About David C.
David C. Solheim traces his professional path back to Nebraska classrooms and a steady interest in how law and markets intersect. He approaches legal questions with an eye for both technical detail and practical outcome. The result is a practice shaped by education in law and economics, and by work across state lines.
He earned a B.A. in economics from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in 2008. He returned to the same campus for legal studies and received a J.D. in 2011. His law school coursework included transactional law and constitutional law, subjects that surface repeatedly in the matters he handles today.
Solheim is admitted to practice in Nebraska and Iowa. He holds membership in the Nebraska State Bar. Those credentials allow him to take on a range of matters in both states, from business-related agreements to disputes that raise constitutional questions.
Colleagues describe his approach as methodical rather than flashy. He often brings economic reasoning into contract analysis and transactional planning. On the constitutional side, he attends closely to statutory text and precedent. He balances negotiation and drafting work with contested matters when they arise.
His practice sits within Solheim Law Office, where he handles client work that blends transactional drafting, contract negotiation, and litigation that implicates constitutional or regulatory issues. Clients range from small business owners navigating contracts to individuals confronting regulatory or civil-rights concerns. He tends to favor clear, organized records and straightforward legal explanations. That style can make complex disputes easier for clients to evaluate and resolve.
Outside case files, he maintains professional ties in the Nebraska legal community through bar membership and regular court appearances in the region. He has kept his practice deliberately regional, focusing on issues that commonly affect businesses and individuals in Nebraska and neighboring Iowa. As of 2026 he practices at Solheim Law Office, handling transactional and constitutional matters across Nebraska and Iowa.