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Unveiled: The Hot 100 2016
By Natasha Bernal 25 January 2016
This year’s Hot 100 gathers together the best lawyers in the business – the cream of
the crop from in-house, private practice and the bar.
The list this year features 49 female lawyers, 10 barristers, and two recently-elected
managing partners alongside top class lawyers in litigation, finance, energy, real
estate, life sciences, and regulation.
Emma Moloney, News UK
The 30-strong in-house cohort gathers together key general counsel from a variety of
businesses, including British American Tobacco’s Jerome Abelman, BT’s Rachel
Canham and News UK’s Emma Moloney. Meanwhile the management section
includes innovation drivers such as Herbert Smith Freehills’ Libby Jackson and
Clifford Chance’s David Bickerton.
The Hot 100 2016 includes lawyers who have truly made a difference in the wider
business world – among them Associated British Foods’ Paul Lister, who helped to
establish a long-lasting $14m settlement following Primark’s Rana Plaza factory
disaster in India, or DWF insurance partner Michael Kingston, who adapted his
expertise to advise on key shipping safety regulation in the Arctic.
This year’s raft of barristers have reached new heights. Blackstone Chambers’ Tom
de la Mare QC
Tom de la Mare QC, Blackstone Chambers holds the record of acting on 10 of the 25
major cartel claims to hit the UK, while Brick Court Chambers’ Sarah Lee was
awarded silk earlier this year after making a name for herself as one of the most
prolific juniors when it comes to FTSE 100 clients battling in court.
Innovation has continued to be at the heart of the Hot 100. Some of the lawyers in this
year’s list have transformed their own practice to go above and beyond their fee-
earning duties – Bird & Bird’s Felicity Reeve and her push to expand her commercial
practice into less conventional sports, or Addleshaw Goddard’s Andrew Rosling, who
spearheaded the development of an app for doing business in Africa alongside his fee-
earning responsibilities, are just two examples.
Felicity Reeve, Bird & Bird
All of the 100 lawyers on the list have made an impact not just on the performance of
their firms, companies or chambers, but also the wider business community. Hundreds
of recommendations from across the industry poured in to support their nominations –
find out why they made the list here.
The Hot 100 2016: The Bar
John Beggs QC, Serjeants’ Inn Chambers
John Beggs QC
Over the past 25 years John Beggs QC has built up a leading practice acting on
defendant police work. The Serjeants’ Inn Chambers tenant acts for individual
policemen and women, chief constables and police authorities – as well as the Police
and Crime Commissioner – on a wide range of cases and inquiries.
In 2015 Beggs continued his representation of the Hillsborough match commanders
before the Hillsborough inquest; a job that has kept him on his feet for months and put
him firmly in the public gaze. More inquest work is scheduled for this year, with the
inquiry into the 1995 death of trainee soldier Cheryl James at the Deepcut Barracks.
With a raft of similarly high-profile cases on his caselist for the coming year there is
no doubt that Beggs is the go-to man for a policeman facing the courts.
Guy Blackwood QC, Quadrant Chambers
Guy Blackwood QC, Quadrant Chambers
Quadrant Chambers silk Guy Blackwood QC had a fantastic 2015, setting a precedent
on the way hypothetical evidence should be dealt with in court as well as handling a
number of high-profile sovereign immunity cases. In the former, Blackwood
successfully defended Arab Insurance Group (Arig) against claims from Axa
Versicherung that material non-disclosures from Arig had led Axa to write two
reinsurance treaties in a specific way. While Axa proved that Arab Insurance Group
had not disclosed the relevant information when it should have, Blackwood persuaded
Mr Justice Males disclosure would not have influenced the way Axa’s treaties were
written.
The decision was particularly significant given that the new Insurance Act will come
into force in 2016.
On the sovereign immunity front Blackwood was successful in having a $100m
(£70m) New York suit against hedge fund Talos dismissed on the grounds that it was
oppressive and also represented Taurus Petroleum in a case against the Iraqi
Government that will now go to the Supreme Court.
Next up, Blackwood is due to appear in a case concerning a ship hijacked by Somali
pirates.
Tom de la Mare QC, Blackstone Chambers
Tom de la Mare QC, Blackstone Chambers
The past 12 months have seen Tom de la Mare QC set the wheels in motion for a
career-defining era in competition litigation.
Of the 25 major cartel claims to hit the UK courts he has been instructed in 10, with
three ongoing. De la Mare was also appointed to the Competition Appeal Tribunal
expert working group that delivered its game-changing review last September, having
a fundamental impact on the court’s Rules of Procedure and championing the rights of
consumers and businesses potentially harmed by a breach of the law.
The eminent silk has a self-confessed “weirdly varied practice”, which meant his
headline case of last year was Lumsdon v Legal Services Board, otherwise known as
the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates case. Despite the Supreme Court
throwing out de la Mare’s client’s case in June, it recast the proportionality test in
cases involving measures that impede EU legal rights.
De la Mare was no stranger to the Supreme Court last year, appearing before it three
times on a range of competition and policy cases.
He has also taken on a primary role campaigning on criminal justice cuts.
Richard Hermer QC, Matrix Chambers
Richard Hermer QC, Matrix Chambers
Amid a raft of high-profile cases on which Matrix Chambers’ Richard Hermer QC
appeared last year, two in particular stand out.
The first was the successful £55m settlement with Shell on behalf of the Bodo
community in the Niger Delta. Instructed by regular client Leigh Day, Hermer led
advice which saw the oil giant settle out of court in January with almost 16,000
farmers and fishermen whose livelihoods were devastated by oil spills in 2008 and
2009.
At the other end of the year Hermer spent four days in the Supreme Court leading a
four-day hearing in the latest stage of the battle brought by Libyan dissident Abdul-
Hakim Belhaj, who claims he was the victim of unlawful rendition by the security
services.
Indeed, the UK’s highest court will be a regular destination for Hermer in the coming
year, with three cases set down to be heard. Expect the high-profile battles to keep on
coming.
Anneli Howard, Monckton Chambers
Anneli Howard, Monckton Chambers
Anneli Howard has a string of top-name clients including Visa Europe, BT, Orange
Telecom, Ryanair and the London Stock Exchange. She is also standing counsel to
the Civil Aviation Authority.
In her field of competition law she is fast becoming the go-to junior at the bar, having
earned a reputation for being a collaborative team player who gets the job done.
In the past year Howard successfully acted for Visa in its bid for a Commercial Court
summary judgment in the ongoing interchange fees litigation. In doing so she
persuaded the court to strike out more than 30 years’ potential damages sought by a
group of 12 retailers, totalling over £500m. She will appear for Visa again later this
year in a six-month trial on liability.
Howard thrives on managing cases, applying practical methods of cutting court
procedures to help clients achieve their goals in a timely and cost-efficient manner.
Sarah Lee, Brick Court Chambers
Sarah Lee, Brick Court Chambers
Brick Court Chambers tenant Sarah Lee has become a staple of telecoms litigation
and is one of the bar’s most prolific juniors when it comes to FTSE 100 clients
battling it out. Her rising profile was recognised with her appointment to silk in
January 2016.
Within telecoms, Lee began acting for BT, her principal client, in 2004. In 2014 alone
she appeared for the telecoms giant in the Court of Appeal, Supreme Court and
Competition Appeal Tribunal dealing with the extent of Ofcom’s jurisdiction over an
appeal in relation to termination charges.
But Lee, who began her career at Brick Court as a pupil in 1990, is a also go-to for
Government work as well as acting for private and public companies. An example is
her lead appearance for the Government in a landmark European case concerning the
Working Time Directive last year.
Now that she has just been awarded silk, Lee will be even more in demand.
Jolyon Maugham QC, Devereux Chambers
Jolyon Maugham QC, Devereux Chambers
For a tax barrister, Devereux Chambers’ Jolyon Maugham QC has an unusually high
profile.
Just over two years ago Maugham began a blog with the aim of better informing the
public about tax in a bid to start a “more nuanced debate”. That blog has made him
the go-to commentator on tax issues.
Maugham is also involved in driving the political debate. He advised former Labour
leader Ed Miliband on tax in the run-up to the general election and continues to advise
both the Conservative and Labour parties on tax issues.
Maugham’s case list is impressive, with a series of major disputes progressing
through the courts last year and this year. Notably, having taken silk in February
2015, he is set to lead the Supreme Court appeal in a claim brought by film financiers,
after previously being led in the lower courts.
Somehow, Maugham also finds time to sit on the Bar Council’s policy and diversity
committee.
Laura Newton, Wilberforce Chambers
Laura Newton, Wilberforce Chambers
At just seven years’ call Wilberforce Chambers junior Laura Newton has been dubbed
a “superstar” by QCs for her record of bringing in significant commercial litigation
mandates and being a “driving force” in complex case management.
Newton was the most junior barrister to be hired by the set from closing 11 Stone
Buildings last October. She was immediately put to work on six cases, with
Wilberforce sources praising her ability to immediately get to grips with the details.
She is known for her skill on the marketing side of building a practice, succeeding in
securing instructions as a result of networking conferences around Europe. She was
instructed as sole counsel on a dispute involving allegations of fraudulent
misappropriation being heard in the High Court in 2016, and brought in a QC to the
case once its counterclaim was valued at $100m.
Her varied commercial and fraud practice has also seen her take a lead role running
the day-to-day aspects of a $4bn arbitration, a Kazakh mining dispute and a headline
BVI trial.
Mark Simpson QC, Fountain Court Chambers
Mark Simpson QC, Fountain Court Chambers
Fountain Court Chambers’ Mark Simpson QC spent much of the early part of 2015 on
his feet defending Gibson Dunn & Crutcher partner Peter Gray against allegations that
he misled the High Court. Although Gray’s fight was unsuccessful the dispute
highlighted the sort of complex work that forms Simpson’s caseload.
As well as Gray’s appeal, due in February, 2016 looks to be a banner year for the
professional disciplinary specialist. Among the cases to come is a £200m claim by a
special purpose vehicle, Gemini, against two firms of valuers in relation to the
valuation of a portfolio of 37 properties. The case is the biggest valuation claim ever
brought in the UK and is listed for three months in October.
Simpson also has a thriving practice advising firms and companies on investigations
and regulatory issues.
Described as being “as hands-on as I have ever seen a silk”, he receives plaudits for
his gravitas and his leadership skills.
James Willan, Essex Court Chambers
James Willan, Essex Court Chambers
The past 12 months have seen Essex Court Chambers’ James Willan undergo a career
transformation from junior barrister to one of the big names at the bar in civil fraud
and banking and finance litigation, despite only being 10 years’ call.
In one of the most high-profile cases of 2015, Willan acted for Djiboutian
businessman Abdourahman Boreh in his case against the African nation, securing the
discharge of a $100m freezing injunction due to dishonesty by the claimants’
solicitors and misconduct by the claimants.
Willan is not afraid of wading into complex global disputes: he is also acting for
Yukos in its claim to enforce arbitral awards worth $500m
set aside in Russia in allegedly corrupt judicial proceedings.
Willan’s banking work saw him act for Italian investment bank Dexia Crediop,
securing a judgment dismissing allegations of fraud and mis-selling. Judgment was
secured during a hearing so his silk mentor was never brought into the case.
Willan’s instructions see him going above and beyond traditional junior mandates,
being brought in by top silks on strategic case management and coming up with those
“clever points of law” that take the case where it needs to be, according to one of his
peers.
The Hot 100 2016: Commercial
Alex Chapman, Sheridans
Alex Chapman, Sheridans
Sheridans head of gaming law Alex Chapman leads a team that works on almost
every major video game deal going. At one stage this year his team were advisers to
the developers of six of the UK’s 10 top-selling video games.
One major deal was 2014’s $2.5bn (£1.75bn) sale of Mojang’s Minecraft to
Microsoft. Chapman and his team advised the company behind the pioneering game,
which sold 54 million copies since its release in 2009, on its sale to Microsoft.
Other matters this year include advising the developers of games such as ‘No Man’s
Sky’, and ‘Score! Hero’.
He also structured the deals for the first large-scale game to benefit from UK Games
Tax Credits and subsequently advised a number of developers on similar
arrangements, worth more than $250m to UK video games development.
Felicity Reeve, Bird & Bird
Felicity Reeve, Bird & Bird
It has been a great year for Bird & Bird commercial partner Felicity Reeve, who
scored a major new client in the media and sports space.
The All England Lawn Tennis Club entrusted her to close a deal with the BBC for
Wimbledon broadcasting rights in the UK, a challenging process that also involved
negotiating the hotly contested rights with broadcasters worldwide.
When Reeve joined Bird & Bird in 1994 the firm had a nascent sports group, which
has now grown to 11 fee-earners representing all three of the UK’s most important
football bodies: the Football Association (FA), the Premier League and the Football
League. The FA was Reeve’s first client and the firm has been reappointed to its
panel. Last year Reeve also advised the British and Irish Lions on the appointment of
Canterbury as official apparel partner for the 2017 tour of New Zealand.
Reeve is now branching out into other sports such as horse racing, a new challenge
where the underlying principles are the same.
Sarah Wright, Olswang
Sarah Wright, Olswang
Major client work for Sarah Wright last year included gaining trademark work from
longstanding Olswang client Microsoft, which had not historically given the firm its
filing work. Wright was able to “get under the skin of the business” and has worked
with the company on a weekly basis to secure its trademark position in the market.
She also won Lipsy as a client and has worked alongside the fashion brand to boost its
anti-counterfeiting efforts. Since her instruction in April 2015 she has secured three
five-figure settlements from third parties selling copies of Lipsy’s designs alongside
images of the company’s celebrity ambassadors.
Alongside her new work Wright gained a top spot on her firm’s 10-strong advisory
board recently, motivated by her desire for better female representation at the firm.
The prospect of representing junior partners at the top level is a priority for her and,
so far, she has performed a perfect balancing act between management responsibilities
and fee-earning.
The Hot 100 2016: Competition
Isabel Taylor, Slaughter and May
Isabel Taylor, Slaughter and May
It is not often that lawyers get to be the first to test a new regime, but that is what
Slaughter and May competition partner Isabel Taylor got to do last year.
Taylor led the Slaughters team acting for Northern Powergrid on an appeal against the
Gas and Electricity Markets Authority on price controls for electricity distribution
network operators. The appeals, to the Competition and Markets Authority, were the
first to be made under a new regime introduced by regulation in 2011, and will boost
Northern Powergrid’s revenue by £11m.
Not only was this an extraordinarily successful outcome, but for Slaughters Northern
Powergrid was a brand new client, won in a pitch process.
The work was the icing on the cake of a busy year for Taylor, who also has a thriving
state aid practice with clients such as the Green Investment Bank and is the chair of
the Law Society’s competition section committee.
Claire Wright, Allen & Overy
Claire Wright, Allen & Overy
In March 2016 Claire Wright will have been at Allen & Overy (A&O) for 30 years.
She marked her 29th with the completion of a matter that has been ongoing since the
firm first beat off heavy competition for it in 2012 – the Ministry of Justice’s
Transforming Rehabilitation project.
This saw 35 probation trusts dismantled, with their work being taken over by 21
newly created community rehabilitation companies (CRCs).
An incredibly tight schedule was imposed by then-justice secretary Chris Grayling for
what was an immense exercise: the final signing took two weeks, with A&O’s biggest
boardroom dedicated to housing the documents.
It turned out to be a fitting end to Wright’s client-facing career at the firm. She has
taken on the role of graduate recruitment partner and tasked with overhauling the
firm’s selection process to reflect what it will need from its lawyers in 2020.
The Hot 100 2016: Corporate
Aedamar Comiskey, Linklaters
Aedamar Comiskey, Linklaters
In the past few years corporate partner moves have hit the headlines. But Linklaters
lifer Aedamar Comiskey has stayed put throughout, winning lead roles on multiple
billion-pound M&A deals last year. Soon after closing Amec’s merger with Foster
Wheeler at the end of 2014 Comiskey was advising another longstanding client Amlin
on its £3.48bn acquisition by Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance, while Alent was bought by
Platform Speciality Products in a £1.35bn deal.
As the firm’s lead relationship partner for both Amlin and Alent, as well as Aviva,
HSBC, Tate & Lyle and Dixons Carphone, Comiskey is Linklaters’ gateway to many
FTSE 100 companies.
She additionally worked on Visa Europe’s €21.2bn (£16.1bn) acquisition by Visa,
with HSBC’s $5.2bn (£3.7bn) sale of its Brazilian business strengthening her position
as one of Linklaters’ key Latin American experts.
A member of the magic circle’s partnership board, Comiskey is also heavily involved
in its Women Leadership Programme, mentoring female associates coming up the
ranks.
James Grimwood, CMS
James Grimwood, CMS
CMS’s new state-of-the-art City headquarters were the talk of the town last year – but
the redevelopment didn’t stop there. At James Grimwood’s request, another office
was set up at the start of the year, dedicated to deepening relationships with private
equity clients in the heart of Mayfair.
Grimwood saw an opportunity to grow in the affluent area, putting CMS within
walking distance of W1’s family businesses and real estate lenders.
Under his leadership, the EU private equity group has grown considerably over the
past year, with the firm increasingly acting for major players in the market such as
CVC, Cinven and Advent. He is the client relationship partner to private equity house
LDC and as such won a role on its £160m sale of uSwitch to Zoopla, and buyout of
online travel agent Iglu.
Elaine Nolan, Kirkland & Ellis
Elaine Nolan, Kirkland & Ellis
Since acting for the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) on the restructuring of Thomas
Cook in 2012, Kirkland & Ellis partner Elaine Nolan has cemented her place as the
go-to lawyer for the UK’s largest specialist aviation regulator.
In 2014 Nolan, a Kirkland partner since 2010 having joined the firm in June 2008
from Weil Gotshal & Manges, where she qualified in 2004, advised the CAA on the
restructuring of Monarch Airlines. Then last year she helped it protect its position
when Virgin Atlantic tapped the bond markets for a major refinancing in connection
with its landing slots at Heathrow.
While the CAA is just one client in Nolan’s blossoming practice, the fact that the US
firm is now firmly a key part of a UK regulator’s external legal armoury thanks to her
success on this string of matters is about as big an endorsement as it is possible to
find.
Lisa O’Neill, McDermott Will & Emery
Lisa O’Neill, McDermott Will & Emery
McDermott Will & Emery energy partner Lisa O’Neill has had a challenging and
busy first year after moving from Berwin Leighton Paisner in late 2014.
All of O’Neill’s clients – including Fortune 250 company Praxair and DEA Deutsche
Exploration – moved with her to her new firm and all instructed her on at least one
major energy matter in the first nine months.
Much of Lisa’s work involves advising on difficult issues and transactions in
challenging jurisdictions. In 2015 O’Neill advised on matters in Trinidad & Tobago,
Suriname, Guyana, Malawi, Tanzania, Comoros, North Sea, Columbia, Mexico, the
Canary Islands, Democratic Republic of Congo, and in nine European countries.
Among her many deals, O’Neill acted on Shell’s complex sale of its liquid petroleum
gas (LPG) businesses in 2015, as well as acting for oil and gas exploration company
RWE Dea on a $10bn development agreement with the Egyptian government to
continue its exploration efforts in the region.
Nick Pearey, Addleshaw Goddard
Nick Pearey, Addleshaw Goddard
It’s been an exciting year in the betting sector, with several high-profile sales and
mergers being announced. However, one of the most complicated deals the year was
GVC and 888 Holdings’ war for UK-listed Bwin.party, in a transaction about as
unpredictable as a game of roulette.
Although a large proportion of the Bwin board plumped for 888 Holdings in July, it
was Nick Pearey’s client GVC that eventually stormed to victory in a £1.1bn bid for
the company. It took the Addleshaw Goddard partner just two months to help GVC
turn the recommendation around in its favour, with both parties agreeing to adhere to
the UK Takeover Code despite it being a Gibraltar scheme of arrangement.
