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Contract problem? Put the deal, breach, and deadline in one place.

Request a Mississippi contract dispute review. Share what agreement existed, what went wrong, the dollar range or performance issue, and whether a demand letter or lawsuit is already involved.

Bud Sheppard, Attorney Submitting this form does not create an attorney-client relationship and does not extend a deadline to answer a lawsuit or file a claim.

Contract Dispute Review

Use this guided review for breach of contract, unpaid invoices, contractor disputes, fraud, real-estate contracts, business disputes, demand letters, and collection issues.

Review starts here Answer the first questions so the firm can see the contract type, breach, amount, and deadline pressure.
  • No flags yet

What kind of contract dispute is this?
What documents, money, or deadline details exist?
Check anything you have. The agreement, payment history, and communications usually matter most.
Urgency flags help identify court deadlines, answer deadlines, and time-sensitive performance issues.
Where should the firm follow up?
Step 1 of 3: start with the facts that route the review.
1

Basic Facts

You share the agreement type, breach, amount or performance issue, and deadline.

2

Proof Check

The firm identifies the contract, payment records, demand letters, and court posture needed for review.

3

Attorney Follow-up

If the matter fits the firm, Bud or the office follows up about consultation terms and next steps.

Contract disputes need the deal, the breach, and the proof.

The first review of a contract dispute usually asks three questions: what agreement existed, what was promised, and what proof shows the breach or defense.

A focused review helps the firm understand whether the matter calls for a demand letter, negotiation, lawsuit response, collection strategy, or a different path.

The agreement

Written contracts, invoices, estimates, emails, text messages, and course of dealing can all matter.

The breach

The firm needs to know what was promised, what happened instead, and when performance failed.

The amount or remedy

Money damages, property rights, specific performance, and business disruption drive strategy and economics.

The posture

A dispute before court is different from a demand letter, filed lawsuit, judgment, or collection issue.

Do not wait if a lawsuit or answer deadline exists.

If you have been served with a lawsuit, have a response deadline, or believe records may disappear, call 601-688-4110. A website form does not extend any deadline.

Start Contract Review