About Christopher B.
Christopher B. Hall built his legal foundation at the University of Georgia School of Law, where he received his J.D. in 1993. He completed undergraduate studies at the University of Virginia. Those years set the stage for a steady career in litigation and appellate work.
Early in his career Hall entered practice in Georgia and gained admission to the Eleventh Circuit. He has practiced continuously since finishing law school, moving from associate roles into firm leadership. Over time he took on more complex appellate matters and appeals strategy, drawing on courtroom experience and written advocacy.
Hall joined Hall & Lampros, LLP and ascended to partner. At the firm he has handled appeals and state-court litigation, often participating in procedural and briefing decisions that shape how cases proceed on appeal. Colleagues and opposing counsel have encountered him in appellate filings and hearings, where clear legal writing and an eye for record issues matter.
He maintains bar privileges in Georgia and before the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. Those admissions allow him to carry matters from trial courts to appellate panels. He also works with trial teams to prepare records and to frame legal questions likely to carry weight on appeal.
Outside casework, Hall has been involved in professional circles and bar activities. He holds current membership in a professional association, and he contributes to firm work that touches on appellate procedure, preservation of error and standards of review. That involvement keeps him attuned to changes in appellate rules and court practice.
Clients and fellow lawyers know him for a methodical approach in the appellate phase: careful record review, focused briefing and attention to procedural posture. He balances the detail work of appellate briefs with the tactical choices that affect outcomes at both trial and appellate levels.
Today he is a partner at Hall & Lampros, LLP. He practices in Georgia courts and represents clients in appeals filed in the Eleventh Circuit.