About Charles E Floyd
Charles E Floyd Jr. has spent more than half a century in the courtroom and the office. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in History and Business from Auburn University in 1961. That early combination of liberal arts and business studies prefaced a long legal career that has spanned state and federal practice.
He began his professional legal associations in the late 1960s, joining the Alabama Bar Association in 1969 and becoming a member of the American Bar Association the same year. He added membership in the Georgia Bar Association and the American Trial Lawyers Association in 1972. He has also been listed with Martindale-Hubbell since 1969. Those long-standing affiliations reflect steady involvement in the profession rather than short-term engagements.
In 1969 he became a partner at Floyd And Floyd Lawyers, a firm name he continues to be identified with. His admissions include practice in both Alabama and Georgia, as well as admission to the U.S. Supreme Court and the Eleventh Circuit. Those credentials indicate a practice that extends beyond a single state’s trial dockets and reaches federal appellate and high court filings.
Colleagues and court records show a lawyer who has maintained active memberships and licensure for decades. He has navigated the procedures required to appear before trial courts, the Eleventh Circuit, and the nation’s highest court. That breadth of admission requires familiarity with both state and federal rules and an ability to prepare filings for multiple levels of review.
Over the years Floyd’s professional path has combined private practice and sustained participation in bar organizations. He has been continuously listed in professional directories and remains a member of several national and state legal organizations. Those memberships have provided a platform for staying current on developments in litigation practice and court procedure.
He remains a partner at Floyd And Floyd Lawyers and continues to hold licensure in Alabama and Georgia. His current practice centers on litigation in state and federal courts in Alabama and Georgia.