Hale & Merrow was founded on a simple premise: that serious legal work is best done without spectacle. For four decades we have advised Toronto's corporations, families and property owners with the same measured attention — one file, one client, one careful conversation at a time.
In 1987, Margaret Hale and Owen Merrow left larger downtown firms to open a two-room practice on Adelaide Street, convinced that clients of real consequence — family businesses, property investors, and individuals navigating the more delicate matters of estate and counsel — were being underserved by scale. They kept the office small deliberately. No file was passed down an associate chain without a partner's direct involvement; no client waited more than a day for a call back.
That founding discipline never loosened. As the firm grew through the 1990s and 2000s — adding corporate/commercial and real-estate practices to meet demand from a changing city — Hale & Merrow resisted the pressure to become a volume shop. We added lawyers one at a time, each chosen as much for judgment and discretion as for technical skill. Today the firm remains a genuine partnership rather than a brand: every matter is led by a named lawyer who answers the phone personally.
The Toronto the firm serves today looks very different from 1987 — taller, faster, more international. Our approach has not changed with it. We still believe the best counsel is unhurried counsel: thorough in the drafting, direct in the advice, and entirely uninterested in performing busyness. Clients come to us, and stay with us, because a Hale & Merrow file is handled the way it would be handled if it were our own.
We are proud that a meaningful share of our engagements today come from second- and third-generation relationships — children of founding clients, successor companies, referred families — a lineage of trust we consider our most important asset, and the one hardest to build quickly.
Clients reach their lawyer directly — not a call centre, not a rotating intake team. Questions get answered the same day, without needing to explain the file from the beginning each time.
Where possible, the same lawyer handles a client's matters across years and across areas — corporate today, estate planning a decade from now — so context is never lost and trust compounds.
We are asked, often, not just what the law permits but what we would do. That judgment — earned over decades of comparable matters — is the part of the work that cannot be automated or outsourced.
Our offices occupy a quiet floor above King Street — high ceilings, deep chairs, and rooms with doors that close properly. We designed the space around the belief that a client discussing a difficult estate, a contested transaction, or a sensitive family matter deserves somewhere calm to sit and think, not a glass-walled pod within earshot of a trading floor.
There is no reception theatre here, no wall of awards. Just a small, capable team, a well-kept library, and the unhurried attention that the work — and the client sitting across the table — is owed.