TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: Upcoming

YWCA Nashville & Middle Tennessee will host a Stand Against Injustice Lunch and Learn on Sept. 29 from noon until 1 p.m. CDT. The free webinar will focus on the school to prison pipeline and will feature a group of panelists who are working for social change in our communities. The panel includes YWCA Nashville & Middle Tennessee President and CEO Sharon K. Roberson, Davidson County Juvenile Court Judge Sheila Calloway, Disability Rights Tennessee Child & Youth Advocate Johnnie Hatten and The Education Trust in Tennessee's Reginald Nash. Register here.  

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: Your Career

Sumner County is seeking qualified applicants for the position of the Sumner County Law Director. The Law Director is responsible for handling all the legal matters of Sumner County and is expected to be competent in a wide range of practice areas, including litigation, workplace and employment law, compliance with laws and regulations governing county governments, and more. Visit TBA JobLink for more information.

Posted by: Barry Kolar on Sep 22, 2022

Democratic lawmakers want to add 51 judges to the country's federal appeals courts, a move they say is necessary to reduce case backlogs but that would also give President Joe Biden a chance to appoint more judges, Reuters reports,. U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson of Georgia on Wednesday led a group of seven Democrats in introducing the Circuit Court Judgeships Act of 2022, which they said would address understaffed appellate courts nationally. Under the bill, eight circuits would gain judges including the Atlanta-based 11th Circuit, which would get 10 more, and the conservative-leaning New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, with 13 new ones for 30 total. Despite growing caseloads, the appeals courts have not gained any new judges in over three decades.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: BPR Actions

The law license of Richard Hovey Dinkins was yesterday transferred to disability inactive status by the Tennessee Supreme Court. Dinkins cannot practice law while on disability inactive status and shall comply with the requirements of Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 9, Sections 28 regarding the obligations and responsibilities of attorneys transferred to disability inactive status. To be reinstated, he must show the court his disability has been removed.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: TBA CLE

From conducting an initial client interview to completing a representation, a lawyer’s duty of communication with a client creates on-going potential for ethics missteps and legal malpractice liability. Sign up for this three-hour CLE webcast and learn what you can do to effectively meet this important attorney-client duty.

Posted by: Barry Kolar on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: Legal News

City Judge Johnny Houston was sworn into office during the Red Bank Commission meeting this week, the Chattanoogan reports. General Sessions Court Judge Christie Sell administered the oath. This will be his third term as the city’s judge. Commissioner Ruth Jeno praised Houston's work, saying he has always been fair, kind and generous and an exceptional judge.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: BPR Actions

Florida lawyer Kathleen Elizabeth Dyer and Montana lawyer Melissa Ann Edwards-Smith recently were reinstated to the practice of law in Tennessee. Dyer was reinstated on Sept. 1 after having been on inactive status since June 26, 2015. Edwards-Smith was reinstated on Sept. 6 after having been on inactive status since May 31, 2013. The Tennessee Supreme Court issued the order on Sept. 12. 

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: BPR Actions

Shelby County lawyer Johnnie Louis Johnson II was disbarred by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals on May 25. The Tennessee Supreme Court issued an order on Sept. 12 asking Johnson to respond as to why imposition of identical discipline in Tennessee should not be imposed. Johnson has 30 days from the issuance of the court’s order to respond.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Sep 22, 2022
News Type: BPR Actions

The Tennessee Supreme Court earlier this month suspended 20 attorneys for failure to pay the annual registration fee; seven of them also failed to file proof that client funds are held in an IOLTA-compliant account. View the Sept. 13 fee suspension order and Sept. 15 IOLTA suspension order. Six lawyers have since been reinstated. See the list of all lawyers suspended and reinstated for fee and IOLTA violations in 2022 or access all administrative suspensions dating back to 2005.

Posted by: Barry Kolar on Sep 21, 2022
News Type: Clarification

An item in Tuesday’s TBA Today failed to note that retired magistrate Carl Colloms was also honored by the University of Tennessee’s Alumni Association. Colloms, who graduated from the College of Law in 1966, served in a variety of legal and judicial positions in Bradley County before his retirement in 2012. Since then he has donated millions in scholarship funding to the College of Law. Read more about his career and that of the other award winners.


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