Tods Murray

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Tods Murray LLP WS
Limited liability partnership
Industry Commercial law
Founded Edinburgh, 1856 (1856)
Founder Andrew Jamieson
John Tod
John Robert Tod
Thomas Graham Murray
Headquarters Edinburgh Quay, Fountainbridge, Edinburgh
Area served
Scotland
Services Legal advice
Revenue £13.1m (2011)[1]
Website www.todsmurray.com

Tods Murray LLP WS was a mid-tier Scottish commercial legal firm with offices in Edinburgh and Glasgow and 2011 turnover of £13.1m,[1] placing it at number 144 in The Lawyer magazine's list of the two hundred largest UK firms.[2] The firm appointed administrators on 3 October 2014 and the firm was bought out by Shepherd and Wedderburn.[3]

Practice

The firm's practice areas included Banking and Finance, Bribery Consultancy, Charity Law, Construction, Corporate, Employment, Environment and Climate Change, Family, Hospitality and Leisure, IT/IP/Media, Litigation and Dispute Resolution, Planning and Development, Private Client, Projects, Real Estate, Recovery and Insolvency, Renewable Energy, Residential Property, Rural Property and Business, Social Housing, Sports Law, and Tax.

It was rated by legal directory Chambers and Partners as a Band 1 firm for Media & Entertainment and Partnership, and Band 2 for Banking & Finance and Healthcare,[4] and by Legal500 as a first tier firm in Technology, Media & Telecoms, and as a second tier firm for Social Housing and for Edinburgh and Glasgow Commercial Property.[5]

Locations

The firm had its head office in the Edinburgh Quay development between Lochrin and Fountainbridge in Edinburgh, and an office on Bothwell Street in the centre of Glasgow.[6]

History

The 'Tods' of the name is a plural, the firm having begun life in 1856 as the partnership of John Tod WS and his son John Robert Tod WS, along with Thomas Graham Murray WS and Andrew Jamieson SSC.[7] The firm's original name was Tods Murray & Jamieson. Thomas Murray was in fact married to Caroline Tod, the daughter of the elder John Tod. Murray's son, Andrew Murray, 1st Viscount Dunedin, became Secretary of State for Scotland (1903-05), Lord President (1905-13) and a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary (1913-32). Of the four partners, three were Writers to the Signet while one was a Solicitor in the Supreme Courts, and the firm remains a WS firm to this day, in that at least half of its partners are Writers to the Signet.[8]

The firm was based for over one hundred years on Edinburgh's Queen Street, a popular area for solicitors' firms, but moved in 2005 to the new Edinburgh Quay development in the city's regenerated Fountainbridge business district.[9] In 1999, it opened an additional office in Glasgow.[7]

References

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  9. MacQueen, Hector Lewis, Lawyers' Edinburgh 1908-2008 (March 14, 2010). Book of the Old Edinburgh Club (new series), Vol. 8, pp. 27-53, 2010; University of Edinburgh School of Law Working Paper No. 2010/07. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1570626