
5 minute read
Meet: Wills Clinic Coordinator Christian Cahill
where home recipients were provided free wills drafted by NSL students and executed under the supervision of licensed attorneys.
Irvin Kilcrease
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For Christian Cahill, teaching the Wills Clinic at Nashville School of Law is just another stop on his lifelong journey of learning.

“Every day, in every situation, and with every person you encounter, you have the opportunity to learn something. The flip side is that you can also use that as an opportunity to teach,” said Cahill, a 2016 graduate of NSL. “Studying at NSL has shifted the way I look at almost everything in my life. The fact that I’m able to give back something to NSL for all that it’s given me is just my pleasure.”
Cahill’s original intention for his law degree was so he could add a legal department to the international professional services company that he owns, Cahill & Dunn CHB, Inc. “But international law cases take so long to adjudicate, and there are so many intricate details, that it just takes an incredible amount of time,” he said. “I’m so unequivocally in love with the law, there’s no way I could just sit around and not do something with the law on a daily basis.”
As a solo practitioner, Cahill has a wide array of legal issues on his plate, including estate planning and civil litigation. Helping clients with estate planning is one of the most important aspects of his practice.
“Far and away, the most important thing to me is my family,” he said. “I look at estate planning as though it’s an opportunity to protect your family even after you’re gone.” It’s human nature to bury your head in the sand and not want to deal with something that makes you uncomfortable, Cahill said.
And thinking about death tends to make many people uncomfortable. “But when you can shift that paradigm and make them see it’s an opportunity to give one more gift to your family, to protect them one more time … It’s amazing how the conversation changes when people look at it through that lens.”
During his third and fourth years at NSL, Cahill participated in a collaboration with Habitat for Humanity led by instructor John Lewis
Once he was licensed, he continued working with the collaboration as one of the licensed attorneys. And in 2021, he joined NSL as the instructor for the yearlong Wills Clinic.
In addition to helping his students learn the subject matter, Cahill hopes they learn that kindness and compassion with clients are just as important in estate planning. “You need to establish trust with your clients, or you won’t be able to effectively help them. If we were in the medical field, you would call it our bedside manner.”
Cahill has also led a campaign since 2016 to provide a free one-page document with very specific instructions on how to draft a holographic will. “I want everybody in Tennessee who needs a will to have one. This is so important for everyone with minor children, because they don’t realize if they don’t put their wishes down in writing, it’s the State of Tennessee or the court system who decides where their children will go.”
A University of Mississippi graduate and former professional soccer player who has completed seven Ironman Triathlons, Cahill said his family will always come first. He and his wife, Gena, have two children: Lindzi Tilghman, an NSL graduate and attorney in Franklin, Tennessee, and son Yale, a sophomore pre-law student at Ole Miss.
Meet: Juvenile Court Custody Clinic Coordinator Evan Baddour
When Evan Baddour was a student at Nashville School of Law, he knew one thing: he didn’t want to practice family law when he graduated. Fast forward five years later, and family law is one of his main areas of focus in his Pulaski, Tennessee, law practice.

“I assumed those cases had too much drama, between parents and their kids. The reality is that for a new lawyer, that’s the most available type of case to take – whether court-appointed or divorce work,” he said.
Baddour, who teaches the Juvenile Court Custody Clinic at NSL, now makes a point to tell his students to be open to where their practice will take them. “It’s funny how certain we are about things. I was certain I didn’t want to do family law,” he said. It didn’t look appealing, and it didn’t seem like the type of work I would want to take home with me. But it’s important work.”
The clinic is a one-hour elective course designed for third- and fourth-year students to represent indigent clients in actual Davidson County Juvenile Court cases, which includes modifying existing parenting plans or creating new ones.
“The unique nature of this course is it’s like moot court in that students get to practice courtroom lawyering live and apply all the things they’ve been learning the first three years of law school,” Baddour said. “But unlike moot court, they’re representing real parents. And they’re operating under a limited license under Rule 7, under the supervision of licensed attorneys. These are clients who otherwise would be representing themselves, so they’re really providing a service to indigent folks in the Nashville area. And I love seeing how exciting it is for our students – when they start to realize this isn’t all about them, that their work is going to determine a child’s custody situation.”
Baddour was in the courtroom recently when the judge made his ruling, and the father stood up and hugged both students assigned to his case. “He was clearly grateful, but you could see it was an important moment for the students too. This was probably the first time they had been thanked sincerely by a client for the work they had done,” he said. After graduating from NSL in 2018, Baddour decided to return to his hometown of Giles County to practice with his brother, Colby Baddour, a 2011 NSL graduate.
“They say you shouldn’t partner with someone unless you really trust them. I can’t imagine anyone I trust more than my brother,” he said. “We definitely have different strengths and perspectives. We have different world views, in some cases. He likes to say he keeps me grounded, and I keep him thinking. We make a good team.”
Baddour, a graduate of University of Tennessee, Knoxville, is fluent in Spanish, volunteers to provide legal services to the disenfranchised of Middle Tennessee and has been called for a consult on several immigration cases of Spanish-speaking clients. He is also an elected Giles County commissioner.
He successfully argued a court case before the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals in 2021 which made national news headlines. In the State of Tennessee vs. Tim Gilbert, Baddour argued that Gilbert, a Black man being tried in the Giles County Courthouse, didn’t receive a fair trial for his convictions because significant historical symbols, including Confederate flags, were present in the jury room. His convictions were reversed, and he was granted a new trial.
“Those items are no longer in the jury room, fortunately. But subtle, systemic racism can still exist in our court system,” Baddour said.