of marriage dissolution. You file the Original Petition for Divorce at the District Clerk's office in Cameron. That document starts the case and creates the permanent record.

To file in this county, you or your spouse must meet the residency requirement in Texas Family Code § 6.301. At least one of you must have lived in Texas for six months and in Milam County for 90 days before filing. If you recently moved, check your dates before you go to the courthouse.

Texas allows no-fault divorce. The most common ground is insupportability under Texas Family Code § 6.001. This simply means the marriage has broken down and there is no hope of reconciling. Neither spouse has to prove wrongdoing. Fault grounds such as cruelty, adultery, and felony conviction are also available under sections 6.002 through 6.007 if applicable to your situation.

Once the petition is filed, Texas law requires a 60-day waiting period before the divorce is final under Texas Family Code § 6.702. For agreed divorces, once the wait ends and both parties have signed off, the process can wrap up quickly. Contested cases may require mediation or a court hearing. All property acquired during the marriage is subject to division under community property rules in Texas Family Code Chapter 7.

60-Day Rule: No judge in Texas can finalize a divorce until 60 days have passed since the petition was filed. Plan your timeline with this in mind.

What Milam County Divorce Records Include

A divorce case in Milam County creates a file that includes the Original Petition, any answers filed by the other party, temporary orders, settlement agreements, and the signed Final Decree of Divorce. The District Clerk stores all of these permanently as required by Texas records retention law.

The Final Decree is what most people need for legal purposes. It is the court order that officially ends the marriage. It lists the property division, names any debts assigned to each spouse, and addresses child conservatorship, possession schedules, and support orders when children are involved. A certified copy of the decree is needed for name changes, remarriage, and financial transactions where proof of marital status is required.

Most of what's in a Milam County divorce record is public. Anyone can ask for copies. Information that gets redacted includes Social Security numbers and financial account details. Cases involving minor children sometimes have portions sealed or limited in access. If a judge placed a seal on the entire file, you need a court order to view it. The Texas Health and Safety Code under Chapter 191 governs vital records access, while court records fall under Texas Government Code provisions for public records.

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Cities in Milam County

Milam County includes several small communities in central Texas. The county seat is Cameron, where the District Clerk's office is located. No cities in Milam County meet the population threshold for a dedicated city page. All divorce cases from across the county are handled by the Milam County District Court in Cameron.

Nearby Counties

These counties sit near Milam County. If you're unsure which county handles your case, confirm your address and length of residence before filing.