The Legal 500

Brodies LLP

15 ATHOLL CRESCENT, EDINBURGH, EH3 8HA
Tel:
Work 0131 228 3777
Fax:
Fax 0131 228 3878
Web:
www.brodies.com
Email:
Glasgow, Edinburgh

Brodies is a top-quality, client-focused, leading UK commercial law practice delivering the highest level of legal services to a strong UK public and private sector client base, with an international perspective and delivery capability.

The firm: With 64 partners and over 440 staff across its offices in Edinburgh and Glasgow, the firm is a major presence in the Scottish market and celebrates rated expertise in its core business areas of real estate, corporate, banking and financial services, technology, information and outsourcing, employment, litigation and private client law – rated ‘top tier’ in nine key practice areas in the leading legal directories, while the firm is also home to some of the country’s leading experts.

Brodies has grown to become a market leader in Scotland for Scottish jurisdictional work, while presenting a clear option to the market for major Scottish and cross-border transaction work.

The firm regularly supports the international strategies of its clients, and its membership of European and global legal networks strengthens its offering in foreign jurisdictions. The firm was shortlisted for ‘The Legal Business Awards 2008’, ‘The Legal Week’ ‘British Legal Awards 2008’ and The Lawyer Awards 2009.

Our clients single the firm out for its proactivity, pragmatism and appetite to understand their business and its needs.

Types of work undertaken: The corporate team advises significant private corporates and public bodies. The team has exceptional credentials in regulatory, privatisation and government work and offers particular expertise in outsourcing, corporate finance, PPP and projects, corporate tax and IP/IT, remaining strong in the public authority, transport, education and energy sectors. Last year the deals were bigger and better, more complex and certainly more public, often attracting UK-wide media coverage.

The banking and financial services team offers a full range of services and has significantly strengthened its team, won important new clients and been involved in some of the biggest and most complex finance transactions in Scotland.

The firm is ranked top tier for Scottish property by both The Legal 500 and Chambers & Partners, and has many ‘leading individuals’. Brodies’ commercial property team now stands at over 70 lawyers – one of the largest and strongest real estate offerings in the Scottish market. The firm has strengthened all property sectors, ensuring a comprehensive service for any type and size of property deal or project in Scotland. Expertise includes investment and finance, commercial, residential and mixed-use development, outsourcing projects, out-of-town and high street retail, leisure, hospitality and licensing, agriculture and estates, urban regeneration and construction.

Litigation and dispute resolution also remain key strengths. Brodies’ large team of commercial litigators is renowned for providing robust advice and successfully representing clients’ interests in and out of court. The firm has particular strengths in commercial and contractual disputes, risk management, health and safety, property litigation, professional negligence and personal injury. The firm adds value through specialist expertise in public law and human rights and offers accredited specialists in employment law, corporate recovery and insolvency.

The legal directories are unanimous in their placing of Brodies’ exceptional employment law team in the top tier for employment, in recognition of its standing as an innovative employment practice. The team, one of the largest in Scotland, offers a mix of contentious and non-contentious expertise and specialises in litigation and dispute resolution, mediation and alternative dispute resolution, employee relations, corporate transactions support, pensions, training and development, remuneration and benefits, HR project support, contract and policy development and executive appointment and termination.

The firm’s significant corporate tax practice complements its strong corporate, property and private client practices. The exceptional tax team offers an excellent service in relation to VAT, stamp duty and taxation of property.

Brodies’ private client group, complemented by the firm’s experienced family law team, is one of the strongest and most respected in Scotland. Its lawyers have outstanding reputations for their work in estate planning, wills, trusts, tax, divorce, separation and custody, asset protection, charities and executries, including multi-jurisdictional and cross-border projects.

Number of UK partners 64
Number of other UK fee-earners 217

Above material supplied by Brodies LLP.

