Houston
713.650.2776 Direct
713.650.2400 Fax
jmoynahan@winstead.com

Jennifer Moynahan is a member of Winstead’s Business Litigation Practice Group. She has experience with a variety of civil litigation matters, including business disputes, insurance recovery, and fiduciary disputes. During law school, Jennifer served as a judicial intern for the Honorable Justice Kevin Jewell of the Fourteenth Court of Appeals and the Honorable Judge George C. Hanks, Jr., of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas.  

Representative Experience

  • Assisted in representation of royalty owners in multi-million-dollar breach of royalty agreement dispute.
  • Assisted in representation of cryptocurrency company in multi-million-dollar breach of contract and fraud dispute. 
  • Assisted in representation of the Texas Department of Transportation in numerous eminent domain proceedings.    
  • Assisted in representation of a multi-national pipeline company in numerous eminent domain proceedings.
  • Assisted in representing national bank in breach of guaranty and loan agreement litigation.
  • Represented property management company in the eviction of a tenant in breach of the relevant lease and handled eviction trial regarding the same.
  • Assisted in representing client in arbitration proceedings involving a multinational telecommunications corporation.
  • Assisted in representing consulting company in multi-million-dollar breach of contract case involving their intellectual property rights in a new technology.

Search Tips:

You may use the wildcard symbol (*) as a root expander.  A search for "anti*" will find not only "anti", but also "anti-trust", "antique", etc.

Entering two terms together in a search field will behave as though an "OR" is being used.  For example, entering "Antique Motorcars" as a Client Name search will find results with either word in the Client Name.

Operators

AND and OR may be used in a search.  Note: they must be capitalized, e.g., "Project AND Finance." 

The + and - sign operators may be used.  The + sign indicates that the term immediately following is required, while the - sign indicates to omit results that contain that term. E.g., "+real -estate" says results must have "real" but not "estate".

To perform an exact phrase search, surround your search phrase with quotation marks.  For example, "Project Finance".

Searches are not case sensitive.

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