About Eric
Eric Ebbert trained at Brigham Young University, where he earned a B.S. in 1992. He continued his legal education at the University of Tennessee College of Law and received his J.D. in 1996. Those years shaped his understanding of both transactional and litigation practice and placed him squarely in the Tennessee legal community.
Early in his career he joined Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz, PC as an associate. He spent his time there working on matters that required coordination across trial and federal practice. The experience exposed him to complex procedural questions and to litigation strategy in a large firm setting.
Over time Ebbert sought admissions to a range of federal forums. He is admitted to practice in Tennessee and in the U.S. District Courts for the Eastern, Middle and Western Districts of Tennessee. He also holds admission in the U.S. District Court for the Middle and Southern Districts of Florida and is admitted to the U.S. Tax Court. These credentials allow him to carry cases through both state and multiple federal venues.
He later established The Ebbert Law Office. The move shifted his practice into a smaller-office environment where case management and client contact occur more directly. He maintains memberships in professional organizations and stays engaged with developments in federal procedure and tax practice.
Sources of work for his practice have included matters that touch on federal jurisdiction, tax issues and state-court litigation. He handles pleadings, court appearances and other litigation tasks in the courts where he is admitted. His background at a large regional firm informs how he organizes case teams and prepares matters for trial or settlement discussions.
Those who work with Ebbert find a lawyer familiar with the procedural demands of federal and state practice. He draws on courtroom experience and on the admissions that let him appear in multiple federal districts and in the U.S. Tax Court. He currently practices at The Ebbert Law Office, handling matters in Tennessee and in the federal courts where he is admitted.