About Christopher N.
Christopher N. Luhn built a career that moves between courtroom work, community service and bar activity. He is a familiar presence in Saratoga legal circles and in networks that handle brain injury litigation. His career stretches back to the 1980s and includes long-standing roles in local and national associations.
He completed his undergraduate studies at Washington College, earning a B.A. in 1974 after coursework that included political science, psychology, international affairs and Spanish. He later attended the University of Baltimore School of Law, receiving his J.D. in 1985.
Early in his career Luhn took on public-interest work. He served on the board of the Legal Aid Society of Northeastern New York in 1988. That experience shaped an approach that keeps client access and practical advocacy in view. He also participated in leadership roles within the Saratoga County Bar Association beginning in the mid-1980s.
In the 1990s his work moved into specialized litigation involving traumatic brain injury. He was a founding member of the Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group within what is now the American Association for Justice. He later served on the board of the Brain Injury Association of New York State. Those roles reflect a sustained engagement with the medical-legal and advocacy issues that arise in serious-injury cases.
Luhn’s service record extends beyond law. He served as president of the Malta Sunrise Rotary in 2014 and accepted court appointments as a Law Guardian—now called Lawyer for the Child—through the Saratoga County Law Guardian Panel in 2008. Across municipal and nonprofit boards he has tended to administrative and governance duties, holding offices that ranged from secretary to president in bar and civic organizations.
His professional affiliations include longstanding membership in the Saratoga County Bar Association and participation in the American Bar Association, including its Family Law Section. He was a member of the American Association for Justice’s Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group during the 1990s and early 2000s. He is admitted to practice in Maryland and New York and before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
Today he maintains an office under his own name. His practice blends civil litigation, particularly cases arising from serious injury, and representation of children in family-law contexts. He currently concentrates his practice on civil litigation, including traumatic brain injury matters and child representation in family proceedings.