Germany Court Records (2024)

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Germany

A court record is a document created by or submitted to the judge, jury, or clerk of a court. The earliest German vital records were usually kept by one of many city courts. Some German cities began keeping records containing birth, marriage, and death information for certain segments of the population in the 1400s, but only a small fraction of Germans are represented in court records.

In order to understand court records and how to retrieve them read this introduction here.

Contents

  • 1 Courts and Their Records
  • 2 Court Records in the FamilySearch Catalog
  • 3 Online Collections
  • 4 Types of Information
    • 4.1 Heiratsvertrag
    • 4.2 Inventarium
    • 4.3 Volljährigkeitserklärungen
    • 4.4 Notarial Records
    • 4.5 Erbbuch
    • 4.6 Separationssachen
  • 5 Saxony Court Records
  • 6 References

Courts and Their Records[edit | edit source]

Courts may be found on various levels of government: within the local community, on the district- or Kreis level, or higher. They vary widely in function and the types of records that may be created within their jurisdictions. Marriage contracts and permission papers, guardianship records, probate records, land records, and property transfers are some records kept by courts. Marriage contracts are the most common early court records of value to family historians.

There were over fifty kinds of courts (each with a different jurisdiction) in the German states before 1870. Court records are rarely indexed, so finding an ancestor in them is difficult. Search court records only after you have tried all other record types first. You may need professional help to use court records.

However, if you do find a person mentioned in court records, you will often find much useful information. Age, residence, political allegiance, property, debts, misdemeanors, taxes, adoptions,and guardianship are typical information in German court records. Divorces are also recorded in court records, but they are rare before the 1900s. For information about wills, see the “Probate Records” section.

Court Records in the FamilySearch Catalog[edit | edit source]

In the FamilySearch Catalog German court records may be found under the town, district, county, or state jurisdictions. Depending on the record type, documents may be cataloged as census records, probate records, or civil registration, even though they were kept by a court. The researcher needs to systematically check each applicable jurisdiction and all subject headings for potentially helpful records.

GERMANY - COURT RECORDS

GERMANY, [STATE] - COURT RECORDS

GERMANY, [STATE], [TOWN] - COURT RECORD

They may also be listed under the name of the A.G. Amtsgericht [lower court]. The name of the lower court that had jurisdiction over a community can be found in the German gazetteer, Meyers Orts- und Verkehrslexikon. This gazetteer is online.

Online Collections[edit | edit source]

Germany--FamilySearch Historical Records has listings labelled "Miscellaneous City Records" for several cities throughout Germany. Among other records, some court documents are iincluded in these collections.

Types of Information[edit | edit source]

Heiratsvertrag[edit | edit source]

Heiratsvertrag is a prenuptial agreement between couples. They report their possessions and distribution of wealth to the court. Often aging parents are involved because the young couple will take over their possessions. In such cases the parents will determine how they want to be relocated and treated. Often there is a clause what should happen in case of death of either spouse.


Click here to see some sample pages.

Inventarium[edit | edit source]

When a person dies, usually an inventory of the estate of the deceased is made by the surviving spouse or relatives. Herein are listed the personal effects, household goods, cash and cattle etc. If children from a previous marriage are involved, they are counted in. The inventory is ratified by the court in the presence of several witnesses.

Click here to see some sample pages.

Volljährigkeitserklärungen[edit | edit source]

Volljährigkeitserklärungen are issued by the court when young people around 21 years of age want to claim their inheritance. They have to file an application to plead or declare their coming of age which would prove their capability to handle their own affairs. In most cases, the birth record was retrieved from the pastor and testimonies of guardians or others witnesses vouching for the self-reliance of the candidate. In some cases, the court did not issue a coming of age certificate. Such documents reveal next to dates also character traits or personal history of ancestors.

Click here to see some sample pages.

Notarial Records[edit | edit source]

A Notar, or notary public, is a person who studied law and who after thorough examination was appointed to draw up documents, contracts, wills, power of attorney, examination of witnesses and other legal actions. Documents carrying the seal of a notary public had full legal power backed by the emperor or the pope and could serve as evidence. A Notar could only operate within a designated area.

Erbbuch[edit | edit source]

An Erbbuch contains the inheritable properties (Erblehen) of a city/village, their owners, rights and obligations. The Erbbuch is also known as Grundbuch, Erdbuch, Landbuch or Salbuch. An example of an Erbbuch can be viewed at museum-digital. This particular book contains also all villages and their landowning population from 1642 which belonged to the administration of the magistrate in Jerichow.

Separationssachen[edit | edit source]

were concerns re. Flurregelung (allotment regulation). The goal was to eliminate harmful commonly held user and property rights of agricultural land. Separationen made property free of unilaterally and mutually disadvantageous servitudes. It changed the status of the land from commonly held to segregated properties. The goal was to separate the single owner from the community, hence the name separation. Separation could be partial or across the board, depending whether parts of properties were to be eliminated or all property owners were to be relieved of existing conditions. Such actions created altercations and new changes in property owning. When a Separation was a general one, usually new measures for useful roads and water supplies were created. If allotment regulations were in place a better division of allotments through apportion or consolidation according to the interests of property owners took place. The documents kept for such transactions show the names of the participants, the description and size of the property/ies, description of the piece of settlement and the settlement amount.


