Firm News
OBJ Prevails in GA Supreme Court
Category: news
OBJ Organizes People’s Law School
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Orr Joins SCOTUS Amicus Brief
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Bankruptcy and Judicial Estoppel
Category: articles
Category: news
Category: news
Category: news
Category: articles
Gainesville, Georgia
641 Spring St SE
Gainesville, GA 30501
770.534.1980
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Athens, Georgia
325 N. Milledge Ave.
Athens, GA 30601
706.425.8740
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Atlanta, Georgia
3355 Lenox Rd, Lenox Center, Suite 850
Atlanta, GA 30326
404.214.3661
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With offices in Athens, Atlanta, and Gainesville, Georgia, the attorneys and lawyers at Orr Brown Johnson LLP serve clients throughout North Georgia, including Clarke County, Fulton County, Hall County, Gwinnett County, Jackson County, Barrow County, Banks County, Dawson County, Lumpkin County, White County, Habersham County, Stephens County, Franklin County, Forsyth County, Madison County, Oconee County, and the Georgia cities of Athens, Atlanta, Gainesville, Lawrenceville, Suwanee, Buford, Braselton, Hoschton, Jefferson, Winder, Commerce, Dawsonville, Dahlonega, Cumming, Toccoa, Cleveland, and Watkinsville. The firm's lawyers handle a wide variety of cases, including those involving personal injury, wrongful death, auto accidents, trucking collisions, breach of contract, business or commercial disputes, employment discrimination, unpaid wages or overtime, real estate or probate issues, and insurance disputes.
Wyc Orr Comments on New Supreme Court Rule
OBJ Senior Partner Wyc Orr was quoted in the June 3, 2010, edition of the Gainesville Times about the Georgia Supreme Court’s announcement that it was changing its rules in response to a new law that increased the preparation fee of the record in a case from $1.50 per page to $10.00 per page. The Supreme Court’s new rule will ameliorate the terrible effect that the 500% fee increase would have on Georgia’s litigants. When contacted for comment, Orr stated that he hoped that the Georgia Court of Appeals would follow the Supreme Court’s lead and effectively undo the devastating impact of this new law that effectively restricts the public’s access to the courts.