The Atlanta Lawyer June/July 2016 | Page 26

WORDS FROM THE WISE Perspectives on Small Firm Life By Richard Caplan LeClairRyan [email protected] L aw is not a one-size-fits-all profession. Some people thrive in firms with thousands of attorneys, but many others eschew big firm life and either join a smaller firm or start their own. Some would not have it any other way. Abraham Lincoln, for example, told his long-time law partner that he planned to return to Illinois after the Presidency, “and then we will go right on practising law as if nothing had ever happened.” Atlanta is fortunate to have a number of small firms who have managed to accomplish many large things. I was able to ask key figures at four of them—Louis Cohan (Cohan Law Group), Matt Jordan (The Law Offices of Benjamin Y. Gerber), Jeb Butler (Butler Tobin), and Cheryl Legare (Legare, Attwood & Wolfe)—the same five questions about their work. Their answers follow. Tell me a little bit about your current practice—how long have you been there, how many (if any) other attorneys do you work with, etc. 1 Louis Cohan: After nearly 20 years in a bigger firm, I founded Cohan Law Group (CLG) five years ago with my trusty paralegal, Shannon Clutter. Today, we are located on the 25th floor of Tower Place. We have two Associates, Of Counsel (Michael Dunham) and two attorneys who share space in our offices. Shannon is still here because she is not allowed to leave! Our practices all intersect at business litigation. In addition, we have a heavy concentration in employment litigation. Mike Dunham also works in the areas of landlord/tenant and family law. Matt Jordan: My current practice is primarily representing injured Georgia workers in pursuing workers’compensation benefits. In that capacity, I 26 June/July 2016 work in a small office with two other lawyers. In addition, I serve as a pro tempore judge in the Municipal Court of Athens, where I adjudicate Athens-Clarke County ordinance violations, State of Georgia misdemeanor traffic violations, including DUI, and State of Georgia misdemeanor crimes of Theft by Shoplifting, Possession of Less Than an Ounce of Marijuana, and Underage Possession of Alcohol. I also work as a private mediator in workers’ compensation disputes. Jeb Butler: At Butler Tobin, we specialize in serious personal injury and wrongful death cases. My law partner, Darren Tobin, and I left our respective former firms and started our own in June of 2014. The size of Butler Tobin has varied some over our two years of existence, but right now we are sitting at two lawyers and two paralegals, which is a good size for us. It enables us to bounce ideas off each other and to make sure that, if a bad tendency is born, there is someone else around to correct it before it becomes habit. Having two staff members allows us to cross-staff our cases, so that neither Darren nor I work exclusively with one person. It also makes us big enough to ‘muscle up’ in the event that a corporate defendant foolishly attempts to outwork us. Cheryl Legare: My two law partners, Eleanor Atwood and Steve Wolfe, and I founded our firm, Legare, Attwood & Wolfe, in May 2015. We are an employment litigation boutique representing employees in all aspects of employment law, including claims of disability discrimination and retaliation, sexual harassment, FMLA interference and retaliation, gender, pregnancy, race, religion, national origin, and age discrimination, and wage and hour disputes. We also represent individuals in contract negotiations and employment separation negotiations.