Burlingame, California Lawyer ,Chris DeWys , Lawyer Guide

Chris DeWys - Burlingame, California

About

Chris DeWys makes a speciality of civil litigation managing commercial and home actual property, enterprise disputes, neighbor issues, land use, and landlord-tenant matters. Chris also handles Danfoura Law P.C. s probate management exercise and litigation. Chris has been in civil litigation seeing that 2008 and joined Danfoura Law P.C. in 2015 after four years of solo exercise and two years at a boutique civil litigation firm in San Francisco. Chris is dedicated to energetic consumer engagement for the duration of the litigation manner and making sure that purchaser desires are finished both efficiently and with value. Chris moved to San Francisco in 2003 after developing up in Tempe, Arizona and acquiring his B.A. and M.UEP from Arizona State University. Chris then obtained his J.D. from Golden Gate University in 2008. If Chris is not in Court or inside the office you could possibly find him at the mountain within the winters and tenting on the coast in the summers.

Location

Legal Issues

    Real Estate Law
    Commercial Real Estate, Condominiums, Easements, Homeowners Association, Land Use & Zoning, Neighbor Disputes, Residential Real Estate
    Business Law
    Business Contracts, Business Dissolution, Business Formation, Business Litigation, Partnership & Shareholder Disputes
    Landlord Tenant
    Evictions, Landlord Rights, Rent Control, Tenants Rights
    Trademarks
    Trademark Litigation, Trademark Registration
    Probate
    Probate Administration, Probate Litigation, Will Contests

Costs

    Certificates

    No Certifications

    Languages

      Accepted Jurisdictions

      Experience

        Educations

        Video Call/Chat Support

        No Video Call/Chat Support
        Back To Top
        query($sqlprofile); $rowprof = $resultprof->fetch(); echo "gimage".$gimage= $rowprof['image']; include ("message-popup.php"); */ //if ( mb_eregi( $ara, $oku ) ) { // // // echo $ara; // //} else { ?>