When not advising the betting industry, Pearey has been busy in the equally active
insurance sector, advising Miller Insurance Services on the sale of a partnership
interest to Willis Group.
Andrew Rosling, Addleshaw Goddard
Andrew Rosling, Addleshaw Goddard
Addleshaw Goddard corporate partner Andrew Rosling has had a busy 2015. He won
a first instruction for the firm from Tate & Lyle when the business opted for his
expertise and market insight over magic circle advisers for its European restructuring,
which went on throughout most of the year.
He has also been hard at work advising Sainsbury’s on its high-profile, strategic joint
venture with Dansk Supermarket to create the new Netto grocery chain in the UK – an
important strategic development for the retailer.
Long-time client Diageo had Rosling on call for the disposal of non-core businesses
earlier this year – an operation that saw him work on breaking up a series of joint
ventures in South Africa. These and other great opportunities in the retail and
consumer space motivated Rosling to spearhead a change in business plan at
Addleshaws, creating a strategy to capitalise on opportunities in the sector.
Last year Rosling also spearheaded the creation of an app on doing business in Africa
– an idea inspired by the amount of work he received from the continent and the lack
of connection between law firms in the region.
The Hot 100 2016: Employment
Tom Bray, Eversheds
Tom Bray, Eversheds
Eversheds HR partner Tom Bray has been busy over the past four years leading the
team responsible for providing specialist HR legal advice to Heathrow Airport.
Bray’s work for Heathrow covers “every employment issue you may come across”.
This includes work surrounding senior executive appointments, high-profile trade
union issues and Employment Tribunal claims.
The highlight of Bray’s year was striking a deal to transform the airport workers’
defined benefit pension scheme. It took a year for the money-saving changes to be
agreed. The deal tested all of Bray‘s negotiation skills as he assisted Heathrow in
reaching agreements with the trustees and the employees of both the unionised and
non-unionised workforces.
As a result of Bray’s team’s work alongside the Heathrow pension and HR teams to
achieve a “fair and consistent” deal with both workforces, many of Heathrow’s
longstanding employees were able to keep their defined benefit scheme despite the
changes taking place.
Sharon Tan, employment partner, Mishcon de Reya
Sharon Tan, Mishcon de Reya
With one of the largest employment law teams in the City, Mishcon de Reya has a
string of senior executive and CEO clients, as well as non-executive directors, for
which it acts.
But last year it hired McDermott Will & Emery partner Sharon Tan, and tasked her
with broadening the firm’s corporate client base around
the world.
Since joining, the Allen & Overy alumna has stuck to the brief by acting on the
integration and restructuring of two global businesses, a mandate she brought over
from her former US firm.
She has also been acting on the hottest employment topic of the day, working with an
international financial services company on unpaid six-figure bonuses.
The Hot 100 2016: Energy
Rosalie Chadwick, Pinsent Masons
Rosalie Chadwick, Pinsent Masons
Pinsent Masons corporate partner Rosalie Chadwick had a busy 2015 as lead lawyer
on one of the most high-profile deals of the year: the £585m disposal of assets by
French oil giant Total to North Sea Midstream Assets following the collapse in oil
prices.
The deal, which was a challenging first task for Chadwick after returning from
maternity leave, involved many multijurisdictional aspects and a high level of legal
and commercial complexity.
It was completed thanks to Chadwick’s ability to draw from her 15 years’ experience
in the energy market to end 40-year ties with Total’s upstream business.
Aside from her work on Total Chadwick has continued to act on other high-profile
deals including advising Falkland Oil and Gas on its takeover by Rockhopper
Exploration.
The Hot 100 2016: In-house
Rushad Abadan, Standard Life
Rushad Abadan, Standard Life
Former RBS deputy general counsel Rushad Abadan joins Standard Life as its group
general counsel in early 2016, having spent just under a decade at the bank.
That decade was characterised by a total overhaul of corporate culture; the subsequent
part-nationalisation of the bank and the current selling off of shares. According to
Abadan, he is most proud of his involvement in the rehabilitation of RBS and the
restructurings that followed it.
The former Dundas & Wilson lawyer also helped to reorganise the bank’s 400-strong
legal teams along functional lines and held a lead role in the restructuring of Dutch
bank ABN AMRO, which RBS purchased in 2009, and the sales of its stake of Direct
Line Group and Citizens Financial Group.
Jerome Abelman, British American Tobacco
Jerome Abelman, British American Tobacco
BAT general counsel Jerome Abelman revolutionised the tobacco giant’s legal
department last year – despite only taking on the role in May.
Abelman overhauled BAT’s global legal function, merging corporate and regulatory
affairs with legal and security into one mammoth team now named legal and external
affairs.
The move means Abelman now oversees BAT’s entire corporate affairs function,
including communications and sustainability, as well as government affairs,
regulation, risk management, scientific engagement and all legal issues.
Integrating the two teams into one 800-staff and 350-lawyer group around the world
is a project continuing into 2016, but has already proved fruitful, increasing efficiency
for the business worldwide.
It is also allowing Abelman to put increased focus on BAT’s creation of ‘next
generation products’ such as e-cigarettes, which will prove a key indicator of how
well the combined legal function works within the business as a whole.
All of this happened while Abelman also managed a raft of litigation in the UK and
abroad, including taking the British Government to court in December over plain-
packaging legislation.
Graeme Baldwin, Pearson
Graeme Baldwin, Pearson
As Pearson’s first formal M&A lawyer, Graeme Baldwin has played a pivotal role in
shaping the publisher’s corporate group. It couldn’t have been a busier year for him.
In 2015, Baldwin has overseen the high-profile sales of the Financial Times and The
Economist, with the £1bn transactions reflecting Pearson’s move away from news and
towards education.
As the company itself undergoes strategic change, its legal team has had to respond
accordingly, with Baldwin rising to the challenge by bulking up Pearson’s corporate
group and building on its anti-trust expertise. Amid all this restructuring, the ex-
Herbert Smith Freehills (HSF) senior associate has been instrumental in organising
Pearson’s first UK legal panel, in which the number of corporate advisers has been
widened to include not just HSF and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, but Pinsent
Masons and DLA Piper as well.
Maaike de Bie, Royal Mail
Maaike de Bie, Royal Mail
Acting general counsel Maaike de Bie joined the Royal Mail as deputy general
counsel in 2014 to aid its transition from a public sector organisation to a FTSE 100
company.
Since then she has focused on making the legal function up to the task, transforming it
from a contract implementation-focused team to one that behaves like a business
partner. De Bie cites this transformation as her proudest achievement.
She’s also expanded its panel, again making it fit for purpose for a FTSE 100
organisation. For an organisation that tackles everything from the grievances of dog-
bitten postmen to taking on the Competition and Markets Authority, getting this right
is crucial.
De Bie has spent most of her career in-house, spending time at the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development, GE and Ernst & Young.
Martin Bowen, Dyson
Martin Bowen, Dyson
Dyson general counsel and company secretary Martin Bowen may be a long-term
fixture at the technology giant – he joined the company in 1998 – but that doesn’t
mean he’s standing still.
In 2015 Bowen overhauled the in-house team structure to put legal at the forefront of
the company’s development and future growth.
In-house lawyers are now part of the research and development teams, working hand-
in-hand with Dyson’s engineers to ward off any legal challenges that may be coming
down the line. It was no mean feat: Bowen had to convince his business partners of
the benefits legal could bring in helping push Dyson forward on the global stage.
The company is synonymous with innovation and Bowen’s team is right at the heart
of that thanks to his changes. With an eye on 20 per cent year-on-year growth in the
Asia Pacific, Bowen is working hard to see off copycat threats coming from China.
Sonya Branch, Bank of England
Sonya Branch, Bank of England
Sonya Branch was appointed general counsel of the Bank of England in 2015. The
former Linklaters lawyer and Clifford Chance partner had spent several years at
various government authorities such as the Office of Fair Trading and Department for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs before landing the top job last May.
Branch admits that she saw her break from private practice as a temporary measure to
widen her perspective for her clients but soon realised that she saw her future in
Whitehall because of the shared sense of mission for the public good.
Now she heads up a team of 100 lawyers and has inherited a remit that has grown
rapidly over the last two years. As Branch says, the combined sense of mission at this
point in the bank’s history continues to inspire her.
Tom Brown, PayPal
Tom Brown, PayPal
Head of legal for PayPal UK and Ireland Tom Brown slashed the tech company’s
legal budget by 80 per cent when he arrived in 2011 but this impressive economy
pales in comparison to the projects he has overseen in the past four years.
The first half of his year was spent on PayPal’s split from eBay, a transaction
completed in under nine months. This followed on from rolling out an entirely new
business line in the form of PayPal Credit and PayPal Working Capital; producing the
first contactless card reader and mobile apps such as PayPal.me and Pay After
Delivery.
For Brown, the challenge of working at the forefront of tech is what keeps him
interested. Regulatory challenges and innovation from competitors means that he
needs to work fast. Luckily for the former Pinsent Masons and Addleshaw Goddard
lawyer, this year hasn’t disappointed.
Rachel Canham, BT
Rachel Canham, BT
The last year has been one of the busiest for BT mergers and acquisitions chief
counsel Rachel Canham. She spent much of the year advising BT on its planned
£12.5bn acquisition of Everything Everywhere. With the deal approved by the
competition authorities last week this year is about to get a whole lot busier as she
works to integrate the two communication giants.
Canham spent much of 2015 working on the legal, governance and compliance
integration planning of EE into BT, now it is time to put that plan into action.
Canham wrote the rulebook for how BT executes acquisitions, drawing on lessons
learned from previous deals.
As a leading in-house lawyer she is recognised for her commercial no-nonsense
approach. No two days are ever the same for Canham. She always has an eye to the
next deal and is always on hand to highlight the potential risks and rewards of the next
acquisition.
Ingrid Cope, Pernod Ricard
Ingrid Cope, Pernod Ricard
Senior legal adviser Ingrid Cope joined the UK arm of Pernod Ricard in 2013 as the
company’s sole in-house lawyer.
In late 2014 she gained a seat on the senior management board of the UK business,
and last year she was appointed to the role of compliance officer. Cope also gained
two new in-house lawyers, which has allowed her to rely less on external counsel. She
now manages a lean team that looks after the Pernod Ricard UK and World Brands’
Duty Free businesses.
One of Cope’s main strategies has been to improve in-house efficiency. She was the
force behind an innovative app that allows the company’s field sales team to create
contracts on demand, which was launched last year.
The use of this app frees up the sales team’s time so that they can devote more
resources to the commercial side of the business, while allowing the legal team to
spend more time on strategic and long-term projects.
Next year, Cope plans to continue the consolidation of her in-house team and focus on
aligning her legal strategy with Pernod Ricard’s digital-heavy business plan.
Rachael Davidson, National Grid
Rachael Davidson, National Grid
National Grid UK general counsel Rachael Davidson is only a year into her job but
she has made her presence felt at every level.
Her mission in-house is simple: draw the best value possible from each lawyer in her
team.
She has overhauled the in-house team structure and asked her colleagues to keep
time-sheets so she can track what they are doing. Central to that is time set aside for
getting to know the business, including time at the water-cooler.
Having recently completed a panel review for the company, Davidson has also set
some major challenges for winning firms. She wants to know how ‘best-value’ can be
defined.
Over the next 12 months Davidson plans to put in place instruction protocols so each
firm knows what is expected of them.
Asking tough questions and being prepared to respond effectively is the mark of a top
lawyer. Davidson is a general counsel who is thought-provoking, a trait that means
she is highly regarded by her peers.
Viv Du-Feu, BMA Law
Viv Du-Feu, BMA Law
For Viv Du-Feu, joining the British Medical Association (BMA) as interim general
counsel in 2014 quickly snowballed into leading the organisation’s most important
legal development last year.
Du-Feu launched BMA Law to provide legal services to the BMA’s 170,000
members in May, taking the ABS from conception to launch in just seven months.
Getting the terms of the model agreed required innovative collaboration with a
number of law firms, including incorporating firms’ own compliance structures into
BMA Law’s contracts.
Crucial to providing expert but affordable legal advice to doctors across the UK was
securing a legal panel on nationally agreed rates, which Du-Feu did in record time.
Now the ABS is run as an individual entity with one set of fees and one structure, and
seven firms providing legal advice to doctors nationwide.
Other businesses have taken notice of BMA Law’s rapid success, with two
membership organisations approaching Du-Feu about bringing him in to restructure
their legal departments at the end of last year.
He also has plans to expand BMA Law’s offering to take on other bodies with two
membership organisations in late stage talks about signing up to create a shared legal
services.
Annabel Dumbell, Accenture
Annabel Dumbell, Accenture
Managing director of litigation for Northern Europe at Accenture, Annabel Dumbell
arrived at the company in 2007 from the Fieldfisher partnership.
She was then co-lead on pioneering a new way of litigating within Accenture which
focused on how to handle new trends within a small, globalised team, on the back of
which she was promoted to her current role. Aside from being one of four directors,
Dumbell has taken on two advocacy roles within the business.
Currently co-sponsor of the global legal women function, comprising 1,000 women,
she also acts as people advocate for all corporate functions in the UK (again, around
1,000 members), responsible for rolling out people initiatives across the firm and
setting a programme to increase people’s engagement in areas such as career,
contribution, culture and community.
David Eveleigh, Serco Group
David Eveleigh, Serco Group
David Eveleigh has been Serco’s group general counsel for over a year now, and it is
a year that he has described as being one of the hardest of his life.
In the first jam-packed 12 months in the job, the ex-BT Global Services GC was –
alongside the rest of the executive management team – in charge of finding a
replacement for outgoing Serco chairman Alastair Lyons when he announced his
departure in November 2014.
He also had to contend with an emergency rights issue, in which the company set out
to raise proceeds of £555m, and the refinancing of Serco’s debt as well as a Serious
Fraud Office investigation into electronic tagging.
Coming in as Serco’s first GC, Eveleigh has had the mammoth task of organising the
outsourcer’s legal team around the world, reviewing the network of law firms they use
and ensuring there is consistency across the board.
Lisa Gan Tomlins, Made.com
Lisa Gan Tomlins, Made.com
Lisa Gan Tomlins’ first year at online furniture company Made.com has cemented her
reputation as a lawyer dedicated to enabling her business to flourish.
Her arrival from Just Eat, at which she was legal counsel, coincided with the
company’s largest-ever financing round, in which it raised $60m (£42m). Thrown into
due diligence on her first day, Gan Tomlins oversaw more than 1,100 due diligence
queries from venture capital investors while negotiating the myriad legal agreements
and reorganising the group’s corporate structure in order to prepare it for its next stage
of growth.
It’s what she is most proud of in a day job in which she’s also conducting a strategic
review of Made’s entire intellectual property rights portfolio to ensure that it caters
for the many independent designers represented on the website, and training customer
services agents on new consumers rights legislation.
Galit Gonen, Teva Europe
Galit Gonen, Teva Europe
The recent merger frenzy in Europe’s pharma and life sciences market may mean that
healthcare giant Teva Europe has to battle fewer competitors, but they are bigger than
ever before.
Enter Teva Europe general counsel Galit Gonen, who was promoted to the top role in
2013, and has already implemented change within her European domain to gain the
upper hand against the company’s rivals.
Gonen has used IP, combined with regulatory expertise, market access and R&D
strategies, as a pivotal part of her plan in Europe.
Some of Gonen’s innovative ideas for her in-house team, which launched earlier this
year, have proven to be so successful that the company wants to roll it out across its
entire jurisdictions.
The two projects are the Legal Internal Mobility Opportunity (LIMO), created to
allow members of the in-house legal team to do a physical or virtual collaboration,
and the ‘gateway of legal development’, a group that leads on regional subject matters
that affect the business.
Paul Lister, Associated British Foods
Paul Lister, Associated British Foods
As director of legal services at Associated British Foods, Paul Lister’s job sees him
grapple with issues across the company’s diverse global portfolio. But the last year
has been particularly noteworthy.
In April 2013 the Rana Plaza factory in Savar, Bangladesh, collapsed, causing the
deaths of 1,134 people and leaving over 2,000 others with injuries. AB Foods
subsidiary Primark was among the companies supplied by the factory.
Lister has led Primark’s efforts to establish a lasting, $14m settlement for the Rana
Plaza victims and their families. Deciding that Bangladeshi law would not meet their
needs, he set about devising a scheme that would leave compensation in the hands of
those who needed it most. In March 2015 the last long-term payment was made but
Primark will remain involved to support dependants until adulthood.
Lister’s role also means he oversees Primark’s ongoing audit of supply chains, in an
effort to keep track of where and how the company’s products are made.
Rosemary Martin, Vodafone
Rosemary Martin, Vodafone
Vodafone general counsel Rosemary Martin is described by one peer as being “one of
the most innovative GCs in the market”. Another says she is “approachable,
empathetic and commercial all at once”. Those are rare characteristics for a general
counsel who juggles the challenges of being at the helm of a £42bn global business.
In recent years Martin has been a key supporter to Vodafone’s India GC Kumar Das,
who has been battling litigation on several fronts. This despite being a self-confessed
deals junkie.
At home, meanwhile, she was a core member of the team that helped offload
Vodafone’s 45 per cent stake in Verizon Wireless to US telecoms group Verizon
Communications. That deal was worth a cool $130bn, but Martin was able to
negotiate a fixed fee from Slaughter and May for the work done.
Emma Moloney, News UK
Emma Moloney, News UK
Last year interim News UK general counsel Emma Moloney officially stepped up to
the top lawyering job at News UK following the sad death of her predecessor Paul
Chinnery.
Moloney is used to being in the firing line, having been at the helm at a challenging
time for the business when it was recovering from ongoing civil and criminal legal
battles and board changes under intense public scrutiny.
Having joined News UK in 2013, Moloney has worked hard to make the legal team
more approachable to the rest of the business and continued Chinnery’s innovation-
inspired legacy, developing a legal portal that allows the team to provide templates for
employment agreements, NDAs and copyright agreements which take ‘two minutes’
now.
Moloney has also set up a business news solution that enables the company to offer
printing and distribution services to other third parties and has helped News UK
become more efficient.
Aside from working on day-to-day issues at News UK, Moloney is developing a
stronger in-house offering, growing the company’s compliance team, developing
internal progression and revising the use of external counsel.
Solomon Osagie, Tsys
Solomon Osagie, Tsys
Brought into payment services company Tsys eight years ago to build its legal team,
chief legal counsel Solomon Osagie has created a group of lawyers able to do almost
all their work in-house. Despite the company being involved in 49 million payment
transactions each day, and with outsourcing agreements with major banks including
the Royal Bank of Scotland, Deutsche Bank and companies such as PayPal, Osagie
manages to keep the company’s annual legal spend to under £100,000.
His team of seven lawyers handles major outsourcing contracts as well as issues such
as regulatory, real estate and employment law matters, regularly negotiating with
private practice firms on the opposite side.
Last year saw Osagie formulate the first application for regulatory approval from the
Financial Conduct Authority for a Tsys entity, a task that involved the drafting of
policies, processes and a governance and compliance forum.
In a world where in-house lawyers are increasingly asked to be at the heart of the
business, Osagie really is.
Tina Sany-Davies, Bauer Media
Tina Sany-Davies, Bauer Media
Bauer Media general counsel Tina Sany-Davies spent years trying to woo the
company as a client in her years at Reed Smith. One secondment later, she is in the
top job and last year took a lead role in helping Bauer achieve its long-held ambition
of becoming the biggest radio company in Europe.
Running the acquisition of no fewer than 20 radio stations in Denmark, Finland,
Norway and Sweden, Sany-Davies managed five teams of external advisers in five
jurisdictions and is currently engaged in the legal and commercial integration of the
acquired brands into the business, in addition to managing their legal functions.
