Lexpert Magazine

March 2017

Lexpert magazine features articles and columns on developments in legal practice management, deals and lawsuits of interest in Canada, the law and business issues of interest to legal professionals and businesses that purchase legal services.

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44 LEXPERT MAGAZINE | MARCH 2017 FEATURE SWISS MISS The collapse of King & Wood Mallesons' European arm offers a cautionary tale to firms intent on merging misaligned entities under the Swiss verein model BY JULIUS MELNITZER PHOTO: SHUTTERSTOCK IN 2008, SJ Berwin was ranked 14th among the top 50 firms in the UK. It boasted revenue of about $350 million and profit per equity part- ner exceeding $1.3 million. In 2013, SJ Berwin hooked up with King & Wood Mallesons, using a Swiss verein structure to create the first com- bination of top-tier practices in Asia and Europe. SJ Berwin became KWM EUME, embracing the European, United Kingdom and Middle East practice of KWM. In 2016, KWM EUME collapsed and, in January 2016, went into administration. For law firms with global expansion ambitions, there's a lingering ques- tion following on the speedy, vivid collapse of KWM EUME: does the debacle speaks to the inherent advantages or the inherent disadvantages of the Swiss verein, the legal structure of choice for the flood of major international law firm combinations in the past five years? KWM may have been sold something of a bill of goods by SJ Berwin, a firm suffering from a host of issues that pre-dated the merger. "Berwin was in serious trouble before it hooked up with KWM," says Edwin Reeser, a California-based lawyer and consultant who was formerly the managing partner of Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP's Los Angeles office. Arguably, to the extent that Berwin's legacy contributed to the even- tual downfall, it speaks more to KWM's lack of due diligence in its haste to expand to Europe than to the verein structure used to form the com- bination. KWM has been vocal in assigning blame to European manage- ment. Critics of the structure, however, say that KWM's failure to deal with Berwin's issues when they reared their heads early on points to the inadequacies of the Swiss verein.

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