About Adam H.

Adam H. Houser is an appellate lawyer whose practice centers on work before the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. He completed the legal training required to practice and early in his career gravitated toward appellate litigation, where lawyering depends on tight briefs and precise oral argument. That foundation shaped a practice that emphasizes the mechanics of appellate persuasion and the technical requirements of federal appellate procedure.

Houser’s career has been spent largely on the appellate side of federal law. He has prepared and filed appellate briefs, handled mandates, and worked on the procedural steps that take a case from a district court record to an appellate decision. Over time he developed experience handling the types of questions that reach the Federal Circuit, including statutory interpretation, administrative law issues, and the review of lower-court rulings that turn on complex legal standards.

The Federal Circuit hears a distinctive mix of appeals. It is the national court for patent appeals and also decides many bid protests, government-contract disputes, veterans benefits cases, and certain claims against the federal government. Houser’s work engages those subject areas when they present on appeal. He writes appellate briefs aimed at clarifying legal error and frames arguments that appellate judges can apply across related cases.

Today Houser practices at Lawyer at Law LLC, where he serves as a lawyer representing clients in proceedings before the Federal Circuit and in related federal appellate matters. His day-to-day practice includes drafting appellate briefs, preparing for oral argument, advising trial counsel on preserving issues for appeal, and responding to petitions and post-judgment filings. He is active in the procedural and substantive work required to press and defend appeals in the Federal Circuit. His current practice concentrates on appellate advocacy before federal appellate tribunals, particularly the Federal Circuit.

Accepted Jurisdictions

Federal Circuit