In addition to her day job managing the legal work for 50 magazines and 60 UK radio
stations, she also found time to engage with the Leveson Inquiry as part of a select
group of publishing lawyers, spending days negotiating with the newspaper industry,
industry associations, government and lobbying groups.
Nicola Shand, Scotia Gas Network
Nicola Shand, Scotia Gas Networks
General counsel of Scotia Gas Networks (SGN) Nicola Shand trained at her company.
Just seven years later, she’s general counsel of the gas distribution network. In
addition, she’s built up her own team from scratch and now sits on the company’s
executive board.
Shand attributes her success to loyalty, hard work and not being afraid to give an
opinion. This year, her time has been taken up by the Gas to West project, which will
bring gas mains west of Belfast. The project, which has run without any increase in
headcount, required Shand to oversee every aspect from regulatory approval to how to
finance the £250m work via a mix of internal and external funding.
With a keen eye already on the coming year, Shand lists the business’s response to the
review of the gas sector as something that will keep her busy in the coming year, with
her legal team responsible for analysing what kind of business SGN will be in the
future.
Alex Simpson, Asda
Alex Simpson, Asda
Asda general counsel Alex Simpson’s second year in the job has coincided with a
crucial year for the supermarket chain, which is facing a fierce price war on the
British high street.
But Simpson’s focus on creating a legal team that facilitates and encourages product
innovation in a bid to keep Asda ahead of the competition is helping the group to
weather the retail storm and bring in profits totalling over £1bn last year.
Recognising that developing technology and then protecting those creative
endeavours will be key to success in the future, Simpson brought Asda’s enterprise
team to sit within legal last year, and also established a training programme for all
lawyers on intellectual property and patenting.
He also launched a review of Asda’s external law firms in a bid to increase efficiency.
The changes included re-evaluating pricing and two-way sharing of legal intelligence
with firms to abandon the ‘project-by-project’ model and benefit its in-house team as
well as law firms.
Raj Singh-Dehal, Center Parcs
Raj Singh-Dehal, Center Parcs
It has been a whirlwind couple of years for Center Parcs HR and commercial services
director Raj Singh-Dehal.
The business he has worked for since 2009 has gone through a number of major
transactions, beginning with a £1bn refinancing in 2012 with another £490m debt
financing in 2014.
That paved the way for owners Blackstone to look at selling its stake, prompting the
start of a dual-track sale and IPO process that went right to the wire before Canadian
property investment company Brookfield announced that it was acquiring Center
Parcs for a sum understood to be around £2.5bn.
All the while Singh-Dehal has also been working on the financing, acquisition and
planning permission for Center Parcs’ first holiday village in Ireland. The site has
been acquired and with his dual legal and HR hat on, Singh-Dehal is playing a key
role in procurement, regulatory issues and workforce hiring for its construction. So
while ownership has changed, work continues.
Padmini Singla, Kennedy Wilson
Padmini Singla, Kennedy Wilson
Since joining global real estate investment and services firm Kennedy Wilson as
general counsel in May 2014, Padmini Singla has really made her presence felt. She
has effectively jumped from being a senior associate at Ashurst to having a central
role operating one of the most active players in the market last year.
Kennedy Wilson has invested heavily in property in recent years and Singla has been
a key player in that. She has overseen real estate acquisitions in Europe in excess of
£1bn, managing external counsel across a number of jurisdictions. Singla has also
been central to Kennedy Wilson’s £1.5bn of equity capital raisings and around £600m
of debt capital raisings in Europe.
In addition, she was responsible for designing and implementing governance and
compliance protocols for a London Stock Exchange-listed £2.5bn property investment
company that had been sponsored and managed by Kennedy Wilson.
Chris Smith, L1 Energy
Chris Smith, L1 Energy
As general counsel of L1 Energy, Chris Smith deals with bigger sums and more
complex deals in one year than most legal chiefs do in their career.
In 2015, his second year in the role, Smith switched his focus from building up the
company’s legal function from scratch to running
its $10bn acquisition strategy of oil and gas platforms.
In March, Smith closed L1 Energy’s $7.1bn purchase of German utility RWE AG’s
oil and gas business, Dea, in a deal that gave investment fund LetterOne Group oil
and gas fields in the UK, Europe and Egypt. The deal was mired by political
blockages in the UK and might have ground to a halt had it not been for Smith’s long
and difficult negotiations culminating in the eventual sale of its British gas fields to
Swiss company Ineos in October. The $750m sale, in which Smith took a lead role,
ended L1 Energy’s row with the Department for Energy and Climate Change and saw
the business through a number of ‘near-death’ experiences.
As L1 Energy’s only in-house lawyer, Smith handled the colossal legal issues on the
acquisition and subsequent disposal of assets, including management of external
counsel, entirely alone.
Ritva Sotamaa, Unilever
Ritva Sotamaa, Unilever
Global consumer goods company Unilever is big on empowerment. The company,
whose products are sold in 190 countries, believes that the only way to eradicate
poverty is to empower women and it is leading by example by pledging to have 50 per
cent of its management roles filled by women in the near future.
It is no surprise, then, that the company’s chief legal counsel Ritva Sotamaa is
committed to empowering her 300-lawyer legal team.
At the senior end that has meant entrusting a 15-strong team of regional and product-
line GCs with running the legal function when Sotamaa is on frequent field trips
around the company’s network. At the junior end it has meant establishing a legal
academy designed, as Sotamaa says, “to make sure we provide continuous education
to our team and help our lawyers to build and enhance their skills”.
The online academy, which includes an induction module designed to get staff up to
speed on Unilever’s business as well as CPD modules that panel firms can contribute
to, is designed so that everyone in the team can benefit, regardless of where they are
based.
“In today’s world and with such a global team, making sure that we have learning
available for our people wherever they are and whenever they want it is something we
want to make available to everyone,” Sotamaa says.
Mollie Stoker, Lucozade Ribena Suntory
Mollie Stoker, Lucozade Ribena Suntory
When Japanese drinks company Suntory acquired the Lucozade and Ribena brands
from GlaxoSmithKline at the end of December 2013, the deal did not include an in-
house legal function. Lucozade Ribena Suntory (LRS), as it is now known, hired
Mollie Stoker as general counsel to maintain business continuity while the assets were
transferred.
Her immediate task was to deal with a backlog of work dating back months, while
also getting to know the demands of her colleagues.
Having started with a blank canvas in what was effectively a new business, Stoker has
been at the forefront of creating a team that sits at the centre of LRS. With no formal
panel to support her team, she has kept much of the work in-house and is credited for
her can-do attitude.
Building an in-house function from scratch is arduous, complex and demanding.
Stoker has taken it all in her stride and is now a central and valued business partner.
Richard Taylor, euNetworks
Richard Taylor, euNetworks
When Richard Taylor joined euNetworks from Olswang in 2009 he arrived at a
company that was in the midst of major change.
euNetworks, which is an owner and operator of high capacity fibre networks in
Europe, had listed in Singapore in 2004 but had not distributed any dividends since.
This is a company that has a significant number of valuable assets but had failed to
turn that into a profit-making business.
Taylor’s arrival in 2009 coincided with the appointment of chief executive Brady
Rafuse and a fresh capital injection from Columbia Capital. The aim of the new team
was to push the company back into growth mode.
For Taylor it has been a rip-roaring ride ever since. In the last year the company
delisted from the Singapore Stock Exchange, something that was seen as a hurdle to
the company’s future growth, acquired Dublin-headquartered Inland Fibre- Telecom
as well as refinancing its debt facility to push for further growth.
Elaine Williams, British Land
Elaine Williams, British Land
Elaine Williams was appointed as the first ever general counsel of FTSE 100
company British Land last year, after a stint at HSBC, where she was group company
secretary.
Williams, who arrived at British Land in November 2015, is the only member of legal
staff at the company and has been charged with creating a legal department entirely
from scratch.
Prior to her time in-house, Williams was a partner in the corporate practice at
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, specialising in M&A and joint ventures. She advised
on commercial transactions in the UK and a variety of Asian jurisdictions and on
cross-border transactions for a number of listed multi-national corporations and
privately owned companies. She spent five of her 10 years at Freshfields in the Asia
Pacific region, including periods in Hong Kong, Singapore and Vietnam.
Matt Wilson, Uber
Matt Wilson, Uber
Uber general counsel for UK, Ireland and the Nordics Matt Wilson considers himself
a businessman first and lawyer second.
The business brand has enjoyed accelerated growth over the last 18 months in the UK.
Wilson has been drafted in to make sure the company infrastructure keeps up with
that growth.
Since joining Uber Wilson has set about getting to know the growing private car hire
business while laying the foundations for a UK legal team, hiring two lawyers so far
with more to come. He is also preparing to set up Uber’s first non-US legal panel.
Wilson received a huge boost for his nascent team in October when Uber won a High
Court ruling that its app was legal in London after being taken to court by Transport
for London. Litigation is just one feather in his cap. Wilson is a well-rounded lawyer
called upon to advise on everything from High Court cases to marketing and
advertising campaigns.
Alison Yapp, Amec Foster Wheeler
Alison Yapp, Amec Foster Wheeler
When Amec, the British engineering company, struck a deal to acquire its US-listed
rival Foster Wheeler in 2015 for £2bn, Amec’s general counsel Alison Yapp took
centre stage.
The deal, which would make the merged company a powerhouse with a presence in
key markets such as the US and the Middle East, came alongside complex legal issues
and potential pitfalls.
For Yapp, striking the deal was a complicated feat, because of the multiple
jurisdictions in which Foster Wheeler operated. Although the company was UK
headquartered, it was also Swiss-domiciled – as well as being listed on the US
Nasdaq.
Yapp completed a series of Herculean tasks to seal the deal, one of which included
sifting through 1,200 pages of shareholder information.
Yapp was the mind behind a complex legal process that involved deregistering Foster
Wheeler from the Swiss Federal Competition Commission so that they no longer had
to comply with the regulator’s domestic issuer requirements, and acquire more than
90 per cent of Foster Wheeler shares to achieve a squeeze-out merger under Swiss
law.
This complex transaction has gained Yapp the reputation of being one of the slickest
in-house lawyers in the business.
The Hot 100 2016: Insurance
James Wickes, RPC
James Wickes, RPC
RPC insurance partner James Wickes acts for the insurers of the biggest banks and
asset managers in the market and as a result he has worked on some of the biggest
Directors and Officers liability insurance claims of the year.
One such claim saw Wickes put his organisational and communication skills to the
test while he co-ordinated over 30 law firms that were acting for each director or
officer. At the same time he was responsible for advising his insurer client on its own
exposures.
Wickes uses his own experience of working with in-house teams on secondments to
understand his clients’ commercial pressures and understand how best he can work
for them.
As well as working on these huge claims, Wickes also devotes his time to working
with the charity Limitless London – which he set up. The charity works with school
children in Wickes’ hometown of Dagenham and Barking to provide careers guidance
for 14 and 15-year-olds.
Michael Kingston, DWF
Michael Kingston, DWF
A chance conversation over coffee kick-started DWF insurance partner Michael
Kingston’s four-year run to improve safety measures for sailors working in the Arctic.
Although outside his traditional practice, Kingston has become a specialist in the
sector, working with Lloyd’s of London to improve the impending Polar Code, which
will be adopted by the International Maritime Organisation in 2017.
The Polar Code itself is designed to improve safety in the Arctic, but previous drafts
had failed to include an ice regime. This meant there was little guidance on what types
of ships were allowed to sail in icy water and no requirement to map the waters. Sea
ice varies in severity throughout the region and not all ships are equipped to sail in
such conditions.
Thanks to Kingston’s work the ice regime was implemented in the Polar Code in
2015. Not only will this vastly improve safety in the region, it also means much more
certainty for insurers.
The Hot 100 2016: Life sciences
Nicola Maguire, Cooley
Nicola Maguire, Cooley
Maguire moved from Reed Smith to Cooley alongside fellow life sciences partner
John Wilkinson last year to launch the firm’s life sciences practice in the UK. Within
two days she was front and centre pitching to win a new client – biotech company
Immunocore – which was looking for funding to list on Nasdaq.
In July 2015 Maguire advised on Europe’s largest private life sciences financing
($320m) and the second largest in the world for Immunocore. This transaction marks
a trend for the entire industry, as companies seek higher levels of financing in order to
fund longer periods of product research.
The pivotal transaction involved a syndicate including Woodford Investment
Management, Malin Corporation, Eli Lilly and RTW Investments. The financing was
unusual because it was oversubscribed, which meant the onus was on Maguire’s team
to draft the initial documents.
Claire Petts, Clyde & Co
Claire Petts, Clyde & Co
Claire Petts has had an impressive year after being placed in charge of the Clyde &
Co’s new healthcare sector group. The group spun out of the firm’s insurance practice
due to its stellar performance, which saw it increase revenue by 20 per cent over the
year.
She also won a landmark victory that saved the NHS thousands of pounds after a
claimant argued he had been unlawfully detained under the Mental Health Act. Petts
won the case, arguing that the decision was correct despite a technical breach having
occurred. As a result of her work the court set a precedent by awarding the man a
grand total of £1.
Petts has recently been appointed to Clydes’ UK management board, giving her the
chance to promote the healthcare group at the highest level in the firm.
Clare Tunstall, Pinsent Masons
Clare Tunstall, Pinsent Masons
Legal innovation is at the heart of how Pinsent Masons’ IP & life sciences head Clare
Tunstall runs her practice.
Tunstall has fostered a culture of innovation throughout her team to allow the lawyers
to stay ahead of their competitors and patentees during cases. She is constantly
striving to create an edge through legal processes, while making sure her opposition
can never predict her next move. She does this by adapting to each case and often
uses regulatory fillings and Freedom of Information requests to understand
competitors’ strategies and improve her own litigation.
This approach of using law and litigation as a business facilitator has been put to good
use advising Israel’s biggest company Teva Pharmaceuticals. Tunstall describes Teva
as an interesting client, having acted for the company for most of her career. This year
has been particularly exciting, with Teva close to completing a huge acquisition – that
of Allergan Generics for $40.5bn (£28bn).
The Hot 100 2016: Litigation
Boris Bronfentrinker, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan
Boris Bronfentrinker, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan
This time last year US litigation powerhouse Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan had
no competition practice in the UK. Now it has a thriving and growing one, led by
partner Boris Bronfentrinker.
Bronfentrinker joined Quinn Emanuel from Hausfeld at the start of 2015 to build a
UK and European competition team for the firm. The move fulfilled his desire to
work both for defendants – as he did as a senior associate at Freshfields Bruckhaus
Deringer – and claimants. Quinn Emanuel’s focus on contentious work means the
firm does both sides.
Since arriving, Bronfentrinker has helped pick up instructions from a range of notable
clients, including Daimler, regarding global competition, and Fiat Chrysler. Such is
the volume of work that Bronfentrinker is looking to expand his team to meet demand
for a series of major cases set to hit the headlines in 2016.
Peter Hirst, Clyde & Co
Peter Hirst, Clyde & Co
Despite his prominent position within Clyde & Co, co-chair of arbitration Peter Hirst
does not often find himself in the limelight. He stands out for his client work,
consistently among the top two billers at Clydes year-on-year, which is particularly
impressive considering his humble roots studying law at night school.
Hirst’s leadership has also helped the arbitration group grow by 40 per cent over the
last year. He largely attributes this to investing more time and energy in marketing the
group to clients instead of quietly carrying out the work with little fanfare, as has
happened in the past. The group is currently working on over 400 arbitrations and has
worked on nine worth more than $1bn in the last year.
One particular highlight of Hirst’s year was acting on a $25m arbitration in New
York. The work was carried out for Swiss clients with a Brazilian law governed
contracts. He is also currently working on the Samarco mine collapse, which has
caused serious flooding in Brazil.
Osma Hudda, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher
Osma Hudda, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher
Litigation partner Osma Hudda joined Gibson Dunn & Crutcher in 2005 from Clifford
Chance, moving alongside partner Philip Rocher as the first contentious lawyers in
the US firm’s London office.
Back then Hudda was just one year qualified, but the size of the team meant that she
instantly picked up responsibility as Gibson Dunn began investing in litigation.
After being made up in 2013 Hudda’s star has continued only to rise. She is currently
involved on Gibson Dunn’s work for supermarket chain Asda in its defence of the
first private sector equal pay claim to hit the UK courts – a case which is expected to
have significant ramifications for employers. With the case yet to hit the court, it will
keep her busy for much of 2016.
Meanwhile she has played a key role in helping recruit new members of the team and
mentoring younger associates.
Alison Levitt QC, Mishcon de Reya
Alison Levitt QC, Mishcon de Reya
Nobody in the UK knows more about private prosecution work than Mishcon de
Reya’s Alison Levitt QC. Indeed, she literally wrote the guidebook to it while she was
principal legal adviser to the DPP.
Now, 18 months after she launched Mishcon’s first business crime unit, Levitt has
used her specialism to forge the group’s impressive reputation in the white-collar
defence, fraud and money laundering space, combining civil and criminal work to
create the last piece in the puzzle for Mishcon’s burgeoning client base.
Levitt has increased team numbers to eight lawyers and has not shied away from
taking on the highest-profile fraud, corruption and regulatory cases.
Recent clients involve mortgage brokers, former bankers, globally renowned
businessmen and traders – all facing multimillion-pound disputes and multi-
jurisdictional regulatory investigations.
Success, Levitt says, lies in getting these investigations shut down before they even
start, in which the practice has had numerous successes in the past 12 months.
As well as running the caseload on a strategic level, Levitt is involved in the day-to-
day running of each case, even doing the advocacy on some of them during their High
Court trials.
Joanna Ludlam, Baker & McKenzie
Joanna Ludlam, Baker & McKenzie
Baker & McKenzie’s Joanna Ludlam was on the front line this year during one of the
most important cases for the future of the Bar.
Alongside Blackstone Chambers’ Tom de la Mare QC, Ludlam represented the
Criminal Barristers’ Association in the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates
(QASA) case.
QASA will score criminal barristers during live trials and prevent those without
QASA accreditation from undertaking cases; a subject that was heavily disputed. The
case travelled from the High Court to Court of Appeal and then the Supreme Court,
where it was finally thrown out.
Although the appeal was not upheld on the facts, the Supreme Court enshrined into
English law their interpretation of the important EU principle of proportionality.
Outside court, Ludlam was the orchestrator of one of Baker & McKenzie’s biggest
initiatives in 2015 – to exponentially raise the profile of its investigations capability
by creating a global investigations academy.
Christopher Moore, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
Christopher Moore, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton’s London office netted a winner in the form of
Christopher Moore when he made the move from the firm’s New York HQ to its
smaller base in the City. Moore’s rationale was to develop his international arbitration
practice and he quickly made his mark after touching down in Blighty.
Defending the Hellenic Republic against Poštová banka, US-qualified Moore
achieved a landmark victory for his client in the first case to arise out of Greece’s
2012 sovereign debt restructuring. Poštová banka had sought to challenge the legality
of the restructuring, but the ICSID arbitral tribunal dismissed all its claims for lack of
jurisdiction – the first time it has made such a move in a sovereign bonds case. With
the bank now due to bring annulment proceedings against the decision, the case looks
set to heat up for Moore next year.
Damon Parker, Harcus Sinclair
Damon Parker, Harcus Sinclair
Harcus Sinclair has burst onto the scene of major shareholder and banking disputes
thanks to litigation head Damon Parker.
Last year saw Parker build a case that will expose the fascinating inside story of
Lloyds Bank’s £12bn takeover of Halifax Bank of Scotland. The claimant group has
grown exponentially to 6,000 shareholders claiming hundreds of millions thanks to
Parker’s efforts to get it off the ground. He also secured litigation funding and
insurance for the group and dramatically boosted his own team’s numbers to cope
with reams of discovery that will occupy most of this year.
