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Commercial Litigation Lawyer in Dallas

Commercial litigation is how business disputes get resolved when negotiation fails: broken contracts, partnership and shareholder fights, unpaid invoices, fraud and misrepresentation, non-compete and trade-secret disputes, and vendor or customer conflicts with real money at stake. Unlike personal injury work, most commercial cases are billed hourly, which means the economics of the dispute matter from day one — a good litigator starts by asking whether the amount at stake justifies the cost of fighting, and what leverage exists to settle early. The majority of business disputes settle before trial, often after the discovery phase makes each side's evidence visible. The lawyer's job is as much strategy and risk pricing as it is courtroom work: knowing when a sharp demand letter resolves things, when to file first, and when arbitration or mediation is the cheaper path.

The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex is one of the fastest-growing metro areas in the US, with a corporate relocation boom that drives steady demand for business, employment, and real estate legal work.

Commercial Litigation Lawyers in Dallas

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When to hire a commercial litigation lawyer

Involve a litigator the moment a dispute involves real money or an ongoing business relationship you can't afford to lose — not after positions have hardened. Concrete triggers: you've received a demand letter or been served with a lawsuit, a counterparty has stopped performing on a significant contract, a partner or shareholder dispute is affecting operations, or you suspect an ex-employee took clients or confidential data. One immediate obligation people miss: once litigation is reasonably anticipated, you must preserve relevant documents and messages. Deleting emails or texts — even routinely — can damage your case more than the underlying dispute.

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Commercial Litigation Lawyer FAQ

How much does commercial litigation cost?

Most commercial litigators bill hourly, and contested cases that reach discovery routinely run into five figures or beyond. That's why the first conversation should include a budget and a cost-benefit assessment, not just the merits. Ask for a phased estimate — demand letter, pleadings, discovery, trial — and what each phase might change. Some cases fit alternative arrangements: flat fees for defined stages, or contingency for strong collection claims.

How long does a business lawsuit take?

A demand letter can resolve a dispute in weeks. A filed lawsuit that goes through discovery typically takes a year or more to reach trial, depending on the court's calendar, and complex cases run longer. Most cases settle along the way — commonly after discovery clarifies the evidence or after a key motion is decided. Arbitration is sometimes faster, but not always cheaper.

My contract has an arbitration clause. What does that mean?

It means your dispute likely goes to a private arbitrator instead of court. Arbitration is usually confidential, has limited appeals, and moves on its own schedule. Whether that helps or hurts you depends on the clause's terms — who picks the arbitrator, where it happens, who pays. Have a lawyer read the clause before you assume you can sue, and before you respond to a demand.

Can I make the other side pay my attorney's fees?

Only sometimes. The American rule is that each side pays its own fees unless a contract or statute says otherwise. Many commercial contracts include a prevailing-party fee clause — if yours does, it changes the settlement leverage significantly in a strong case. If it doesn't, factor your own legal spend into any decision about how far to push the fight.

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