Morris County Traffic Ticket Records Lookup

Morris County traffic ticket records are filed across 39 municipal courts within the Morris/Sussex Vicinage of the New Jersey Superior Court system. The county seat is Morristown, where the Superior Court handles appeals and more serious motor vehicle matters. Each municipality operates its own court for local traffic violations. Residents and drivers cited in Morris County can search these records through several public access tools. This guide covers how to find, request, and understand traffic ticket records throughout Morris County.

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Morris County Quick Facts

39 Municipalities
973-656-4000 Court Phone
Morristown County Seat
8:30-4:30 Court Hours

Morris County Superior Court Traffic Records

The Morris County Superior Court sits at the corner of Washington and Court Streets in Morristown. This court serves as the hub for serious traffic matters in the county. Cases that involve indictable offenses, appeals from municipal courts, and certain driving while intoxicated charges come through this courthouse. The mailing address is PO Box 910, Morristown, NJ 07963. You can reach the clerk at 973-656-4000.

Hours run Monday through Friday, 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM. The court has Civil, Criminal, Family, Probate, and Special Civil Part divisions. Traffic ticket records tied to criminal charges fall under the Criminal Division. For most standard moving violations, though, the municipal court in the town where you got the ticket holds the original record. The Superior Court steps in when a case is appealed or when the charge rises above what a municipal court can handle.

Morris County traffic ticket records at the Superior Court level can be searched through the NJ Courts public access portal. This tool lets you look up civil and criminal case jackets by name or docket number. It is free to use and available around the clock.

The Morris County court complex in Morristown processes traffic ticket records alongside the Superior Court's broader caseload.

Morris County Court Records Morris County court records website for traffic ticket records lookup

The NJ Courts system provides access to court records filed in Morris County, including traffic-related cases processed through the Superior Court system.

Court Morris County Superior Court
Washington and Court Streets
PO Box 910
Morristown, NJ 07963
Phone: (973) 656-4000
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM
Divisions Civil, Criminal, Family, Probate, Special Civil Part

Searching Morris County Traffic Ticket Records Online

Several online tools let you look up traffic ticket records from Morris County courts. The NJ Courts system provides two main portals. The first is the Municipal Public Access system, which covers tickets handled at the municipal level. You can search by name, ticket number, or complaint number. Results show the charge, court date, and case status.

The second tool is NJMCDirect. This site lets you pay fines and view ticket details for municipal court cases. You need your ticket number or court ID to use it. Both services are free. They cover all 39 municipalities in Morris County.

Note: Online records may not show older cases. Municipal courts in New Jersey typically retain traffic ticket records for three years after disposition. If you need records beyond that window, contact the specific court directly.

For driving history that includes all points and violations statewide, the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission provides driver history abstracts. These show every ticket on your record regardless of which county issued it. The abstract costs a small fee and can be ordered online or by mail.

Morris County Municipal Court Traffic Records

Most traffic tickets in Morris County start and end at the municipal court level. New Jersey municipal courts are courts not of record. That means proceedings are not automatically transcribed. If a case is appealed, the Superior Court holds a brand new trial rather than reviewing a transcript. This distinction matters when you try to get detailed records of what happened during a hearing.

Each of the 39 municipalities in Morris County runs its own court. Some share a court with a neighboring town. The busiest include Parsippany-Troy Hills, Morristown, Dover, Randolph, and Mount Olive. Each court keeps its own traffic ticket records. To get records from a specific case, you contact the court where the ticket was issued.

The types of traffic violations handled at the municipal level include speeding, running a red light, failure to yield, improper passing, and driving with a suspended license. Under N.J.S.A. 39:4-98, reckless driving carries fines, jail time, or both. These cases produce records that remain in the court file and on the driver's abstract.

A Parsippany-Troy Hills municipal court session handles a high volume of traffic cases each month, reflecting the township's busy roadways.

Parsippany-Troy Hills Municipal Court Parsippany-Troy Hills Municipal Court traffic ticket records in Morris County

Parsippany-Troy Hills is one of the largest municipalities in Morris County and processes a significant number of traffic cases each year.

Traffic Ticket Records in Parsippany-Troy Hills

Parsippany-Troy Hills Township operates one of the busiest municipal courts in Morris County. The court is located at 1001 Parsippany Boulevard. You can reach them at (973) 263-7153. Office hours are 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM on weekdays. Traffic cases from Routes 46, 80, 280, and local roads all funnel through this court.

