This guide provides the necessary information for correcting Civil Status records at the Municipality of Druento. Civil Status records include official documentation related to birth, marriage, civil union, citizenship, and death.
Since 2023, following the consolidation of the Cartabia Reform, the procedure has been deeply simplified; however, bureaucratic complexity remains high. There are two paths: Administrative Correction and Judicial Rectification.
If you need to correct a Civil Status record at the Municipality of Druento and are looking for professional assistance, we are here for you. Contact us for a case evaluation and a free, no-obligation quote.
Today, the Civil Status Officer can intervene directly through administrative correction to resolve specific types of situations via an expedited procedure.
The “interested party” (the citizen the record refers to) and other authorized subjects (e.g., a parent for a minor child, an heir correcting a death certificate for succession purposes, or a legal representative) can act by filing a Correction Petition addressed to the Civil Status Officer at the Municipality of Druento.
Additionally, the Civil Status Officer may act ex officio (on their own initiative) if they identify the error independently.
How to submit the petition:
Required Documentation:
The correction is made by the Civil Status Officer of the Municipality of Druento via a specific annotation on the original record, followed by notification to the Prefect, the Public Prosecutor, and the interested parties.
Opposition: The Public Prosecutor and the interested parties have 30 days from receipt of the notification to file an opposition in Court, should they deem it necessary.
While administrative correction resolves material oversights, Judicial Rectification is a full civil proceeding (governed by Art. 95 et seq. of Presidential Decree 396/2000) aimed at re-establishing legal truth when it does not match the registers.
The difference is not just procedural, but substantive:
Cases where Court intervention is mandatory: Administrative correction is not possible, and a Judge’s intervention is indispensable for:
Note: Unlike administrative correction, judicial rectification requires a petition to the ordinary Court (Tribunale) sitting in a collective chamber. It requires the assistance of a specialized lawyer and the payment of court fees. The proceeding ends with a decree which, once final, is annotated by the Civil Status Officer of the Municipality of Druento on the record to be corrected.
Special attention is required for the surnames of Italian citizens born abroad.
If the foreign record lists a surname different from the one entitled under Italian law, the Officer proceeds with an ex officio correction.
The Dual Citizenship Exception: If the citizen also holds the citizenship of another country (EU or non-EU), the Civil Status Officer cannot change the surname ex officio. In compliance with European principles and the protection of personal identity, the surname assigned abroad remains unchanged unless there is an explicit request from the interested party.
Citizens often face refusals from the Civil Status Office or uncertainty about which procedure to trigger. MultiLex transforms a bureaucratic labyrinth into a linear path.
What we offer:
a) Free Preliminary Analysis: We verify whether your case qualifies for administrative correction or judicial rectification.
b) Documentary Audit: We retrieve the necessary historical certificates for you (which are often difficult to obtain from remote archives).
c) ANPR/ANSC Management: We ensure the correction is not just “on paper” but is correctly implemented in the National Resident Population Registry (ANPR) and the Digital Civil Status Archive (ANSC) as well as by the Civil Status Office of the Municipality of Druento.
d) Legal Advocacy: Representation in Court for rectification cases.
MultiLex offers comprehensive assistance for the verification and eventual correction or rectification of Civil Status records (birth, marriage, civil union, citizenship, and death).