Affectionately known as P.K., Paul Kent Bramlett is the owner of the firm, with offices in Nashville and Winchester, Tennessee.
He has practiced law for over 56 years, maintaining a practice in Mississippi from 1969-1980, and in Tennessee since that time.
P.K. has had an active license in both Mississippi and Tennessee for over 35 years, handling litigation in both states. More recently, his legal resume has included cases in Alabama, California, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, New York, Texas and Virginia. Many of those cases involved significant verdicts upheld at the highest appellate levels in Mississippi, Tennessee and Alabama.
P.K. is widely regarded across the nation as an attorney of admirable skill and uncompromising integrity, and has thus maintained the highest AV Preeminent rating granted by Martindale-Hubbell for over 40 years.
P.K. devotes a major part of his practice to civil litigation, with an emphasis on securities and consumer class actions, antitrust and Erisa litigation. He is proud to share his time and experience with the next generation of his family firm (son, Robert), built through the years with the support of the love of his life, his wife of almost sixty years, Shirley.
P.K. graduated with honors from David Lipscomb University, Nashville, Tennessee, in 1966. After graduate work at George Peabody College (now Vanderbilt University), P.K. attended the University of Mississippi School of Law, and graduated with a Juris Doctorate in 1969.
In addition to his legal career, Mr. Bramlett has performed as a musician with the Nashville Symphony and as a soloist both in the United States and seven European countries. He has also been actively involved in the music business as a producer, arranger and performer in the studios. With his love of music, he has continued to perform throughout the years, and has also provided legal representation to numerous people in the music industry.
He is also President of the Kent Bramlett Foundation, Inc., a 501(c)(3) established in honor and memory of his firstborn son, Kent, who died tragically in a car accident in 1992. The Foundation has restored and operates Hundred Oaks Castle, in Winchester, Tennessee, as a tangible, visible effort of love and endurance in the face of tragedy.