Shea & Gould was one of New York's best-known law firms. It was established as a result of a merger in 1964 between the firm Manning, Hollinger & Shea and Gallup, and the firm Climenko & Gould. Then in the 1970s the firm acquired several smaller niche practices in antitrust and other areas. It dissolved in 1994.
Offices
The firm once employed about 200 lawyers with offices in Washington, Albany, New York, Los Angeles, California, and London. The Los Angeles office was opened with the 1985 acquisition of 70-lawyer firm, Pacht Ross Warne Bernhardt & Sears, but it closed in 1989 due to weak earnings. A number of Shea & Gould's Los Angeles lawyers left in 1989 to open the office of the now-defunct New York City law firm Myerson & Kuhn.[1] An additional seven lawyers spun off from Shea & Gould in 1989 to found New York law firm Ingram Yuzek.[2]
In 1991, Shea died and the firm elected a new chairman of the firm, Thomas E. Constance, and soon after added new members to the firm's executive committee. But the larger committee created tensions until they voted on January 27, 1994, to dissolve the firm by March 31 due to irreconcilable differences.[3][4][5][6]