While expanding the focus of his team, Parker has remained true to the firm’s private
client roots, also acting for the estate of poet Ted Hughes last year in the long running
battle over his estate, a client he has nurtured for over a decade.
Parker has recently doubled the size of his practice, which is now made up of four
partners, 10 solicitors and 20 paralegals. He is also looking at clever ways of using his
litigation finance contacts in future, currently mooting plans to launch an ABS with a
funder to provide financing options to all future clients, sure to drastically improve the
scope of his practice and make it one to watch in the arena of shareholder disputes.
Paul Paxton, Stewarts Law
Paul Paxton, Stewarts Law
Stewarts Law head of personal injury Paul Paxton headed up the most high-profile
negligence claim in the last decade in 2015.
Representing the victims of the Alton Towers rollercoaster crash, Paxton had to
handle overwhelming media interest in the case while working to get compensatory
interim payments for the five young people seriously injured in the Smiler ride crash,
at the same time as protecting their families from press intrusion and facilitating the
start of the long process towards rehabilitation.
Paxton ran a team of three lawyers working 20-hour days to get the case off the
ground and put a structure in place with Alton Towers’ owner Merlin to get payments
towards hospital bills delivered quickly.
All of this was run alongside a number of Paxton’s other high-need cases this year,
which include successfully reopening a police investigation into a rugby team coach
crash for a young disabled client.
Meanwhile, managing Stewarts’ 10-partner personal injury group, one of its core
practices, is tough work in a diminishing market, but Paxton has increased its
mandates, only taking on cases in excess of £1m.
Michael Potts, Byrne & Partners
Michael Potts, Byrne & Partners
Byrne and Partners managing partner Michael Potts secured a headline win for former
JP Morgan Chase trade Bruno Iksil – the ‘London whale’ – last year in an landmark
ruling for financial crime disputes.
The July ruling meant Iksil would not be pursued by the Financial Conduct Authority
over allegations of misconduct in relation to £4bn of trading losses and ended a three-
year investigation into his conduct. Remarkably, Potts’ client was completely
vindicated by the regulator without having to attend a hearing.
Despite a victory most litigators would consider a standout success, Potts did not stop
there. He also spent last year acting for individuals implicated in the Tesco corruption
investigation by the Serious Fraud Office; for Rolls-Royce bosses on its SFO bribery
probe; for the head of foreign exchange at Barclays; and also successfully defended
the Sun journalist Neil Millard against charges relating to payments to public officials
for stories.
Although he was busy handling the colossal criminal and civil mandates, Potts
continued to oversee the running of Byrne & Partners, increasing profits last year to
see it become a £12m firm
Stephen Rosen, Collyer Bristow
Stephen Rosen, Collyer Bristow
Collyer Bristow banking and financial disputes head Stephen Rosen took on some of
the most imposing banking institutions and their magic circle lawyers last year,
settling a headline Libor claim against Barclays and Clifford Chance for his client
Rhino Enterprises in December and closing the most high-profile settlement against
the bank since Guardian Care Homes.
In 2015 he also formed the Banking Litigation Network, a group of law firms from
the major European jurisdictions that specialise in acting against banks. The idea was
born from Rosen’s own struggles trying to find a law firm in Dublin to sue the Bank
of Ireland for a client. The network has taken off quickly and now has members in 15
jurisdictions, with its sights set on other countries next year.
On the back of his work against the banks, Rosen also formed Lawyers for Banking
Standards last year, an association of UK firms lobbying for law and regulatory
reform.
Meanwhile, his seven-lawyer team is currently formulating damages claims against
banks with a combined value of £1bn.
Al Watson, Taylor Wessing
Al Watson, Taylor Wessing
Taylor Wessing head of planning and environment Al Watson says the work he has
been doing for Brentford Football Club in recent years has been “reinvigorating”.
Partner Watson has been acting for the club on its planning application for the
development of a new 20,000-seater sports stadium, 910 residential units, as well as
associated transport and social infrastructure needed to support the development. Last
year the club secured permission for the new stadium – the first to be built in London
in 10 years.
In doing so Watson has helped to develop a method for valuing the social
programmes that the club brings to the local area through its work with children and
adults from a diverse range of backgrounds. Such a method had never before been
used in planning applications.
Working closely with the club has been rewarding for Watson, who says the
experience made him fall back in love with his career.
The Hot 100 2016: Management
David Bickerton, Clifford Chance
David Bickerton, Clifford Chance
Clifford Chance London managing partner David Bickerton did more in 2015 than
some magic circle bosses do in a four-year term.
Introducing agile working at Clifford Chance was always going to be a tough call, but
Bickerton’s ‘slowly, slowly’ and top-down approach – encouraging partners to lead
by example – means that a significant culture shift is gradually taking place at Canary
Wharf.
Bickerton also led the partnership through significant changes to the firm’s lockstep,
with Clifford Chance becoming the first magic circle firm to introduce superpoints in
a bid to attract and retain star partners.
Operationally, a number of initiatives overseen by Bickerton led to the firm saving
£6m last year – most notably subletting half its London base to Deutsche Bank and
investing in a second London premises to house its back-office staff.
Each of these ‘big picture’ changes have been made while Bickerton was busy fee-
earning, completing university bond financing for Cambridge, Manchester and
Liverpool universities this year and advising M&G Investments on a £284m
refinancing in November.
Adrian Biles, Gordon Dadds
Adrian Biles, Gordon Dadds
Gordon Dadds managing partner Adrian Biles is on a mission to transform what was
once a sleepy West End private client boutique into a £100m multi-disciplinary legal
market giant with a law firm at its core.
And with the M&A deal-doer Biles at its helm, that rapid transformation will come
sooner than you might think. Biles has so far overseen three London deals that have
catapulted Gordon Dadds into the UK top 100, including the takeovers of Davenport
Lyons and Jeffrey Green Russell. This year, don’t bet against seeing more deals as the
firm takes full advantage of the more relaxed regulatory environment for investment
into law firms.
Biles, once a lawyer at legacy Theodore Goddard, modestly claims to be merely the
man who builds the “foundations and plumbing” – or in other words, creates the
environment that enables Gordon Dadds’ fee earners to thrive. Some plumber.
Shirley Brookes, PwC Legal
Shirley Brookes, PwC Legal
2015 was a year of exceptional growth for PwC Legal. Its UK revenues went up by 15
per cent, resulting in it ranking as one of the UK’s top 100 law firms this year, while
profits also jumped 11 per cent.
But senior partner Shirley Brookes is not letting the ABS-licensed firm rest on its
laurels. Her goal is for PwC Legal’s revenues to reach £100m over the next three
years, with growth of 20 per cent expected in 2015/16. To this end she is
spearheading the firm’s expansion in the North as well as its investment in its cyber
security, IT outsourcing and due diligence business areas.
With nine new partners joining the firm last year and an additional 75 members of
staff, Brookes’ ambitious plan is already well underway.
Andrew Clinton, ASB Law
Andrew Clinton, ASB Law
As last year’s UK 200: the Independents report underlined, firms the size of £10.5m
ASB Law are battling it out in one of the toughest parts of the UK market. But ASB
has a secret weapon: managing partner Andrew Clinton has been working in recent
years to position ASB as a regional trailblazer. Last year the firm unveiled a strategic
alliance with legal process outsourcing and technology provider NewGalexy for
triaging and delivering legal services.
Most recently Clinton and his management team overhauled the firm’s remuneration
policies, with bonuses now aligned to client-centric metrics as it introduces a more
sales-oriented culture.
Clinton says he sees the remuneration changes as being the final piece of a much
bigger jigsaw. He calls it “making our strategy real for people”. With that piece of the
jigsaw now safely slotted in, it’s all about putting on growth and scaling the machine.
Libby Jackson, Herbert Smith Freehills
Libby Jackson, Herbert Smith Freehills
Ever since the full integration of Herbert Smith Freehills’ alternative legal services
teams last June the global group headed by Libby Jackson has had its foot hard on the
accelerator.
Jackson, previously director of Belfast, has been at the forefront of the legal market
nearshore movement since 2011 – but last year was when it really took off at HSF.
Ever since the legacy firm’s merger with Australia’s Freehills in October 2012 the
alternative legal service has been developing under Jackson’s guidance. The Belfast
centre launched in April 2011 with just 26 staff including 19 fee-earners.
It has now grown to a total headcount in excess of 300. And as Jackson points out,
last year it moved from being a way of primarily supporting work that is delivered in
higher cost locations to being an indispensable global function providing a “defined
process”. She adds: “This is now much more than a support function. It is a
differentiator and a work winner.”
Lisa Mayhew, Berwin Leighton Paisner
Lisa Mayhew, Berwin Leighton Paisner
Taking over from Berwin Leighton Paisner’s (BLP) longstanding managing partner
Neville Eisenberg was always going to be a big ask –
but it held no fear for employment head Lisa Mayhew.
Mayhew only arrived at BLP in 2010, from Jones Day. She joined the firm’s board in
2013 and began chairing the employment and diversity group, spearheading BLP’s
drive to improve its diversity statistics and putting in place a target for women to
represent 30 per cent of its partnership by 2018.
Mayhew stood against corporate head David Collins, who had been involved in
BLP’s management for far longer. But her relative newness at the firm did not prevent
her gaining enough support to sweep to victory as BLP’s first female managing
partner and one of just two women to lead top 20 UK firms.
With bags of energy and drive, Mayhew is
exactly the sort of role model and leader to drive BLP further forward.
Gideon Moore, Linklaters
Gideon Moore, Linklaters
Gideon Moore started 2015 as Linklaters’ banking head and ended it as global
managing partner of the 450-partner firm.
The election process saw him beat five competitors for the top role, but his success
was undoubtedly down to his victory elevating the profile of the firm’s banking
practice, boosting its market share to 18 per cent of Linklaters’ total revenue over the
past few years.
The group is one of the most imposing and profitable in the magic circle, making
inroads into US finance client portfolios and making major funds, real estate finance
and restructuring lateral hires last year.
Market sources are predicting Linklaters’ new ‘Gideon era’ will be one of change and
collaboration, with partners dubbing him a “great leader” and “good-humoured”.
In the end it was his personality and experience that won him the top job, Linklaters’
partners have said, adding that he will make a “strong” and “decisive” leader.
Margaret Robertson, Withers
Margaret Robertson, Withers
Few global firms have undergone as much global expansion as Withers in the past
year and managing director Margaret Robertson has been at the helm of it all.
Since the start of 2015 headcount has grown by a third, with new offices in Tokyo,
San Diego, Los Angeles and Rancho Santa Fe as well as alliances in Singapore and
Melbourne.
In her role, which she has held for seven years, Withers lifer Robertson has been
focused on
integrating these new recruits, many of whom have been attracted to the firm in large
teams from Morrison & Foerster and legacy McKenna Long & Aldridge.
Robertson’s re-election as managing director in 2015 is testament to the role she has
played in internationalising the firm as it looks to strengthen its presence in the
world’s key financial centres.
Michael Ward, Gateley
Michael Ward, Gateley
For a time it looked like Irwin Mitchell would be the first UK law firm to float on the
London Stock Exchange. But in the end, it was Gateley that took the lead, announcing
its IPO on the Alternative Investment Market last year.
The firm’s senior partner – and now CEO of the listed company – Michael Ward
played a vital role in this legal first, with the move from LLP to plc intended to
differentiate Gateley in the mid-market space.
Ward was part of the team that went to pitch the listing, and was integral in
encouraging both investors and partners to get onside.
And so far, so good. Since last summer Gateley has seen pre-tax profits rise 32.4 per
cent and turnover grow by 11.5 per cent, setting a precedent for other firms looking to
follow in its wake.
The Hot 100 2016: Private client
Ros Bever, Irwin Mitchell
Ros Bever, Irwin Mitchell
2015 was a standout year for Irwin Mitchell’s Manchester family law head Ros Bever.
In June she led a team that took the divorce cases of Alison Sharland and Varsha
Gohil to the Supreme Court, arguing against decisions of the lower courts which
meant the two women had received lower settlements than they thought they were
entitled to.
The cases, which both hinged on an argument that the husbands had misled their
wives as to the extent of their wealth, were heard jointly, and in October a seven-
strong Supreme Court panel ruled in the women’s favour. While Sharland’s case
concerned a multimillion-pound settlement, Gohil was challenging a much smaller
settlement and had struggled to get legal aid.
Bever secured an after-the-event insurance policy for Gohil as well as another client
in a separate case to enable the women to bring their claims.
The ramifications of her work last year are likely to be huge for many other divorcing
couples.
Davina Katz, Schillings
Davina Katz, Schillings
It’s been a busy year of highly publicised divorce proceedings for Schillings’ Davina
Katz. At 34, Katz is possibly the youngest family law head in London but that hasn’t
stopped her from advising on landmark cases. She successfully represented the
applicant wife in Abuchian v Khojah, with the Saudi Arabian spouse receiving the
highest-ever financial award following an overseas divorce from a High Court judge.
She is also advising Dale Vince in his attempt to strike out his ex-wife’s financial
claim, marking the first time such a claim was struck out under new court powers on
which there was no previous legal authority.
Having set up Schillings’ family practice six years ago, Katz has seen the practice
grow to six members, and she is set to return to the Family Division of the High Court
this year as the Vince v Wyatt saga continues.
Anna Worwood, Penningtons
Anna Worwood, Penningtons Manches
Best known for her work involving the international relocation of children, Anna
Worwood has most recently been working on one of the most significant internal
relocation cases to be heard in the Court of Appeal.
Many of the higher courts normally only hear international relocation cases, but
Worwood successfully argued in Re C that there is no reason to differentiate between
cases of internal child relocation and external. Her involvement has led the law on UK
relocation matters to develop and be heard in the most prestigious of courts.
Aside from her own practice, Worwood is also chairman of the Private Client
Commission of the International Association of Young Lawyers, and she played a
pivotal role last year organising the organisation’s September congress for 800
lawyers and spearheading a session on art law.
Nick West, Axiom
Nick West, Axiom
One of the first big lateral moves of 2016 came in January, when Mishcon de Reya
hired the London general manager of alternative resourcing business Axiom. Nick
West, who joined Mishcon in the purpose-built new role of chief strategy officer,
helped transform Axiom’s UK profile, client base and revenue, in particular with the
trailblazing use of technology.
Mishcon has now tasked West with helping the firm develop its services over the next
decade as the legal market continues to transform. West is among the most passionate
advocates for how these changes can improve client service.
Mishcon, in recent years, has been front and centre of delivering many of these
developments.
With all of the firm’s working processes and delivery mechanisms now in his sights,
and with a market-leading background in the use of technology, expect significant
change at Mishcon sooner rather than later.
John Westwell, Foot Anstey
John Westwell, Foot Anstey
In the seven years since John Westwell took over as managing partner of Foot Anstey
the South West firm has gone from strength to strength. With compound growth of 65
per cent since that time, the firm enjoyed a 16 per cent revenue rise in 2014/15 and is
on track for similar growth this year.
Under Westwell’s leadership Foot Anstey is embracing all the innovations of the
modern legal sector. A flexible working pilot scheme in Bristol – designed to improve
work-life balance as well as cut inflexible fixed costs – is proving successful.
Meanwhile, the firm is turning to external expertise, with two high-profile non-
executives on board.
With plenty of lateral hires to boost growth and key clients across the UK – including
recent wins TNT and the Ministry of Sound – everything points to a firm in rude
health.
With Westwell in charge until 2019, expect great things.
The Hot 100: Real estate
Jacqueline Backhaus, Trowers & Hamlins
Jacqueline Backhaus, Trowers & Hamlins
As Trowers & Hamlins’ head of planning, Jacqueline Backhaus has been at the
forefront of the some of the largest UK housing projects in the past year. She
supported Cherwell District Council on its acquisition and financing for the first
large-scale, self-build housing project in the UK, setting a precedent for how local
councils use their powers under the Localism Act.
The ex-Finers Stephens Innocent partner, who joined Trowers in 2012, has also been
busy working with Balfour Beatty and the Places for People consortium on a
development with the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) at the
Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. While the LLDC is looking to build on the legacy of
the Olympics Backhaus has been pivotal in creating nearly 3,500 homes with these
two deals alone.
Howard Bassford, DLA Piper
Howard Bassford, DLA Piper
Working on the Swansea Bay Tidal Lagoon has been a dream role for DLA Piper
infrastructure partner Howard Bassford, who describes the experience as a once-in-a-
lifetime opportunity. As he explains, “you don’t get to do a world first every year”.
The tidal lagoon is the first of six planned renewable energy projects to be given the
go-ahead and the first where the roles played by the Welsh Government and the
Department of Energy & Climate Change had to be resolved. Bassford worked on the
advocacy and hearing for the plant while his team carried out the drafting work and
dealt with environmental documents.
As a child Bassford’s heroes were engineers George Stephenson and Isambard
Kingdom Brunel, so he found working with the tidal lagoon engineers a pleasure. He
also worked with fisheries to discuss the impact of the plant on marine life.
After overcoming these issues Bassford secured the completion of the project and
paved the way for DLA taking on the other five plants.
Charlotte Morgan, Linklaters
Charlotte Morgan, Linklaters
Linklaters energy and infrastructure partner Charlotte Morgan had an impressive
2015, playing a key role on a number of high-profile projects.
Morgan played a central part in the £2bn financing for the Thameslink rolling stock
project, advised on Centrica’s proposed £16bn investment in Hinkley Point power
station and Energie on its investment in a new nuclear power station at Sellafield.
Her crowning achievement of the year involved creating a financing structure for the
Thames Tideway Tunnel project. The structure, devised by Morgan and her team, was
praised by Chancellor George Osborne as a “new exciting way of financing
infrastructure projects”, and he urged other countries to adopt the financing model.
Aside from innovation on the legal side, the new structure had a more immediate
business impact – it reduced the cost of the project from £80 per customer to around
£20.
Lorraine Reader, DWF
Lorraine Reader, DWF
Since joining DWF from legacy Wragge & Co in 2013 Lorraine Reader has tirelessly
campaigned to up the firm’s focus on real estate portfolios.
One of the best examples of her success was when Reader and her team achieved an
almost-impossible deal. Reader advised real estate investment company Colony
Capital on its £311m acquisition of UK commercial property portfolio Gemini. But
there was an important hitch in the negotiations – rival alternative investment adviser
Värde Partners had already struck the deal to acquire Gemini.
This would have spelled game over for Reader’s clients, but a long-drawn-out due
diligence period saw Värde Partners’ exclusivity deal expire and Reader and her team
sprung into action, securing the deal in just nine days. Despite the rapid turnaround
Colony only needed to increase its offer by £500,000 to win the deal.
Nick Roberts, Hogan Lovells
Nick Roberts, Hogan Lovells
Despite only being made up to partner in January last year, Hogan Lovells real estate
specialist Nick Roberts’ extensive experience has enabled him to pick up a key role
advising Argent on its new joint venture developing one of London’s major
regeneration schemes – the Brent Cross South site.
Roberts has heralded the scheme as one of the most exciting development projects
underway in the UK. The central London development is set to create 7,500 new
homes and more than 20,000 jobs over an enormous site.
The sheer scale of the project creates many of the challenges that Roberts has to face
in his work. As well as managing the demands of both of the joint venture partners,
who often want the project to be brought forward, he must tailor his work to mirror
the ongoing but separate Brent Cross North development.
The Hot 100 2016: Regulation
Stephen Smith, RPC
Stephen Smith, RPC
RPC head of competition Stephen Smith helped to make legal history last year after
advising the workers’ co-operative (SCOP) for MyFerryLink.
Smith became involved with the case some time after Sea France entered into
liquidation in 2012 and Eurotunnel bought its remaining assets. The new service,
MyFerryLink, faced major difficulties after the Competition Commission effectively
banned it from operating in Calais.
