Attorney Haley Moody Featured in Hamilton County Herald
Miller & Martin litigation attorney Haley Moody was featured in the February 2, 2023 issue of theย Hamilton County Herald.ย In the article titled “Marathon Ethic Pays Off for Moody,” Haley Moody, a former NCAA Division I cross country athlete, was interviewed about her recent promotion to Member at the law firm and how she pushes herself with an emphasis on persistence and fortitude to reach her full potential with respect to her law career and representation of clients, as well as motherhood.
Haley Moody is a Member in Miller & Martin’s litigation department where she concentrates her practice on commercial litigation representing large and small companies, as well as individuals, in federal and state courts. She guides clients through complex business disputes, involving breach of contract claims, negligence, misrepresentation, and fraud. Haley also defends clients involved in product liability and personal injury litigation, including serving as national coordinating counsel for a consumer healthcare products company defending hundreds of ongoing product liability cases nationwide. She has experience in a variety of industries, ranging from life sciences and manufacturing to construction and insurance.
The full text of the article is below with permission from the author.ย
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A few years before becoming an attorney, Haley Moody demonstrated her willingness to take on grueling challenges when she competed as a NCAA Division I cross country athlete. While conquering long distances on foot appealed to her, she says, she was more drawn to the test of her personal mettle and her complete reliance on her own skills and fortitude.
โCross country is a solo endeavor,โ muses Moody, 34. โYouโre on your own. How hard you work is up to you. Or, you can slow down, and no one will know. Itโs an individual challenge. Thatโs what drew me to it.โ
As a collegiate athlete, Moody offered no reason for anyone to question if sheโd slowed down; instead, she pushed herself to reach her potential. Seeking an even greater challenge in 2021, she leapfrogged over the Holy Grail for most cross country runners โ the classic 26.2-mile marathon โ and completed the 50-mile JFK ultramarathon in Maryland.
Although Moody tends to be more pragmatic than dramatic, she does admit the race was punishing in a way nothing else sheโs experienced as a runner had been. โI had a lot trouble walking up and down stairs afterward,โ she says.
Moody is now applying this same mindset to her practice at Miller & Martin, where sheโs served as a commercial litigation attorney since 2016 and was recently promoted to member.
โItโs a lot of working nights, a lot of coming in on weekends, a lot of me with my head down, working day in and day out, trying to help our clients as best as possible,โ she says. โItโs a lot of time and effort but also worth it.โ
Moody did not forge a path to the law with intent but rather through a series of decisions based on what she believed would be a good match for her interests and abilities, she says.
After growing up in Morristown, Moody ventured south into neighboring Alabama to compete as a member of the Crimson Tideโs track and field team and study history. She did well in both pursuits, earning accolades as a runner and graduating summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts.
Moody also benefited from an academic experience she not only loved but that also taught her vital skills that pointed her toward law school.
โI loved history, as well as my professors,โ she says. โThey taught me how to think critically and write well. But I didnโt want to teach history, and law school seemed like the most interesting option.โ
Tulane University Law School lured Moody even farther south to New Orleans with what she says were reasonable costs and an attractive scholarship. The history buff in her loved the city, while the genial southerner in her appreciated the welcoming nature of the cityโs people.
โI love New Orleans. Itโs my favorite place. It has a lot of history and character, and itโs imperfect. I love that the buildings are a little rubbly and the sidewalks are cracked from 200-year-old oak trees breaking up from below. Itโs flawed and beautiful, and everyone just wants you to hang out with them.โ
As appealing as New Orleans was to Moody, she was unable to secure work in the city after she graduated from Tulane, so she turned her eyes northward.
โI applied to several places, but nothing was sticking, which I took as a sign that I wanted to return to Tennessee, where my family still lives. I applied to firms in a few different cities, landed an interview at Leitner (Williams, Dooley & Napolitan in Chattanooga), and connected well with the people there.โ
After a productive two-year stint at Leitner, where Moody says she gained valuable experience many associates donโt receive, she was drawn to the promise of a civil litigation practice at Miller & Martin.
Getting ready for the interview must have felt like training for a cross country run, given the way Moody describes her preparations.
โLynzi Archibald, whoโs also a member here, asked me if I wanted to interview for a position. I worked very hard to nail the interview and make sure I got the job,โ Moody recalls.
Since then, Moody has worked even harder to โstick around,โ she says. Her days โ as well as her nights and weekends โ consist of connecting with clients, learning about their businesses, determining how she can help them, and delivering a quality product. It comes as no surprise that Moody says this requires โa lot of long hours and hard work.โ
As will being a member of the firm, she adds.
โBeing named a member of Miller & Martin means a lot to me. Itโs not a steppingstone to somewhere else; itโs what I wanted. Going forward, the expectations are the same as they have been: do excellent work and provide great client service.โ
Moody says thereโs one thing that can entice her to curtail her hours on the job โ her family. Consisting of her husband, physical therapist John Gilpin, and their young daughter, Moody says her family gives her great pleasure, whether sheโs running with her spouse or playing with their child.
โMy daughter is chaotic in the most wonderful way,โ Moody smiles. โWeโll be hanging out at the house or the park, and Iโll see her learn something, or do something she wasnโt able to do last week, and Iโll just laugh. Watching her is fun. Sheโll point at something and say a word, and then Iโll look, and lo and behold, sheโs articulated what it is.โ
Work is always waiting in the wings, but for those moments, Moody is running a marathon of a different kind. It tests her mettle in ways sheโs never experienced, she says, but sheโs glad sheโs not alone.
The Moody File
Attorney Haley Moody of Miller & Martin is a member of the local American Inns of Court, the Chattanooga and Tennessee bar associations, and the Defense Research Institute. Moody’s community involvement includes memberships with the Associated General Contractorsย of East Tennessee and the Chattanooga Women’s Leadership Institute.