Corporate and Business Transactions
Hendell Corporate and Business Transactions Lawyer
Hendell Law Firm serves the legal needs of businesses, professionals, and commercial landowners

Hendell Law Firm serves the legal needs of businesses, professionals, and commercial landowners with entity formation and dissolution, partnership disputes and breakups, consulting agreements, confidentiality agreements, leases, easement agreements, deeds, security agreements, foreclosures under UCC Article 9, and mediation and litigation. We have handled cases of breach of contract, theft of trade secrets, tortious interference with contracts and business expectancies, conspiracy to injure in trade or business, piercing the corporate veil, reverse veil piercing, and setting aside voluntary and fraudulent conveyances.
We have successfully quieted title to land by adverse possession.
We have represented professionals and organizations at every stage of their business or career. Our legal product and legal guidance are informed by our experience with how things go in court, and we approach every transaction and every contractual provision as if we may have to litigate it for our client one day.
Set Up a Free Consultation with a Hendell Law Corporate and Business Transactions Attorney Today
Attorney Thomas M. Hendell works relentlessly to achieve the best outcome the law will allow his business clients. We are proud that most of our business clients are repeat clients and return from year to year with new legal matters. Contact Us to see if we can assist with your commercial law needs.
Legal Blogs & Articles

New Virginia Limits of Liability Effective January 1, 2025
Beginning January 1, 2025, Virginia drivers must carry automotive liability insurance with coverage limits of at least $50,000 for personal

Sovereign Immunity of Counties and Cities in Virginia
Sovereign immunity is a legal doctrine that protects the government from being sued. Sovereign immunity comes from “an axiom of

New Vicarious Liability Law: Employers May Again Be Liable for Their Employees’ Torts
On May 2, 2025 Virginia Governor Glen Youngkin signed into law HB1730 and SB894, which will become Virginia Code Section