S. Horowitz & Co.
Partnership (Israel) | |
Industry | Law |
Founded | Jerusalem, Palestine (1921) |
Headquarters | Tel Aviv, Israel |
Key people | Senior Partners — Tal Band, Alex Hertman, Yehoshua Horesh, Ruth Oren, Asgad Stern. |
Products | Legal advice |
Revenue | Unknown |
Number of employees | 210 |
Website | www.s-horowitz.com |
S. Horowitz & Co. is one of Israel’s largest law firms, with over 140 fee-earners, many of whom are multilingual and have qualified and practised as lawyers in the US, England and South Africa.[1] Its offices are in Tel Aviv. The firm specializes in high end corporate and commercial legal practices. It was ranked as Israel's overall leading law firm by the Practical Law Company "Which Lawyer? - 2005" guidebook.[2]
S. Horowitz & Co. is the Israeli member of Lex Mundi, one of the world's largest network of independent law firms based in 165 countries, states and provinces.[3]
History
Founded in 1921, S. Horowitz & Co. is the oldest and longest-established law firm in Israel.
Cambridge-educated barrister Shalom Horowitz (1880-1956) arrived in Jerusalem in 1922 and immediately joined the law firm of British barrister Harry Saker, which had been established a year earlier. When Saker returned to England in 1929, he left the firm to his erudite colleague, by then one of the most active and admired lawyers practicing in the country before the establishment of the State. In 1933, Abraham Levin joined as a partner, and the firm became S. Horowitz & Co.
Many of S. Horowitz & Co.’s first clients were British companies engaged in business activities in the British Mandate. However, the firm, whose office was located next to the old courthouse in the Russian Compound, quickly became involved in the process of nation-building. Shalom Horowitz advised on the establishment of Israel’s most prominent institutions, including the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Hadassah Medical Center, the Weizmann Institute of Science, the Israel Electric Corporation, the Israel Lands Authority and the Jewish Agency. He was soon engaged in the country’s first natural resources, energy and infrastructure projects, including the Dead Sea Quarries and the Naharaim Power Station in the northern part of Israel. In what would be the first of many of the firm’s negotiations with the Israel Lands Authority, Horowitz obtained the authorization to lease the former swamp lands of the Hula Valley for agricultural use.
In the 1940s, the firm opened its first Tel Aviv office. Around this time, Shalom Horowitz retired, and the management of the office was taken over by Abraham Levin.
In 1965, a lawyer by the name of Amnon Goldenberg joined the firm. Like Shalom Horowitz, he too had been educated in England.
In 1986, the firm moved to its own building, S. Horowitz House, where it remains to this day.
Notable attorneys
In addition to numerous professors and partners, both at S. Horowitz and other firms, some of the more notable former S. Horowitz attorneys include:[4][5]
- Chief Justice Asher Grunis
- Justice Alfred Vitkon
- Justice Tzvi Tal
- Prof. David Gilo
- Ilana Dayan
- Menachem Tulchinsky
- Dr. Yoram Turbowicz
References
- ↑ http://www.legal500.com/firms/12300-s-horowitz-co/offices/13930-tel-aviv/profile, retrieved on December 6, 2012
- ↑ Oledimmah, Laurena (2005-11-16). "Which lawyer? Israel". Practical Law Company. Retrieved 2007-01-16.
- ↑ Company profile, Lex Mundi website, retrieved on January 16, 2007.
- ↑ http://www.themarker.com/law/1.653805
- ↑ http://www.globes.co.il/news/article.aspx?did=1000430320
External links
- S. Horowitz & Co. Profile, BDI Code- 2005 (PDF file)
- BDI report in Globes June 26, 2006