About Michael
Michael Kuebler built a professional path that crosses construction sites, laboratory reports and courtroom files. He holds an associate degree in construction engineering from Chattanooga State Technical Community College, earned in the late 1980s, and later returned to school to study business administration, completing a B.A. in 2011. He completed his legal training at Nashville School of Law, receiving his J.D. in 2015.
His academic mix of construction, business and law shapes the practical perspective he brings to cases. Early technical coursework in surveying and construction materials testing is reflected in his certifications. He is a certified mold inspector and has credentials in surveying and construction materials testing from Chattanooga State Technical Community College. He also holds LEED accreditation from the US Green Building Counsel.
Kuebler is licensed to practice in Tennessee. In 2018 he earned a listing as a Rule 31 civil mediator with the Tennessee Supreme Court, a designation that allows him to serve as a court-approved neutral in civil matters. He has been a member of the Chattanooga Bar Association since 2016 and maintains ties to the local legal community.
Those technical qualifications and his mediator listing inform the work he takes on. He handles disputes where construction processes, environmental issues and property conditions intersect. In some matters his background in materials testing and mold inspection allows him to review reports and question testing methodologies. In others he supervises fact-gathering and coordinates expert analysis.
Kuebler and Associates, PLLC is listed as his office. At that firm he blends case work, mediation services and technical review. He files pleadings and participates in court hearings when litigation is required. He also accepts appointments and private referrals for mediation under Rule 31 and conducts independent inspections tied to property and environmental concerns.
Professionally he favors a direct style: clear written analysis and thorough technical review. He prepares reports that aim to explain technical issues in ordinary language. That approach helps judges, juries and clients see where the facts and the engineering intersect.
He continues to practice in Tennessee, handling matters that involve construction and real estate disputes, environmental conditions and civil mediation.