James R. Neal, an attorney with the Lansing law firm of Loomis, Ewert, Parsley, Davis and Gotting, was named by The Best Lawyers in America as “Lawyer of the Year” for Lansing, in both Energy Law and Natural Resources Law for 2018.
In addition, The Best Lawyers in America recognized the following Loomis attorneys in their practice areas for 2018: Kenneth W. Beall, Real Estate Law; Jack C. Davis, Real Estate Law; Karl L. Gotting, Administrative / Regulatory Law, and Real Estate Law; Jeffrey L. Green, Real Estate Law; Catherine A. Jacobs, Family Law, Elder Law, and Trusts and Estate; Paula K. Manis, Arbitration, Mediation, and Oil and Gas Law; James R. Neal, Energy Law, Natural Resources Law, and Oil and Gas; Michael G. Oliva, Administrative / Regulatory Law, and Energy Law; Michael H. Rhodes, Corporate Law, Health Care Law, Oil and Gas Law, and Real Estate Law; Kevin J. Roragen, Commercial Litigation and Municipal Law; Jeffrey S. Theuer, Commercial Litigation, and Construction Law; and James F. Anderton, Business Organizations (including LLCs and Partnerships) and Closely Held Companies and Family Businesses Law.
- Posted October 05, 2017
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Loomis attorneys earn Best Lawyers recognition
headlines Ingham County
- Foster Swift selects Taylor A. Gast as Business & Tax Practice co-leader
- MLaw Civil-Criminal Litigation Clinic partners on suit against online “ghost gun” seller
- Law firm donates legal fees to ACLU of Michigan
- Dual JD student explores criminal defense work
- Wayne State University daylong symposium promotes civil discourse
headlines National
- 50 Years of Service: ABA has been a ‘stalwart ally’ for LSC funding
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Biden recalls time he bluffed knowledge of torts case and why he changed his mind about civil-trial work
- Lawyers’ ‘barrage of personal attacks’ on opponents started with tissue-box toss, appeals court says
- Longtime prosecutor resigns after judge tosses him from case, citing Perry Mason-type revelations
- 24% of law students expect to work in public service, survey says