About Charlotte
Charlotte McCray studied economics at Loyola University New Orleans and earned a Bachelor of Arts in 2014. She went on to attend Michigan State University College of Law and received her J.D. in 2017. While in law school she worked as a teaching assistant for the first-year property course, an early sign of an interest in matters that touch on real property and estates.
Her practical legal training began before law school and continued through it. McCray worked at McCray Law Office, PLLC as an intern in 2013 and as a clerk in 2014. During law school she spent a summer as an extern at the Ingham County Probate Court in 2016, and also served that year as a temporary mail clerk and deputy probate register III. These experiences placed her inside both a private practice setting and the day-to-day operations of a probate court.
After law school McCray returned to McCray Law Office, PLLC. In 2018 she is listed there as both a law clerk and a lawyer, a progression that reflects an early transition from support roles into practicing attorney responsibilities. Her record shows continuity with the same office across multiple positions, suggesting a practice built from long-term familiarity with the firm's matters and clients.
Her work history encompasses court-side exposure and law office practice. Time spent at the probate court involved administrative and procedural work that informs how estates move through the system. Her roles at McCray Law Office covered transactional and client-facing tasks typical of a small firm, including document preparation and case management. She has maintained professional association membership while practicing in Michigan.
Colleagues and clients would find in McCray a lawyer whose training combined classroom instruction, court experience, and on-the-job practice at the same firm. That mix has given her practical insight into probate procedures and the mechanics of estate administration. She practices from McCray Law Office PLLC in Michigan, where her current practice centers on probate and estate administration in the state.