About Richard Ashe
Richard Ashe House is an attorney practicing in Tennessee. He entered Nashville School of Law in 1995 and earned his Juris Doctor in 1999. Those years shaped his legal grounding and introduced him to the practical side of law practice in a close-knit legal community.
After completing law school he began practicing in Tennessee. He has spent his career working in the state's legal system, handling matters that brought him into local courthouses and client meetings. Over time he moved into private practice and established his own firm, Richard House Law, to provide a steady point of contact for people seeking advice and representation.
House's practice reflects the rhythms of smaller firms. He manages casework, advises clients directly and oversees the administrative side of running a law office. That combination means he spends time both in front of judges and at the desk preparing filings and strategy. His experience includes courtroom appearances and transactional work typical of attorneys who serve individuals and local businesses in state matters.
Colleagues describe him as practical and matter-of-fact in how he presents options. He aims to give clients clear explanations of the legal process and likely outcomes, and to align legal steps with what clients need to accomplish. He keeps his arguments anchored in applicable law and local procedure, and he builds files that judges and opposing counsel can follow.
House is licensed to practice in Tennessee and has built his practice around the legal environment of that state. He stays engaged with the procedural and substantive developments that affect clients who have state-court issues. He emphasizes responsiveness; clients who call his office typically deal directly with him rather than through layers of staff.
Outside court schedules and client meetings, he handles the business of maintaining a small law firm. That work includes intake, case management and the practical decisions that keep a practice running day to day. It also means adapting to changes in court rules and filing systems that affect how cases proceed.
He currently focuses his practice through his firm, Richard House Law, serving clients across Tennessee through representation in state courts and related legal matters.