The Legal 500

Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP

What we say about the firm's legal practice in London

Corporate and commercial

Within Flotations - small and mid-cap, Morrison & Foerster LLP is a third tier firm,

Led by Paul Claydon, Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP advised BHK on its £2m AIM IPO. Ed Lukins is also recommended.

Within M&A - lower mid-marketdeals, £50m-£250m, tier 4

Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP’s six-partner corporate group is best known for technology and healthcare sector work and, increasingly, natural resources. Paul Claydon heads the team, which includes James Gubbins and Natalie Diep. One of its largest recent deals was Claydon’s advice to Acambis on its £276m recommended takeover by Sanofi-Aventis.

Within Outsourcing and procurement, Morrison & Foerster LLP is a second tier firm,

Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP has ‘an amazing team of lawyers’ in its outsourcing group. Alistair Maughan chairs the global practice, and is ‘among the elite in his particular discipline’. The group recently advised HMRC on its £80m outsourcing contract with CapGemini and continues to do significant supplier-side work as a member of the TCS panel. Jon Edgell is recommended, and recently advised Lloyds TSB and new client Investec.

Within Venture capital, Morrison & Foerster LLP is a second tier firm,

Morrison & Foerster LLP, a major player in the VC arena globally with a strong focus on biotechnology, offers a full service from venture funding to exits. ‘Highly recommended’ partner Paul Claydon had an active 2008, closing notable deals for Plethora Solutions Holdings, Hunter-Fleming and Piramed.

Crime, fraud and licensing

Within Fraud - commercial and regulatory investigations,

Irwin Mitchell LLP acted for Mercury Tax Group in an HMRC investigation into an alleged multimillion-pound fraudulent tax plan. Sarah Wallace is ‘committed’, and Maurice Martin is a ‘very wily’ tax practitioner. Kevin Roberts left for Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP, and Sarah Cleary has joined DLA Piper UK LLP.

Dispute resolution

Finance

Within Debt capital markets, tier 6

Strong bank connections feed Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP London office, which also has an active debt trading practice for commercial loans and distressed debt.

Within Derivatives and structured products, tier 4

Peter Green and Jeremy Jennings-Mares at Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP have assisted over 25 banks with exposure to Lehman Brothers, unwinding CDOs and swap positions. Structured equity, credit and fund-linked deals are key strengths.

Human resources

Within Employment,

Ann Bevitt heads the practice at Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP.

TMT (technology, media and telecoms)

Within IT and telecoms, Morrison & Foerster LLP is a second tier firm,

‘A distinctly competent and trustworthy lawyer’, technology transactions group head Alistair Maughan continues to build a strong reputation at Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP, particularly for acting on user-side IT outsourcing deals for leading banks and, notably, for HMRC. However, the team has depth: the ‘brilliant’ Jon Edgell was crucial to securing the reappointment to the Lloyds TSB panel and attracting new instructions from Investec, while Chris Coulter acted for Odeon UCI, and David Skinner advises both user and supplier-side clients.

Within Overview,

Many of the US firms have also been growing their IT and telecoms practices. These include Latham & Watkins - also building its media and entertainment team; Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP - also a leader for life sciences corporate work; and Mayer Brown International LLP - which has lost music industry veteran Robert Allan to niche media firm Michael Simkins LLP. Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy LLP remains very strong at providing IT and telecoms outsourcing advice; and Weil, Gotshal & Manges and Covington & Burling LLP - which is extremely strong in life sciences - have been building their media and entertainment practices.

Within Pharmaceuticals and biotechnology, Morrison & Foerster LLP is a second tier firm,

Morrison & Foerster (UK) LLP has an ‘excellent’ corporate team in the life sciences sector, with a global practice that is strong in the US and Asia. London corporate lawyer James Halstead has been promoted to the partnership, and been seconded to the firm’s Tokyo office to build relationships between its clients and London. Commercial partner Julian Thurston has been advising Singapore-based S*BIO Pte on a development collaboration, while corporate partner James Gubbins has ‘done more deals than anyone’.


What we say worldwide

Please choose another Morrison & Foerster LLP office to view full details of what we say in that region, or choose from this list to view a specific editorial reference in context.

