Ozarks
Maries County deeds have an iCounty search path
Maries County land-record research can start with the Recorder's iCounty search, while assessor mapping still relies on recorded deeds.
The iCounty search is the land-document door for Maries County. It is tied to the Recorder of Deeds and points people to the recorder side when the question is about recorded papers, not just a parcel outline.
The assessor has a connected but different job. Maries County’s tax mapping is updated from warranty deeds received from the Recorder of Deeds. That means a map can follow the deed record, but the map is not the deed itself.
A buyer, heir, neighbor, or landowner should keep those two layers separate. The recorder search is the place to start for deeds and other recorded land documents. The assessor is the place to ask about assessed value, tax mapping, and the property list used for taxation. If the map and the paperwork seem to tell different stories, the next question is whether the recorded deed trail has been read, not just whether the parcel screen looks right.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Maries County. See every local note for the county on its page.