Keith Morris
Attorney Keith Morris is the founding attorney of Keith Morris & Stacy Kelly, Attorneys at Law. Mr. Morris graduated from Texas A & M University in 1997. He achieved his Juris Doctor at the University of Houston Law Center in 2001. Since then Mr. Morris has devoted himself to the practice discipline of probate administration as well as litigation involving estates, probate, guardianships, fiduciary duty, commercial, and other general litigation. His firm represents individuals, small businesses, and larger corporations with general legal assistance, mediation, and litigation.
Mr. Morris has been named a 2015 Texas Super Lawyer, an H Texas Magazine and Houstonia Magazine Top Lawyer, and has received the highest peer-reviewed rating by Martindale-Hubbell® of AV Preeminent®. He has also achieved a perfect 10.0 rating by Avvo. He has worked for Harris County and other Texas counties in a fiduciary capacity as Ad Litem, Administrator and Guardian handling decedent estates.
- Probate
- Probate Administration, Probate Litigation, Will Contests
- Estate Planning
- Guardianship & Conservatorship Estate Administration, Health Care Directives, Trusts, Wills
- Texas
- State Bar of Texas
- University of Houston Law Center
- J.D.
- Texas A&M University - Texas A&M International University
- B.A. | Political Science
- “Best Lawyer”
- Best Lawyers in America
- Texas Super Lawyers
- Texas Super Lawyers
- H Texas Magazine Top Lawyers
- H Texas Magazine
- Houston’s Top Lawyers
- Houstonia Magazine
- Texas Rising Stars
- Texas Rising Stars
- National Guardianship Association
- Current
- National College of Probate Judges
- Current
- Texas Guardianship Association
- Current
- Houston Bar Association
- Current
- Houston Association of Debtors Attorneys
- Current
- Fiduciary Duties in Real Estate Transactions and Beyond,
- Tarrant County Probate Bar Association
- COVID-19 Has Increased Demand for Estate Planning. Here is How to Do It Right
- Texas Lawyer
- Agents and Managers for Athletes, Actors and Musicians and the Related Fiduciary Duties
- The State Bar of Texas
- Signing’ Without Signing: What Every Estate Planner Should Know About the Federal E-Sign Act and the Texas Uniform Electronic Transactions Act
- Montgomery County Bar Association
- Website
- Website