Cross-examination by Dominic Carman
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Greedy, grasping, duplicitous, self-serving, silver-tongued, slimy, pompous… and that’s being diplomatic. It has become fashionable to knock lawyers, especially successful ones. Few professional groups are as maligned as solicitors and their more voluble (and grandiose) bedfellows, the barristers.
But, m’lud, are we being entirely fair? Just how much do they really earn – and are they worth it? If you look at the hourly rates charged by the top law firms, it appears that clients might be well advised to keep the phone calls to a minimum. Yet the fact remains that an expensive lawyer may save you more than a few bob in the long run. Remember the relieved look on Paul McCartney’s face after he emerged from his divorce hearing – his solicitor, Fiona Shackleton, having saved him upwards of £100m in his settlement with Heather Mills.
The law is a polarised profession. While reforms on fixed fees have hit thousands of legal-aid practitioners beavering away in backstreet offices, partners in City law firms are trousering record profits. There are almost 150,000 practising lawyers in England and Wales – up from 91,000 a decade ago. Last year, the top 100 City law firms employed 46,000 lawyers, generating £12.25 billion in revenues and £4.2 billion in profit. This year, at least 800 lawyers will earn £1m or more. They remain largely an Oxbridge elite – over 60% of the top players went to either Oxford or Cambridge, and nearly all were privately educated.
The 50 lawyers profiled here are among the most distinguished in their fields. While some partners are on a fixed salary, equity partners are generally remunerated on some form of lock-step system – a firm’s profits are pooled and distributed according to seniority. But increasingly, our firms are adopting the US model known as “eat what you kill” – the more money you bring into a firm, the more of the profit you keep.
Rates of charging vary. For City firms these range from £600 an hour to £1,400 an hour for a partner. Leading barristers have a wider spectrum. Tax silks come out on top. When instructing the best tax silks for a conference that might last up to two hours, requiring an additional four hours’ preparation, fees will start at a minimum of £20,000. According to one instructing solicitor: “They very quickly escalate rewards from there – soon reaching £40,000 or £50,000 for more complex work.” At this level, hourly rates up to £4,000 are routine. So who are the key players – and what do they earn?
Dealmakers
Nigel Boardman, 57, £2.3m
Boardman is the best-known lawyer in the City. As Slaughter and May’s star
dealmaker, he fought off Sir Philip Green’s £9 billion bid for M&S,
negotiated the £420m financing of Arsenal’s Emirates stadium, and is
currently advising BHP‑Billiton on their £70 billion hostile bid for Rio
Tinto. He personifies the strong work ethos of the firm. One story tells of
the trainee who shared his office getting up to leave at 8pm. As he reached
for his coat, Boardman asked, “Are you cold?” He describes his
80-hour-a-week work schedule as “fun”. Boardman is fiercely loyal to his
clients, which include 12 FTSE100 companies: “If I act for M&S, I
buy my clothes at M&S, if I act for Shell, I stop at Shell petrol
stations. I identify with them. I share their misfortunes and their
excesses.” He even waves the Arsenal flag at most home games. He sometimes
escapes to a holiday home in Aveyron, in the Midi-Pyrénées, near two other
Slaughter and May partners. He is a father of six.
David Cheyne, 58, £1.8m
From a military family, Cheyne now commands an army of 2,500 lawyers at
Linklaters, where he is senior partner. He was delighted when The Sunday
Times put his as the only “magic circle” law firm in the 100 Best Companies
to Work For, and believes “change needs to be constant”. This has required
“de-equitising” partners to improve the firm’s profitability. “When I joined
in 1972, I was not expected to work very hard, and didn’t: I wasn’t paid
very much.” His first salary was £950 a year. Things soon changed. Was he
noticeably more ambitious and aggressive than his contemporaries? “Yes.” And
as a boss? “I am not unduly tolerant of someone who doesn’t learn very, very
quickly.”
He has three sons: one in the army, one a hedge-fund manager, one a student. He takes three-week holidays in April and August, and has homes in Henley and Notting Hill. “I shoot and I collect things: antiques, paintings. My wife describes me as an accumulator.”
Alan Paul, 54, £1.6m
Not one of those lawyers who, he says, “has huge self-confidence even when
they don’t know what they are doing”. Paul led Allen &
Overy’s M&A practice to the top of the 2007 dealmaking tables,
advising ABN AMRO on its £49 billion takeover by the Royal Bank of Scotland,
which beat Barclays to the prize in the first competitive, hostile bid for a
leading bank in the EU. He also advised Reuters on its £8.7 billion
acquisition by Thomson.
He strongly believes that team strength is more important than the individual. “You’d be a nutcase to do this job if you didn’t enjoy it: you spend so much of your life working. I believe in balance, although my wife would say it doesn’t show much.”
At 13, he had a trial as a professional footballer. He now spends time watching his three boys and one girl (“all too sensible to be lawyers”) playing sport. He has a house in Roehampton, London, and is looking to buy one in France. He plays golf “badly”.
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A big NO is the answer!
Dave Farmer, Broxbourne, England
No way is the minimum chargeout rate for a partner as high as £600 an hour in a City firm
Callum Blaze, London,
Suddenly that rather dull law conversion course is seeming more attractive...
anita, cambridge, uk
After reading your most informative article. it is easy to understand why this proffession has such a low rating on the ladder of public esteem!
Mike O Connor, Plymouth,
Surprised to see that Kavanagh QC doesn't make the list.
Jacques Francis, Westcott, UK
Lawyers are incredibly hardworking and motivated in a very stressful and demanding profession. Entry to the profession is very competitive and comes at huge financial cost for self financing students. Lawyers deserve every penny they make as this profession demands a great deal.
Susan, Carlisle, UK
My wife was charged nearly £2,000 for 40 minutes of work by a provincial lawyer (and threatened with court if she did not pay). I shudder to think what going to a 'top' lawyer would cost.
Peter, Oxford, England
The Law is a monopoly, there are no competing systems and as such is a governmental institution to provide justice. However with no cap on lawyers remuneration, justice is reserved for the very rich who can afford it. Lawyers should be paid on strict civil servant scales.
Roger Lexington, London, UK
I would be prepared to pay a lot of money if I could find a lawyer who really cared about his clients welfare more than lining his pockets. So many lawyers seem to be just going through the motions for the sake of earning a fast buck.
Janet, Aberdeen, Scotland
the City does drain the best of the UK's talent no doubt, but that is simply because the salaries you receive there allow you to live reasonably well in the UK which is now one of the most expensive countries in the world. public sector pay is not in line with living costs and this is an issue.
Alex, london, england
Of course they are. About 40x the income of a nurse to save some celeb a bit of money. Then again, the celeb can only afford it because s/he is paid obscene amounts of money - for what? I know, capitalism - the market sets the rate. Just shows how screwed up we've become.
Clint, Brighton, UK
I notice the newspaper has not dared to let anyone post negative comments about these fees. The lesson of this is. Avoid going to court if you possibly can. The only winners are the lawyers.
Mike, Bolton, uk