Smith’s tireless work led to the first successful irrationality judicial review challenge
to the Competition and Market Authority’s merger control jurisdiction powers. The
case was also the first under the Enterprise Act to be heard at the Supreme Court and
set the standard for the limits of UK merger control. Thanks to Smith and his team’s
work, MyFerryLink was allowed to operate for a further two years and ensured that
90 per cent of SCOP’s employees found work.
Catherine Wolfenden, Osborne Clark
Catherine Wolfenden, Osborne Clarke
Already a leading procurement and regulatory lawyer in the UK, Catherine
Wolfenden took on an extra role in 2015 as Osborne Clarke’s training principal. Top
of her agenda is the engagement of senior associates, whom she believes should be
using their role as trainee supervisors to enhance their skills on the way to partnership.
Another issue close to her heart is encouraging women to put themselves forward for
promotion, with Wolfenden not only Osborne Clarke’s regulatory head but the
founder of the Women in Regulatory Law network.
Last year the public procurement specialist sat on the other side of the Government in
a number of cases, representing Bluewater Industries in its successful challenge
against the Department for Transport, as well as EE in its multimillion-pound contract
win from the Home Office for the emergency services’ Airwave network.

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25.01.2016 - The Lawyer Hot 100 2016

  • 1. Unveiled: The Hot 100 2016 By Natasha Bernal 25 January 2016 This year’s Hot 100 gathers together the best lawyers in the business – the cream of the crop from in-house, private practice and the bar. The list this year features 49 female lawyers, 10 barristers, and two recently-elected managing partners alongside top class lawyers in litigation, finance, energy, real estate, life sciences, and regulation. Emma Moloney, News UK The 30-strong in-house cohort gathers together key general counsel from a variety of businesses, including British American Tobacco’s Jerome Abelman, BT’s Rachel Canham and News UK’s Emma Moloney. Meanwhile the management section includes innovation drivers such as Herbert Smith Freehills’ Libby Jackson and Clifford Chance’s David Bickerton. The Hot 100 2016 includes lawyers who have truly made a difference in the wider business world – among them Associated British Foods’ Paul Lister, who helped to establish a long-lasting $14m settlement following Primark’s Rana Plaza factory disaster in India, or DWF insurance partner Michael Kingston, who adapted his expertise to advise on key shipping safety regulation in the Arctic. This year’s raft of barristers have reached new heights. Blackstone Chambers’ Tom de la Mare QC
  • 2. Tom de la Mare QC, Blackstone Chambers holds the record of acting on 10 of the 25 major cartel claims to hit the UK, while Brick Court Chambers’ Sarah Lee was awarded silk earlier this year after making a name for herself as one of the most prolific juniors when it comes to FTSE 100 clients battling in court. Innovation has continued to be at the heart of the Hot 100. Some of the lawyers in this year’s list have transformed their own practice to go above and beyond their fee- earning duties – Bird & Bird’s Felicity Reeve and her push to expand her commercial practice into less conventional sports, or Addleshaw Goddard’s Andrew Rosling, who spearheaded the development of an app for doing business in Africa alongside his fee- earning responsibilities, are just two examples. Felicity Reeve, Bird & Bird All of the 100 lawyers on the list have made an impact not just on the performance of their firms, companies or chambers, but also the wider business community. Hundreds of recommendations from across the industry poured in to support their nominations – find out why they made the list here.
  • 3. The Hot 100 2016: The Bar John Beggs QC, Serjeants’ Inn Chambers John Beggs QC Over the past 25 years John Beggs QC has built up a leading practice acting on defendant police work. The Serjeants’ Inn Chambers tenant acts for individual policemen and women, chief constables and police authorities – as well as the Police and Crime Commissioner – on a wide range of cases and inquiries. In 2015 Beggs continued his representation of the Hillsborough match commanders before the Hillsborough inquest; a job that has kept him on his feet for months and put him firmly in the public gaze. More inquest work is scheduled for this year, with the inquiry into the 1995 death of trainee soldier Cheryl James at the Deepcut Barracks. With a raft of similarly high-profile cases on his caselist for the coming year there is no doubt that Beggs is the go-to man for a policeman facing the courts. Guy Blackwood QC, Quadrant Chambers Guy Blackwood QC, Quadrant Chambers Quadrant Chambers silk Guy Blackwood QC had a fantastic 2015, setting a precedent on the way hypothetical evidence should be dealt with in court as well as handling a number of high-profile sovereign immunity cases. In the former, Blackwood successfully defended Arab Insurance Group (Arig) against claims from Axa Versicherung that material non-disclosures from Arig had led Axa to write two reinsurance treaties in a specific way. While Axa proved that Arab Insurance Group had not disclosed the relevant information when it should have, Blackwood persuaded
  • 4. Mr Justice Males disclosure would not have influenced the way Axa’s treaties were written. The decision was particularly significant given that the new Insurance Act will come into force in 2016. On the sovereign immunity front Blackwood was successful in having a $100m (£70m) New York suit against hedge fund Talos dismissed on the grounds that it was oppressive and also represented Taurus Petroleum in a case against the Iraqi Government that will now go to the Supreme Court. Next up, Blackwood is due to appear in a case concerning a ship hijacked by Somali pirates. Tom de la Mare QC, Blackstone Chambers Tom de la Mare QC, Blackstone Chambers The past 12 months have seen Tom de la Mare QC set the wheels in motion for a career-defining era in competition litigation. Of the 25 major cartel claims to hit the UK courts he has been instructed in 10, with three ongoing. De la Mare was also appointed to the Competition Appeal Tribunal expert working group that delivered its game-changing review last September, having a fundamental impact on the court’s Rules of Procedure and championing the rights of consumers and businesses potentially harmed by a breach of the law. The eminent silk has a self-confessed “weirdly varied practice”, which meant his headline case of last year was Lumsdon v Legal Services Board, otherwise known as the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates case. Despite the Supreme Court throwing out de la Mare’s client’s case in June, it recast the proportionality test in cases involving measures that impede EU legal rights. De la Mare was no stranger to the Supreme Court last year, appearing before it three times on a range of competition and policy cases. He has also taken on a primary role campaigning on criminal justice cuts.
  • 5. Richard Hermer QC, Matrix Chambers Richard Hermer QC, Matrix Chambers Amid a raft of high-profile cases on which Matrix Chambers’ Richard Hermer QC appeared last year, two in particular stand out. The first was the successful £55m settlement with Shell on behalf of the Bodo community in the Niger Delta. Instructed by regular client Leigh Day, Hermer led advice which saw the oil giant settle out of court in January with almost 16,000 farmers and fishermen whose livelihoods were devastated by oil spills in 2008 and 2009. At the other end of the year Hermer spent four days in the Supreme Court leading a four-day hearing in the latest stage of the battle brought by Libyan dissident Abdul- Hakim Belhaj, who claims he was the victim of unlawful rendition by the security services. Indeed, the UK’s highest court will be a regular destination for Hermer in the coming year, with three cases set down to be heard. Expect the high-profile battles to keep on coming. Anneli Howard, Monckton Chambers Anneli Howard, Monckton Chambers Anneli Howard has a string of top-name clients including Visa Europe, BT, Orange Telecom, Ryanair and the London Stock Exchange. She is also standing counsel to the Civil Aviation Authority.
  • 6. In her field of competition law she is fast becoming the go-to junior at the bar, having earned a reputation for being a collaborative team player who gets the job done. In the past year Howard successfully acted for Visa in its bid for a Commercial Court summary judgment in the ongoing interchange fees litigation. In doing so she persuaded the court to strike out more than 30 years’ potential damages sought by a group of 12 retailers, totalling over £500m. She will appear for Visa again later this year in a six-month trial on liability. Howard thrives on managing cases, applying practical methods of cutting court procedures to help clients achieve their goals in a timely and cost-efficient manner. Sarah Lee, Brick Court Chambers Sarah Lee, Brick Court Chambers Brick Court Chambers tenant Sarah Lee has become a staple of telecoms litigation and is one of the bar’s most prolific juniors when it comes to FTSE 100 clients battling it out. Her rising profile was recognised with her appointment to silk in January 2016. Within telecoms, Lee began acting for BT, her principal client, in 2004. In 2014 alone she appeared for the telecoms giant in the Court of Appeal, Supreme Court and Competition Appeal Tribunal dealing with the extent of Ofcom’s jurisdiction over an appeal in relation to termination charges. But Lee, who began her career at Brick Court as a pupil in 1990, is a also go-to for Government work as well as acting for private and public companies. An example is her lead appearance for the Government in a landmark European case concerning the Working Time Directive last year. Now that she has just been awarded silk, Lee will be even more in demand.
  • 7. Jolyon Maugham QC, Devereux Chambers Jolyon Maugham QC, Devereux Chambers For a tax barrister, Devereux Chambers’ Jolyon Maugham QC has an unusually high profile. Just over two years ago Maugham began a blog with the aim of better informing the public about tax in a bid to start a “more nuanced debate”. That blog has made him the go-to commentator on tax issues. Maugham is also involved in driving the political debate. He advised former Labour leader Ed Miliband on tax in the run-up to the general election and continues to advise both the Conservative and Labour parties on tax issues. Maugham’s case list is impressive, with a series of major disputes progressing through the courts last year and this year. Notably, having taken silk in February 2015, he is set to lead the Supreme Court appeal in a claim brought by film financiers, after previously being led in the lower courts. Somehow, Maugham also finds time to sit on the Bar Council’s policy and diversity committee. Laura Newton, Wilberforce Chambers Laura Newton, Wilberforce Chambers
  • 8. At just seven years’ call Wilberforce Chambers junior Laura Newton has been dubbed a “superstar” by QCs for her record of bringing in significant commercial litigation mandates and being a “driving force” in complex case management. Newton was the most junior barrister to be hired by the set from closing 11 Stone Buildings last October. She was immediately put to work on six cases, with Wilberforce sources praising her ability to immediately get to grips with the details. She is known for her skill on the marketing side of building a practice, succeeding in securing instructions as a result of networking conferences around Europe. She was instructed as sole counsel on a dispute involving allegations of fraudulent misappropriation being heard in the High Court in 2016, and brought in a QC to the case once its counterclaim was valued at $100m. Her varied commercial and fraud practice has also seen her take a lead role running the day-to-day aspects of a $4bn arbitration, a Kazakh mining dispute and a headline BVI trial. Mark Simpson QC, Fountain Court Chambers Mark Simpson QC, Fountain Court Chambers Fountain Court Chambers’ Mark Simpson QC spent much of the early part of 2015 on his feet defending Gibson Dunn & Crutcher partner Peter Gray against allegations that he misled the High Court. Although Gray’s fight was unsuccessful the dispute highlighted the sort of complex work that forms Simpson’s caseload. As well as Gray’s appeal, due in February, 2016 looks to be a banner year for the professional disciplinary specialist. Among the cases to come is a £200m claim by a special purpose vehicle, Gemini, against two firms of valuers in relation to the valuation of a portfolio of 37 properties. The case is the biggest valuation claim ever brought in the UK and is listed for three months in October. Simpson also has a thriving practice advising firms and companies on investigations and regulatory issues. Described as being “as hands-on as I have ever seen a silk”, he receives plaudits for his gravitas and his leadership skills.
  • 9. James Willan, Essex Court Chambers James Willan, Essex Court Chambers The past 12 months have seen Essex Court Chambers’ James Willan undergo a career transformation from junior barrister to one of the big names at the bar in civil fraud and banking and finance litigation, despite only being 10 years’ call. In one of the most high-profile cases of 2015, Willan acted for Djiboutian businessman Abdourahman Boreh in his case against the African nation, securing the discharge of a $100m freezing injunction due to dishonesty by the claimants’ solicitors and misconduct by the claimants. Willan is not afraid of wading into complex global disputes: he is also acting for Yukos in its claim to enforce arbitral awards worth $500m set aside in Russia in allegedly corrupt judicial proceedings. Willan’s banking work saw him act for Italian investment bank Dexia Crediop, securing a judgment dismissing allegations of fraud and mis-selling. Judgment was secured during a hearing so his silk mentor was never brought into the case. Willan’s instructions see him going above and beyond traditional junior mandates, being brought in by top silks on strategic case management and coming up with those “clever points of law” that take the case where it needs to be, according to one of his peers.
  • 10. The Hot 100 2016: Commercial Alex Chapman, Sheridans Alex Chapman, Sheridans Sheridans head of gaming law Alex Chapman leads a team that works on almost every major video game deal going. At one stage this year his team were advisers to the developers of six of the UK’s 10 top-selling video games. One major deal was 2014’s $2.5bn (£1.75bn) sale of Mojang’s Minecraft to Microsoft. Chapman and his team advised the company behind the pioneering game, which sold 54 million copies since its release in 2009, on its sale to Microsoft. Other matters this year include advising the developers of games such as ‘No Man’s Sky’, and ‘Score! Hero’. He also structured the deals for the first large-scale game to benefit from UK Games Tax Credits and subsequently advised a number of developers on similar arrangements, worth more than $250m to UK video games development. Felicity Reeve, Bird & Bird Felicity Reeve, Bird & Bird It has been a great year for Bird & Bird commercial partner Felicity Reeve, who scored a major new client in the media and sports space.
  • 11. The All England Lawn Tennis Club entrusted her to close a deal with the BBC for Wimbledon broadcasting rights in the UK, a challenging process that also involved negotiating the hotly contested rights with broadcasters worldwide. When Reeve joined Bird & Bird in 1994 the firm had a nascent sports group, which has now grown to 11 fee-earners representing all three of the UK’s most important football bodies: the Football Association (FA), the Premier League and the Football League. The FA was Reeve’s first client and the firm has been reappointed to its panel. Last year Reeve also advised the British and Irish Lions on the appointment of Canterbury as official apparel partner for the 2017 tour of New Zealand. Reeve is now branching out into other sports such as horse racing, a new challenge where the underlying principles are the same. Sarah Wright, Olswang Sarah Wright, Olswang Major client work for Sarah Wright last year included gaining trademark work from longstanding Olswang client Microsoft, which had not historically given the firm its filing work. Wright was able to “get under the skin of the business” and has worked with the company on a weekly basis to secure its trademark position in the market. She also won Lipsy as a client and has worked alongside the fashion brand to boost its anti-counterfeiting efforts. Since her instruction in April 2015 she has secured three five-figure settlements from third parties selling copies of Lipsy’s designs alongside images of the company’s celebrity ambassadors. Alongside her new work Wright gained a top spot on her firm’s 10-strong advisory board recently, motivated by her desire for better female representation at the firm. The prospect of representing junior partners at the top level is a priority for her and, so far, she has performed a perfect balancing act between management responsibilities and fee-earning.
  • 12. The Hot 100 2016: Competition Isabel Taylor, Slaughter and May Isabel Taylor, Slaughter and May It is not often that lawyers get to be the first to test a new regime, but that is what Slaughter and May competition partner Isabel Taylor got to do last year. Taylor led the Slaughters team acting for Northern Powergrid on an appeal against the Gas and Electricity Markets Authority on price controls for electricity distribution network operators. The appeals, to the Competition and Markets Authority, were the first to be made under a new regime introduced by regulation in 2011, and will boost Northern Powergrid’s revenue by £11m. Not only was this an extraordinarily successful outcome, but for Slaughters Northern Powergrid was a brand new client, won in a pitch process. The work was the icing on the cake of a busy year for Taylor, who also has a thriving state aid practice with clients such as the Green Investment Bank and is the chair of the Law Society’s competition section committee. Claire Wright, Allen & Overy Claire Wright, Allen & Overy
  • 13. In March 2016 Claire Wright will have been at Allen & Overy (A&O) for 30 years. She marked her 29th with the completion of a matter that has been ongoing since the firm first beat off heavy competition for it in 2012 – the Ministry of Justice’s Transforming Rehabilitation project. This saw 35 probation trusts dismantled, with their work being taken over by 21 newly created community rehabilitation companies (CRCs). An incredibly tight schedule was imposed by then-justice secretary Chris Grayling for what was an immense exercise: the final signing took two weeks, with A&O’s biggest boardroom dedicated to housing the documents. It turned out to be a fitting end to Wright’s client-facing career at the firm. She has taken on the role of graduate recruitment partner and tasked with overhauling the firm’s selection process to reflect what it will need from its lawyers in 2020.
  • 14. The Hot 100 2016: Corporate Aedamar Comiskey, Linklaters Aedamar Comiskey, Linklaters In the past few years corporate partner moves have hit the headlines. But Linklaters lifer Aedamar Comiskey has stayed put throughout, winning lead roles on multiple billion-pound M&A deals last year. Soon after closing Amec’s merger with Foster Wheeler at the end of 2014 Comiskey was advising another longstanding client Amlin on its £3.48bn acquisition by Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance, while Alent was bought by Platform Speciality Products in a £1.35bn deal. As the firm’s lead relationship partner for both Amlin and Alent, as well as Aviva, HSBC, Tate & Lyle and Dixons Carphone, Comiskey is Linklaters’ gateway to many FTSE 100 companies. She additionally worked on Visa Europe’s €21.2bn (£16.1bn) acquisition by Visa, with HSBC’s $5.2bn (£3.7bn) sale of its Brazilian business strengthening her position as one of Linklaters’ key Latin American experts. A member of the magic circle’s partnership board, Comiskey is also heavily involved in its Women Leadership Programme, mentoring female associates coming up the ranks. James Grimwood, CMS James Grimwood, CMS
  • 15. CMS’s new state-of-the-art City headquarters were the talk of the town last year – but the redevelopment didn’t stop there. At James Grimwood’s request, another office was set up at the start of the year, dedicated to deepening relationships with private equity clients in the heart of Mayfair. Grimwood saw an opportunity to grow in the affluent area, putting CMS within walking distance of W1’s family businesses and real estate lenders. Under his leadership, the EU private equity group has grown considerably over the past year, with the firm increasingly acting for major players in the market such as CVC, Cinven and Advent. He is the client relationship partner to private equity house LDC and as such won a role on its £160m sale of uSwitch to Zoopla, and buyout of online travel agent Iglu. Elaine Nolan, Kirkland & Ellis Elaine Nolan, Kirkland & Ellis Since acting for the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) on the restructuring of Thomas Cook in 2012, Kirkland & Ellis partner Elaine Nolan has cemented her place as the go-to lawyer for the UK’s largest specialist aviation regulator. In 2014 Nolan, a Kirkland partner since 2010 having joined the firm in June 2008 from Weil Gotshal & Manges, where she qualified in 2004, advised the CAA on the restructuring of Monarch Airlines. Then last year she helped it protect its position when Virgin Atlantic tapped the bond markets for a major refinancing in connection with its landing slots at Heathrow. While the CAA is just one client in Nolan’s blossoming practice, the fact that the US firm is now firmly a key part of a UK regulator’s external legal armoury thanks to her success on this string of matters is about as big an endorsement as it is possible to find.
  • 16. Lisa O’Neill, McDermott Will & Emery Lisa O’Neill, McDermott Will & Emery McDermott Will & Emery energy partner Lisa O’Neill has had a challenging and busy first year after moving from Berwin Leighton Paisner in late 2014. All of O’Neill’s clients – including Fortune 250 company Praxair and DEA Deutsche Exploration – moved with her to her new firm and all instructed her on at least one major energy matter in the first nine months. Much of Lisa’s work involves advising on difficult issues and transactions in challenging jurisdictions. In 2015 O’Neill advised on matters in Trinidad & Tobago, Suriname, Guyana, Malawi, Tanzania, Comoros, North Sea, Columbia, Mexico, the Canary Islands, Democratic Republic of Congo, and in nine European countries. Among her many deals, O’Neill acted on Shell’s complex sale of its liquid petroleum gas (LPG) businesses in 2015, as well as acting for oil and gas exploration company RWE Dea on a $10bn development agreement with the Egyptian government to continue its exploration efforts in the region. Nick Pearey, Addleshaw Goddard Nick Pearey, Addleshaw Goddard It’s been an exciting year in the betting sector, with several high-profile sales and mergers being announced. However, one of the most complicated deals the year was GVC and 888 Holdings’ war for UK-listed Bwin.party, in a transaction about as unpredictable as a game of roulette.
