If you would like to speak with an attorney on any matter, please contact Rick Detwiler.

“One of the pleasures of my professional life was the honor of practicing law with Reece Williams,” said Callison Tighe Managing Member Rick Detwiler. “He was always so kind and generous with his time and wisdom. He was a legend. So many things in one man. And what a storyteller. I don’t think I ever left his office without a laugh and a smile on my face. He loved practicing law and was genuinely devoted to the profession and improving how we lawyers treat each other. It is difficult to describe how much he meant to us at the firm, and how much he will be missed.”

It may seem there has been a D. Reece Williams serving as an attorney in South Carolina forever. But really, it just goes back to the generation after the Civil War. The first Reece Williams was the son of a veteran who came home to the cotton-mill town of Lancaster and became a judge.

The latest attorney of that name was just preparing to retire when he passed away, capping a long and distinguished career.

Reece Williams III focused his practice at Callison Tighe on his main professional strength, trial advocacy. He was deeply experienced in areas including personal injury, professional liability, commercial and government litigation. He tried numerous cases resulting in verdicts in excess of a million dollars. He was also a certified mediator and arbitrator.

After growing up in Lancaster, he received a degree in English from the University of North Carolina before earning his Juris Doctor from the University of South Carolina School of Law.

He was always going to be a litigator. “I used to spend a lot of time at my daddy’s law office and at the courthouse when I got out of school, waiting for somebody to take me home,” he remembered. “I really enjoyed it. I loved it. I had this vision about what it meant to be a lawyer, and that meant being in the courtroom.”

His reputation in the courtroom extended beyond South Carolina, as attorneys across the country have sought his counsel. But he took no credit for what he called this “undeserved distinction… Being able to try a lawsuit is like being able to sing. It’s a natural ability.” But whatever you call it, he always loved it.

Mr. Williams said successful trial advocacy requires certain special qualities in an attorney. “You have to be a little bit nuts,” he said. After all, it involves performing in public, which calls for different skills and temperament “whether you’re singing or dancing or trying a lawsuit.”

He was not only a member of the invitation-only American Board of Trial Advocates, he served as its National President in 2000. He was also a member of the American Judicature Society and International Society of Barristers, and was president of the Richland County Bar Association in 2002.

His interests and community involvement extended beyond the bounds of the practice of law.

In 2016, he and his wife, Nancy, presented a valuable gift to the Thomas Cooper library at the University of South Carolina. It was the couple’s William Faulkner collection, including first editions of all 20 novels, plus an eclectic assortment of other rare books by and about the legendary Mississippian. The following year, the Williamses were named honorary life members of Thomas Cooper Society – not only as acknowledgement of the Faulkner gift, but for their many years of dedicated support of the University Libraries, the Irvin Department, the Thomas Cooper Society, and the Ex Libris Society.

  • U.S. Supreme Court
  • U.S. Court of Appeals 4th Circuit
  • U.S. District Court, District of South Carolina
  • South Carolina
  • South Carolina Supreme Court Certified Circuit Court Mediator

  • University of South Carolina School of Law, Juris Doctor
  • University of North Carolina, Bachelor of Arts in English

  • South Carolina Bar
  • Richland County Bar
    • President, 2002
  • American Board of Trial Advocates
    • President, 2000
  • American Judicature Society
  • International Society of Barristers
  • University of South Carolina Ex Libris Society Board of Directors, president, 2014
  • Salvation Army Advisory Board, life member
  • South Carolina Academy of Authors, board member
  • U.S.  Supreme Court Historical Society, member

  • Best Lawyers in America, Lawyer of the Year, Litigation – Real Estate, 2021; Litigation – Insurance, 2024
  • Best Lawyers in America, Litigation – Insurance, 2017 to present; Personal Injury Litigation – Plaintiffs, 2018 to present; Litigation – Real Estate, 2019 to present.
  • James Petigru Compleat Lawyer
  • South Carolina Trial Lawyer of the Year
  • Richland County Bar John “Tootie” Williams Distinguished Service Award
  • Martindale-Hubbell AV Preeminent rating

DISCLAIMER: THE FOLLOWING EXAMPLES ARE INTENDED ONLY TO BE REPRESENTATIVE OF MR. WILLIAMS’ PRACTICE. MR. WILLIAMS IS SOLELY RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS CONTENT.  THESE EXAMPLES ARE NOT INTENDED TO, AND CANNOT BE RELIED UPON TO PREDICT THE RESULTS IN ANY OTHER CASE.

  • WRB Ltd. Partnership v. County of Lexington, 369 S.C. 30, 630 S.E.2d 479, 2006 WL 1330864, S.C., May 15, 2006 (No. 26149.) In this suit, representing a landowner, the county was required to pay for property contaminated by an adjacent landfill based on inverse condemnation.
  • L-J, Inc. v. Bituminous Fire and Marine Insurance Company, 366 S.C. 117, 621 S.E.2d 33, 2004 WL 3540903, S.C., September 26, 2005 (No. 25854.) Representing the Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of South Carolina as amicus curiae, this appeal resulted in novel interpretation of policy provisions.
  • Hamiter v. Retirement Div. of the South Carolina Budget and Control Bd., 326 S.C. 93, 484 S.E.2d 586, 1997 WL 207997, S.C., April 21, 1997 (No. 24603.) This action successfully defended the Senate of South Carolina against a former employee.
  • Charleston Television, Inc. v. South Carolina Budget and Control Bd., 301 S.C. 468, 392 S.E.2d 671, 1990 WL 78076, , S.C., April 30, 1990 (No. 23201.) This was a complex dispute between competing broadcasters seeking South Carolina Educational Television as a tenant in which Education Television, the client, was successful.
  • Atkinson v. Belser, 273 S.C. 296, 255 S.E.2d 852, S.C., June 13, 1979 (No. 20986.) Representing the defendant, this was a successful defense to claims of unfairness in several real estate transactions.
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