Susan Clouthier graduated from the University of Houston Law Center in 2007 and has been licensed over fifteen years. Susan Clouthier, along with her associates, have handled numerous appellate matters in all different practice areas including civil, criminal, and family law. The firm has notable success in both State and Federal courts of appeals due to Susan's high standard of excellence and ability to unravel even the most complicated cases.
Susan is passionate about helping her clients overturn unfavorable verdicts, she stays in communication with her clients, and she fights hard for justice. Since she practices exclusively appeals, and she has a deep understanding of the rules and procedures that are associated with the complicated appellate process. She also dedicates time to explain the complicated legal process to her clients, so they fully understand.
Clouthier Law, PLLC operates differently than many other law firms, with deep empathy for the difficulty of navigating the justice system and enabling strong communication between attorneys and clients. The attorneys at the firm try to make things as smooth as possible during a very challenging time.
Ms. Clouthier is licensed to practice in the State of Texas, State of Mississippi, the United States Supreme Court, the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits, and federal district courts in Texas, Colorado, and Mississippi.
- Appeals & Appellate
- Civil Appeals, Federal Appeals
- Criminal Law
- Criminal Appeals
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Credit Cards Accepted
Visa, Mastercard, American Express
- Mississippi
- The Mississippi Bar
- Texas
- State Bar of Texas
- ID Number: 24062673
- 1st Circuit
- 4th Circuit
- 5th Circuit
- 6th Circuit
- 7th Circuit
- 8th Circuit
- 9th Circuit
- 10th Circuit
- 11th Circuit
- U.S. Bankruptcy Courts for Southern, Western, Northern and Eastern District of Texas
- U.S. District Courts for Southern, Western, Northern and Eastern District of Texas
- U.S. Supreme Court
- English: Spoken, Written
- Owner / Attorney
- Clouthier Law
- - Current
- University of Houston Law Center
- J.D. (2007)
- -
- Baylor University
- Bachelors of Music Performance (2000) | Music Performance, General
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- Best Lawyer
- Expertise
- Top Rated Attorney
- American Association of Attorney Advocates
- 10 Best
- American Institute of Criminal Law Attorneys
- Top Tier Lawyer Top 2%
- American Trial Academy
- Member
- Esteemed Lawyers of America
- Texas Bar College
- Member
- Current
- American Bankruptcy Institute
- Member
- - Current
- Texas Bar Association-- Appellate Section
- Member
- - Current
- Houston Bar Association
- Member
- - Current
- Christian Legal Society
- Member
- - Current
- Oral Argument, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
- Oral Argument, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
- 2255 Hearing, Federal District Court
- Q. In an appeal whàt does set for submission on briefs mean?
- A: Intermediate courts of appeals do not grant oral argument often, and if the briefing provides the facts and law needed to resolve the issues raised on appeal, they will set the case for submission on the briefs. Not setting for oral argument does not indicate which way they are leaning or whether you have meritorious claims on appeal, only that the court does not believe oral argument will aid in their resolution of the case.
- Q. I turned in my appellate brief to First Court Of Appeals Harris county, Tx. Will court accept anymore documents.
- A: You could file a letter of supplemental authority, especially if new case law has been decided since your briefing that might be relevant to the outcome.