About Mr. Kimball G
Mr. Kimball G Orwoll built a legal career that began inside a law school classroom and extended into courtrooms across several jurisdictions. He entered Hamline University School of Law in 1977 and earned his J.D. in 1980. That foundational period set the tone for a steady practice spanning decades and multiple levels of the judiciary.
Straight out of law school he joined Petersen & Stephenson as an associate in 1980. Five years later he became a partner in a firm listed as Peterson & Orwoll, a step that shifted him from a supporting role to one of leadership inside the practice. In 1990 he launched his own practice, operating under the name Kimball G. Orwoll, Lawyer at Law. The record shows admissions to practice in Minnesota and in federal forums, including the Eighth Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court, which broadened the venues where he could represent clients.
Over the years Orwoll maintained active ties to professional organizations. He has been a member of the American Bar Association since 1980 and holds memberships in the Minnesota State Bar Association, the Olmsted County Bar Association, and the Minnesota Third Judicial District Bar Association, each listing his participation beginning in 1980 and continuing to the present. Those memberships reflect long-standing engagement with the legal community at state, local and national levels.
Orwoll’s career displays a familiar arc: early associate work, partnership, then a move to private solo practice. The records do not list specific reported cases or published legal scholarship under his name here, but they do show a practice capable of operating in both state and federal systems. His admissions allow appearances in trial and appellate settings. He has navigated firm management and client representation across several decades, adapting as legal practice and court procedures evolved.
He continues to operate his solo practice under the name Kimball G. Orwoll, Lawyer at Law. He represents clients in matters in Minnesota state courts and in federal forums, including the Eighth Circuit and, when appropriate, the U.S. Supreme Court.