Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money Records

Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money searches work best when you start with the county treasurer and then move to the court or probate office if the record points there. The treasurer receives county funds, administers property tax laws, and handles statewide programs including Unclaimed Funds and Tax Deed process work. That gives the office a clear role in money searches. If the balance is court-related or tied to an estate, the clerk of circuit court or register in probate can explain the file behind it. The county offices give you a real local trail before any statewide DOR search becomes necessary.

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Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money and Treasurer

The Kewaunee County Treasurer is Michelle Dax, and the office is at 810 Lincoln Street, Kewaunee, WI 54216. The phone number is (920) 388-7131. The research says the Treasurer receipts all county funds, maintains banking accounts, administers property tax laws, completes annual tax settlement, and handles statewide programs including Lottery and Gaming Credit, Unclaimed Funds, and the Tax Deed process. That makes the office the most important county contact when a local payment or dormant balance needs to be matched to a record.

The office is not just a tax desk. It is the county money hub. It records receipts, maintains accounts, and answers questions about real estate taxes. That matters for a Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money search because a county refund, a tax overpayment, or a balance held by the county can often be traced to the Treasurer's work. If your name appears in a county notice, the Treasurer office is where the county says the money trail begins.

The Treasurer page below is the official county source for the office that handles county funds and tax law administration.

Kewaunee County Treasurer shows the office role, contact information, and county money responsibilities tied to unclaimed funds.

Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money at the Kewaunee County Treasurer

Use that office first when the funds are county-held, because the Treasurer is the county custodian that can confirm the local record trail.

Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money and Court Records

The Kewaunee County Clerk of Circuit Court is Rebecca A. Deterville, and the office is at 613 Dodge Street, Kewaunee, WI 54216. The phone number is (920) 388-7144, and the fax number is (920) 388-7049. The clerk office manages court files for civil, small claims, felony, misdemeanor, traffic, county ordinance, DNR, paternity, and other family matters. It also collects fees, fines, restitution, court-appointed attorney fees, and other obligations ordered by the Court, while handling jury management and local court rules and forms.

That matters because a court balance can look like unclaimed money until the file is checked. If a payment was tied to a citation, a civil case, or another court order, the clerk's office can show whether the money was posted, returned, or still open. The clerk page is the place to sort those records before assuming the balance belongs with the Treasurer. Kewaunee County keeps the court file and the county money file separate for a reason.

The clerk page below is the official county source for the court record and court financial side of the search.

Kewaunee County Clerk of Circuit Court explains the court files and obligations that can sit behind a county money claim.

Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money clerk of circuit court page

That page is the best county reference when the search turns into a court fee, fine, or other obligation rather than a treasurer-held amount.

Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money and Probate

The Kewaunee County Register in Probate is Nina Martel, and the office is at 613 Dodge Street, Kewaunee, WI 54216. The phone number is (920) 388-7143. The register coordinates probate and juvenile court functions and handles estates, trusts, guardianships, conservatorships, protective placements, mental commitments, adoptions, TPR, CHIPS, JIPS, and juvenile delinquency. That makes probate a real part of an unclaimed money search when the owner is deceased or when the claimant needs to prove legal authority.

Probate often supplies the missing link. If a county notice shows a name that no longer matches the person who should receive the money, the probate office can show the estate path. If the matter involves a guardianship or juvenile file, the register office can explain the next procedural step. That is why probate is not just an extra office. It is often the record that tells the county who can claim the money and how the claim should be filed.

The probate page below is the official county source for estate and guardianship records that can support a claim.

Kewaunee County Register in Probate is the county source for probate and juvenile records that can support an unclaimed money claim.

Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money register in probate page

That page is the best county reference when the claim depends on an estate, guardianship, or juvenile record.

Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money Records

Kewaunee County's structure helps because the treasurer, clerk, and probate offices each hold a different part of the money trail. The Treasurer handles county funds and tax administration. The Clerk of Circuit Court handles court files and court obligations. The Register in Probate handles estate and guardianship matters. When a claim does not fit one office cleanly, the county record system still gives you a path to the office that does fit. That is the practical value of starting local.

Because the Treasurer also handles unclaimed funds and the tax deed process, a county search can cover more than one type of money record at once. A tax payment, a county-held balance, or a fee connected to a court file can all surface in the same broader search. The county offices are the right place to sort that out before the claim moves to the state. That keeps a Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money search from drifting into a generic statewide lookup too early.

Once the office is clear, the claim usually gets much easier to finish. County funds stay with the county, court obligations stay with the court office, and probate records show who has the authority to act.

Wisconsin Unclaimed Money Search

Not every Kewaunee County search belongs to the county. The Wisconsin Department of Revenue handles statewide unclaimed property from banks, insurance companies, utilities, and other private holders. The state says it provides free searching, accepts electronic claims with proper identification, and holds property indefinitely until the rightful owner comes forward. That makes DOR the correct fallback when the county offices do not match the money you are chasing.

The Wisconsin DOR unclaimed property home page is the statewide search entry point.

How to claim property explains the filing steps after a match is found.

Acceptable documents explains the proof DOR expects, and the Wisconsin DOR FAQ explains why the state holds abandoned property and why there is no time limit to claim it.

The statutes at Wis. Stat. 177.0501 and Wis. Stat. 177.0903 supply the notice and claim framework behind the state process.

Kewaunee County Unclaimed Money Tips

The safest Kewaunee County approach is to work the offices in order. Start with the Treasurer if the money looks like a county fund or tax issue. Move to the Clerk of Circuit Court if the amount came from a court file or obligation. Check probate if an estate or guardianship is involved. Then use DOR if the property is statewide instead of county-held. That keeps the search tied to the office that actually controls the record.

Kewaunee County is a good example of why one office rarely tells the whole story. Taxes, court obligations, probate authority, and county funds can overlap, but they are not the same record. Once the holder is clear, the claim path becomes much easier to manage.

For Kewaunee County, the practical rule is simple: treasurer first, court or probate office second, and DOR last if the money is not local.

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