Mallesons

Australian-based law firm From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mallesons is a commercial law firm based in Australia. It has 5 offices in Australia and 1 office in Singapore, with over 1200 lawyers. It was originally founded in 1832 and was re-founded in 2026.[1][2]

No.ofoffices6
No.ofemployees1,200+ lawyers
Key peopleDavid Freelander (Chairman)
Renae Lattey (Chief Executive Partner)
Quick facts Headquarters, No. of offices ...
Mallesons
HeadquartersGovernor Phillip Tower
Sydney, New South Wales
Australia
No. of offices6
No. of employees1,200+ lawyers
Key peopleDavid Freelander (Chairman)
Renae Lattey (Chief Executive Partner)
Date founded1832 (Stone James)
1878 (Stephen Jaques and Stephen)
1982 (Stephen Jacques Stone James)
1987 (Mallesons Stephen Jaques)
2012 (King & Wood Mallesons)
2026 (Mallesons)
Company typePartnership
Websitemallesons.com
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Prior to the formation of the current form of Mallesons, its predecessor was King and Wood Mallesons, which was the largest international commercial law firm based in the Asia-Pacific formed of SJ Berwin, one of the United Kingdom's "Silver Circle", Mallesons Stephen Jaques, one of the "Big Six" Australian law firms, and King & Wood, one of China's "Red Circle" law firms.

History

Mallesons Stephen Jaques

Governor Phillip Tower in Sydney, Mallesons' Australian headquarters

Mallesons Stephen Jaques was an Australian law firm which originated in 1832 in Western Australia[3] and was one of the "Big Six" law firms in Australia.

'Mallesons' derives from the name of the predecessor firm's founding partner; Alfred Brooks Malleson. Malleson was born at Richmond Hill, on the Surrey side of the Thames in 1831. As a 25-year-old London solicitor he immigrated to Melbourne in 1856. Malleson's obituary in The Argus in 1892 recorded that his expertise was especially "in company law and in the banking business. Several of the associated banks entrusted their legal affairs to the firm, as well as a large number of leading insurance and other companies, so that Mr Malleson had always as much as he could do". In 1858, the firm (then called "Muttlebury Malleson and Coster") handled the legal work to establish The National Bank of Australasia, which remains one of the firm's key clients as the present-day National Australia Bank.[4]

The "Stephen" part of the firm's former name comes from Sydney founder Montague Stephen. He was the second son of Sir Alfred Stephen, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales from 1844 to 1873. Montague Stephen founded a Sydney practice in 1849. One of his earliest (1853) clients was the "Australian Mutual Provident Society" (AMP Limited) which remains one of the modern firm's key clients.[5] The "Jaques" part of the firm's name comes from a second "Alfred" – Alfred Jaques. He became a partner of the Sydney firm in 1878. In 1888 the firm's name changed to Stephen Jaques & Stephen – a name which continued until the 1980s.[5]

In 1976, Stephen Jaques & Stephen established its London office. In 1982, it merged with Stone James of Perth. The merged firm was called "Stephen Jaques Stone James". Stone James had been established in 1832 by Alfred Stone, Western Australia's first solicitor.[5] The merger reflected a growing importance of Western Australian primary industries as clients to the firm.

In 1987, Stephen Jaques Stone James merged with Mallesons. The firm was renamed "Mallesons Stephen Jaques".[6] The 1987 merger was driven by an assessment that Sydney and Melbourne had become one legal market. The merger enabled the firm to look after clients in Sydney, Melbourne, Perth and Canberra. In 1989, the firm opened an office in Brisbane. The firm opened a Hong Kong office in 1989, and a Beijing office in 1993. It established an alliance with Posman Kua Aisi Lawyers of Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea in 1995. In 2004 the firm strengthened its Beijing resources by taking on lawyers and support staff from Denton Wilde Sapte. Later that year Mallesons merged with the Hong Kong and Shanghai corporate boutique Kwok & Yih.[7][8]

King & Wood Mallesons

On 1 March 2012, the firm merged with the Chinese firm King & Wood PRC Lawyers to form King & Wood Mallesons (KWM) following votes in November 2011.[9][10] KWM in the following year in 2013 merged with UK Silver Circle firm SJ Berwin.[11][12]

Mallesons

In December 2025, KWM announced that their Chinese and Australian partnership will come to an end on 31 March 2026, with the law firm reverting to the pre-merger brands of "King & Wood" and "Mallesons" for China and Australia respectively.[13][14]

Following the split, King & Wood retained KWM's offices in China, Hong Kong, Japan, Canada, and the United States, whereas Mallesons had retained KWM's offices in Australia and Singapore.[15][1]

Notable alumni

Judges

High Court of Australia

Federal courts

State courts

Lawyers

Politics and public service

Federal politicians

State politicians

Public servants

Academia and the arts

See also

References

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