  • 17. Although a large proportion of the Bwin board plumped for 888 Holdings in July, it was Nick Pearey’s client GVC that eventually stormed to victory in a £1.1bn bid for the company. It took the Addleshaw Goddard partner just two months to help GVC turn the recommendation around in its favour, with both parties agreeing to adhere to the UK Takeover Code despite it being a Gibraltar scheme of arrangement. When not advising the betting industry, Pearey has been busy in the equally active insurance sector, advising Miller Insurance Services on the sale of a partnership interest to Willis Group. Andrew Rosling, Addleshaw Goddard Andrew Rosling, Addleshaw Goddard Addleshaw Goddard corporate partner Andrew Rosling has had a busy 2015. He won a first instruction for the firm from Tate & Lyle when the business opted for his expertise and market insight over magic circle advisers for its European restructuring, which went on throughout most of the year. He has also been hard at work advising Sainsbury’s on its high-profile, strategic joint venture with Dansk Supermarket to create the new Netto grocery chain in the UK – an important strategic development for the retailer. Long-time client Diageo had Rosling on call for the disposal of non-core businesses earlier this year – an operation that saw him work on breaking up a series of joint ventures in South Africa. These and other great opportunities in the retail and consumer space motivated Rosling to spearhead a change in business plan at Addleshaws, creating a strategy to capitalise on opportunities in the sector. Last year Rosling also spearheaded the creation of an app on doing business in Africa – an idea inspired by the amount of work he received from the continent and the lack of connection between law firms in the region.
  • 18. The Hot 100 2016: Employment Tom Bray, Eversheds Tom Bray, Eversheds Eversheds HR partner Tom Bray has been busy over the past four years leading the team responsible for providing specialist HR legal advice to Heathrow Airport. Bray’s work for Heathrow covers “every employment issue you may come across”. This includes work surrounding senior executive appointments, high-profile trade union issues and Employment Tribunal claims. The highlight of Bray’s year was striking a deal to transform the airport workers’ defined benefit pension scheme. It took a year for the money-saving changes to be agreed. The deal tested all of Bray‘s negotiation skills as he assisted Heathrow in reaching agreements with the trustees and the employees of both the unionised and non-unionised workforces. As a result of Bray’s team’s work alongside the Heathrow pension and HR teams to achieve a “fair and consistent” deal with both workforces, many of Heathrow’s longstanding employees were able to keep their defined benefit scheme despite the changes taking place. Sharon Tan, employment partner, Mishcon de Reya Sharon Tan, Mishcon de Reya
  • 19. With one of the largest employment law teams in the City, Mishcon de Reya has a string of senior executive and CEO clients, as well as non-executive directors, for which it acts. But last year it hired McDermott Will & Emery partner Sharon Tan, and tasked her with broadening the firm’s corporate client base around the world. Since joining, the Allen & Overy alumna has stuck to the brief by acting on the integration and restructuring of two global businesses, a mandate she brought over from her former US firm. She has also been acting on the hottest employment topic of the day, working with an international financial services company on unpaid six-figure bonuses.
  • 20. The Hot 100 2016: Energy Rosalie Chadwick, Pinsent Masons Rosalie Chadwick, Pinsent Masons Pinsent Masons corporate partner Rosalie Chadwick had a busy 2015 as lead lawyer on one of the most high-profile deals of the year: the £585m disposal of assets by French oil giant Total to North Sea Midstream Assets following the collapse in oil prices. The deal, which was a challenging first task for Chadwick after returning from maternity leave, involved many multijurisdictional aspects and a high level of legal and commercial complexity. It was completed thanks to Chadwick’s ability to draw from her 15 years’ experience in the energy market to end 40-year ties with Total’s upstream business. Aside from her work on Total Chadwick has continued to act on other high-profile deals including advising Falkland Oil and Gas on its takeover by Rockhopper Exploration.
  • 21. The Hot 100 2016: In-house Rushad Abadan, Standard Life Rushad Abadan, Standard Life Former RBS deputy general counsel Rushad Abadan joins Standard Life as its group general counsel in early 2016, having spent just under a decade at the bank. That decade was characterised by a total overhaul of corporate culture; the subsequent part-nationalisation of the bank and the current selling off of shares. According to Abadan, he is most proud of his involvement in the rehabilitation of RBS and the restructurings that followed it. The former Dundas & Wilson lawyer also helped to reorganise the bank’s 400-strong legal teams along functional lines and held a lead role in the restructuring of Dutch bank ABN AMRO, which RBS purchased in 2009, and the sales of its stake of Direct Line Group and Citizens Financial Group. Jerome Abelman, British American Tobacco Jerome Abelman, British American Tobacco BAT general counsel Jerome Abelman revolutionised the tobacco giant’s legal department last year – despite only taking on the role in May. Abelman overhauled BAT’s global legal function, merging corporate and regulatory affairs with legal and security into one mammoth team now named legal and external affairs.
  • 22. The move means Abelman now oversees BAT’s entire corporate affairs function, including communications and sustainability, as well as government affairs, regulation, risk management, scientific engagement and all legal issues. Integrating the two teams into one 800-staff and 350-lawyer group around the world is a project continuing into 2016, but has already proved fruitful, increasing efficiency for the business worldwide. It is also allowing Abelman to put increased focus on BAT’s creation of ‘next generation products’ such as e-cigarettes, which will prove a key indicator of how well the combined legal function works within the business as a whole. All of this happened while Abelman also managed a raft of litigation in the UK and abroad, including taking the British Government to court in December over plain- packaging legislation. Graeme Baldwin, Pearson Graeme Baldwin, Pearson As Pearson’s first formal M&A lawyer, Graeme Baldwin has played a pivotal role in shaping the publisher’s corporate group. It couldn’t have been a busier year for him. In 2015, Baldwin has overseen the high-profile sales of the Financial Times and The Economist, with the £1bn transactions reflecting Pearson’s move away from news and towards education. As the company itself undergoes strategic change, its legal team has had to respond accordingly, with Baldwin rising to the challenge by bulking up Pearson’s corporate group and building on its anti-trust expertise. Amid all this restructuring, the ex- Herbert Smith Freehills (HSF) senior associate has been instrumental in organising Pearson’s first UK legal panel, in which the number of corporate advisers has been widened to include not just HSF and Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, but Pinsent Masons and DLA Piper as well.
  • 23. Maaike de Bie, Royal Mail Maaike de Bie, Royal Mail Acting general counsel Maaike de Bie joined the Royal Mail as deputy general counsel in 2014 to aid its transition from a public sector organisation to a FTSE 100 company. Since then she has focused on making the legal function up to the task, transforming it from a contract implementation-focused team to one that behaves like a business partner. De Bie cites this transformation as her proudest achievement. She’s also expanded its panel, again making it fit for purpose for a FTSE 100 organisation. For an organisation that tackles everything from the grievances of dog- bitten postmen to taking on the Competition and Markets Authority, getting this right is crucial. De Bie has spent most of her career in-house, spending time at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, GE and Ernst & Young. Martin Bowen, Dyson Martin Bowen, Dyson Dyson general counsel and company secretary Martin Bowen may be a long-term fixture at the technology giant – he joined the company in 1998 – but that doesn’t mean he’s standing still.
  • 24. In 2015 Bowen overhauled the in-house team structure to put legal at the forefront of the company’s development and future growth. In-house lawyers are now part of the research and development teams, working hand- in-hand with Dyson’s engineers to ward off any legal challenges that may be coming down the line. It was no mean feat: Bowen had to convince his business partners of the benefits legal could bring in helping push Dyson forward on the global stage. The company is synonymous with innovation and Bowen’s team is right at the heart of that thanks to his changes. With an eye on 20 per cent year-on-year growth in the Asia Pacific, Bowen is working hard to see off copycat threats coming from China. Sonya Branch, Bank of England Sonya Branch, Bank of England Sonya Branch was appointed general counsel of the Bank of England in 2015. The former Linklaters lawyer and Clifford Chance partner had spent several years at various government authorities such as the Office of Fair Trading and Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs before landing the top job last May. Branch admits that she saw her break from private practice as a temporary measure to widen her perspective for her clients but soon realised that she saw her future in Whitehall because of the shared sense of mission for the public good. Now she heads up a team of 100 lawyers and has inherited a remit that has grown rapidly over the last two years. As Branch says, the combined sense of mission at this point in the bank’s history continues to inspire her.
  • 25. Tom Brown, PayPal Tom Brown, PayPal Head of legal for PayPal UK and Ireland Tom Brown slashed the tech company’s legal budget by 80 per cent when he arrived in 2011 but this impressive economy pales in comparison to the projects he has overseen in the past four years. The first half of his year was spent on PayPal’s split from eBay, a transaction completed in under nine months. This followed on from rolling out an entirely new business line in the form of PayPal Credit and PayPal Working Capital; producing the first contactless card reader and mobile apps such as PayPal.me and Pay After Delivery. For Brown, the challenge of working at the forefront of tech is what keeps him interested. Regulatory challenges and innovation from competitors means that he needs to work fast. Luckily for the former Pinsent Masons and Addleshaw Goddard lawyer, this year hasn’t disappointed. Rachel Canham, BT Rachel Canham, BT The last year has been one of the busiest for BT mergers and acquisitions chief counsel Rachel Canham. She spent much of the year advising BT on its planned £12.5bn acquisition of Everything Everywhere. With the deal approved by the competition authorities last week this year is about to get a whole lot busier as she works to integrate the two communication giants. Canham spent much of 2015 working on the legal, governance and compliance integration planning of EE into BT, now it is time to put that plan into action. Canham wrote the rulebook for how BT executes acquisitions, drawing on lessons learned from previous deals. As a leading in-house lawyer she is recognised for her commercial no-nonsense approach. No two days are ever the same for Canham. She always has an eye to the next deal and is always on hand to highlight the potential risks and rewards of the next acquisition.
  • 26. Ingrid Cope, Pernod Ricard Ingrid Cope, Pernod Ricard Senior legal adviser Ingrid Cope joined the UK arm of Pernod Ricard in 2013 as the company’s sole in-house lawyer. In late 2014 she gained a seat on the senior management board of the UK business, and last year she was appointed to the role of compliance officer. Cope also gained two new in-house lawyers, which has allowed her to rely less on external counsel. She now manages a lean team that looks after the Pernod Ricard UK and World Brands’ Duty Free businesses. One of Cope’s main strategies has been to improve in-house efficiency. She was the force behind an innovative app that allows the company’s field sales team to create contracts on demand, which was launched last year. The use of this app frees up the sales team’s time so that they can devote more resources to the commercial side of the business, while allowing the legal team to spend more time on strategic and long-term projects. Next year, Cope plans to continue the consolidation of her in-house team and focus on aligning her legal strategy with Pernod Ricard’s digital-heavy business plan. Rachael Davidson, National Grid Rachael Davidson, National Grid
  • 27. National Grid UK general counsel Rachael Davidson is only a year into her job but she has made her presence felt at every level. Her mission in-house is simple: draw the best value possible from each lawyer in her team. She has overhauled the in-house team structure and asked her colleagues to keep time-sheets so she can track what they are doing. Central to that is time set aside for getting to know the business, including time at the water-cooler. Having recently completed a panel review for the company, Davidson has also set some major challenges for winning firms. She wants to know how ‘best-value’ can be defined. Over the next 12 months Davidson plans to put in place instruction protocols so each firm knows what is expected of them. Asking tough questions and being prepared to respond effectively is the mark of a top lawyer. Davidson is a general counsel who is thought-provoking, a trait that means she is highly regarded by her peers. Viv Du-Feu, BMA Law Viv Du-Feu, BMA Law For Viv Du-Feu, joining the British Medical Association (BMA) as interim general counsel in 2014 quickly snowballed into leading the organisation’s most important legal development last year. Du-Feu launched BMA Law to provide legal services to the BMA’s 170,000 members in May, taking the ABS from conception to launch in just seven months. Getting the terms of the model agreed required innovative collaboration with a number of law firms, including incorporating firms’ own compliance structures into BMA Law’s contracts. Crucial to providing expert but affordable legal advice to doctors across the UK was securing a legal panel on nationally agreed rates, which Du-Feu did in record time.
  • 28. Now the ABS is run as an individual entity with one set of fees and one structure, and seven firms providing legal advice to doctors nationwide. Other businesses have taken notice of BMA Law’s rapid success, with two membership organisations approaching Du-Feu about bringing him in to restructure their legal departments at the end of last year. He also has plans to expand BMA Law’s offering to take on other bodies with two membership organisations in late stage talks about signing up to create a shared legal services. Annabel Dumbell, Accenture Annabel Dumbell, Accenture Managing director of litigation for Northern Europe at Accenture, Annabel Dumbell arrived at the company in 2007 from the Fieldfisher partnership. She was then co-lead on pioneering a new way of litigating within Accenture which focused on how to handle new trends within a small, globalised team, on the back of which she was promoted to her current role. Aside from being one of four directors, Dumbell has taken on two advocacy roles within the business. Currently co-sponsor of the global legal women function, comprising 1,000 women, she also acts as people advocate for all corporate functions in the UK (again, around 1,000 members), responsible for rolling out people initiatives across the firm and setting a programme to increase people’s engagement in areas such as career, contribution, culture and community.
  • 29. David Eveleigh, Serco Group David Eveleigh, Serco Group David Eveleigh has been Serco’s group general counsel for over a year now, and it is a year that he has described as being one of the hardest of his life. In the first jam-packed 12 months in the job, the ex-BT Global Services GC was – alongside the rest of the executive management team – in charge of finding a replacement for outgoing Serco chairman Alastair Lyons when he announced his departure in November 2014. He also had to contend with an emergency rights issue, in which the company set out to raise proceeds of £555m, and the refinancing of Serco’s debt as well as a Serious Fraud Office investigation into electronic tagging. Coming in as Serco’s first GC, Eveleigh has had the mammoth task of organising the outsourcer’s legal team around the world, reviewing the network of law firms they use and ensuring there is consistency across the board. Lisa Gan Tomlins, Made.com Lisa Gan Tomlins, Made.com Lisa Gan Tomlins’ first year at online furniture company Made.com has cemented her reputation as a lawyer dedicated to enabling her business to flourish. Her arrival from Just Eat, at which she was legal counsel, coincided with the company’s largest-ever financing round, in which it raised $60m (£42m). Thrown into due diligence on her first day, Gan Tomlins oversaw more than 1,100 due diligence queries from venture capital investors while negotiating the myriad legal agreements and reorganising the group’s corporate structure in order to prepare it for its next stage of growth. It’s what she is most proud of in a day job in which she’s also conducting a strategic review of Made’s entire intellectual property rights portfolio to ensure that it caters for the many independent designers represented on the website, and training customer services agents on new consumers rights legislation.
  • 30. Galit Gonen, Teva Europe Galit Gonen, Teva Europe The recent merger frenzy in Europe’s pharma and life sciences market may mean that healthcare giant Teva Europe has to battle fewer competitors, but they are bigger than ever before. Enter Teva Europe general counsel Galit Gonen, who was promoted to the top role in 2013, and has already implemented change within her European domain to gain the upper hand against the company’s rivals. Gonen has used IP, combined with regulatory expertise, market access and R&D strategies, as a pivotal part of her plan in Europe. Some of Gonen’s innovative ideas for her in-house team, which launched earlier this year, have proven to be so successful that the company wants to roll it out across its entire jurisdictions. The two projects are the Legal Internal Mobility Opportunity (LIMO), created to allow members of the in-house legal team to do a physical or virtual collaboration, and the ‘gateway of legal development’, a group that leads on regional subject matters that affect the business. Paul Lister, Associated British Foods Paul Lister, Associated British Foods
  • 31. As director of legal services at Associated British Foods, Paul Lister’s job sees him grapple with issues across the company’s diverse global portfolio. But the last year has been particularly noteworthy. In April 2013 the Rana Plaza factory in Savar, Bangladesh, collapsed, causing the deaths of 1,134 people and leaving over 2,000 others with injuries. AB Foods subsidiary Primark was among the companies supplied by the factory. Lister has led Primark’s efforts to establish a lasting, $14m settlement for the Rana Plaza victims and their families. Deciding that Bangladeshi law would not meet their needs, he set about devising a scheme that would leave compensation in the hands of those who needed it most. In March 2015 the last long-term payment was made but Primark will remain involved to support dependants until adulthood. Lister’s role also means he oversees Primark’s ongoing audit of supply chains, in an effort to keep track of where and how the company’s products are made. Rosemary Martin, Vodafone Rosemary Martin, Vodafone Vodafone general counsel Rosemary Martin is described by one peer as being “one of the most innovative GCs in the market”. Another says she is “approachable, empathetic and commercial all at once”. Those are rare characteristics for a general counsel who juggles the challenges of being at the helm of a £42bn global business. In recent years Martin has been a key supporter to Vodafone’s India GC Kumar Das, who has been battling litigation on several fronts. This despite being a self-confessed deals junkie. At home, meanwhile, she was a core member of the team that helped offload Vodafone’s 45 per cent stake in Verizon Wireless to US telecoms group Verizon Communications. That deal was worth a cool $130bn, but Martin was able to negotiate a fixed fee from Slaughter and May for the work done.
  • 32. Emma Moloney, News UK Emma Moloney, News UK Last year interim News UK general counsel Emma Moloney officially stepped up to the top lawyering job at News UK following the sad death of her predecessor Paul Chinnery. Moloney is used to being in the firing line, having been at the helm at a challenging time for the business when it was recovering from ongoing civil and criminal legal battles and board changes under intense public scrutiny. Having joined News UK in 2013, Moloney has worked hard to make the legal team more approachable to the rest of the business and continued Chinnery’s innovation- inspired legacy, developing a legal portal that allows the team to provide templates for employment agreements, NDAs and copyright agreements which take ‘two minutes’ now. Moloney has also set up a business news solution that enables the company to offer printing and distribution services to other third parties and has helped News UK become more efficient. Aside from working on day-to-day issues at News UK, Moloney is developing a stronger in-house offering, growing the company’s compliance team, developing internal progression and revising the use of external counsel. Solomon Osagie, Tsys Solomon Osagie, Tsys
  • 33. Brought into payment services company Tsys eight years ago to build its legal team, chief legal counsel Solomon Osagie has created a group of lawyers able to do almost all their work in-house. Despite the company being involved in 49 million payment transactions each day, and with outsourcing agreements with major banks including the Royal Bank of Scotland, Deutsche Bank and companies such as PayPal, Osagie manages to keep the company’s annual legal spend to under £100,000. His team of seven lawyers handles major outsourcing contracts as well as issues such as regulatory, real estate and employment law matters, regularly negotiating with private practice firms on the opposite side. Last year saw Osagie formulate the first application for regulatory approval from the Financial Conduct Authority for a Tsys entity, a task that involved the drafting of policies, processes and a governance and compliance forum. In a world where in-house lawyers are increasingly asked to be at the heart of the business, Osagie really is. Tina Sany-Davies, Bauer Media Tina Sany-Davies, Bauer Media Bauer Media general counsel Tina Sany-Davies spent years trying to woo the company as a client in her years at Reed Smith. One secondment later, she is in the top job and last year took a lead role in helping Bauer achieve its long-held ambition of becoming the biggest radio company in Europe. Running the acquisition of no fewer than 20 radio stations in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden, Sany-Davies managed five teams of external advisers in five jurisdictions and is currently engaged in the legal and commercial integration of the acquired brands into the business, in addition to managing their legal functions. In addition to her day job managing the legal work for 50 magazines and 60 UK radio stations, she also found time to engage with the Leveson Inquiry as part of a select group of publishing lawyers, spending days negotiating with the newspaper industry, industry associations, government and lobbying groups.