Source: Meiers Konversationslexikon

Saxony Court Records[edit | edit source]

A large collection of court records has been filmed for Saxony. These records have been cataloged by town. Some indexes and finding aids are available.

In order to retrieve court records from Saxony and how to interpret them, read The Kauf- and Handelsverträge of Freistaat Sachsen, Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3.

References[edit | edit source]

For works cited and consulted read here

v d e

Links to Germany-related articles

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Germany Court Records (2024)

FAQs

Are German criminal records public? ›

INPOL is the German police information system, and it has been used since the 1970s. It is an integrated system which allows the German police to update records efficiently and quickly. Once the information has been placed on INPOL, it is available to all others with access to Germany's system.

Where can I find German court cases? ›

Since 2010 the Federal Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection has published selected rulings by the Federal Constitutional Court, the federal supreme courts and the Federal Patent Court on the Rechtsprechung im Internet [online case law] website. This information is available free of charge for those interested.

Is there a court system in Germany? ›

The highest courts of the five German court branches, the Federal Constitutional Court, and the Federal Patent Court are all federal courts. Unlike, e.g., the U.S. system, Germany does not have distinct federal and state court systems. All lower-instance courts are courts of the 16 federal German states.

Is there judicial review in Germany? ›

Lawmaking and policy making by courts are most evident when powerful national supreme courts (e.g., those in the United States, Germany, and India) exercise their power of judicial review to hold laws or major government actions unconstitutional.

How to get a criminal record from Germany? ›

If you are aged 14 or over, you can apply for a certificate of conduct in the following ways: In person or - with an official or publicly certified signature – in writing at your local residents' registration authority (e.g. at a town hall or citizens' office (Bürgerbüro) in Germany).

How long does a criminal record last in Germany? ›

Criminal records are reviewed periodically (every five years) and most are deleted after 5 or 10 years. So, if you had a minor traffic offense in Germany, your record would certainly expire in 5 years. But if your sentence was severe, like life imprisonment, it is unlikely to be ever deleted.

Why does German have so many cases? ›

All nouns in German have a 'case' and this means that a different form of the noun is used depending on what its role is in the sentence. For example, if it is the subject (the 'do-er' of the action) or the object (the thing having the action done to it).

Is there case law in Germany? ›

Case law precedence does not exist formally in Germany. Cases do have binding authority over the parties, but not on future cases. Cases do, however, have persuasive value and lower court judges are aware of higher court decisions. The judicial structure consists of both Federal and state courts.

Why is there no jury in Germany? ›

In contrast to the Anglo-American and French legal culture jury trials have never firmly established themselves in Germany and therefore never grew out of a tradition. Before 1848 not very many German criminal law scholars were sympathetic towards jury trial.

How is German law different from American law? ›

There are no pleas in the German legal system, so even if the defendant does plead guilty the case will still go to trial and the judge may declare the defendant not guilty if he or she believes there is evidence to indicate that the defendant is innocent.

What is a lawyer called in Germany? ›

The official professional title of a German lawyer is Rechtsanwalt (male) oder Rechtsanwältin (female). Only fully qualified German lawyers who have passed both legal exams are entitled to refer to themselves as “Rechtsanwalt” or – in short – “Anwalt”.

How is the U.S. judicial system different from Germany's judicial system? ›

The German court system differs from that of some other federations, such as the United States, in that all the trial and appellate courts are state courts while the courts of last resort are federal.

What are the legal systems like in Germany? ›

Germany's legal system is a civilian system whose highest source of law is the 1949 Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany (which serves as the nation's constitution), which sets up the modern judiciary, but the law adjudicated in court comes from the German Codes; thus, German law is primarily codal in nature.

Is law in Germany good? ›

Germany is known for its high standard and quality of education, and this excellence extends to their Law programmes. Many German universities offer Masters Degrees in Law with a variety of specialisations such as human rights law, commercial law, international law, etc.

Can you do a background check on someone in Germany? ›

Are Background Checks Legal in Germany? Yes, background checks are legal in Germany, but they must comply with the country's strict data protection laws. Employers need to be transparent about their background check process, and the candidate's consent is mandatory.

Do other countries have access to your criminal record? ›

Most foreign officials do not check for criminal records, but they have every right to do so if they choose. Each country can handle criminal records however they want, depending on their laws. INTERPOL tracks international criminal records in their database for all participating countries.

What is the crime data in Germany? ›

Overall, the number of crimes recorded in Germany rose to 5.94 million last year, an increase of 5.5% over 2023 and 9.3% higher than in 2019, before the pandemic. The number of suspects arrested rose by 7.3% to 2.246 million and 41.3% of them did not have a German passport.

Does Germany have search warrants? ›

Request the Search Warrant

Ensure the officers present a search warrant, preferably a copy for your records. The warrant will outline the reasons for the search and specify what the officers are looking for in the search.

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