Grimes County Traffic Court Records

Grimes County traffic court records are kept by the Justice of the Peace courts and the County Clerk in Anderson. Use the statewide re:SearchTX portal to search cases online, or contact the courthouse to get citations, docket entries, and case dispositions for traffic violations filed in Grimes County, Texas.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Grimes County Overview

Anderson County Seat
12th, 278th Districts Judicial Districts
Free re:SearchTX Access
JP Court Traffic Cases

Grimes County Traffic Court Offices

Traffic violations in Grimes County go through the Justice of the Peace courts. JP courts handle Class C misdemeanor traffic offenses -- fine-only cases with no jail time. This includes speeding, failure to stop, failure to maintain lane, and most other routine moving violations. Which JP precinct handles your case depends on where the stop occurred in the county.

Grimes County has JP precincts covering Anderson, Navasota, and Iola. The county seat is Anderson, which is a very small town -- most county residents deal with services in Navasota. Municipal courts in Navasota and Anderson handle violations within those city limits and operate separately from the county JP court system. If your ticket names a municipal court, contact that court directly. The County Clerk in Anderson maintains county court records.

Office Grimes County Clerk
Address P.O. Box 375, Anderson, TX 77830
Phone (936) 873-4422
Records Available Criminal, civil, and traffic case records for Grimes County courts

For certified copies of court records, contact the County Clerk in Anderson. You can visit in person or submit a written request by mail to P.O. Box 375, Anderson TX 77830. Include the defendant's full name, approximate offense date, and case number if available. The clerk can confirm current copy fees and processing times.

Search Grimes County Traffic Records Online

The statewide re:SearchTX portal is the main free tool for looking up Grimes County traffic court cases. Search by party name or case number. The system updates nightly. It provides case index data only -- for official certified copies, go through the County Clerk in Anderson.

For records from Navasota or Anderson municipal courts, contact those courts directly. They keep records separately from the county court system. The Texas Judicial Branch website has a court directory to help you find the right court in Grimes County and its contact information.

The TexasCourtHelp.gov traffic page has general guidance on responding to Texas traffic citations. This covers payment options, driver safety courses, deferred disposition, and what happens if you miss a court date. These rules apply in Grimes County just as they do throughout Texas.

Texas Traffic Laws in Grimes County

Traffic violations in Grimes County fall under the Texas Transportation Code. Most citations are Class C misdemeanors with fines but no jail time. Transportation Code Chapter 543 sets out the uniform citation process statewide. Officers must use standard forms when issuing tickets. Chapter 542 covers general traffic provisions applicable throughout Texas.

Speed limit rules come from Transportation Code Chapter 545. Local authorities may set specific limits on roads under their control. Reckless driving is more serious than a basic speeding ticket. Grimes County courts follow the statewide rules on fine collection, driver safety courses, and deferred disposition.

Grimes County is in the 12th and 278th Judicial Districts. Felony traffic cases -- such as intoxication assault -- go to District Court rather than JP court. Most drivers deal only with the JP courts for routine traffic matters. The Texas Judicial Branch site has local rules and contact details for courts in Grimes County.

Under the Texas Public Information Act, anyone can request copies of public court records. The county has 10 business days to respond to a written request. Copy fees follow state rules. Ask the clerk if a specific record is public -- some sealed or juvenile records may be restricted.

Driver Safety Course Options in Grimes County

If you received a traffic citation in Grimes County, you may be eligible to get it dismissed by completing a Driver Safety Course (DSC). You must request this on or before your court date. The JP court clerk can tell you whether a DSC is available for your specific violation.

To take a DSC in Texas, you generally pay state costs, the traffic fine, and an administrative fee. You must plead guilty or no contest, waive your right to a jury trial, show proof of insurance with you listed as the driver, and provide your driver's license. You must sign an affidavit that you have not completed a DSC within the past 12 months. Once approved, you have 90 days to finish the course and submit proof to the court.

Not everyone qualifies. You cannot use a DSC if you were leaving the scene of an accident, driving recklessly, passing a school bus, or committing a violation in an active construction zone with workers present. CDL holders face restrictions. Failing to complete the course by the deadline can result in a capias pro fine warrant.

Deferred Disposition in Grimes County

Deferred disposition lets some traffic defendants in Grimes County avoid a final conviction. You plead guilty or no contest, pay fines and fees up front, and if you stay violation-free during the deferral period -- typically 90 to 180 days -- the case is dismissed. No driving course is required, but you must not pick up any new violations during that time.

Not every case or court qualifies. Ask the JP clerk whether deferred disposition is an option for your citation. Local rules may set additional conditions. Missing your check-in date or getting a new violation can result in the court entering a final judgment and issuing a warrant against you.

Driver Records and DPS in Grimes County

Texas driver records are issued by the Texas Department of Public Safety, not the county courts. If you need your full driving history -- including past tickets and license actions -- request it from DPS. A certified record by mail costs $10 and takes about 14 to 21 days. Online requests cost $12.

Vehicle title and registration records go through the Texas DMV open records system. Those records are separate from court records. For Grimes County court records specifically, contact the County Clerk or the JP court that handled your case. They can tell you what is on file and the current copy fee schedule.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Nearby Counties

Grimes County is in Southeast Texas between Houston and College Station. Check your citation to confirm which county court filed your case.