​ENTREPRENEURSHIP LAW CLINIC

Hands-On Experience Forming Business Entities

Entrepreneurship Law Clinic at Texas A&M LawStudents in the Entrepreneurship Law Clinic (ELC) help clients choose, form, and operate their businesses. In the ELC, you will be assigned actual clients with real-world business interests to represent. Your work may involve sole proprietorships, partnerships, corporations, or LLCs, with needs ranging from formation to effective operation, depending on the needs of your clients. Our clients come from a wide range of industries, from restaurants and breweries to software and medical device companies, and we try to match students with clients from an industry the student is interested in.

​Service work in the ELC typically includes:

  • client interviewing
  • providing advice regarding choice of entity and structuring considerations
  • preparing entity formation documents
  • preparing organizational / governance documents (such as articles of organization for an LLC, or bylaws and a shareholder agreement for a corporation)
  • preparing a memorandum to clients regarding the maintenance and operation of their new entities
  • preparing various contracts, such as confidentiality agreements, non-disclosure agreements, and employment or independent contractor agreements
  • managing client files throughout using law practice management software of the sort common to law firms large and small

Our goal is providing each student with a learning experience unsurpassed in even the best law firm or in-house environments. Your client work will be supervised and written work product reviewed by one or more practicing professors, each with years of experience forming and operating of business entities. You will be introduced to and work with the same materials these attorneys use in daily life, develop the oral and written skills needed for effective client work, collaborate with your colleagues on tougher issues, and enjoy multiple opportunities for feedback along the way.

The Entrepreneurship Law Clinic will be four units and will be offered together with the Community Development Clinic.

Course Information

Course catalog description:
Work with entrepreneurs on transactional matters in connection with the founding and/or development of a small business; emphasis on legal issues involved in starting a business including choice of entity, entity formation and founding agreements. May be taken three times for credit. May be repeated for credit.

Pre-requisites/Co-requisites:
In order to enroll in a Fall or Spring clinic, you must have completed or be concurrently enrolled in Professional Responsibility. Students who have not completed Professional Responsibility will be automatically enrolled in a section when admitted to a clinic. There are limited waivers of this requirement, but only if a student worked full-time in a law firm or other position requiring the handling of confidential information for one year or more before attending law school.
Regarding summer clinics, Professional Responsibility is preferred but not required. In lieu of the Professional Responsibility requirement, the Summer Clinic will include an intensive training on ethics.

Recommended Courses:
Business Associations

Eligibility to Enroll:
• Completed first year of law school in a JD program
• Must be in good academic standing
• No Honor Code violations

Credit Hours/Experiential Hours:
​Four to six (4-6) hours credit
Class meets once per week for two (2) hours, with an additional eight and one-half (8.5) hours of client work per week, scheduled by each student to fit within their individual calendar, subject to approval by the professor.
Counts towards oral skills requirement.

Terms available:
Fall, Spring

Evaluation:
Graded

Dropping Clinics:
Given the unique nature of clinics and the ethical obligations that arise for our attorneys when they expose students to actual client cases, students will not be allowed to drop a clinic after the first week of classes.

Faculty:
Full-time and Adjunct Professors

Location:
To facilitate client meetings in a law firm environment, classes and most working hours take place in the clinical offices (Star-Telegram Building, downtown Fort Worth – a five minute walk from the main campus). However, meetings with professors may occur on the main campus, and client work can sometimes be done remotely.

Considerations

Since clinics operate differently than doctrinal, writing, and other simulation courses, students must keep in mind the following before enrolling:

  • All clinical courses meet in the Clinical Program Office located in the Star-Telegram Building at 307 W. 7th Street, Fort Worth, Texas. It is a 0.6 mile walk from the Law School building to the clinical space.

  • All 3 and 4 unit clinic courses require that students spend a minimum of 6-8 hours per week at the clinical space.

  • Per our Academic Standards, students are expected to submit logs of their time to their supervising attorneys to receive credit. Your instructor will provide you with direction of how to keep track of your time.

  • In order to provide all of our students with a clinical opportunity, you cannot enroll in more than one clinic in any one semester.

  • You may not enroll in an externship and a clinic in the same semester unless authorized by the Associate Dean for Experiential Education.

  • If you plan to be employed by a law firm, government agency, or other unit engaged in providing legal services during the semester, you must disclose the employer’s information so the clinical program can determine if there are any conflicts that prevent the student from enrolling in the clinic.

  • Once a student is admitted to a clinic, the student must commit to attend a mandatory Clinical Skills Training the first Friday of the semester from 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.

  • Unless a special accommodation is necessary, free student parking is not available in the clinic space. The cost to valet in the Star-Telegram Building is $10. There is additional parking in the area that ranges from $6 to $10. Street metered parking is available on a first-come, first-served basis.

Student Application

Students are advised to review the Clinic Application & Registration Information Packet before submitting an application.

The student clinic application is only available online:

  • Use this new, single CLINIC APPLICATION LINK to apply for first-time clinic enrollment in any Fall or Spring semester clinic, for available Summer semester clinics, or for second or subsequent semesters in a clinic.
  • Please note that as part of the application submission, you will be required to upload your current resume as a PDF.

There is no Howdy registration for clinics. Instead, applications are reviewed and students are accepted during registration period on a rolling basis. Priority is given to applications we receive by the priority deadline -- please refer to the Course Schedule for the current priority deadline. Students are encouraged to apply as early as possible in order to secure a seat in the clinic of their choice for the semester they would like. Once a seat has been secured, registration is handled on your behalf by a faculty member or administrator in the Clinical Program Office. Questions about the clinics or the application process can be answered by emailing experiential@law.tamu.edu.

Once a student is admitted to a clinic, the student must commit to attend a mandatory Clinical Skills Training the first Friday of the semester from 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Conflicts:
Clinics operate as law firms. Conflicts may arise if students enroll in a clinic and also work in a law firm or government agency in the first semester. If you plan to intern, extern, or otherwise, work during the semester you are in clinic, you will need to discuss with Dean Herrera. On the application you will be asked to indicate if you plan to intern, extern, or work elsewhere during the semester(s) you are applying for.