Wadia Ghandy & Company

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wadia Ghandy & Company
No. of offices5
Major practice areasGeneral practice, Banking & Finance, Private Equity & Investments, Mergers & Acquisitions, Real Estate, Aviation, Media, Intellectual Property, Foreign Investment & Exchange Control, Insurance, Alternative Dispute Resolution, Capital Markets & Securities, Infrastructure, Insurance, General Corporate and Anti-Trust Laws
Key peopleHamid Moochala, Ashish Ahuja, Marylou Bilawala, Bindi Dave, Dhawal Mehta, Denzil Arambhan, Sameer Pandit, Shabnum Kajiji, Nihas Basheer, Sayantani Dutta, Gaurav Gopal, Gopal Bankar, Radhika Bhatt, Krishna Moorthy, Dhruv Khanna
Revenue$
Date founded28 November 1883

Wadia Ghandy & Co., is one of the oldest law firms of India. It was founded on 28 November 1883 with an office in what was then Bombay. It currently holds offices at Ahmedabad, Delhi, Mumbai, Pune.[1] While it is a full service firm with partners across practice areas, it has well recognised and market leading litigation, real estate, aviation and banking teams.

History[]

The law firm was started by Framji Rustomji Wadia and Jiwaji Dinshaw Ghandy in the 1880s. The firm's "managing clerk," Ardeshir Jamshedji Chanji Mistry published memoirs of its history in 1911[2] and 1925,[3] along with memoirs of the Bombay High Court in 1925.[4] These remain rare and valuable "primary source" accounts of the everyday life of the firm and Indian legal profession at the turn of the twentieth century.[5] Despite losing one of their senior partners Anand Bhatt in the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attack, the firm has continued to prosper. Nihar Mody, once a partner at Wadia Ghandy & co, has gone on to found Platinum Partners.

Structure[]

The firm is a partnership firm with various partners for each office. For offices other than the Mumbai office, there is a junior resident partner and the partners of Mumbai have cross-partnerships in such local offices. Currently the position of managing partner of the firm is shared between Ashish Ahuja and Dhawal Mehta.

Articleship programme[]

The firm is well known for its article-ship training programme which is similar to the one followed in U.K (Solicitor trainee). It is a three-year programme whereby an articled clerk is assigned to a department for a year and rotated at the end of each year (Conveyancing, Corporate, Litigation; not in particular order) and thereby providing holistic training. the firm follows three round process in selecting articled clerks wherein the first round consists of shortlisting candidates on the basis of their C.V., selected candidates then proceed to the second round which consists of personal interview with the head of H.R and then the candidates selected from the second round proceed to the third round which consists of personal interview with a senior partner.

References[]

  1. ^ Ardeshir Jamshedji Chanji Mistry, Forty years reminiscences of the firm of Messrs. Wadia, Ghandy & Co (A.J.C. Mistry, 1925)
  2. ^ A. J. C. Mistry, Reminiscences of the Office of Messrs Wadia Ghandy & Co. (Bombay: Commercial Reporter's Press and the "Echo" Press, [1911])
  3. ^ A. J. C. Mistry, Forty Years' Reminiscences of the Firm of Messrs. Wadia Ghandy & Co. (Bombay: the author, 1925)
  4. ^ A. J. C. Mistry, Forty Years' Reminiscences of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay (Bombay: the author, 1925)
  5. ^ Mitra Sharafi, "Two Lives in Law: The Reminiscences of A. J. C. Mistry and Sir Norman Macleod, 1884-1926" in Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud, Anoop V. Mohta and Roshan S. Dalvi, eds., A Heritage of Judging: The Bombay High Court through 150 Years (Mumbai: Maharashtra Judicial Academy, Indian Mediation Centre and Training Institute, 2012), 259-83


Retrieved from ""