About Jack
Jack Byno earned a Bachelor of Arts in History and Political Science from the University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth in 1987. He went on to study law at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, receiving his J.D. in 1993. Those academic years set the groundwork for a long professional life in Texas courts.
He joined the State Bar of Texas in 1994 and began practicing the same year. He opened Jack Byno & Associates and established a local presence handling matters commonly heard in municipal and county settings. His early caseload included routine traffic matters and municipal ordinance disputes. Over time the practice developed around those steady, day-to-day legal needs faced by drivers and residents.
In 1999 he took on a judicial role as a municipal judge for Haltom City. The position placed him on the bench for municipal dockets, where he presided over traffic cases, city ordinance hearings, and other local matters. Serving as a municipal judge gave him direct exposure to courtroom procedures from a judicial perspective and a clearer sense of how local courts operate.
Across years of practice he has remained active in the State Bar of Texas. That ongoing membership has kept him connected to changes in Texas traffic law and municipal procedure. His practice has involved advising clients on options available in traffic cases, representing them at hearings, and negotiating outcomes that address both legal and practical consequences.
Clients who encounter traffic citations often need quick, pragmatic counsel. He has built experience handling driver’s license issues, point assessments, fines, and contested citations. His work in municipal court and on the prosecution and defense sides of routine matters gives him familiarity with how judges and prosecutors commonly handle these cases.
Today he continues to serve clients through Jack Byno & Associates and remains active in the local legal community. He maintains a practice centered on traffic ticket defense and related municipal matters.