Tim Almohamad is an associate in the firm’s Construction Practice Group. Tim primarily represents oil and gas operators and drilling companies in state and federal courts in Texas, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Colorado, New Mexico, Alaska, and Oklahoma, and also represents construction, retail, and other commercial clients in Texas. His practice focuses on complex commercial litigation, catastrophic personal-injury matters, construction-defect disputes, breach-of-fiduciary-duty claims, general corporate advice, employment law, and premises-liability cases.
In his first year of practice, Tim has worked to help clients secure favorable results. In Bandera St. Cloud, LLC v. DFW Constructors Holdings, LLC, in Bexar County, Texas, he won summary judgment on behalf of the owner of a medical facility, removing a mechanic’s lien originally filed for approximately $800,000 against the property. Tim also helped obtain summary judgment for a financial services client in a wrongful foreclosure dispute in the Northern District of Texas by showing that statutory foreclosure notice requirements were satisfied. He also has worked on partial summary judgments eliminating a variety of claims, including gross‑negligence claims, negotiated several tenders and assumptions of the defense, and litigated numerous pretrial motions.
Tim earned a J.D. from the University of Texas School of Law and a B.A. in Government, with a minor in History, from the University of Texas at Austin. After completing his first year of law school, he transferred from South Texas College of Law Houston to Texas Law. During his first semester at South Texas, Tim received CALI awards for top exam performance in all four doctrinal courses and, by the end of his first year, had earned six CALI awards in Civil Procedure I, Contracts I, Evidence, Torts I, Torts II, and Criminal Law.
At Texas Law, Tim participated in the Mock Trial Team and the American Journal of Criminal Law and completed the Texas Venture Labs Practicum, where he helped the pre‑revenue startup ContextQA develop a go‑to‑market strategy. During law school, he also served as a policy analyst in the Texas Senate for Sen. Paul Bettencourt and interned for Judge Beau Miller in the 190th Civil District Court of Harris County. Tim is admitted to practice in Texas and Colorado.