Stephen J. Pagano
sjpagano@beckermeisel.com

Education:
Seton Hall University School of Law, J.D., cum laude, 2005
Boston College, B.A., 2002

Areas of Specialty:
Corporate Law
Land Development
Real Estate Finance

Admitted to Practice:
New Jersey
U. S. District Court of New Jersey
New York

Office:
Livingston & Red Bank
973-422-1100 extension x136

Stephen J. Pagano

In The News

Stephen Pagano is an associate in our corporate law and real estate development, finance and investment practice groups. Mr. Pagano provides general corporate counseling relating to the formation, structuring and governance of business entities and has represented individual and corporate clients in the acquisition and disposition of business interests, stock, assets and inventory. Mr. Pagano also focuses his practice on representing clients in all stages of the acquisition, sale, development and leasing of commercial properties, including the representation of Master Redevelopers under municipal redevelopment plans. In connection with these practices Mr. Pagano is often asked to draft complex purchase and sale agreements, partnership agreements, operating agreements, leases, bylaws, corporate resolutions and confidentiality agreements.

In 2005, Mr. Pagano graduated cum laude with his J.D. degree from Seton Hall University School of Law and received his B.A. degree from Boston College in 2002. At Seton Hall, Mr. Pagano was a recipient of the Seton Hall Law School Incentive Grant, a member of the Seton Hall Sports and Entertainment Law Journal, and a participant in the Gressman Moot Court Competition.

Real Estate New Jersey named Mr. Pagano one of its 2007 "30 Under 30." He is a member of the Monmouth County Bar Association and the New Jersey Chapter of the National Association of Industrial and Office Properties (NJ-NAIOP).

Recently, he authored an article entitled "Getting Back to Basics: The Importance of Schedules to an Asset Purchase Agreement," which appeared in the March 31, 2008 issue of the New Jersey Lawyer and also co-authored “Securing Construction Costs From a Tenant,” which was published in the October 22, 2007 issue of the New Jersey Law Journal.

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