Gowlings and Wragge Lawrence Graham to merge

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Gowlings and Wragge Lawrence Graham to merge

Canadian firm Gowlings and UK-headquartered Wragge Lawrence Graham will merge in January 2016, creating a law firm called Gowling WLG with more than 1400 lawyers and about 200 IP professionals

Rob MacDonald

Managing IP has learned that the idea of a merger was first discussed at a dinner between Gordon Harris, Wragge’s head of IP, and Robert MacDonald, leader of Gowlings’ IP group, at the INTA Annual Meeting in Washington, DC in 2012.

“The discussions have been gradually moving forward since then,” said Harris, who first visited Gowlings in Ottawa back in 1991. “We are both full-service firms, but we also both have a substantial IP practice, which is increasingly unusual … IP was core to this, and Rob and I started the whole thing off.”

“Gordon and I have been very involved throughout the discussions,” added MacDonald (right), “and we’ve both been very excited about it. Our management teams bought into the idea, did the due diligence and have driven it forward.”

MacDonald said that during the discussions “we found matches on a number of levels”, including in IP work. For example, there were synergies between Gowlings’ French-speaking Montreal office, and WLG’s Paris office.

Worldwide – but not in the US

Gordon Harris

The combined firm will have 18 offices in Canada, Europe, China and the Middle East. But it said in a statement that it will add other firms “in strategically important regions”.

Speaking to Managing IP following the “overwhelmingly positive” partners vote on Monday this week, MacDonald and Harris said that there would likely be expansion in Europe (for example in Germany), Asia and Africa, but not the United States.

“Both firms have tremendously strong relationships in the US and we want to continue to work with the best law firms in that jurisdiction,” said MacDonald.

Harris described the new firm as an “Anglo-Canadian venture” providing English-language, common law expertise, including to US clients: “We think it will be a distinctive alternative offering, with footprints around the world but leaving us open to the vast majority of US firms.”

IP prosecution work

Both partners also confirmed that Gowling WLG will not handle patent, design and trade mark prosecution in Europe, even though these services are offered in Canada, Russia and China. “We think together we will be able to provide stronger cross-referral opportunities with prosecution firms in Europe,” said Harris.

The new firm will have some 70 IP partners, with specialisms in litigation, transactional work and life sciences, where it acts mainly for originators rather than generics.

As well as IP, it will have notable practices in project finance, real estate, mining, oil and gas and M&A work.

Gowlings was founded in 1875, while Wragge’s predecessor firms can trace their origins back as far as 1730. Today, both firms have about 700 legal professionals.

At Managing IP’s 2015 North America Awards, Gowlings won trophies for patent prosecution and trade mark prosecution. Wragge won in the UK – patent contentious work category at the Global Awards 2014.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

News of a trademark row over Taylor Swift’s ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ and Nokia’s expansion of its IoT licensing programme were also among the top talking points
IP attorneys share how the Cox v Sony ruling impacts their counselling strategies, and if the case could influence how courts may assess liability for AI platforms
Natasha Daughtrey shares how firms can help their women litigators take the lead on trials, and why she is seeing a convergence of tech and life sciences disputes
The LMG Life Sciences Awards is thrilled to present the shortlist for the 2024 EMEA Awards
Having agreed to a cost cap in the landmark Emotional Perception AI case, the government should do the right thing and pay at least the bare minimum
Ruth Hoy will join the firm's IP practice alongside Huw Cookson, who will also become a partner
IP boutique firm says its platform will help navigate ‘scattered’ decisions by bringing case law, commentary and research under one umbrella
The latest round of promotions has contributed to a 21% rise in partner headcount in the past two years, with business leaders eyeing litigation and the UPC
João Negrão, EUIPO executive director, is joined by a seasoned official to reflect on three decades of stories
Sim & San, which secured the $16m victory for their client, previously led Communications Components Antenna to a $26m damages win in 2024
Gift this article