Hemenway & Barnes Attorneys Named to 2021 Massachusetts Super Lawyers and Rising Stars Lists

October 14, 2021
Hemenway & Barnes Attorneys Named to 2021 Massachusetts Super Lawyers and Rising Stars


Hemenway & Barnes announces that eleven of its attorneys were named to the 2021 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list and three were selected for the 2021 Massachusetts Rising Stars list.

Please join us in congratulating the following Hemenway & Barnes attorneys:

2021 Massachusetts Super Lawyers

Brad Bedingfield – Estate Planning & Probate
Joseph L. Bierwirth, Jr.
– Estate & Trust Litigation
Dennis R. Delaney – Estate Planning & Probate
Mark B. Elefante – Real Estate
Ryan P. McManus – Estate & Trust Litigation
Edward Notis-McConarty – General Litigation
Michael J. Puzo – Estate Planning & Probate
John J. Siciliano – Real Estate
Johanna W. Schneider – Land Use/Zoning
Kurt F. Somerville – Estate Planning & Probate
Diane C. Tillotson – Land Use/Zoning

2021 Massachusetts Rising Stars

Vanessa Arslanian – Business Litigation
Steven L. Mangold – Real Estate
M. Patrick Moore, Jr. – Business Litigation

About Massachusetts Super Lawyers and Rising Stars

Super Lawyers is a rating service of outstanding lawyers from more than 70 practice areas who have attained a high-degree of peer recognition and professional achievement. The patented multiphase selection process is designed to create a credible, comprehensive and diverse listing of outstanding attorneys that can be used as a resource for attorneys and consumers searching for legal counsel. Only up to 5% of the state’s total lawyer pool is selected for Super Lawyers. Rising Stars candidates must be either 40 years old or younger, or have been in practice for 10 years or fewer. No more than 2.5% of the state’s lawyers are named to the Rising Stars list.

News & Resources

Event
Planned Giving Group of New England (PGGNE) Annual All-Day Conference 2024
Event
Brad Bedingfield to Speak at 43rd Annual Kansas City Estate Planning Symposium
Firm News
Donna Mizrahi quoted in Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly article “Extrinsic evidence allowed to prove testator’s intent”