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About the Firm

Julie & Holleman is a boutique law firm dedicated to protecting shareholder rights, holding companies’ directors and officers accountable for their misconduct, and improving corporate governance. The firm is based in New York but handles cases in state and federal courts across the country. We handle various types of shareholder litigation, including mergers and acquisitions cases, shareholder derivative actions, and securities fraud class actions. Julie & Holleman’s attorneys also have experience in complex commercial and business litigation, antitrust actions, consumer cases, and employment matters.

Our lawyers have a proven track record of success in obtaining recoveries worth hundreds of millions of dollars for shareholders and their companies. The firm’s attorneys have also secured critical and sweeping corporate governance changes that will prevent future corporate misconduct. Julie & Holleman’s attorneys have won major, precedent-setting victories before federal and state courts across the country.

The firm combines the experience, skills, and sophistication of a large law firm with special attention to our clients’ needs that only a boutique can provide. Before starting Julie & Holleman, the firm’s attorneys worked at leading plaintiffs’ and defense firms. The trust our clients place in us to fight for their rights and secure their investments fuels our passion and dedication to our work.

If you are a shareholder and believe you have been injured by corporate wrongdoing, please contact us to discuss how we can help.

Significant Achievements

Julie & Holleman’s attorneys have successfully litigated cases in state and federal courts across the country and have secured hundreds of millions of dollars for the benefit of companies and their shareholders. The firm has also been involved in numerous precedential decisions. Listed below are some of our attorneys’ noteworthy accomplishments:

In re Investors Bancorp, Inc. Stockholder Litigation (Del. Ch.)

  • Obtained recission of 75% of the more than $50 million in stock and options awarded by bank directors to themselves following corporate reorganization.  Settlement praised by approving court as an “excellent result” that recovered “significant value that was wrongfully diverted from the company.”.  Case involved years of hard-fought litigation including a successful, precedent-setting appeal to the Delaware Supreme Court following the trial court’s initial dismissal of the case.

Willcox v. Dolan (The Madison Square Garden Company) (Del. Ch.)

  • Recovered stock award valued at more than $30 million in action challenging compensation paid to CEO-controlling shareholder. The Delaware Court of Chancery praised the settlement as an “excellent” result for the company and its shareholders.

In re Google Inc. Class C Shareholder Litigation (Del. Ch.)

  • Secured payment of more $552 million in stock to investors, in settlement reached on eve of trial in action challenging the creation of new securities intended to entrench the control of Google by its founding executives.  Settlement also strengthened power of Google’s independent directors to police founders’ transfer of stock and corporate control.

Englehart v. Brown (Flow International Corp.) (Wash. Super. Ct. King Cnty.)

  • Obtained a $12.75 million settlement following fact discovery and expert discovery. The settlement is the largest ever recovery in a merger class action involving a Washington corporation.

Pfeiffer v. Toll (Toll Brothers Inc.) (Del. Ch.)

  • Obtained cash recovery of $16.25 million in action alleging that corporate officers and directors sold stock while possessing material nonpublic information concerning the falling fortunes of the company and its industry.

Freudenberg v. E*TRADE Financial Corp. (S.D.N.Y.)

  • Secured a landmark $79 million settlement for the benefit of E*Trade shareholders in a securities fraud class action alleging that the company misrepresented the risk of its investment in subprime mortgage-backed securities.

KBC Asset Management NV v. Marsh (SCANA Corp.) (S.C. Ct. Common Pleas)

  • Obtained $63 million in settlement of class action and derivative claims after company merged in the wake of criminal and regulatory investigations stemming from abandonment of major nuclear construction project. The settlement is believed to be the largest ever recovery for a merger class action involving a South Carolina corporation.

Pirani v. Slack Technologies, Inc. (N.D. Cal.)

  • In ongoing matter, secured landmark rulings from a California federal district court and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals that shareholders had standing to pursue claims even if they could not prove they bought registered shared or unregistered shares in novel “direct listing” IPO.

Pictured above is the original City Hall Station on New York’s first subway line.