Office Profile

Bates Wells

London Office

Current View

UK
Also ranked in the following guides

Profile

Provided by Bates Wells

Number of partners: 35

Other fee-earners: 111


Firm Overview Areas of Practice

B Corp: 4.95%

Corporate and Commercial: 34.16%

Purposeful Business: 8.91%

Not for profit: 18.81%

Public body: 3.47%

Charity and Social Enterprise: 29.7%

Main Areas of Practice

Charity & Social Enterprise:

The charity and social enterprise department is recognised as one of the leading practices in the country. It acts for numerous household names, international charities and NGOs. It has particular expertise in obtaining charitable status for innovative organisations and for developing new initiatives within the sector. The firm, as well as having initiated the idea of the ‘Community Interest Company’, has been responsible through the years for many books and other publications. Particularly noted has been the department’s cutting-edge advice on social enterprise; its close liaison with the Cabinet Office on social impact bonds; its ground-breaking work in the Butler-Sloss case, which clarified the law on investment powers for the benefit of charities generally, particularly in relation to climate change mitigation; and its win in the High Court ruling against the Official Receiver in his bid to disqualify the former trustees and CEO of Kids Company from acting as company directors.

Corporate & Commercial:

The corporate/commercial team has developed considerable expertise in M&A, company take-overs, joint ventures, management buyouts, commercial contracts and partnership advice. This team has a focus on the technology sector and specialises in the small to mid-cap market, acting on many AIM listings.

Purpose & Impact:

A key area of focus for the firm is businesses who are dedicated to achieving profit alongside purpose. Bates Wells’ own values-driven ethos underpins its advice in this sector.

Culture & Creative:

The culture and creative team advises a wide range of arts organisations and venues across the creative industries, from theatre, dance and opera, to artists and companies in the digital sphere.

Employment:

The employment team advises both employers and employees on all aspects of contentious and non-contentious employment law, including dismissals and redundancies, restrictive covenants, TUPE, service agreements and injunctions. The team has particular interest and expertise in all areas of discrimination. The team undertakes most representative work in-house, both in the Employment Tribunals and the Employment Appeal Tribunal. It also offers a full range of employment training services, including mock tribunal training. The team is well known for its successful, ground-breaking worker status case against Uber in the Supreme Court.

Immigration:

The immigration department handles all aspects of immigration and nationality law, including work permits, highly-skilled migrant applications, residency, asylum work and human rights.

Dispute Resolution & Litigation:

The litigation department is broad-based, with particular specialisations in commercial litigation, real estate litigation, administrative law, civil liberty law, social work law, intellectual property law, insolvency and defamation. The media disputes team’s notable matters include representing The Times in a ground-breaking Supreme Court appeal, in which the judge established a common law right to information from public authorities, where it is in the public interest for such information to be released.

Politics, Elections & Campaigning Law:

The team has advised on some of the biggest political issues of our time, including advising Britain Stronger in Europe on their role as the designated lead campaigner on the ‘Remain’ side of the EU referendum debate; advising the largest non-party campaigners and the Green Party in the run-up to the 2015 General Election and the 2016 devolved national elections in Scotland and Wales; and advising one of the prospective Labour Party candidates in relation to the 2016 London Mayoral campaign.

Public & Regulatory:

This team acts for regulators, charities, not-for-profit and private sector organisations. The team has a particular focus on work with educational establishments and central and local government (including audit). It also acts for businesses, campaign groups and individuals who wish to challenge the decisions of public authorities.

Real Estate:

The real estate team handles all types of commercial property work with related specialist expertise in financing and borrowing, planning and construction, and insolvency work, both for property companies, and also a wide range of businesses and individuals, both as landlords and tenants.

International:

Bates Wells has a significant international practice across all specialisations, reflecting the international scope of many of its clients. Bates Wells is a founder member of the Global Alliance of Impact Lawyers, as well as the Parlex Group, an extensive network of European firms bringing together practices specialising in commercial law, with affiliates in the US, China and Israel.

Contacts:

Advertising & Marketing: Rupert Earle

Charity & Social Enterprise: Thea Longley

Competition: Lindsay Draffan

Corporate/M&A: Nirav Patel

Commercial Contracts: Richard Marke

Culture & Creative: Erica Crump

Dispute Resolution: Robert Oakley

Education: Jean Tsang

Employment: Lucy McLynn

Environment: Simon Steeden

Faith-Based Organisations: Stephanie Biden, Leona Roche

Immigration: Chetal Patel

Insolvency: Robert Oakley

Legacies & Probate Disputes: Leticia Jennings

Litigation: Robert Oakley

Media Disputes: Rupert Earle

Politics, Elections & Campaigning: Simon Steeden

Public & Regulatory: Matthew Smith

Public Services & Mutuals: Augustus Della-Porta

Real Estate: Mark Traynor

Impact investment: Luke Fletcher

Sports: Thea Longley

Trade Marks: Mathew Healey

Offices

This content is provided by Bates Wells. Learn more about our methodology

UK - Head office
10 Queen Street Place , London, Greater London, UK, EC4R 1BE

Web: bateswells.co.uk

Email: [email protected]

Tel: (020) 7551 7777

Fax: (020) 7551 7800