  • 34. Nicola Shand, Scotia Gas Network Nicola Shand, Scotia Gas Networks General counsel of Scotia Gas Networks (SGN) Nicola Shand trained at her company. Just seven years later, she’s general counsel of the gas distribution network. In addition, she’s built up her own team from scratch and now sits on the company’s executive board. Shand attributes her success to loyalty, hard work and not being afraid to give an opinion. This year, her time has been taken up by the Gas to West project, which will bring gas mains west of Belfast. The project, which has run without any increase in headcount, required Shand to oversee every aspect from regulatory approval to how to finance the £250m work via a mix of internal and external funding. With a keen eye already on the coming year, Shand lists the business’s response to the review of the gas sector as something that will keep her busy in the coming year, with her legal team responsible for analysing what kind of business SGN will be in the future. Alex Simpson, Asda Alex Simpson, Asda Asda general counsel Alex Simpson’s second year in the job has coincided with a crucial year for the supermarket chain, which is facing a fierce price war on the British high street.
  • 35. But Simpson’s focus on creating a legal team that facilitates and encourages product innovation in a bid to keep Asda ahead of the competition is helping the group to weather the retail storm and bring in profits totalling over £1bn last year. Recognising that developing technology and then protecting those creative endeavours will be key to success in the future, Simpson brought Asda’s enterprise team to sit within legal last year, and also established a training programme for all lawyers on intellectual property and patenting. He also launched a review of Asda’s external law firms in a bid to increase efficiency. The changes included re-evaluating pricing and two-way sharing of legal intelligence with firms to abandon the ‘project-by-project’ model and benefit its in-house team as well as law firms. Raj Singh-Dehal, Center Parcs Raj Singh-Dehal, Center Parcs It has been a whirlwind couple of years for Center Parcs HR and commercial services director Raj Singh-Dehal. The business he has worked for since 2009 has gone through a number of major transactions, beginning with a £1bn refinancing in 2012 with another £490m debt financing in 2014. That paved the way for owners Blackstone to look at selling its stake, prompting the start of a dual-track sale and IPO process that went right to the wire before Canadian property investment company Brookfield announced that it was acquiring Center Parcs for a sum understood to be around £2.5bn. All the while Singh-Dehal has also been working on the financing, acquisition and planning permission for Center Parcs’ first holiday village in Ireland. The site has been acquired and with his dual legal and HR hat on, Singh-Dehal is playing a key role in procurement, regulatory issues and workforce hiring for its construction. So while ownership has changed, work continues.
  • 36. Padmini Singla, Kennedy Wilson Padmini Singla, Kennedy Wilson Since joining global real estate investment and services firm Kennedy Wilson as general counsel in May 2014, Padmini Singla has really made her presence felt. She has effectively jumped from being a senior associate at Ashurst to having a central role operating one of the most active players in the market last year. Kennedy Wilson has invested heavily in property in recent years and Singla has been a key player in that. She has overseen real estate acquisitions in Europe in excess of £1bn, managing external counsel across a number of jurisdictions. Singla has also been central to Kennedy Wilson’s £1.5bn of equity capital raisings and around £600m of debt capital raisings in Europe. In addition, she was responsible for designing and implementing governance and compliance protocols for a London Stock Exchange-listed £2.5bn property investment company that had been sponsored and managed by Kennedy Wilson. Chris Smith, L1 Energy Chris Smith, L1 Energy As general counsel of L1 Energy, Chris Smith deals with bigger sums and more complex deals in one year than most legal chiefs do in their career. In 2015, his second year in the role, Smith switched his focus from building up the company’s legal function from scratch to running its $10bn acquisition strategy of oil and gas platforms.
  • 37. In March, Smith closed L1 Energy’s $7.1bn purchase of German utility RWE AG’s oil and gas business, Dea, in a deal that gave investment fund LetterOne Group oil and gas fields in the UK, Europe and Egypt. The deal was mired by political blockages in the UK and might have ground to a halt had it not been for Smith’s long and difficult negotiations culminating in the eventual sale of its British gas fields to Swiss company Ineos in October. The $750m sale, in which Smith took a lead role, ended L1 Energy’s row with the Department for Energy and Climate Change and saw the business through a number of ‘near-death’ experiences. As L1 Energy’s only in-house lawyer, Smith handled the colossal legal issues on the acquisition and subsequent disposal of assets, including management of external counsel, entirely alone. Ritva Sotamaa, Unilever Ritva Sotamaa, Unilever Global consumer goods company Unilever is big on empowerment. The company, whose products are sold in 190 countries, believes that the only way to eradicate poverty is to empower women and it is leading by example by pledging to have 50 per cent of its management roles filled by women in the near future. It is no surprise, then, that the company’s chief legal counsel Ritva Sotamaa is committed to empowering her 300-lawyer legal team. At the senior end that has meant entrusting a 15-strong team of regional and product- line GCs with running the legal function when Sotamaa is on frequent field trips around the company’s network. At the junior end it has meant establishing a legal academy designed, as Sotamaa says, “to make sure we provide continuous education to our team and help our lawyers to build and enhance their skills”. The online academy, which includes an induction module designed to get staff up to speed on Unilever’s business as well as CPD modules that panel firms can contribute to, is designed so that everyone in the team can benefit, regardless of where they are based. “In today’s world and with such a global team, making sure that we have learning available for our people wherever they are and whenever they want it is something we want to make available to everyone,” Sotamaa says.
  • 38. Mollie Stoker, Lucozade Ribena Suntory Mollie Stoker, Lucozade Ribena Suntory When Japanese drinks company Suntory acquired the Lucozade and Ribena brands from GlaxoSmithKline at the end of December 2013, the deal did not include an in- house legal function. Lucozade Ribena Suntory (LRS), as it is now known, hired Mollie Stoker as general counsel to maintain business continuity while the assets were transferred. Her immediate task was to deal with a backlog of work dating back months, while also getting to know the demands of her colleagues. Having started with a blank canvas in what was effectively a new business, Stoker has been at the forefront of creating a team that sits at the centre of LRS. With no formal panel to support her team, she has kept much of the work in-house and is credited for her can-do attitude. Building an in-house function from scratch is arduous, complex and demanding. Stoker has taken it all in her stride and is now a central and valued business partner. Richard Taylor, euNetworks Richard Taylor, euNetworks When Richard Taylor joined euNetworks from Olswang in 2009 he arrived at a company that was in the midst of major change.
  • 39. euNetworks, which is an owner and operator of high capacity fibre networks in Europe, had listed in Singapore in 2004 but had not distributed any dividends since. This is a company that has a significant number of valuable assets but had failed to turn that into a profit-making business. Taylor’s arrival in 2009 coincided with the appointment of chief executive Brady Rafuse and a fresh capital injection from Columbia Capital. The aim of the new team was to push the company back into growth mode. For Taylor it has been a rip-roaring ride ever since. In the last year the company delisted from the Singapore Stock Exchange, something that was seen as a hurdle to the company’s future growth, acquired Dublin-headquartered Inland Fibre- Telecom as well as refinancing its debt facility to push for further growth. Elaine Williams, British Land Elaine Williams, British Land Elaine Williams was appointed as the first ever general counsel of FTSE 100 company British Land last year, after a stint at HSBC, where she was group company secretary. Williams, who arrived at British Land in November 2015, is the only member of legal staff at the company and has been charged with creating a legal department entirely from scratch. Prior to her time in-house, Williams was a partner in the corporate practice at Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, specialising in M&A and joint ventures. She advised on commercial transactions in the UK and a variety of Asian jurisdictions and on cross-border transactions for a number of listed multi-national corporations and privately owned companies. She spent five of her 10 years at Freshfields in the Asia Pacific region, including periods in Hong Kong, Singapore and Vietnam.
  • 40. Matt Wilson, Uber Matt Wilson, Uber Uber general counsel for UK, Ireland and the Nordics Matt Wilson considers himself a businessman first and lawyer second. The business brand has enjoyed accelerated growth over the last 18 months in the UK. Wilson has been drafted in to make sure the company infrastructure keeps up with that growth. Since joining Uber Wilson has set about getting to know the growing private car hire business while laying the foundations for a UK legal team, hiring two lawyers so far with more to come. He is also preparing to set up Uber’s first non-US legal panel. Wilson received a huge boost for his nascent team in October when Uber won a High Court ruling that its app was legal in London after being taken to court by Transport for London. Litigation is just one feather in his cap. Wilson is a well-rounded lawyer called upon to advise on everything from High Court cases to marketing and advertising campaigns. Alison Yapp, Amec Foster Wheeler Alison Yapp, Amec Foster Wheeler When Amec, the British engineering company, struck a deal to acquire its US-listed rival Foster Wheeler in 2015 for £2bn, Amec’s general counsel Alison Yapp took centre stage.
  • 41. The deal, which would make the merged company a powerhouse with a presence in key markets such as the US and the Middle East, came alongside complex legal issues and potential pitfalls. For Yapp, striking the deal was a complicated feat, because of the multiple jurisdictions in which Foster Wheeler operated. Although the company was UK headquartered, it was also Swiss-domiciled – as well as being listed on the US Nasdaq. Yapp completed a series of Herculean tasks to seal the deal, one of which included sifting through 1,200 pages of shareholder information. Yapp was the mind behind a complex legal process that involved deregistering Foster Wheeler from the Swiss Federal Competition Commission so that they no longer had to comply with the regulator’s domestic issuer requirements, and acquire more than 90 per cent of Foster Wheeler shares to achieve a squeeze-out merger under Swiss law. This complex transaction has gained Yapp the reputation of being one of the slickest in-house lawyers in the business.
  • 42. The Hot 100 2016: Insurance James Wickes, RPC James Wickes, RPC RPC insurance partner James Wickes acts for the insurers of the biggest banks and asset managers in the market and as a result he has worked on some of the biggest Directors and Officers liability insurance claims of the year. One such claim saw Wickes put his organisational and communication skills to the test while he co-ordinated over 30 law firms that were acting for each director or officer. At the same time he was responsible for advising his insurer client on its own exposures. Wickes uses his own experience of working with in-house teams on secondments to understand his clients’ commercial pressures and understand how best he can work for them. As well as working on these huge claims, Wickes also devotes his time to working with the charity Limitless London – which he set up. The charity works with school children in Wickes’ hometown of Dagenham and Barking to provide careers guidance for 14 and 15-year-olds. Michael Kingston, DWF Michael Kingston, DWF
  • 43. A chance conversation over coffee kick-started DWF insurance partner Michael Kingston’s four-year run to improve safety measures for sailors working in the Arctic. Although outside his traditional practice, Kingston has become a specialist in the sector, working with Lloyd’s of London to improve the impending Polar Code, which will be adopted by the International Maritime Organisation in 2017. The Polar Code itself is designed to improve safety in the Arctic, but previous drafts had failed to include an ice regime. This meant there was little guidance on what types of ships were allowed to sail in icy water and no requirement to map the waters. Sea ice varies in severity throughout the region and not all ships are equipped to sail in such conditions. Thanks to Kingston’s work the ice regime was implemented in the Polar Code in 2015. Not only will this vastly improve safety in the region, it also means much more certainty for insurers.
  • 44. The Hot 100 2016: Life sciences Nicola Maguire, Cooley Nicola Maguire, Cooley Maguire moved from Reed Smith to Cooley alongside fellow life sciences partner John Wilkinson last year to launch the firm’s life sciences practice in the UK. Within two days she was front and centre pitching to win a new client – biotech company Immunocore – which was looking for funding to list on Nasdaq. In July 2015 Maguire advised on Europe’s largest private life sciences financing ($320m) and the second largest in the world for Immunocore. This transaction marks a trend for the entire industry, as companies seek higher levels of financing in order to fund longer periods of product research. The pivotal transaction involved a syndicate including Woodford Investment Management, Malin Corporation, Eli Lilly and RTW Investments. The financing was unusual because it was oversubscribed, which meant the onus was on Maguire’s team to draft the initial documents. Claire Petts, Clyde & Co Claire Petts, Clyde & Co Claire Petts has had an impressive year after being placed in charge of the Clyde & Co’s new healthcare sector group. The group spun out of the firm’s insurance practice due to its stellar performance, which saw it increase revenue by 20 per cent over the year.
  • 45. She also won a landmark victory that saved the NHS thousands of pounds after a claimant argued he had been unlawfully detained under the Mental Health Act. Petts won the case, arguing that the decision was correct despite a technical breach having occurred. As a result of her work the court set a precedent by awarding the man a grand total of £1. Petts has recently been appointed to Clydes’ UK management board, giving her the chance to promote the healthcare group at the highest level in the firm. Clare Tunstall, Pinsent Masons Clare Tunstall, Pinsent Masons Legal innovation is at the heart of how Pinsent Masons’ IP & life sciences head Clare Tunstall runs her practice. Tunstall has fostered a culture of innovation throughout her team to allow the lawyers to stay ahead of their competitors and patentees during cases. She is constantly striving to create an edge through legal processes, while making sure her opposition can never predict her next move. She does this by adapting to each case and often uses regulatory fillings and Freedom of Information requests to understand competitors’ strategies and improve her own litigation. This approach of using law and litigation as a business facilitator has been put to good use advising Israel’s biggest company Teva Pharmaceuticals. Tunstall describes Teva as an interesting client, having acted for the company for most of her career. This year has been particularly exciting, with Teva close to completing a huge acquisition – that of Allergan Generics for $40.5bn (£28bn).
  • 46. The Hot 100 2016: Litigation Boris Bronfentrinker, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan Boris Bronfentrinker, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan This time last year US litigation powerhouse Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan had no competition practice in the UK. Now it has a thriving and growing one, led by partner Boris Bronfentrinker. Bronfentrinker joined Quinn Emanuel from Hausfeld at the start of 2015 to build a UK and European competition team for the firm. The move fulfilled his desire to work both for defendants – as he did as a senior associate at Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer – and claimants. Quinn Emanuel’s focus on contentious work means the firm does both sides. Since arriving, Bronfentrinker has helped pick up instructions from a range of notable clients, including Daimler, regarding global competition, and Fiat Chrysler. Such is the volume of work that Bronfentrinker is looking to expand his team to meet demand for a series of major cases set to hit the headlines in 2016. Peter Hirst, Clyde & Co Peter Hirst, Clyde & Co Despite his prominent position within Clyde & Co, co-chair of arbitration Peter Hirst does not often find himself in the limelight. He stands out for his client work, consistently among the top two billers at Clydes year-on-year, which is particularly impressive considering his humble roots studying law at night school.
  • 47. Hirst’s leadership has also helped the arbitration group grow by 40 per cent over the last year. He largely attributes this to investing more time and energy in marketing the group to clients instead of quietly carrying out the work with little fanfare, as has happened in the past. The group is currently working on over 400 arbitrations and has worked on nine worth more than $1bn in the last year. One particular highlight of Hirst’s year was acting on a $25m arbitration in New York. The work was carried out for Swiss clients with a Brazilian law governed contracts. He is also currently working on the Samarco mine collapse, which has caused serious flooding in Brazil. Osma Hudda, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher Osma Hudda, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher Litigation partner Osma Hudda joined Gibson Dunn & Crutcher in 2005 from Clifford Chance, moving alongside partner Philip Rocher as the first contentious lawyers in the US firm’s London office. Back then Hudda was just one year qualified, but the size of the team meant that she instantly picked up responsibility as Gibson Dunn began investing in litigation. After being made up in 2013 Hudda’s star has continued only to rise. She is currently involved on Gibson Dunn’s work for supermarket chain Asda in its defence of the first private sector equal pay claim to hit the UK courts – a case which is expected to have significant ramifications for employers. With the case yet to hit the court, it will keep her busy for much of 2016. Meanwhile she has played a key role in helping recruit new members of the team and mentoring younger associates.
  • 48. Alison Levitt QC, Mishcon de Reya Alison Levitt QC, Mishcon de Reya Nobody in the UK knows more about private prosecution work than Mishcon de Reya’s Alison Levitt QC. Indeed, she literally wrote the guidebook to it while she was principal legal adviser to the DPP. Now, 18 months after she launched Mishcon’s first business crime unit, Levitt has used her specialism to forge the group’s impressive reputation in the white-collar defence, fraud and money laundering space, combining civil and criminal work to create the last piece in the puzzle for Mishcon’s burgeoning client base. Levitt has increased team numbers to eight lawyers and has not shied away from taking on the highest-profile fraud, corruption and regulatory cases. Recent clients involve mortgage brokers, former bankers, globally renowned businessmen and traders – all facing multimillion-pound disputes and multi- jurisdictional regulatory investigations. Success, Levitt says, lies in getting these investigations shut down before they even start, in which the practice has had numerous successes in the past 12 months. As well as running the caseload on a strategic level, Levitt is involved in the day-to- day running of each case, even doing the advocacy on some of them during their High Court trials. Joanna Ludlam, Baker & McKenzie
  • 49. Joanna Ludlam, Baker & McKenzie Baker & McKenzie’s Joanna Ludlam was on the front line this year during one of the most important cases for the future of the Bar. Alongside Blackstone Chambers’ Tom de la Mare QC, Ludlam represented the Criminal Barristers’ Association in the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (QASA) case. QASA will score criminal barristers during live trials and prevent those without QASA accreditation from undertaking cases; a subject that was heavily disputed. The case travelled from the High Court to Court of Appeal and then the Supreme Court, where it was finally thrown out. Although the appeal was not upheld on the facts, the Supreme Court enshrined into English law their interpretation of the important EU principle of proportionality. Outside court, Ludlam was the orchestrator of one of Baker & McKenzie’s biggest initiatives in 2015 – to exponentially raise the profile of its investigations capability by creating a global investigations academy. Christopher Moore, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton Christopher Moore, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton’s London office netted a winner in the form of Christopher Moore when he made the move from the firm’s New York HQ to its smaller base in the City. Moore’s rationale was to develop his international arbitration practice and he quickly made his mark after touching down in Blighty. Defending the Hellenic Republic against Poštová banka, US-qualified Moore achieved a landmark victory for his client in the first case to arise out of Greece’s 2012 sovereign debt restructuring. Poštová banka had sought to challenge the legality of the restructuring, but the ICSID arbitral tribunal dismissed all its claims for lack of jurisdiction – the first time it has made such a move in a sovereign bonds case. With the bank now due to bring annulment proceedings against the decision, the case looks set to heat up for Moore next year.
