CMS Cameron McKenna

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CMS Cameron McKenna LLP
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Headquarters London, United Kingdom
No. of offices 17
No. of lawyers 904 (2011/12)[1]
Major practice areas General practice
Key people Stephen Millar
(Managing Partner)
Penelope Warne
(Senior Partner)[2]
Revenue £227.6 million (2011/12)[1]
Date founded 1 May 1997 (London)
Company type Limited liability partnership
Website
www.cms-cmck.com

CMS Cameron McKenna LLP, trading as CMS, is a multinational law firm headquartered in London, United Kingdom. It has over 200 partners and 17 offices across Europe, the Middle East, North America and Asia.

CMS Cameron McKenna is a member of the CMS organisation of law firms. When considered as a single firm, CMS is one of the ten largest law firms in the world (by number of lawyers: American Lawyer 2014).

History

The origins of the firm date back to 1779 and the law practice of T Hewitt.

In 1997 Cameron Markby Hewitt merged with fellow City of London law firm, McKenna & Co, to form Cameron McKenna (renamed CMS Cameron McKenna in 1999).[3] The firms of Cameron Markby and Hewitt Woollacott & Chown had merged in 1989 to become Cameron Markby Hewitt. Prior to that Cameron Kemm Norden of New Street, London, EC2, off Bishopsgate, merged with Markbys of London Wall, either in 1980 or 1981. After 17 years at Mitre House, near the Barbican, the firm moved into its Cannon Place headquarters in July 2015, situated above Cannon Street Station.

Henry Markby, a name partner in legacy firm Cameron Markby Hewitt, is alluded to (usually in an unflattering manner) in a number of Oscar Wilde's plays, most notably in The Importance of Being Earnest, when Lady Bracknell says that her solicitors are Markby, Markby and Markby.

Markby, who was President of the Law Society of England and Wales in 1887, had fallen out with Wilde, a former friend, for reasons unknown.

The partnership incorporated as a limited liability partnership in 2005.

In January 2008, CMS Cameron McKenna expanded its European presence through the acquisition of the Romanian law firm Hayhurst Robinson.[4]

In December 2013 it was announced that CMS Cameron McKenna would merge with the Edinburgh-headquartered law firm Dundas & Wilson.[5][6] The merger completed on 1 May 2014.[5][6]

Practice

CMS Cameron McKenna provides advice across all types of commercial law; banking and finance, competition, corporate and M&A, dispute resolution, employment & pensions, environment, immigration, intellectual property, private equity, public procurement, real estate and tax.

CMS Cameron McKenna's services are concentrated in eight industry sector groups; consumer products, energy, hotels & leisure, infrastructure & project finance, insurance and funds, lifesciences, real estate & construction, and technology, media & telecommunications.

Practice Areas

The firm specialises in the following areas:

Sector Groups

The firm also operates along sector lines, focusing on the following industry groups:

  • Consumer Products
  • Energy
  • Financial Services and Institutions – Banks, Insurers, Investment Business and Private Equity
  • Hotels & Leisure
  • Infrastructure & Project Finance
  • Lifesciences
  • Real Estate & Construction
  • Technology, Media & Telecommunications (TMT)

CMS Legal Services EEIG

CMS Cameron McKenna is a founding member of the international CMS Legal Services EEIG organisation of law firms, which was established with the objective to create a professional multi-jurisdictional legal and tax service organisation, headquartered in Europe. CMS currently has 3,000 legal and tax advisers across 59 offices, and boasts deep local expertise coupled with the most extensive footprint of any firm in Europe. The organisation's firms are branded with the preface 'CMS' as part of their respective names but remain independent businesses. The acronym's letters derive from two of the founding firms, Cameron McKenna and Sigle (now CMS Hasche Sigle). CMS is organised as a European Economic Interest Grouping (EEIG) and is managed centrally by an executive committee based in Frankfurt, Germany.

External links

See also

References

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