Ed Silva, the Godfather, is down but not out. Not by a long stretch. At 83, he's still too tough. Boston tough.
Ed is hospitalized at Vanderbilt with lymphoma, after being transferred there from Williamson Medical Center in Franklin. I had a wonderful visit with him last night after work. He's in a tough spot but he's a fighter and there are many, many people pulling for him.
In my legal career, I've had two mentors that meant the most to me. Two men, lawyers, whom I turned to when things were darkest. When I had a problem, personal or professional. When I needed advice about a case or a client. When I needed business advice.
Steve Cox, who hired me at Manier, Herod, Hollabaugh & Smith, God rest his soul.
Ed Silva, who once tried to hire Mark Puryear and me, a couple of years after we started our law practice in Franklin, Puryear & Newman, in a small house at 401 Church Street.
Interestingly, Steve and Ed, similar in so many ways, were friends and colleagues as they shared a love of Nascar racing of all things. Ed Silva did all of Darryl Waltrip's and Sterling Marlin's legal work for many years. Steve occasionally called Ed to get the scoop on this or that racer or race. Small world , since both of them have had such an outsized impact on my legal career.
As I look back on three decades of practicing law in downtown Franklin, I can't remember how I got to know Ed Silva so well or how we became such close friends. Steve Cox made the introduction, by telephone, and I can recall us calling Ed about a case and the two of them ending up talking about Nascar. But I can't remember when or how our friendship developed.
In every small town, there is one lawyer whom everyone turns to when they have a legal problem. A series legal problem. He or she will handle it, most often discreetly with little or no publicity, behind the scenes, or refer it out to the person who needs to handle it. Somehow, everything and everyone in the legal community seems to run through or be connected to that lawyer. In Franklin, that lawyer was Ed Silva.
I'm struggling this morning, as I sip my coffee at 8th & Roast, to adequately describe how important Ed Silva has been to my legal career. So many stories. We've had cases against each other. We've mediated for each other. We've yelled at each other. We've laughed together. So much laughter. I've sat across Ed's desk from him on several occasions and sought his advice, professionally, and he's given it to me. Always on point. Always straight up.
My partner, Chas Morton, and I named him The Godfather years ago. Ed loved it. At one point, I had a set of business cards made for him. Heavy card stock. On the front, it said "Ed P. Silva." Underneath that, "The Godfather." On the back, it said "It's not personal. It's strictly business." He beamed when I gave them to him.
The Godfather.
The lawyer in Franklin that other lawyer went to for help. The lawyer in Franklin you knew you were in for a fight with when he appeared in a case against you. The lawyer in Franklin that people called, always, when they were in trouble. The lawyer in Franklin who could get things done. The lawyer in Franklin who kept all of the secrets.
I'll write more, I know, about Ed, in the coming days. I'll see him this weekend, too, along with many others.





