The managing partner of Gurgaon-headquartered Kaden Boriss Legal, Hemant Batra, said he would be taking a back-seat in future, having bestowed the managing partner title to four of the firm’s lawyers, each of whom will be responsible for a practice vertical.
Managing partner Preeti Wahi Batra - a 1994 Delhi University law graduate, who is also Hemant Batra’s wife - will head the financial transactions-related legal advisory vertical, as well as be responsible for the firm’s administration. “She’s adding a lot of value to commercial documentation plus she is also taking care of administration”, said Hemant Batra.
Managing partner Amiya Ranjan Nayak - an Utkal University graduate who had been with the firm since 2005 - will head up the real estate and commercial law practice. Nayak had “mastered the art” of real estate work, said Batra.
Managing partner and Supreme Court advocate Aditya Shankar, a 2008 Delhi University LLB with a 2010 LLM from Cornell Law School, is now heading the firm’s litigation and disputes vertical.
“We don’t have very many briefs in litigation, because we are very selective but we really want to grow litigation as well,” Batra noted.
Kaden Boriss had closed its active disputes practice in 2013, following the death of senior partner Ali Naqvi in a car accident caused by a drunk driver. Shankar had restarted litigation at the firm in 2017, with a small separate office in Delhi’s Bengali Market, which now houses four lawyers, including himself.
Finally, Swati Sharma Sulalit - a 2008 NLU Jodhpur graduate who had joined Kaden Boriss in 2015 after stints at Tata Capital, Apollo Tyres and Moody’s - will be managing partner of the corporate, private equity and transaction law practice. She was “representing really good clientele”, including a number of “prominent” start-ups, such as Urban Clap, Benori, CoinTribe, Mercurio Pallia, MetalMan and and Cars24, which were clients of the firm.
“These guys have done really well,” Hemant Batra said, noting that the the promotions had “not been made purely from the perspective of marketing strategy or designation strategy”.
Time for a new beat
Regarding his plans to do less hands-on transactional work and to take a back-seat to the firm, Batra joked that he had gone through a bit of a “midlife dilemma with the same old work routine”.
“I don’t brand myself as a partner, more as a chairperson now - and am not at all involved in the day-to-day. Wherever the client insists, I might stay present in the meeting for a while so the client gets a bit of comfort, but [others will manage the deals],” he said.
“I was in any case thinking of succession planning and thinking, maybe I should venture into different things, writing books, teaching and purely advisory work on cross-border legal transactions that excites me more.” He said also wanted to spend more time on making lounge music, from his “state of the art music studio” at home: “I’m very fond of music and engineering it.”
Evolution from LLP to something else
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However, one Bar Council of Delhi notice a short time after that, which claimed the LLP structure was not permitted for law firms, Batra decided to scrap it on the advice of a senior lawyer. ”I never wanted to take it head on,” he said about the bar council’s notice.
After dabbling with full partnership - which proved to be a complex and “tedious process” whenever a partner retired, according to Batra - Kaden Boriss’ partnership now was a contractual arrangements between partners with the Kaden Boriss entities, where individual partners were entitled to between 30 to 70% of their invoiced amounts.
Correction: The initially published story stated that the ratio was between 50 to 70%.
And, notably, the firm’s computer system meant that partners were always paid within 24 hours of their invoices being submitted, Batra added.
“And the entire cost of the firm’s infrastructure and salary is on the firm, which means that the partners are getting spic and span invoice percentage, absolutely no responsibility of salary, infra costs, etc - nothing - that is paid out of whatever is left over, from the invoice,” Batra explained. “Me and Preeti, we took it as a social responsibility. Though we’re pretty sure we’ll never be in loss, even if we make less money, it doesn’t matter: we want the new and next generation lawyers and partners to make good money.”
However, the firm’s brand “does not have Batra or Hemant attached to it - we want them to feel that the brand is theirs”, he said.
Unlike his music, of course. He has been recording and distributing on iTunes and similar platforms under the name Urf Hekbat (YouTube link), the latter part of which is a portmanteau of Hemant K Batra.
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LI - please publish this comment. There is nothing factually incorrect in my comment - you can get it verified by Mr Hemant as well.
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