  • 50. Damon Parker, Harcus Sinclair Damon Parker, Harcus Sinclair Harcus Sinclair has burst onto the scene of major shareholder and banking disputes thanks to litigation head Damon Parker. Last year saw Parker build a case that will expose the fascinating inside story of Lloyds Bank’s £12bn takeover of Halifax Bank of Scotland. The claimant group has grown exponentially to 6,000 shareholders claiming hundreds of millions thanks to Parker’s efforts to get it off the ground. He also secured litigation funding and insurance for the group and dramatically boosted his own team’s numbers to cope with reams of discovery that will occupy most of this year. While expanding the focus of his team, Parker has remained true to the firm’s private client roots, also acting for the estate of poet Ted Hughes last year in the long running battle over his estate, a client he has nurtured for over a decade. Parker has recently doubled the size of his practice, which is now made up of four partners, 10 solicitors and 20 paralegals. He is also looking at clever ways of using his litigation finance contacts in future, currently mooting plans to launch an ABS with a funder to provide financing options to all future clients, sure to drastically improve the scope of his practice and make it one to watch in the arena of shareholder disputes. Paul Paxton, Stewarts Law Paul Paxton, Stewarts Law
  • 51. Stewarts Law head of personal injury Paul Paxton headed up the most high-profile negligence claim in the last decade in 2015. Representing the victims of the Alton Towers rollercoaster crash, Paxton had to handle overwhelming media interest in the case while working to get compensatory interim payments for the five young people seriously injured in the Smiler ride crash, at the same time as protecting their families from press intrusion and facilitating the start of the long process towards rehabilitation. Paxton ran a team of three lawyers working 20-hour days to get the case off the ground and put a structure in place with Alton Towers’ owner Merlin to get payments towards hospital bills delivered quickly. All of this was run alongside a number of Paxton’s other high-need cases this year, which include successfully reopening a police investigation into a rugby team coach crash for a young disabled client. Meanwhile, managing Stewarts’ 10-partner personal injury group, one of its core practices, is tough work in a diminishing market, but Paxton has increased its mandates, only taking on cases in excess of £1m. Michael Potts, Byrne & Partners Michael Potts, Byrne & Partners Byrne and Partners managing partner Michael Potts secured a headline win for former JP Morgan Chase trade Bruno Iksil – the ‘London whale’ – last year in an landmark ruling for financial crime disputes. The July ruling meant Iksil would not be pursued by the Financial Conduct Authority over allegations of misconduct in relation to £4bn of trading losses and ended a three- year investigation into his conduct. Remarkably, Potts’ client was completely vindicated by the regulator without having to attend a hearing. Despite a victory most litigators would consider a standout success, Potts did not stop there. He also spent last year acting for individuals implicated in the Tesco corruption investigation by the Serious Fraud Office; for Rolls-Royce bosses on its SFO bribery probe; for the head of foreign exchange at Barclays; and also successfully defended
  • 52. the Sun journalist Neil Millard against charges relating to payments to public officials for stories. Although he was busy handling the colossal criminal and civil mandates, Potts continued to oversee the running of Byrne & Partners, increasing profits last year to see it become a £12m firm Stephen Rosen, Collyer Bristow Stephen Rosen, Collyer Bristow Collyer Bristow banking and financial disputes head Stephen Rosen took on some of the most imposing banking institutions and their magic circle lawyers last year, settling a headline Libor claim against Barclays and Clifford Chance for his client Rhino Enterprises in December and closing the most high-profile settlement against the bank since Guardian Care Homes. In 2015 he also formed the Banking Litigation Network, a group of law firms from the major European jurisdictions that specialise in acting against banks. The idea was born from Rosen’s own struggles trying to find a law firm in Dublin to sue the Bank of Ireland for a client. The network has taken off quickly and now has members in 15 jurisdictions, with its sights set on other countries next year. On the back of his work against the banks, Rosen also formed Lawyers for Banking Standards last year, an association of UK firms lobbying for law and regulatory reform. Meanwhile, his seven-lawyer team is currently formulating damages claims against banks with a combined value of £1bn.
  • 53. Al Watson, Taylor Wessing Al Watson, Taylor Wessing Taylor Wessing head of planning and environment Al Watson says the work he has been doing for Brentford Football Club in recent years has been “reinvigorating”. Partner Watson has been acting for the club on its planning application for the development of a new 20,000-seater sports stadium, 910 residential units, as well as associated transport and social infrastructure needed to support the development. Last year the club secured permission for the new stadium – the first to be built in London in 10 years. In doing so Watson has helped to develop a method for valuing the social programmes that the club brings to the local area through its work with children and adults from a diverse range of backgrounds. Such a method had never before been used in planning applications. Working closely with the club has been rewarding for Watson, who says the experience made him fall back in love with his career.
  • 54. The Hot 100 2016: Management David Bickerton, Clifford Chance David Bickerton, Clifford Chance Clifford Chance London managing partner David Bickerton did more in 2015 than some magic circle bosses do in a four-year term. Introducing agile working at Clifford Chance was always going to be a tough call, but Bickerton’s ‘slowly, slowly’ and top-down approach – encouraging partners to lead by example – means that a significant culture shift is gradually taking place at Canary Wharf. Bickerton also led the partnership through significant changes to the firm’s lockstep, with Clifford Chance becoming the first magic circle firm to introduce superpoints in a bid to attract and retain star partners. Operationally, a number of initiatives overseen by Bickerton led to the firm saving £6m last year – most notably subletting half its London base to Deutsche Bank and investing in a second London premises to house its back-office staff. Each of these ‘big picture’ changes have been made while Bickerton was busy fee- earning, completing university bond financing for Cambridge, Manchester and Liverpool universities this year and advising M&G Investments on a £284m refinancing in November. Adrian Biles, Gordon Dadds
  • 55. Adrian Biles, Gordon Dadds Gordon Dadds managing partner Adrian Biles is on a mission to transform what was once a sleepy West End private client boutique into a £100m multi-disciplinary legal market giant with a law firm at its core. And with the M&A deal-doer Biles at its helm, that rapid transformation will come sooner than you might think. Biles has so far overseen three London deals that have catapulted Gordon Dadds into the UK top 100, including the takeovers of Davenport Lyons and Jeffrey Green Russell. This year, don’t bet against seeing more deals as the firm takes full advantage of the more relaxed regulatory environment for investment into law firms. Biles, once a lawyer at legacy Theodore Goddard, modestly claims to be merely the man who builds the “foundations and plumbing” – or in other words, creates the environment that enables Gordon Dadds’ fee earners to thrive. Some plumber. Shirley Brookes, PwC Legal Shirley Brookes, PwC Legal 2015 was a year of exceptional growth for PwC Legal. Its UK revenues went up by 15 per cent, resulting in it ranking as one of the UK’s top 100 law firms this year, while profits also jumped 11 per cent. But senior partner Shirley Brookes is not letting the ABS-licensed firm rest on its laurels. Her goal is for PwC Legal’s revenues to reach £100m over the next three years, with growth of 20 per cent expected in 2015/16. To this end she is spearheading the firm’s expansion in the North as well as its investment in its cyber security, IT outsourcing and due diligence business areas. With nine new partners joining the firm last year and an additional 75 members of staff, Brookes’ ambitious plan is already well underway.
  • 56. Andrew Clinton, ASB Law Andrew Clinton, ASB Law As last year’s UK 200: the Independents report underlined, firms the size of £10.5m ASB Law are battling it out in one of the toughest parts of the UK market. But ASB has a secret weapon: managing partner Andrew Clinton has been working in recent years to position ASB as a regional trailblazer. Last year the firm unveiled a strategic alliance with legal process outsourcing and technology provider NewGalexy for triaging and delivering legal services. Most recently Clinton and his management team overhauled the firm’s remuneration policies, with bonuses now aligned to client-centric metrics as it introduces a more sales-oriented culture. Clinton says he sees the remuneration changes as being the final piece of a much bigger jigsaw. He calls it “making our strategy real for people”. With that piece of the jigsaw now safely slotted in, it’s all about putting on growth and scaling the machine. Libby Jackson, Herbert Smith Freehills Libby Jackson, Herbert Smith Freehills Ever since the full integration of Herbert Smith Freehills’ alternative legal services teams last June the global group headed by Libby Jackson has had its foot hard on the accelerator. Jackson, previously director of Belfast, has been at the forefront of the legal market nearshore movement since 2011 – but last year was when it really took off at HSF.
  • 57. Ever since the legacy firm’s merger with Australia’s Freehills in October 2012 the alternative legal service has been developing under Jackson’s guidance. The Belfast centre launched in April 2011 with just 26 staff including 19 fee-earners. It has now grown to a total headcount in excess of 300. And as Jackson points out, last year it moved from being a way of primarily supporting work that is delivered in higher cost locations to being an indispensable global function providing a “defined process”. She adds: “This is now much more than a support function. It is a differentiator and a work winner.” Lisa Mayhew, Berwin Leighton Paisner Lisa Mayhew, Berwin Leighton Paisner Taking over from Berwin Leighton Paisner’s (BLP) longstanding managing partner Neville Eisenberg was always going to be a big ask – but it held no fear for employment head Lisa Mayhew. Mayhew only arrived at BLP in 2010, from Jones Day. She joined the firm’s board in 2013 and began chairing the employment and diversity group, spearheading BLP’s drive to improve its diversity statistics and putting in place a target for women to represent 30 per cent of its partnership by 2018. Mayhew stood against corporate head David Collins, who had been involved in BLP’s management for far longer. But her relative newness at the firm did not prevent her gaining enough support to sweep to victory as BLP’s first female managing partner and one of just two women to lead top 20 UK firms. With bags of energy and drive, Mayhew is exactly the sort of role model and leader to drive BLP further forward.
  • 58. Gideon Moore, Linklaters Gideon Moore, Linklaters Gideon Moore started 2015 as Linklaters’ banking head and ended it as global managing partner of the 450-partner firm. The election process saw him beat five competitors for the top role, but his success was undoubtedly down to his victory elevating the profile of the firm’s banking practice, boosting its market share to 18 per cent of Linklaters’ total revenue over the past few years. The group is one of the most imposing and profitable in the magic circle, making inroads into US finance client portfolios and making major funds, real estate finance and restructuring lateral hires last year. Market sources are predicting Linklaters’ new ‘Gideon era’ will be one of change and collaboration, with partners dubbing him a “great leader” and “good-humoured”. In the end it was his personality and experience that won him the top job, Linklaters’ partners have said, adding that he will make a “strong” and “decisive” leader. Margaret Robertson, Withers Margaret Robertson, Withers Few global firms have undergone as much global expansion as Withers in the past year and managing director Margaret Robertson has been at the helm of it all.
  • 59. Since the start of 2015 headcount has grown by a third, with new offices in Tokyo, San Diego, Los Angeles and Rancho Santa Fe as well as alliances in Singapore and Melbourne. In her role, which she has held for seven years, Withers lifer Robertson has been focused on integrating these new recruits, many of whom have been attracted to the firm in large teams from Morrison & Foerster and legacy McKenna Long & Aldridge. Robertson’s re-election as managing director in 2015 is testament to the role she has played in internationalising the firm as it looks to strengthen its presence in the world’s key financial centres. Michael Ward, Gateley Michael Ward, Gateley For a time it looked like Irwin Mitchell would be the first UK law firm to float on the London Stock Exchange. But in the end, it was Gateley that took the lead, announcing its IPO on the Alternative Investment Market last year. The firm’s senior partner – and now CEO of the listed company – Michael Ward played a vital role in this legal first, with the move from LLP to plc intended to differentiate Gateley in the mid-market space. Ward was part of the team that went to pitch the listing, and was integral in encouraging both investors and partners to get onside. And so far, so good. Since last summer Gateley has seen pre-tax profits rise 32.4 per cent and turnover grow by 11.5 per cent, setting a precedent for other firms looking to follow in its wake.
  • 60. The Hot 100 2016: Private client Ros Bever, Irwin Mitchell Ros Bever, Irwin Mitchell 2015 was a standout year for Irwin Mitchell’s Manchester family law head Ros Bever. In June she led a team that took the divorce cases of Alison Sharland and Varsha Gohil to the Supreme Court, arguing against decisions of the lower courts which meant the two women had received lower settlements than they thought they were entitled to. The cases, which both hinged on an argument that the husbands had misled their wives as to the extent of their wealth, were heard jointly, and in October a seven- strong Supreme Court panel ruled in the women’s favour. While Sharland’s case concerned a multimillion-pound settlement, Gohil was challenging a much smaller settlement and had struggled to get legal aid. Bever secured an after-the-event insurance policy for Gohil as well as another client in a separate case to enable the women to bring their claims. The ramifications of her work last year are likely to be huge for many other divorcing couples. Davina Katz, Schillings Davina Katz, Schillings
  • 61. It’s been a busy year of highly publicised divorce proceedings for Schillings’ Davina Katz. At 34, Katz is possibly the youngest family law head in London but that hasn’t stopped her from advising on landmark cases. She successfully represented the applicant wife in Abuchian v Khojah, with the Saudi Arabian spouse receiving the highest-ever financial award following an overseas divorce from a High Court judge. She is also advising Dale Vince in his attempt to strike out his ex-wife’s financial claim, marking the first time such a claim was struck out under new court powers on which there was no previous legal authority. Having set up Schillings’ family practice six years ago, Katz has seen the practice grow to six members, and she is set to return to the Family Division of the High Court this year as the Vince v Wyatt saga continues. Anna Worwood, Penningtons Anna Worwood, Penningtons Manches Best known for her work involving the international relocation of children, Anna Worwood has most recently been working on one of the most significant internal relocation cases to be heard in the Court of Appeal. Many of the higher courts normally only hear international relocation cases, but Worwood successfully argued in Re C that there is no reason to differentiate between cases of internal child relocation and external. Her involvement has led the law on UK relocation matters to develop and be heard in the most prestigious of courts. Aside from her own practice, Worwood is also chairman of the Private Client Commission of the International Association of Young Lawyers, and she played a pivotal role last year organising the organisation’s September congress for 800 lawyers and spearheading a session on art law.
  • 62. Nick West, Axiom Nick West, Axiom One of the first big lateral moves of 2016 came in January, when Mishcon de Reya hired the London general manager of alternative resourcing business Axiom. Nick West, who joined Mishcon in the purpose-built new role of chief strategy officer, helped transform Axiom’s UK profile, client base and revenue, in particular with the trailblazing use of technology. Mishcon has now tasked West with helping the firm develop its services over the next decade as the legal market continues to transform. West is among the most passionate advocates for how these changes can improve client service. Mishcon, in recent years, has been front and centre of delivering many of these developments. With all of the firm’s working processes and delivery mechanisms now in his sights, and with a market-leading background in the use of technology, expect significant change at Mishcon sooner rather than later. John Westwell, Foot Anstey John Westwell, Foot Anstey In the seven years since John Westwell took over as managing partner of Foot Anstey the South West firm has gone from strength to strength. With compound growth of 65 per cent since that time, the firm enjoyed a 16 per cent revenue rise in 2014/15 and is on track for similar growth this year.
  • 63. Under Westwell’s leadership Foot Anstey is embracing all the innovations of the modern legal sector. A flexible working pilot scheme in Bristol – designed to improve work-life balance as well as cut inflexible fixed costs – is proving successful. Meanwhile, the firm is turning to external expertise, with two high-profile non- executives on board. With plenty of lateral hires to boost growth and key clients across the UK – including recent wins TNT and the Ministry of Sound – everything points to a firm in rude health. With Westwell in charge until 2019, expect great things.
  • 64. The Hot 100: Real estate Jacqueline Backhaus, Trowers & Hamlins Jacqueline Backhaus, Trowers & Hamlins As Trowers & Hamlins’ head of planning, Jacqueline Backhaus has been at the forefront of the some of the largest UK housing projects in the past year. She supported Cherwell District Council on its acquisition and financing for the first large-scale, self-build housing project in the UK, setting a precedent for how local councils use their powers under the Localism Act. The ex-Finers Stephens Innocent partner, who joined Trowers in 2012, has also been busy working with Balfour Beatty and the Places for People consortium on a development with the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) at the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. While the LLDC is looking to build on the legacy of the Olympics Backhaus has been pivotal in creating nearly 3,500 homes with these two deals alone. Howard Bassford, DLA Piper Howard Bassford, DLA Piper Working on the Swansea Bay Tidal Lagoon has been a dream role for DLA Piper infrastructure partner Howard Bassford, who describes the experience as a once-in-a- lifetime opportunity. As he explains, “you don’t get to do a world first every year”.
  • 65. The tidal lagoon is the first of six planned renewable energy projects to be given the go-ahead and the first where the roles played by the Welsh Government and the Department of Energy & Climate Change had to be resolved. Bassford worked on the advocacy and hearing for the plant while his team carried out the drafting work and dealt with environmental documents. As a child Bassford’s heroes were engineers George Stephenson and Isambard Kingdom Brunel, so he found working with the tidal lagoon engineers a pleasure. He also worked with fisheries to discuss the impact of the plant on marine life. After overcoming these issues Bassford secured the completion of the project and paved the way for DLA taking on the other five plants. Charlotte Morgan, Linklaters Charlotte Morgan, Linklaters Linklaters energy and infrastructure partner Charlotte Morgan had an impressive 2015, playing a key role on a number of high-profile projects. Morgan played a central part in the £2bn financing for the Thameslink rolling stock project, advised on Centrica’s proposed £16bn investment in Hinkley Point power station and Energie on its investment in a new nuclear power station at Sellafield. Her crowning achievement of the year involved creating a financing structure for the Thames Tideway Tunnel project. The structure, devised by Morgan and her team, was praised by Chancellor George Osborne as a “new exciting way of financing infrastructure projects”, and he urged other countries to adopt the financing model. Aside from innovation on the legal side, the new structure had a more immediate business impact – it reduced the cost of the project from £80 per customer to around £20.
  • 66. Lorraine Reader, DWF Lorraine Reader, DWF Since joining DWF from legacy Wragge & Co in 2013 Lorraine Reader has tirelessly campaigned to up the firm’s focus on real estate portfolios. One of the best examples of her success was when Reader and her team achieved an almost-impossible deal. Reader advised real estate investment company Colony Capital on its £311m acquisition of UK commercial property portfolio Gemini. But there was an important hitch in the negotiations – rival alternative investment adviser Värde Partners had already struck the deal to acquire Gemini. This would have spelled game over for Reader’s clients, but a long-drawn-out due diligence period saw Värde Partners’ exclusivity deal expire and Reader and her team sprung into action, securing the deal in just nine days. Despite the rapid turnaround Colony only needed to increase its offer by £500,000 to win the deal. Nick Roberts, Hogan Lovells Nick Roberts, Hogan Lovells Despite only being made up to partner in January last year, Hogan Lovells real estate specialist Nick Roberts’ extensive experience has enabled him to pick up a key role advising Argent on its new joint venture developing one of London’s major regeneration schemes – the Brent Cross South site.
  • 67. Roberts has heralded the scheme as one of the most exciting development projects underway in the UK. The central London development is set to create 7,500 new homes and more than 20,000 jobs over an enormous site. The sheer scale of the project creates many of the challenges that Roberts has to face in his work. As well as managing the demands of both of the joint venture partners, who often want the project to be brought forward, he must tailor his work to mirror the ongoing but separate Brent Cross North development.
  • 68. The Hot 100 2016: Regulation Stephen Smith, RPC Stephen Smith, RPC RPC head of competition Stephen Smith helped to make legal history last year after advising the workers’ co-operative (SCOP) for MyFerryLink. Smith became involved with the case some time after Sea France entered into liquidation in 2012 and Eurotunnel bought its remaining assets. The new service, MyFerryLink, faced major difficulties after the Competition Commission effectively banned it from operating in Calais. Smith’s tireless work led to the first successful irrationality judicial review challenge to the Competition and Market Authority’s merger control jurisdiction powers. The case was also the first under the Enterprise Act to be heard at the Supreme Court and set the standard for the limits of UK merger control. Thanks to Smith and his team’s work, MyFerryLink was allowed to operate for a further two years and ensured that 90 per cent of SCOP’s employees found work. Catherine Wolfenden, Osborne Clark Catherine Wolfenden, Osborne Clarke Already a leading procurement and regulatory lawyer in the UK, Catherine Wolfenden took on an extra role in 2015 as Osborne Clarke’s training principal. Top of her agenda is the engagement of senior associates, whom she believes should be using their role as trainee supervisors to enhance their skills on the way to partnership.
  • 69. Another issue close to her heart is encouraging women to put themselves forward for promotion, with Wolfenden not only Osborne Clarke’s regulatory head but the founder of the Women in Regulatory Law network. Last year the public procurement specialist sat on the other side of the Government in a number of cases, representing Bluewater Industries in its successful challenge against the Department for Transport, as well as EE in its multimillion-pound contract win from the Home Office for the emergency services’ Airwave network.