Yennes LawAttorney-Led Legal Counsel in Tampa
Tampa Contract, Lease, and Property Counsel

Tampa legal counsel for contracts, leases, evictions, closings, and foreclosure matters driven by documents, deadlines, and next steps.

Yennes Law helps Tampa businesses, landlords, tenants, property owners, buyers, and investors understand what their documents require and what should happen next.

Attorney-led review starts with the documents controlling the matter.

Intake is built to capture deadlines, county, property details, and the other side involved.

Clear next steps for Tampa matters that need timely legal attention.

Matter Intake

A structured intake path for legal matters that need attorney review.

1

Submit the matter type, deadline, county, and short timeline.

2

We review urgency, basic scope, and the documents needed before any deeper analysis.

3

You receive a next step for attorney review, scheduling, or a prompt call-back if timing requires it.

Attorney-Led Review

Adham Yennes

Florida counsel serving Tampa clients in contract, lease, eviction, closing, and foreclosure-related matters where documents, deadlines, and the next step affect the legal position.

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Approach

Document-first

Review begins with the contract, lease, notice, or closing file that defines the issue.

Market

Tampa-focused

Florida law, local property issues, and deadline pressure often shape the next step.

Conversion

Attorney review

The intake collects the details needed to determine whether the matter should move into attorney review or an urgent call-back.

Intake Process

The first step is to collect the facts and documents that shape the legal issue.

The intake asks for deadlines, documents, property details, and the other side involved so review can begin with useful context.

What to prepare

1

The controlling document: contract, lease, notice, closing package, or foreclosure notice.

2

The live deadline: hearing date, cure window, notice date, or closing date.

3

The county, property address if relevant, and who is on the other side of the issue.

What the form should include

1

Matter type, deadline date, county, property address, and opposing party.

2

Enough timeline detail to determine whether the matter calls for attorney review, an urgent call-back, or later scheduling.

3

A clear disclaimer that the form does not create an attorney-client relationship and is not a secure channel for highly sensitive information.

4

A prompt call if the matter involves a live notice, hearing, filing, or closing date.

What Clients Need

Clear guidance, a defined process, and attention to the written record.

The site is meant to help prospective clients understand fit, prepare the right materials, and move quickly when a deadline is already active.

A clear explanation of what the firm handles and what belongs elsewhere.

Preparation guidance that tells clients which documents and dates matter first.

Practice summaries that make contract, lease, closing, eviction, and foreclosure work easier to distinguish.

A calmer reading experience that keeps attention on the legal issue instead of unnecessary clutter.

Attorney Review

If this matter is active, the next step should happen now.

Request attorney review online, or call immediately for matters involving a live deadline, notice, hearing, or closing date.

CallRequest Review