Chaffe McCall, L.L.P. - New Orleans Law Firm
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Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Toler & Sarpy, L.L.P.
New Orleans, Baton Rouge, Louisiana ~ Caracus, Venezuela  

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Slidell & Slidell

1826 – 1846

 

Slidell & Clark

1846 – 1851

 

Clark & Bayne

1851 – 1869

 

Clark, Bayne & Renshaw            1869 – 1878

 

Bayne & Renshaw

1878 – 1880

 

Bayne & Denegre

1880 – 1888

 

Bayne, Denegre & Bayne

1888 – 1893

 

Bayne, Deneger & Denegre

1893 – 1895

 

Denegre & Blair

1895 – 1913

 

Denegre, Leovy & Chaffe

1913 – 1942

 

Chaffe, McCall, Bruns, Toler & Phillips

1942 – 1948

 

Chaffe, McCall, Toler & Phillips

1948 – 1955

 

Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Burke & Hopkins

1955 – 1962

 

Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Burke, Toler & Hopkins

1962 – 1968

 

Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Burke, Toler & Sarpy

1968 – 1971

 

Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Toler & Sarpy

1971 – 2005

 

Chaffe McCall

2005 - present

    

Firm History

In 1826, James Fenimore Cooper published “The Last of the Mohicans” but “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” and  “The Three Musketeers” were still years away.  Beethoven was still alive, Victoria was still a Princess, The Spanish Inquisition was still in progress, the first railroad in the United States had yet to be built, and the Mormon church had not been formed.  In 1826 Thomas Jefferson died, and there were only 24 states in the Union.

Also in 1826 Thomas and John Slidell, two very prominent attorneys in Louisiana, founded a law firm.  Today that law firm, 180 years “young,” is Chaffe McCall, L.L.P.   It is the oldest continually operating law firm in Louisiana and, beginning with the Slidell brothers, has developed a tradition of excellence.

Thomas Slidell prepared one of the first Louisiana case digests and in 1846 became a member of the state Supreme Court, and, in 1852, its Chief Justice.  John Slidell became a cause celebre during the Civil War.  While en route as a Confederate emissary aboard the British vessel TRENT, the vessel was intercepted by a Yankee frigate and he was taken off.  The incident nearly brought England into the war on the side of the Confederacy.  Click here to read an article from the New Orleans Bar Association regarding John Slidell.

Thomas A. Clark joined the firm in 1842 and, following Thomas Slidell's departure for the judiciary, it became Slidell & Clark.  Clark was also a classmate of Confederate Secretary of War Judah P. Benjamin.  When Clark was imprisoned by the Union forces during the Civil War, Benjamin sent a special train to rescue Clark.

Thomas L. Bayne joined the firm and became a partner in 1851, following which the firm was known as Clark & Bayne.  It was subsequently Clark, Bayne & Renshaw (1869); Bayne & Renshaw (1878); and Bayne & Denegre (1880).  George Denegre was a brilliant commercial lawyer who also acquired distinction as a leader in the successful battle overcoming the Louisiana Lottery and the Citizens' League campaign in 1896 which, in the words of his obituary written by the state Supreme Court, "in large measure laid the foundation of the city's political regeneration."

In 1888, Thomas Bayne's son, T. L. "Nervy' Bayne, became a member of the firm, and it was then known as Bayne, Denegre & Bayne.  Nervy Bayne was the legendary figure who coached both football teams of archrivals Tulane and L.S.U. in their first intercollegiate game in 1893.  It was also said that he built the goal posts, laid out the field, sold the tickets, and refereed the game.

During this period, the firm's practice focused on maritime and commercial law.  Its name changed in 1893 to Bayne, Denegre & Denegre; in 1894 to Denegre & Denegre; and in 1895, to Denegre & Blair, after J. Paxton Blair became a partner.  Blair became renowned for representing such railroads as J. P. Morgan's Louisiana & Texas Railroad.

In 1902, Victor Leovy joined the firm and distinguished himself as a stalwart of its admiralty practice.  At the same time, Henry Chaffe finished clerking for state Supreme Court Justice Joseph Breaux and also became a member.  Chaffe earned great prominence as a trial attorney and established the oil and gas section.

