Finding his Niche: Attorney enjoys satisfaction of solving client's problems

- Photo by Robert Chase


By Sheila Pursglove
Legal News

Bob Grover, an attorney and of counsel with Abbott, Thomson & Beer in Jackson, originally planned on a career in civil engineering.

Instead he became a lawyer, and has enjoyed a legal career that stretches back almost five decades. 

Grover had enjoyed math and science in high school, but a physics course in his freshman college year at Knox College in Galesburg, Ill., made him rethink an engineering idea. In his sophomore year he took courses in almost every department and most enjoyed political science classes.  

“I didn’t think about law school until my junior or senior year when I took a constitutional law class that was taught much like a law school course – read and brief actual cases,” he says. “I was hooked.”  

A Depression-era baby and an only child, the Chicago native was the first in his family to attend college, and had no family law tradition.

One of the most memorable days in his life was receiving an acceptance letter from the University of Michigan Law School. 

“I think my acceptance had more to do with the recommendation from the political department chair at Knox who was a U of M grad, and the fact I would pay out-of-state tuition, than it did with my grades or my LSAT score, which frankly weren’t that great,” he says. 

After attending Knox with about 800 students, Grover found Ann Arbor, the University of Michigan, and the law school with more than 1,200 students, very intimidating. 

“Many of my classmates were from very prestigious Ivy league and similar schools,” he says. “I also had to learn how to study for maybe the first time.

“One advantage I had was my roommate at the law club who was an old friend from the ‘hood’ in Chicago. He was an excellent student – law review – and a grind. He set a good example and kept me focused. Anyway, I made it – no law review but probably the upper third of my class.” 

His old friend also introduced Grover to his first wife, a Jackson High School grad. Grover had been in the ROTC program at Knox and received a deferment to go to law school. 

After passing the Illinois bar exam in August 1962, he got married in Jackson in September and reported for duty in October at Fort Sill (artillery branch) for basic officer’s training.   

Stationed at Fort Polk in Louisiana, he was assigned to the Judge Advocate’s office when they found out he was a lawyer.

  “Because of all the AWOLs from that place they needed all the lawyers they could get their hands on,” he says. “One of my duties was to prosecute all the traffic offenses on the post before a federal magistrate and just before I was discharged in 1964, I had to prepare a review of all the Louisiana laws that could arguably conflict the newly enacted Civil Rights Act of 1964. There were lots! 

Although Grover had not necessarily intended to make the law his career, he decided he should try to make the most of his efforts in law school.   

His then-father-in-law, W. K. “Sam” McInally, a Jackson lawyer and banker and a member of the U-M Board of Regents, had three young lawyers in his practice. When one of them left the firm in 1964, he asked Grover to fill the vacancy. 

“Tragically, Sam died suddenly on August 22, 1964, less than two months before I was due to be discharged in October,” Grover says. “It wasn’t more than day or so later when the two remaining members of the firm, Dick Rosenfeld and Dick Firestone, called to say I still had a job with them if I wanted it. I will always be grateful for that call because I’m sure they had no idea what the future of the firm would be without Sam.”   

Grover began representing school districts in the early ‘70s, when the firm merged with another that represented the Jackson Public Schools and Michigan Center.

“The school district practice grew considerably in the late ‘70s or early ‘80s when Jerry Kratz, the new Jackson County ISD Superintendent, approached us,” he says. “We worked out an annual retainer arrangement to do certain things for $500 a year. Almost all of the other Jackson County districts eventually signed on.”  

In 1981, Grover formed a new firm with Dick Rosenfeld and Jim Frang that continued for 25 years. 

“Dick, who I describe as a lawyer’s lawyer, was a wonderful mentor and partner. He retired in about 2002. And Jim, who was also a brilliant lawyer and a joy to be associated with, retired in 2006,” he says. “Not wanting to practice alone I was fortunate to be taken in by Abbott, Thomson & Beer, PLC, as ‘of counsel,’ whatever that means.”  

It means being only accountable to his clients and himself, not being responsible for personnel or administrative matters and working as little or as much as he wants to, subject only to the needs of his clients, he says.  

“I should have become ‘of counsel’ long before 2006. I strongly recommend it to my more senior colleagues. But not everyone will be as fortunate as me to practice with people like Dick, Jim, Bill Abbott, Kevin Thomson and Brendon Beer. Significantly, I’ve never had even a mild argument or disagreement with any of them. That may be somewhat unusual considering the business we’re in.” 

Grover enjoys the intellectual stimulation of the law, and the satisfaction of being able to solve clients’ problems, whether it’s settling a labor contract or closing a real estate or other business transaction.

“It’s certainly never boring. I still enjoy going to the office every morning to find out what questions I will be asked to resolve that day,” he says. “I describe myself as a general practitioner with concentrations in school, labor, municipal and business law and some estate planning who doesn’t do any criminal, divorce or personal injury work. 

“My so-called ‘niche’ school law practice runs the gamut from teacher and other labor negotiations to student discipline, real estate and construction contract issues. We can handle almost any legal matter a school district may have except serving as bond counsel.” 

A member of the American Bar Association, State Bar of Michigan and Jackson County Bar Association, where he served as President in 1978, Grover was a founding director of the Michigan Council of School Attorneys and served as its president in 1995-96. He is also a member of the National Council of School Attorneys. 
 

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