About Bryan Matthew
Bryan Matthew Everitt trained first as an engineer and then as a lawyer. He earned a Bachelor of Science in Political Science from the United States Naval Academy in 1999. He continued his studies with a Master of Science in Engineering Management from Old Dominion University in 2007. He later enrolled at Capital University Law School in 2009 and received his J.D. in 2013.
Everitt’s academic path spans distinct disciplines. Political science provided a foundation in public policy and institutions. Engineering management added technical and organizational tools. Law school followed, bringing formal legal training and courtroom procedure. The sequence suggests an interest in situations where policy, technical detail, and legal rules intersect.
After law school he obtained the authority to practice in Ohio. He has built a practice grounded in the rules and procedures of that state. His legal experience has unfolded within Ohio’s courts and regulatory environment. That experience is threaded through his work at firms and offices that serve state-level needs.
Colleagues and clients describe Everitt as methodical. He approaches factual questions by breaking them down and testing assumptions. That approach mirrors his engineering training. He applies those techniques to legal problems, reviewing documents, timelines and technical material closely. The result is a practice style that emphasizes careful preparation and clarity when legal matters hinge on technical facts or regulatory detail.
Everitt is part of the team at Dagger Law. He works out of the firm’s Ohio offices. His practice touches matters that arise under Ohio law and that require an understanding of both technical and policy concerns. He handles filings, client counseling and representation in the matters the firm accepts.
Outside the office he has maintained ties to the fields that informed his studies. Those links inform how he frames questions and evaluates evidence. He reads technical reports as readily as statutes. He reviews regulations and case law with equal attention. He aims for practical solutions that fit the contours of state law.
He currently practices at Dagger Law, focusing on legal matters in Ohio.