In 1913, J. P. Blair left the firm to become General Counsel of the Southern Pacific Railroad, and the firm was known as Denegre, Leovy & Chaffe, the name it retained until the deaths of Messrs.  Denegre and Leovy.  In 1915 Harry McCall, Sr. joined the firm.   While continuing to practice law, he also taught English and Mathematics at Tulane University.  Later he served as a judge ad hoc of the Court of Appeal, was President of both the Louisiana and the New Orleans Bar Associations, and Chairman of the Charter Commission which drafted the New Orleans Home Rule Charter.  In 1942, the firm became Chaffe, McCall, Bruns, Toler & Phillips. 

After his retirement in 1948, Henry Bruns' name was deleted from letterhead.  In

1955 the firm merged with Rosen, Kammer, Wolf, Hopkins & Burke, and became Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Burke & Hopkins, then in 1962 Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Burke, Toler & Hopkins.  By 1968 James Hopkins had died and Leon Sarpy’s name was added to the masthead, making it Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Phillips, Burke, Toler & Sarpy. 

In 1971, Gibbons Burke had departed the firm, and the firm assumed the name: Chaffe, McCall, Phillips, Toler & Sarpy.  In the years since then, at a time when many firms were becoming known by shorter versions of their full names, the firm was referred to simply as CHAFFE MCCALL.  In 2005, this change was made official, and it is now the current name of the law firm.

The year 2005 marked yet another milestone in the firm’s history.  On Friday, August 26, 2005, the firm cut short its workday to allow members to batten down their offices and return home to make preparations for Hurricane Katrina, then still out in the Gulf of Mexico.   The expectation was Chaffe would re-open on Monday, after the storm had passed but, nonetheless, in a manner typical of the foresight and planning at Chaffe, a decision was made to take vital computer information and data on disc.

Hurricane Katrina blew in from the Gulf and that story is all too well known.  In the aftermath, when firm managers realized it would not be possible to return to the New Orleans’ offices, the Baton Rouge offices became home.  Within a matter of days, that office was expanded to accommodate the bulk of the firm’s attorneys, with satellite offices established in Mobile, Nashville, Asheville, Dallas and Lafayette, almost anywhere space could be found.  The critical decision to evacuate with the electronic data enabled Chaffe to be functional by the end of that week and, after an emergency trip to the New Orleans office to recover the actual hardware from the main offices, Chaffe’s computers were fully functional.  Clients were contacted by email, land line and cell phone and assured the firm was operating and ready to serve them.

Writing to the members of the firm from her offices in Lafayette, the firm’s managing partner praised all for coming together in the incredible crisis, and for working through personal problems and losses to come to the aid of the firm.  Chaffe ultimately reoccupied its New Orleans offices in mid-October, 2005, although several attorneys remained in the outlying offices due to home losses and the lingering effects of Katrina.  Chaff McCall lost virtually no time to Katrina in servicing the needs of its clients, and has since developed a very strong disaster program in preparation for any similar event in the future.  Click here to read  Chaffe's "Katrina Chronicles," a detail of the firm's events related to Katrina.

To this day, just as the Slidell brothers did at the firm’s inception, as so many others also did over the 180+ years of the firm’s history, Chaffe McCall’s attorneys continue in their service to their clients and to the bar and the community by actively participating in a variety of civic, business, political, and professional boards and committees.  For the year 2007, Chaffe McCall was recognized by the New Orleans Pro Bono Project as a Pro Bono Law Firm of the year.

Chaffe McCall is more, however, than just a tradition-based law firm: it is a progressive, full-service, cohesive law firm of hard working, talented, effective, client-focused professionals with shared values who provide clients added legal services of outstanding quality.  Its main office is situated on two floors of The Energy Centre in downtown New Orleans, with branch offices in Baton Rouge, Houston, Texas, and Caracas, Venezuela.  Our attorneys are organized into working groups, or practice areas, by experience and orientation.  A client with complex representational needs has access to attorneys from as many practice areas as the engagement requires.

Chaffe McCall’s mission is to provide the highest quality legal services in a timely and cost-effective manner throughout Louisiana, the southeastern United States, Mexico, Latin and South America.  The firm’s record of success in landmark litigation, transactions large and small, complex negotiations, emerging and dynamic practice areas, as well as in political and civic endeavors, sets it apart as the exceptional New Orleans law firm – a position the firm has continually earned since its inception in 1826. 


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Chaffe McCall, L.L.P.
2300 Energy Centre | 1100 Poydras Street
New Orleans, Louisiana 70163-2300
Phone: (504) 585-7000 | Fax: (504) 585-7075

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