Charleston County Probate Judge
Probate Court offices are open Monday through Friday, 8:30am to 5:00pm and virtually 24/7. For marriage license questions, please call 843-958-5183. To apply for a marriage license, click here. For Estate Administration questions, please call 843-958-5030. For questions regarding Conservatorships/Guardianships, Involuntary Commitment and our problem-solving courts, please call 843-958-5180. We are also here to assist you through our online services. Documents can also be delivered by using drop boxes located outside our offices located at 84 Broad Street, 3rd Floor, and 100 Broad Street, Suite 469.
Judge Irv Condon has implemented electronic filing, called "EZ-Filing." For more information, read Administrative Order, Rules and EZ-Filing Instructions. To EZ-file a document in any case, click here. You are able to view all images on each case for which you create an EZ-Filing account, which enables you to easily keep up with the activities of the case.
Please note the Probate Estate Division Office, in the Historic Courthouse Building at 84 Broad, is temporarily relocating to the Blake Tenement Building at 10 Court House Square, Third Floor, Charleston, SC 29401. Commitment, Adult Guardianship and Conservatorship, and Marriage Divisions remain in Suite 469 of 100 Broad Street, Charleston, SC 29401. The Court’s mailing address is still the same ~ 84 Broad Street, Charleston, SC 29401.
Judge Irvin G. Condon
Charleston County Probate Judge
Judge Irvin G. Condon was elected Charleston County Probate Judge in November 1994 and was re-elected in 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014 and 2018. During his more than 20 years of service, Judge Condon has worked with dedication and innovation to make the Charleston County Probate Court a national model of excellence.
Judge Condon led the planning team and started the Charleston County Adult Drug Court in 1999 and has presided over the court since its inception. Judge Condon implemented a Veterans Treatment Court as part of the Adult Drug Court. Associate Probate Judge Peter Kouten, a Marine Corps veteran, presides over this court. Judge Condon also led the planning team for the Charleston County Mental Health Court, which began in January 2003. Associate Probate Judge David Michel presides over this court. In 2010, Judge Condon also began presiding over the Ninth Circuit Juvenile Drug Court.
In addition to making Charleston County a leader in the creation of problem solving courts, Judge Condon has received national recognition by participating in cutting edge programs assisting incapacitated adults under guardianship and conservatorship. In 2011, the American Bar Association selected the Charleston County Probate Court as one of two courts in the nation to participate in a pilot project providing assistance and monitoring for incapacitated adults and their guardians. Students from the Charleston School of Law serve as volunteer court visitors. Courts in South Carolina and nationally have adopted this program. In 2018, the National Center for State Courts selected the Charleston County Probate Court as one of two courts in the nation to pilot the rapid response conservator program. The program will use cutting edge software to monitor spending by conservators on behalf of incapacitated adults along with the annual accountings. Judge Condon also led the Charleston County Probate Court in becoming the first probate court in South Carolina to use electronic filing.
Judge Condon offers free workshops to the public on the estate administration process on the first Monday of each month. He also assisted the family members of the Charleston Nine and the Emmanuel Nine with the probate process.
Judge Condon has been a leader in South Carolina and nationally in many organizations involving his court. Judge Condon is past President of the National College of Probate Judges, the South Carolina Association of Probate Judges, the National Guardianship Association, and the Congress of State Associations of the National Association of Drug Court Professionals. He is currently President of the South Carolina Association of Drug Court Professionals and the James Hoban Society. James Hoban was the architect of Charleston County's historic courthouse and the White House.
He also is a member of the Charleston County Bar Association, the South Carolina Bar, the American Bar Association, the South Carolina Association of Probate Judges, the National College of Probate Judges, the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys, the National Guardianship Association, the South Carolina Association of Drug Court Professionals, and the National Association of Drug Court Professionals.
Judge Condon has been a faculty member and frequent speaker for the National Judicial College, the National Association of Drug Court Professionals, the National Drug Court Institute, the National Business Institute, the Charleston School of Law, West Virginia University's Master of Legal Studies online program, and for numerous civic and charitable organizations. Judge Condon serves on the planning committee for the Medical University of South Carolina Attorneys and Judges Substance Abuse Annual Seminar. Judge Condon, the Charleston County Probate Court, and the Mills House Hotel have partnered on an annual probate seminar for over 20 years to raise funds for portraits and furnishings for the courthouse and funds for housing, bus passes, etc. for citizens in the problem solving courts.
Before his election, Judge Condon was a shareholder in the law firm of Rosen, Rosen & Hagood, P.A., in Charleston where he practiced probate and business law. Judge Condon earned his law degree from the University of South Carolina School of Law. Judge Condon is a Certified Public Accountant and worked for McKnight Frampton and Price Waterhouse for three years before going to law school. He attended the College of Charleston and received his B.S. degree in accounting, magna cum laude, from Clemson University. Judge Condon was also admitted to the MBA Program of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania but chose to work for Price Waterhouse followed by law school. He is a graduate of Bishop England High School.
Judge Condon grew up in Charleston as the seventh of ten children born to the late Harriet Molony Condon and the late J. Joseph Condon. He and his wife, Michelle Mensore Condon, an attorney originally from New Martinsville, West Virginia, have a 16-year-old son. They are members of the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Charleston.
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