Dallas Commercial Litigation Attorneys
Texas Commercial Law
At Chamblee & Ryan, P.C., we have built our reputation and our success as trial lawyers. We were founded to be a trial law firm and we have continued to emphasize our skills in the courtroom on behalf of our business clients.
In commercial litigation, our attorneys have the ability to examine reams of documents in search of the key financial details that could change the outcome of a case. Our commerce lawyers also have the ability to see the big picture and describe options to our business-owner clients in terms that are clear, concise and to the point.
Our results in the courtroom on behalf of our commercial clients speak for themselves. If your goal is protecting your business during commercial litigation, we can help.
The Capacity to Handle All Types of Commercial Litigation
If a person has tripped in front of your store and is suing for damages, we can defend you. If your company is being sued for employment discrimination, we can defend you. If you are involved in a large, complex dispute involving multiple parties, extensive evidentiary documents and business decisions made over multiple years, we can defend you. We offer full commercial litigation services across the complete range of business disputes.
- Contract disputes including collections, breach of warranty, defective products and noncompete agreements
- Claims of breach of fiduciary duty
- Fraud and tortious interference suits
- Construction law issues
- Employment litigation including discrimination defense, nonsubscriber defense and Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) disputes
- Professional malpractice defense
- Health care litigation
- Litigation for companies in the trucking industry
- Protection of patents, trademarks and other forms of intellectual property from infringement
- Class actions
Contact Chamblee & Ryan, P.C.
Get an aggressive and protective advocate on your side during business disputes. To learn more about our law firm, contact us to schedule a consultation.

