Your Dispute. Our Battle.

When the outcome matters, specialist advice matters more.

Disputes are a different discipline.

Most commercial lawyers are trained to document, advise, and transact. Litigation is something else entirely. It requires a different mindset, different skills, and a different kind of judgment under pressure.

When a dispute arises, the stakes change. Deadlines become real. Evidence gets scrutinised. Relationships can fracture. The decisions made in the first days of a dispute often determine how it ends, months or years later. That is not the moment to rely on someone who handles disputes occasionally, alongside everything else.

Boyle Litigation practises exclusively in commercial litigation and disputes. Every matter we take on involves a fight worth winning, and our entire practice is built around winning it.

Every dispute deserves a specialist.

Commercial litigation is not a service we offer alongside everything else. It is the only thing we do.

 

Disputes require a different kind of thinking. Different preparation. Different judgment under pressure. When something goes wrong and the stakes are real, the lawyer who drafted your contracts is not the right person to fight for what they mean. Every conversation, every strategy, every step we take is directed at one outcome: resolving your dispute on the best possible terms.

Why Use an Accredited Specialist?

Any lawyer can call themselves a specialist. Few have been tested and certified as one. The Queensland Law Society Accredited Specialist program is the profession’s own benchmark for advanced expertise. To hold an accreditation, a lawyer must demonstrate not just experience, but independently assessed knowledge and skill in their specific area of law. There are only 33 Accredited Specialists in Commercial Litigation in Queensland, with Boyle Litigation’s Managing Partner being one of them. 

At Boyle Litigation, the Accredited Specialist is not a title on the website. They are the lawyer on your matter, from the first call to the final resolution. That distinction matters when the stakes are high.
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