Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Jones Day

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
No. of offices
  
44

Major practice areas
  
Full Service

Slogan
  
One Firm Worldwide

Number of attorneys
  
2,500

Motto
  
One Firm Worldwide

No. of attorneys
  
2,500+

Company type
  
General partnership

Revenue
  
1.7 billion USD (2015)

Founded
  
1893

Number of offices
  
44


Date founded
  
1893; 124 years ago (1893) (as Blandin & Rice) Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.

Headquarters
  
Cleveland, Ohio, United States

Subsidiaries
  
Jones Day, Jones Day Intellectual Property Agency (Beijing) Co., Ltd., Jones Day México, S.C, Jones Day Gouldens

Profiles

Careers why come to jones day


Jones Day is an international law firm based in the United States. It is the largest law firm in the US and one of the ten largest law firms in the world.

Contents

Jones day london careers what s the difference


History

Jones Day was founded as Blandin & Rice in 1893 by two partners, Edwin J. Blandin and William Lowe Rice, in Cleveland, Ohio. Frank Ginn joined the firm in 1899, and it changed its name to Blandin, Rice & Ginn. Rice was murdered in August 1910, and in 1912 Thomas H. Hogsett joined the firm as partner. The firm became Blandin, Hogsett & Ginn that year, and Tolles, Hogsett, Ginn & Morley a year later after the retirement of Judge Blandin and the addition of partners Sheldon H. Tolles and John C. Morley. After Morley retired in 1928, the firm adopted the name Tolles, Hogsett & Ginn.

In November 1938, then-managing partner Thomas Jones led the merger of Tolles, Hogsett & Ginn with litigation-focused firm Day, Young, Veach & LeFever to create Jones, Day, Cockley & Reavis. The merger was effective January 1, 1939. The firm's Washington, D.C., office was opened in 1946, becoming the firm's first office outside Ohio. In 1967, the firm merged with D.C. firm Pogue & Neal to become Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue.

International expansion

The international expansion of Jones Day began in 1986 when the firm merged with boutique law firm Surrey & Morse, a firm of 75 attorneys with international offices in New York City, Paris, London and Washington, D.C. The following years the firm expanded to Hong Kong, Brussels, Tokyo, Taipei, and Frankfurt.

Recent years

In August 2008, Jones Day filed a lawsuit against Blockshopper LLC for service mark infringement, service mark dilution, false designation of origin and deceptive trade practices. In February 2009, Blockshopper LLC and Jones Day settled the case, allowing Blockshopper LLC to continue to cover Jones Day attorneys and embed deep links to Jones Day attorney profiles on non-Jones Day owned sites. The case was seen by some as an abuse of trademark law and potentially harmful to the concept of linking.

As of 2013, Jones Day was the biggest American law firm, with more than 2,400 lawyers and 800 partners.

Jones Day partner Donald McGahn, who was previously a member of the Federal Election Commission, served as counsel for the 2016 Donald Trump presidential campaign and was later nominated to serve as Trump's White House Counsel.

Compensation

Jones Day prides itself on its compensation structure. Unlike many of its peer firms, Jones Day does not pay a year-end or mid-year bonus and instead compensates associates entirely with salary. Salaries are not public and salaries are not determined by class-year. Instead, the firm compensates each associate (after their first year) differently based on the quality of their work and jurisdiction. The firm has long claimed that this "black box" compensation system breeds collegiality and that its associates—even though they are not paid a bonus—generally earn the same as or more than associates at other major firms. However, associates have recently claimed that they are under-compensated—sometimes by tens of thousands of dollars—compared to their peers at other firms and that their compensation is much lower than what they were promised when they interviewed.

Notable people

Notable alumni of the firm include:

  • Former Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia
  • U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit Judge Timothy Dyk
  • U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit Judge Jeffrey Sutton
  • Former U.S. Congresswoman Jane Harman
  • Erwin Griswold, former United States Solicitor General and Harvard Law School Dean
  • Mark McCormack, sports agent and IMG founder
  • Marvin Bower, McKinsey & Co. consultant; Bower reportedly based his approach to management consulting—now the dominant model in that profession—on his observations of the practice of law at Jones Day
  • Megyn Kelly, Fox News Anchor of The Kelly File
  • L. Welch Pogue, former Chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Board
  • James Brokenshire, Northern Ireland Secretary under Prime Minister Theresa May
  • White House Counsel Donald McGahn
  • Acting United States Solicitor General Noel Francisco
  • References

    Jones Day Wikipedia