- New Jersey
- New York
Jordan S. Solomon is a Partner in the Firm’s Healthcare Practice Group. Jordan is an experienced transactional attorney with over 25 years’ experience counseling business clients on a variety of legal matters. He serves as a trusted advisor to clients with expertise in buying, selling, merging and divesting businesses, including, without limitation, healthcare facilities, medical practices, dental practices and veterinary practices; business startup and succession planning; joint ventures; sales, purchases, leasing, development and financing of commercial real estate; preparation and negotiation of shareholder/operating agreements, private equity and management agreements, and various types of business contracts, leases, license agreements, and employment agreements (including compensation, benefits and non-compete arrangements), as well as trademark and copyright registration. Jordan has provided legal and business counseling to veterinarians across the U.S. primarily in the areas of mergers and acquisitions, purchasing, leasing and financing commercial real estate, employment agreements and commercial contracts.
Jordan is a member of the New Jersey State Bar Association in the Business Law Section and served as the Chair of the Entertainment, Arts and Sports Law Section. He is also a long-time member of The Inn of Transactional Counsel (Morris & Essex Counties). He has served as an Adjunct Professor of Law at Seton Hall University School of Law, where he taught a transactional law skills course.
Jordan graduated from Franklin & Marshall College in 1988 and from Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in 1993 where he served as an editor of the Cardozo Law Review.
- New Jersey Bar Association (Past Chair – Entertainment, Arts and Sport Law Section; Business Law Section
- American Bar Association
- Solicitor, Inn of Transactional Counsel
Mandelbaum Barrett PC Secures Non-Profit Status for an Independent Medical Practice PC
March 13, 2024
Mandelbaum Barrett PC’s healthcare and non-profit tax law teams have secured IRS recognition of non-profit status on behalf of an independent medical professional corporation, as an independent charity and not derivatively by associating with another charity under the “integral part” test. Because a professional corporation is, by operation of the state’s professional corporation act, a for-profit entity, […]