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Andrew Strickland
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Biography
I am a solutions-oriented, service provider with a background in real estate and business law. Prior to law school, I worked in real estate sales, property management, and investments. Throughout law school, my focus was on real estate and business. As a legal professional, I have held positions as an attorney providing services to the low-income and as a judicial law clerk working for a trial court judge providing research, legal drafts, and recommendations. Now, as a legal professional at Woehrle Dahlberg Jones Yao, I supplement my knowledge and experience with those in the firm to provide legal services to my clients.
Practice Areas
- Business Law
- Business Contracts, Business Dissolution, Business Finance, Business Formation, Business Litigation, Franchising, Mergers & Acquisitions, Partnership & Shareholder Disputes
- Real Estate Law
- Commercial Real Estate, Condominiums, Easements, Eminent Domain, Homeowners Association, Land Use & Zoning, Mortgages, Neighbor Disputes, Residential Real Estate, Water Law
- Consumer Law
- Class Action, Lemon Law
Additional Practice Area
- Information Privacy
Fees
- Free Consultation
- Credit Cards Accepted
Jurisdictions Admitted to Practice
- District of Columbia
- District of Columbia Bar
- Virginia
Languages
- English: Spoken, Written
Professional Experience
- Judicial Law Clerk
- Superior Court of DC
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- Law clerk to Judge Puig-Lugo
- Staff Attorney
- Legal Services of Northern Virginia
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- Practice areas: Housing, Consumer, and Elder.
- General Counsel Fellow
- Atlanta BeltLine, Inc.
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Education
- Mercer University Walter F. George School of Law
- J.D. (2016)
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Legal Answers
1 Questions Answered
- Q. Can a former landlord sue for damages if he didn't notify as per required under the contract, hence then there are none?
- A: Question: "If I win as per the terms of our contract (no proper notification,, no communication until way way later, no nothing) do the damages still exist then to sue me later?"
There's a few things going on with your question and some assumptions that I need to make in order to tailor it. Let me start with the assumptions: (1) You have a claim against Landlord; (2) Landlord shows up to small claims and disputes the claim; (3) you win final judgment in your favor in small claims based on a breach of contract (your lease with landlord).
To answer your question under these assumptions, you need to understand that small claims is a lower-level trial court with rights to ... Read More
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