Clients benefit from Melissa’s thorough research and carefully written appellate briefs.
Melissa has served as the principal attorney for numerous appeals, including in arbitration, personal injury, insurance coverage, and business dispute cases. In addition to briefing and arguing appeals, Melissa regularly guides clients through the process of preserving the record in the trial court, attacking judgments in the trial court through posttrial motions, staying enforcement of judgments, and perfecting an appeal. Melissa also frequently partners with trial teams to develop legal strategies and preserve appellate issues during trial. She also maintains an active pro bono practice, and recently secured a favorable published decision reversing an order denying her client’s request to renew a domestic violence restraining order.
In 2019, Melissa clerked for Judge Steve Kim, a magistrate judge at the United States District Court for the Central District of California. The following year, she clerked on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals for Judge Ferdinand Fernandez. She returned to Horvitz & Levy in 2021 to continue her career as an appellate attorney and now manages the appellate fellowship program that first brought her to the firm in 2017.
Melissa graduated magna cum laude from Loyola Law School, where she served as Chief Research Editor of the Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review, and was elected to the Order of the Coif. Melissa obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree in History, summa cum laude, from George Washington University.
Representative Matters
Vallejo City Unified School District v. Superior Court (2026)
California Court of Appeal holds that a school district is immune from liability for an off-campus student suicide.
Read MoreSamuelian v. Life Generations Healthcare, LLC (2024)
In a published opinion, California Court of Appeal holds that noncompetition provisions are binding on partial owners of a business unless the provisions are unreasonable, reversing confirmation of a $40 million arbitration award.
Read MoreCheesman v. Ford Motor Co. (2024)
Washington Court of Appeals affirms defense summary judgment in product liability action.
Read MoreG.G. v. G.S. (2024)
California Court of Appeal holds that the Domestic Violence Protection Act protects against all types of abuse, including stalking, such that courts may not distinguish between physical and nonphysical abuse when deciding whether to renew a restraining order.
Read MoreSanchez v. Superior Court (2022)
California Court of Appeal issues alternative writ, causing trial court to vacate order that compelled Horvitz & Levy client to submit to mental examination.
Read MoreNikmanesh v. Walmart (2022)
Federal district court reduces $27.3 million punitive damages award to $800,400 and denies plaintiff attorney fees.
Read MoreCredentials
Education
- Loyola Law School J.D., Order of the Coif, magna cum laude, 2017
- George Washington University
Bachelor of Arts in History with minors in Psychology and Judaic Studies, summa cum laude, 2014
Clerkships
- Hon. Steve Kim, U.S. District Court, Central District of California
- Hon. Ferdinand Fernandez, U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit
Bar Admissions
- California
- U. S. Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit
- U.S. District Court, Central District of California
Professional Associations
- Association of Southern California Defense Counsel
- Los Angeles County Bar Association, Barrister Officer, Vice President of Outreach, Bench and Bar Committee
- Women Lawyers Association Los Angeles
Awards
- Received First Honors Awards for the highest grades in Introduction to Income Tax, Marital Property, and California Civil Procedure.
Publications
- The Uncertain Future of Summary Judgment in California (Oct. 30, 2018) Law360
- U.S. Supreme Court Update: Pending Cases of Interest In October Term 2017, ABTL Report (Ass’n Bus. Trial Law., L.A.), February 2018
- Note, Special Education in Adult Correctional Facilities: A Right Not A Privilege (2017) 50 Loyola L.A. L.Rev. 93.
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