Legal Developments in the UK

Legal Developments and updates from the leading lawyers in each jurisdiction. To contribute, send an email request to
  • Student employees – new restrictions on employment

    On 10 February 2010 a Statement of Changes to the Immigration Rules was laid before Parliament which is due to come into force on 3 March 2010.
    - Penningtons Solicitors LLP
  • Landlord & Tenant Briefing

    Dilapidations in commercial premises – ten points to consider
    - Bircham Dyson Bell LLP
  • Being a helpful Landlord may be a mistake!

    Most landlords and their solicitors try to resist the impulse to be helpful, however, in these recessionary times when landlords are concerned to avoid empty space, there may be the temptation to take shortcuts to ensure a letting proceeds. In circumstances where it is intended that Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 (the 1954 Act) should not apply to the tenancy, i.e. that the tenant should not have the benefit of security of tenure, then occupation before the lease has been finalised (and the appropriate ‘contracting-out’ steps taken) is a potentially dangerous step and needs to be taken only when the landlord has fully comprehended the potential consequences.
    - Bircham Dyson Bell LLP
  • New regime for approval of major transport projects set to ‘switch on’

    The Planning Act 2008 (the Act) introduces a new regime designed to speed up the planning and, in turn, the delivery of infrastructure projects of national significance. For transport projects, it is one of the most important pieces of legislation in recent years. The new procedure will have to be used for any third runway at Heathrow, amongst other high-profile projects.
    - Bircham Dyson Bell LLP
  • Divorce and the media: the courts, the pay-outs and the speculation

    The rising divorce rate and some well-publicised settlements running into tens of millions of pounds have focused attention on a growing issue in divorce cases: just how far can spouses go to obtain information about their partner’s financial affairs?
    - Schillings
  • Top ten really useful cases of 2009

    If you want your panel solicitor to‘get off the fence’, need to know when a cause of action accrues or wondered whether the judiciary live in the 21st century, the following cases from 2009 provide some really useful guidance. With professional negligence claims on the increase, whether you are giving or receiving legal advice, the cases discussed below highlight practical points for all legal advisers to be aware of.
    - Bond Pearce LLP
  • The twilight zone: legal issues for directors

    there is no legal definition of the term ‘twilight zone’ (perhaps derived from the cult TV series, the writer would like to think), which is now widely used to describe a period of trading when a company has, or is predicted to have, insufficient cash to pay its debts as they fall due. This might be an immediate cash-flow crisis or the problem might be anticipated many months ahead.
    - Holman Fenwick Willan
  • Cloud computing:key issues for SMEs

    Although many definitions exist, broadly speaking ‘cloud computing’ is the outsourcing of specified IT functions via the internet (the cloud) to provide or receive services that would otherwise only be available if the end user had installed the appropriate hardware and/or software on desktops, or on local networks controlled by that organisation itself. Such services may include the use of software over the internet or remote storage of business data by a third-party provider. One benefit of this is that businesses can structure payment for these services differently (for example pay-as-you-go or on a subscription basis), rather than having to pay large sunk costs for long-term software licences, and the purchase and installation of IT infrastructure necessary to support the services locally.
    - SJ Berwin LLP
  • Commission victorious in ‘regulatory holiday’ action brought against Germany

    On 3 December 2009, following an action brought by the European Commission under article 226 of the EC Treaty (now article 258 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU) the European Court of Justice (ECJ) confirmed that Germany had failed to comply with its obligations under the European regulatory framework for telecommunications (the Common Regulatory Framework (CRF)). The ECJ’s judgment in European Commission v Germany [2009] confirms that Germany acted unlawfully by adopting a national law excluding ‘new markets’ from regulation – so called ‘regulatory holidays’.
    - SJ Berwin LLP
  • New Commission

    On Friday 27 November 2009 the new European Commission, which will begin its mandate early in 2010, was announced by Commission President José Barroso. This announcement followed a week after the appointment of Herman Van Rompuy and Catherine Ashton as the President of the European Council and the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy respectively, the two new roles created by the Lisbon Treaty, which entered into force on 1 December 2009.
    - Berwin Leighton Paisner LLP