For records requests, the Records Custodian can be reached at (973) 263-4351. You may also email OPRA requests to opra@parsippany.net. The township handles roughly 250 OPRA requests per year. Traffic ticket records are among the most commonly sought documents. Requests are processed under the Open Public Records Act, which requires a response within seven business days.

Morristown Municipal Court sits at 200 South Street and can be reached at (973) 292-6610. As the county seat, Morristown sees steady traffic court activity. Hours match the standard 8:30 to 4:30 schedule. Like all municipal courts in New Jersey, Morristown is a court not of record.

Public Records Requests for Morris County Traffic Tickets

The Open Public Records Act gives you the right to request traffic ticket records from any government body in Morris County. Each municipality has a designated records custodian who handles OPRA requests. You submit a written request on the official OPRA form. The custodian must respond within seven business days. They can grant access, deny it with a stated reason, or ask for an extension.

Some Morris County municipalities have made the process easier with online portals. Washington Township, for example, has a dedicated records custodian. Nina DiGregorio serves as the Township Clerk and can be reached at ndigregorio@wtmorris.net or 908-876-3315 extension 1225. For police records in Washington Township, contact Lt. Mark Niemynski at mniemynski@wtpdmorris.org or call (908) 876-5655. Police departments maintain their own copies of traffic stop records and citations.

When requesting traffic ticket records through OPRA, include as much detail as possible:

  • Full name of the person on the ticket
  • Date the ticket was issued
  • Ticket or complaint number if known
  • Name of the issuing municipality or police department
  • Type of violation

Note: Government records custodians are not required to create new documents in response to an OPRA request. They only need to provide existing records. If the record has been purged after the retention period, the custodian will inform you that it no longer exists.

Morris County Clerk and Related Records

The Morris County Clerk Office is located on Court Street in Morristown. The phone number is (973) 285-6120. While the Clerk does not hold traffic ticket records directly, this office manages land records, trade names, notary commissions, passports, and election records. These related records sometimes matter when a traffic case leads to liens or judgments.

The Morris County Clerk Office in Morristown handles a range of public records that may connect to traffic-related court matters.

Morris County Clerk Office Morris County Clerk Office for public records in Morristown

Visit the Clerk's website for information on land records, certified documents, and other public filings in Morris County.

For instance, if a traffic fine goes unpaid, the court can place a judgment against the driver. That judgment may appear in the county records system. Unpaid fines can also trigger a suspension of your driver's license through the MVC. Checking both court records and county records gives you a fuller picture of any outstanding obligations tied to a Morris County traffic ticket.

Morris County Traffic Ticket Fines and Points

Traffic ticket records in Morris County reflect the fines and points assigned to each violation. New Jersey uses a point system to track driver behavior. Points accumulate on your driving record with each moving violation. Too many points can lead to surcharges, higher insurance rates, and license suspension.

Common violations and their point values in Morris County include:

  • Speeding 1-14 mph over the limit: 2 points
  • Speeding 15-29 mph over the limit: 4 points
  • Speeding 30 mph or more over: 5 points
  • Running a red light: 2 points
  • Reckless driving: 5 points
  • Tailgating: 5 points
  • Improper passing: 4 points

Once you hit six or more points, the MVC adds a surcharge of $150 per year plus $25 for each point over six. These surcharges are separate from the court fines. The court fine itself depends on the statute violated and can range from $50 to $800 or more for serious offenses. Morris County municipal courts set fines within the ranges allowed by state law.

You can check your current point total by ordering a driver abstract from the NJ MVC. Three safe driving points are deducted for every year you go without a violation.

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Cities in Morris County

Morris County has 39 municipalities, each with its own municipal court that handles local traffic cases. All traffic ticket records are kept at the court where the ticket was filed. For Superior Court matters, cases go to the courthouse in Morristown.

Other municipalities in Morris County include Morristown, Dover, Randolph, Mount Olive, Denville, Roxbury, Chatham, Madison, Boonton, and Washington Township. Each operates its own municipal court for traffic violations.

Nearby Counties

These counties border Morris County. If you received a traffic ticket near a county line, confirm which municipality issued the citation. The ticket must be resolved in the court for the town where it was issued.