Obion County Court Docket

Obion County court docket searches usually begin with the county offices in Union City, since that is where the main clerk contact is located. The county records trail is simple once you know whether the matter stayed in Circuit Court or moved through General Sessions. If you are trying to find a case, the fastest route is to start with the county office, then use Tennessee Case Finder for recent records, and then move to the clerk if you need a copy or a deeper look at the file. Obion County keeps its record path local and direct.

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Obion County Court Docket Search

The county government site at obioncountytn.gov is the first stop for an Obion County court docket search. Obion County operates Circuit Court and General Sessions Court, and the county clerk office is in Union City at 1 Bill Burnett Circle. Crystal Crain is the county clerk, and the office phone is (731) 885-9456. That makes it easy to ask where a docket lives and what office should have the file.

For recent public records, the Tennessee Case Finder page for Obion County gives a quick way to look up current Circuit Court and General Sessions records. It is useful when you need to confirm a hearing date, the case status, or the division that handled the matter. The county search works best when you have a party name or a case number, but it can still help if you are just trying to narrow the record trail.

Obion County is the kind of place where a clean search matters. The county seat is Union City, so the clerk office and the court trail sit close together. That keeps the search process practical. If the record is public, the county office can usually tell you which division has it and whether you need to ask for a certified copy or just a case look-up.

  • Party name or business name
  • Case number if available
  • Approximate filing or hearing date
  • Court division if known

Obion County Court Records

The county image below comes from the Obion County government source tied to the county records page. It shows the record trail that begins at the county office and helps users locate a public docket or case file.

Obion County Court Docket records from the county clerk source

That county source matters because it points users to the office that actually keeps the case file. If you need a recent docket, a copy, or a case status check, the county route is the one to use first.

Obion County court records are usually handled in the clerk office first, then matched with the correct division. Circuit Court and General Sessions cases can both show up in the county search. That is why a county docket is more than a single line. It can show the hearing date, the next setting, or the case history that follows the file from one step to the next.

If you are not sure whether the case is recent enough for online search, use the county office and the Case Finder portal together. That gives you both a public search and a live local contact. It also keeps you from chasing the wrong court when the file is public but not obvious.

Obion County also benefits from having a single county seat search path. Union City is where the clerk contact lives, so the office can usually tell you whether the record is sitting in a courthouse file, an active docket, or a case that needs a later copy request. That local setup keeps the process practical for people who just need the next hearing date or a clear answer about where the file sits.

Obion County Public Access

Tennessee's public records rule at T.C.A. § 10-7-503 gives the public a broad right to inspect government records. That includes many Obion County court docket files, but not every piece in every file. Some records are sealed. Some details are redacted. Private data and juvenile material are handled with care, which is why the public copy may be shorter than the clerk copy.

The Office of Open Records Counsel explains request timing and the basic charge rules for Tennessee records. The FAQ at tennessee public records act FAQs is useful if you want to make a request that is specific enough for the office to find the right file. For Obion County, the best request usually names the party, the court, and the date range.

Note: If you need a copy, ask the clerk office whether the record is in Circuit Court or General Sessions before you submit the request.

Obion County Docket Help

The Tennessee courts portal at tncourts.gov is a useful statewide map when an Obion County court docket search needs more context. It shows how the trial courts fit together and helps you decide whether you are in the right office. The clerk directory at tncourts.gov/courts/court-clerks is also handy when you need a live office contact instead of a web search result.

For older files, TSLA is the better fallback. The court-record FAQ at sos.tn.gov explains how historical court minutes and archival materials are used in Tennessee research. That matters when an Obion docket is older than the online search window or when the paper file has to be matched with a short docket line.

Obion searches work best when they stay focused. Start with the county site, then use Tennessee Case Finder, and then call the clerk if you need the full file or a certified copy. That sequence keeps the search clear and practical.

The county record path is not hard once you know where the file sits. Union City gives Obion County a tidy search route, and that makes the record work easier.

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