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Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Mar 19, 2026

New data released from the American Bar Association (ABA) shows that Belmont College of Law ranks 10th in the nation for schools with the most successful bar exam passage rate. Belmont students saw a pass rate of 100% for first-time test takers in February 2025 and 96.91% for the July 2025 exam. Stanford, Yale, Duke and Harvard law schools took the top four spots. Reuters reports that the ABA recently released bar exam data detailing national results and figures for the 198 individual U.S. law schools it accredits. The new data shows that 84% of graduates from ABA-accredited law schools who took the bar for the first time passed, which is up one percentage point over the 83% first-time pass rate in 2024.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Mar 19, 2026

Retired Henry County General Sessions and Juvenile Court Judge Vicki S. Snyder is the 2026 recipient of the Tennessee Commission on Children and Youth's (TCCY) Jim Pryor Award for Child Advocacy. “I’m humbled and honored by the award,” Snyder said. “A child should be safe, and every child deserves to be somebody’s someone and not be alone. It is in my heart. It’s my purpose.” During her tenure on the bench, Snyder helped develop the county's Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) program and was one of the first juvenile court judges in Tennessee to establish a Safe Baby Court. TCCY awarded the first advocacy award posthumously to Pryor in 1995. Pryor, who died in 1994, was an attorney, a former assistant district attorney, a member of the state Child Sexual Abuse Task Force, and a member of the Northeast Regional Council on Children and Youth. Read more in a press release from the Administrative Office of the Courts.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Mar 19, 2026

New filing rules are in effect for the Tennessee Court of Workers' Compensation Claims. Attorneys now must file documents through TNComp, the court's new electronic filing system. Clerk of the Court Penny Shrum has written a blog post on "From the Bench" with answers to frequently asked questions about the new system, including formatting requirements and what to do if a BPR number is not recognized in the system. On April 1, the clerk’s office will begin returning documents that have not been properly filed electronically.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Mar 19, 2026

The U.S. Supreme Court on March 4 ruled unanimously that federal appeals courts must defer to immigration judges’ findings when evaluating asylum claims, applying the "substantial evidence" standard rather than conducting independent reviews. The case arose from an El Salvadoran family whose asylum application was denied, with courts upholding that denial as long as it was backed by reasonable evidence. Bloomberg Law reports that the ruling, written by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, arrives as the Trump administration fires immigration judges and instructs replacements to grant asylum only rarely.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Mar 19, 2026

Sean R. Aiello, Middle Tennessee governor on the TBA Board of Governors and immediate past president of the TBA's Young Lawyers Division, has announced his reelection campaign for Williamson County Commission to serve District 11 during the 2026-2030 term. He currently serves as vice chair on the commission and recently introduced legislation forming a new County Task Force to study the needs of the county courthouse and explore potential expansion or relocation. Aiello is managing partner for Schell & Oglesby in Franklin. Election day for the county primary is May 5. More information about his campaign can be found at www.seanraiello.com.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 19, 2026

Rhodes College in Memphis is hosting the 2026 American Mock Trial Association (AMTA) qualifying tournament this weekend and still needs volunteers to serve as judges for the 4 p.m. CDT round on Friday. Other rounds will take place on Saturday and Sunday. The AMTA Opening Round Championship Series is the last stop before the national championship. The top six teams from this weekend’s event will advance to nationals. Sign up to help or contact Rhodes Mock Trial Coach Veda Krumpe at krumpev@rhodes.edu with any questions.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 19, 2026

After a lengthy debate, the Tennessee House Education Committee advanced a bill that would double the number of private school voucher recipients for the 2026-2027 academic year, the Nashville Banner reports. Though five Republicans on the committee voted against it, HB2532/SB2247 passed by a vote of 11-9. Bills that would have set forth various reporting requirements for the voucher program failed in both the subcommittee and committee. The Nashville Scene has more on those efforts. The voucher expansion bill now goes to the House Finance, Ways and Means Subcommittee. The Senate version of the bill cleared the that body’s Education Committee on March 11 and is now at the Senate Finance, Ways and Means Committee.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Mar 19, 2026

The TBA International Law Section's annual forum will provide an overview of the trade and investment landscape as it concerns Tennessee in 2026 and beyond. Programming will focus on Tennessee's foreign direct investment, global health perspectives and partnerships, international financing, global sales and supply chains, and more. Participants will have the opportunity for direct interactive discussions with speakers, and the chance to network, learn about best practices and chart a path to increase capacity for internationalization. Make plans now to join colleagues on May 29 in the TBA's newly renovated CLE classroom. Get more information and register here.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Mar 18, 2026

This appeal concerns the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees in a conservatorship action. Discerning no reversible error, we affirm as modified.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Mar 18, 2026

Following lengthy proceedings arising out of a delinquent tax sale of real property and attempted redemptions by two parties, the chancery court concluded that the taxpayer properly redeemed her property. The court then awarded the tax sale purchaser interest on the amount he had tendered for the sale, to be paid in part by the redeeming taxpayer and in part by another party that had unsuccessfully attempted redemption. The purchaser appeals, arguing that the court should have awarded him greater interest. The party that unsuccessfully attempted redemption argues that the trial court improperly disbursed to the purchaser funds beyond those to which he was entitled. We affirm.


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