Charles Kevin Grant
Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz, PC
Charles K. Grant's experience includes defending clients in complex employment litigation, including class actions and collective actions (wage and hour litigation); litigation concerning claims under Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA); wrongful discharge; sexual, racial, age, national-origin, disability, and religious discrimination and harassment under state and federal laws; Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA); retaliatory discharge; defamation; intentional infliction of emotional distress, tortious interference with contract; employment and non-compete agreements; protection of trade secrets; drug-testing; conspiracy; reductions in force; and the Worker Adjustment Retraining and Notification Act (WARN).
His clients also include licensed professionals such as lawyers, physicians and dentists, whom he has represented before licensing boards. Mr. Grant has extensive federal and state trial experience, has tried more than 45 jury trials to verdict, has represented local, regional, and national clients in more than a dozen states, and has represented numerous clients in mediation and arbitration proceedings.
- Business Law
- Business Contracts, Business Dissolution, Business Finance, Business Formation, Business Litigation, Franchising, Mergers & Acquisitions, Partnership & Shareholder Disputes
- Employment Law
- Employee Benefits, Employment Contracts, Employment Discrimination, ERISA, Overtime & Unpaid Wages, Sexual Harassment, Whistleblower, Wrongful Termination
- Class Action
- EEO
- General Civil
- L & E Health Care
- Labor & Employment
- Tennessee
- Virginia (Inactive)
- West Virginia
- Shareholder
- Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz, PC
- Current
- Washington and Lee University School of Law
- J.D.
- -
- The Citadel
- B.S. | Business Administration
- -
- Harris Gilbert Pro Bono Attorney of the Year Award
- Tennessee Bar Association
- Grant received the Harris Gilbert Pro Bono Volunteer of the Year Award for his work on issues of disenfranchisement and restoration of voter rights. In 1996, Grant took on a case from the Nashville Pro Bono program to help a convicted felon who had served his time win back the right to vote. Inspired by that experience, Grant worked with a coalition of bar groups, radio stations and the Davidson County Election Commission to raise public awareness of voting rights restoration and identify those who might be eligible for reinstatement. Through that process Grant became one of the state’s foremost experts on the topic. He also discovered that state laws governing restoration of rights were out-of-date and inconsistent. Grant then worked with the Tennessee Bar Association to introduce and pass legislation to improve and streamline the process for restoring voting rights. He also was instrumental in planning town hall meetings around the state to explain the new law and help others pursue their rights. For his tireless advocacy on behalf of those seeking to redeem past wrongs, the association was pleased to present the award to Grant. The Harris Gilbert Pro Bono Volunteer of the Year Award is given annually to a private sector attorney who has demonstrated dedication to the development and delivery of legal services to the poor, and has performed significant pro bono work. The award is named for Harris A. Gilbert, who served as president of the TBA from 1994 to 1995 and whose dedication to legal services for the poor set a high standard for all Tennessee attorneys.
- Pro Bono Attorney of the Year
- Baker Donelson
- "Best of the Bar"
- Nashville Business Journal
- Recognized as among the best in the area of employment litigation defense.
- Tennessee State Conference President's Award
- NAACP
- Recognized for work streamlining process for returning voting rights to former felons deemed to be rebuilding their lives.
- President's Award
- Tennessee Bar Association
- Leadership of TBA's Diversity Summit.
- Legal Aid Society of Middle Tennessee and the Cumberlands
- Member, Board of Directors
- - Current
- Activities: For 40 years, the Legal Aid Society has been a place for low-income families to find a helping hand with legal issues involving money, family, housing, health care and domestic violence. Donations of both dollars and time make it possible for the Legal Aid Society to provide services in 48 counties through eight offices located in Clarksville, Cookeville, Columbia, Gallatin, Murfreesboro, Nashville, Oak Ridge and Tullahoma. In 2007 Legal Aid Society staff attorneys helped more than 6,010 people and their families. Volunteer attorneys, working through the Nashville Pro Bono Program and other local pro bono programs, worked on an additional 1,154 cases.
- Tennessee Supreme Court
- Member, Advisory Commission on Rules of Practice and Procedure
- - Current
- Tennessee Bar Foundation
- Fellow
- - Current
- National Employment Law Council
- Member
- - Current
- Nashville Bar Foundation
- Fellow
- - Current
- Tennessee Civil Jury Instructions
- LexisNexis