Business litigation and practical counsel for contracts, disputes, and commercial legal problems.
Grantham Law Firm PLLC helps businesses, owners, and professionals address commercial disputes, contract issues, litigation strategy, and recurring legal needs with direct access to experienced counsel.
Direct access, practical advice.
The firm provides straightforward legal counsel and litigation representation grounded in business disputes, contracts, commercial litigation, and in-house legal judgment. Clients work directly with attorney John Grantham, not a large team or rotating point of contact.
Commercial Litigation & Disputes
Representation and strategy for contract disputes, business conflicts, demand letters, discovery, depositions, and Texas commercial litigation.
Business & Contract Counsel
Counsel on contract review and negotiation, business disputes, settlement agreements, and day-to-day legal needs.
Outside General Counsel Support
Recurring or project-based legal support for businesses that need help reviewing contracts, managing disputes, and making legal-risk decisions.
Practical strategy when a dispute becomes a legal problem.
Grantham Law Firm PLLC represents clients in business and commercial disputes, including contract disputes, demand letters, payment disputes, business relationship conflicts, discovery, depositions, and Texas commercial litigation. The firm focuses on practical dispute strategy, early case assessment, negotiation, litigation, and resolution.
Legal help before every issue becomes a lawsuit.
The firm also assists businesses with contract review and negotiation, settlement agreements, vendor and customer issues, and outside general counsel support. For businesses without a full-time legal department, Grantham Law Firm PLLC provides practical legal guidance on a project, hourly, or recurring basis.
Contact the Firm
Reach out by phone or email to discuss whether Grantham Law Firm PLLC may be able to assist with your matter.
Please do not send confidential or time-sensitive information unless and until the firm has agreed to represent you. Contacting the firm does not create an attorney-client relationship.