Belgium

Offices in Brussels

China

Offices in Shanghai and Beijing

Foreign Firms

Hong Kong

Offices in Hong Kong

India

Japan

Offices in Tokyo

London

Offices in London

Singapore

Offices in Singapore

Thailand

US

Offices in Washington DC, Walnut Creek, Sacramento, Palo Alto, New York, Denver, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, and McLean

Vietnam

Legal Developments in the UK

Legal Developments and updates from the leading lawyers in each jurisdiction. To contribute, send an email request to
  • Changes to the child visitor immigration rules from 1 January 2010

    From 1 January 2010, students from countries outside the European Economic Area will be able to apply to enter the UK for up to six months on an exchange or educational visit to a state-maintained school, a non-maintained special school, an independent fee-paying school or an independent non fee-paying school. They will not require entry clearance, unless they are nationals of countries who require a visa to enter the UK.
    - Penningtons Solicitors LLP
  • Introduction of biometric processing for tier 2 in-country applications  - a reminder

    Regulations extending identity cards for foreign nationals (ICFN) to skilled workers came into force on 6 January 2010. All tier 2 applications made inside the UK now involve the enrolment of the applicant's biometric information (fingerprints and photograph).
    - Penningtons Solicitors LLP
  • Pulling the plug on a television documentary:a case study

    Out of the blue, you receive a call from a broadcaster proposing to feature your company in a prime-time documentary. The broadcaster tells you that they have footage covertly filmed inside the company by a former employee, accompanied by sensational stories from the same source. After carrying out initial enquiries, you ascertain that the former employee left on bad terms, the footage is staged and the stories are, in some instances, untrue and, in others, wildly exaggerated. You must stop the broadcast. Your next two calls are to your PR or communications team and your media lawyers. These teams will work alongside each other to apply just the right amount of pressure on the broadcaster to ensure that the story is dropped. You gather your team around you and prepare as much information as possible to hand over to the media lawyers.
    - Schillings
  • Stop the press:the Reynolds defence

    Reynolds v Times Newspapers Ltd & ors [2001] established a new defence for libel claims in which the story is in the public interest and the publisher acted ‘responsibly’. The Reynolds defence is designed to protect serious investigative journalists acting in good faith and reporting on matters of public interest. Even where allegations are false and hugely damaging to the subject of the publication, publishers can make use of this defence. However, Reynolds has also provided a useful tool for subjects to delay, if not prevent, publication of defamatory allegations.
    - Schillings
  • Fire safety: a burning legal issue

    Heralded as the biggest overhaul of fire safety legislation in 40 years, the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order (FSO) 2005 was introduced in April 2006 with the intention of streamlining existing legislation, reducing the burden on business and improving safety by allowing fire authorities (the bodies responsible for fire brigades in each area) to concentrate on high-risk premises; all of which are laudable aims. But over three years on what’s been the reality?
    - Bond Pearce LLP
  • Terminal traps in insurance contracts

    The terms of any insurance contract can be categorised as conditions, conditions precedent, warranties, or terms delimiting the risk. The status of conditions and warranties in mainstream contract law is reversed in insurance law. Breach:
    - Debevoise & Plimpton LLP
  • Samsun Logix and developing cross-border insolvency issues

    With the ever-increasing trend towards globalisation, it is often observed that there are few businesses of reasonable size that do not trade across borders. At this difficult economic time, many are likely to have overseas suppliers, contractors, counter-parties and customers undergoing financial difficulties. For these businesses, cross-border insolvency issues are cropping up frequently. At the same time, the law is rapidly developing, with cases on cross-border insolvency issues regularly brought before the English and foreign courts.
    - Holman Fenwick Willan
  • Agreement finally reached on EU telecoms reform package

    On 5 November 2009 the European Commission announced that the European Parliament and Council of Ministers had finally reached an agreement on the issues outstanding in the reform of the EU Common Regulatory Framework for Communications (CRF). Disagreement between the European Parliament and the member states (via their position in the Council) earlier this year had threatened to significantly delay the vital reform of the CRF.
    - SJ Berwin LLP
  • Dispute resolution clauses in IT contracts

    Given the relatively frequent occurrence of disputes over contracts for the supply of software and IT services, dispute resolution provisions are an important feature. In the recent case of Ericsson AB v Eads Defence and Security Systems Ltd [2009], the High Court had an opportunity to consider such provisions and their relationship with rights of termination and remedies under the contract.
    - SJ Berwin LLP
  • Under review: current consultations and market studies

    THE EU and UK competition authorities are carrying out several consultations on revised legislation and guidance, as well as a number of market studies.
    - Berwin Leighton Paisner LLP