Lisa C. Goodheart - Boston, MA
Attorney at Fitch Law Partners LLP
Business Litigation Lawyers in Boston, MA
84 State Street 11th Floor Boston, MA 02109 - 3119
- 1 Super Lawyers®
-
41
Years
Experience
Boston Business Litigation Lawyer
Updated: 02/28/2026
Areas of Practice
- Business Litigation
- Construction Litigation
- Environmental and Energy Law
- Real Estate Litigation
Attorney Information
Overview
Ms. Goodheart’s litigation practice spans a broad range of environmental, energy, land use, real estate, insurance, business, professional, and government disputes. She is a Fellow of both the American College of Trial Lawyers and the American College of Environmental Lawyers. She is a current Co-Chair of the Massachusetts Access to Justice Commission, and her leadership experience includes past service as President of the Boston Bar Association, Chair of the Massachusetts Judicial Nominating Commission, and Chair of the Massachusetts Court Management Advisory Board. Best Lawyers® has selected her eight times as a “Lawyer of the Year,” and Chambers USA lists her in “Band 1” in both the Environmental and the Litigation: General Commercial categories. Lawdragon has named her to its “Green 500” list of leading U.S. environmental lawyers, and the Lexicology Index names her as a “Thought Leader,” while Super Lawyers ranks her as one of the Top 10 lawyers in the state, and among the Top 3 in recent years.
Lisa joined Fitch in 2023, having spent the previous 18 years as a partner of the Boston litigation firm of Sugarman, Rogers, Barshak & Cohen, P.C. On behalf of private and public sector clients, Ms. Goodheart practices in state and federal courts at both the trial and appellate levels. In addition, she handles contested administrative proceedings, alternative dispute resolution matters, and sensitive regulatory compliance negotiations. She is frequently called upon to advise clients concerning multi-dimensional disputes that present novel issues and involve high stakes and substantial risks. Ms. Goodheart has deep experience in matters involving environmental law and policy, but she enjoys a broad and diverse practice that spans numerous other areas of law, as well. Her practice is concentrated in Massachusetts, where she has obtained noteworthy victories in disputed matters, and contributed to important developments in state law. Her clients include commercial, institutional, industrial, and private property owners, real estate developers, operators of manufactured housing communities, colleges and universities, land conservation trusts and other non-profit organizations, state and municipal government bodies, private individuals, and citizen groups. Pro bono work, particularly in the area of environmental justice, has long been an important aspect of her practice.
Ms. Goodheart’s representation of clients is substantially enriched and strengthened by her deep involvement in the legal community. She is regularly asked to take on leadership roles aimed at enhancing the justice system in Massachusetts. Currently, she serves as Co-Chair of the Massachusetts Access to Justice Commission, by appointment of the Supreme Judicial Court. In 2024, she chaired the Merit Selection Committee tasked with making recommendations for appointment of a United States Magistrate Judge, by appointment of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. In 2020, she participated in the Strategic Planning Committee of the Flaschner Judicial Institute, which is dedicated to meeting the educational needs of both new and experienced judges in Massachusetts with programs that reflect the priorities expressed by judges. In 2019, she served as Co-Chair of the Boston Bar Association’s Judicial Independence Working Group, which produced a report entitled “Judicial Independence: Promoting Justice and Maintaining Democracy.” She also acted as Co-Chair of the Massachusetts Board of Bar Overseers Bar Counsel Search Committee, by appointment of the Supreme Judicial Court, in 2018 and 2019.
Ms. Goodheart previously led the Massachusetts Court Management Advisory Board (CMAB), a legislatively-created body tasked with assisting the justices of the Supreme Judicial Court, the Chief Justice of the Trial Court, and the Court Administrator on all matters of judicial form. She also served as a member of the Supreme Judicial Court Committee to Study the Code of Judicial Conduct, the work of which led to the adoption of a substantially reformed judicial conduct code for Massachusetts judges. For the first four years of Governor Deval L. Patrick’s administration, Ms. Goodheart served as Chair of the Massachusetts Judicial Nominating Commission, which was tasked with screening, performing due diligence, and ultimately recommending candidates for judicial appointments in all Massachusetts courts. During that same period, she was also a member of the Massachusetts DEP Wetlands Appeals Streamlining Task Force, which led to reforms to the state system for providing adjudicatory appeals of wetlands permitting decisions.
Awards and Honors
Honors
- Recipient of the Lelia J. Robinson Award from the Women’s Bar Association of Massachusetts
- Recipient of the Leadership Award from CREW Boston (formerly New England Women in Real Estate)
- Recipient of the Environmental Justice Award from Alternatives for Community & Environment, Inc. (ACE)
- Top Women of Law Honoree, Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly
- Band 1 rankings in Chambers USA for both Environmental Law and Litigation: General Commercial
- Listed in Best Lawyers in America® for Environmental Law and Litigation-Environmental
- Named by Best Lawyers in America® as a Massachusetts “Lawyer of the Year” in both Environmental Law (2014, 2017, 2019), and Litigation-Environmental (2012)
- Listed in Lawdragon 500 Leading U.S. Environmental & Energy Lawyers
- Consistently recognized as a Massachusetts Super Lawyer, including as one of Top 10 Lawyers in Massachusetts (2019-present)
- Listed as a Global Leader in Who’s Who Legal: Environment
- Ranked AV Preeminent® by the Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory®
- Listed in Best Lawyers® for Environmental Law and Litigation-Environmental since 2006, including eight “Lawyer of the Year” recognitions
- Listed in the Lawdragon Green 500 as a leader in environmental law
- Listed as a “Thought Leader” on Environmental and Climate Change by the Lexicology Index (formerly Who’s Who Legal)
- Listed in Super Lawyers® since 2004; ranked in Top 10 for Massachusetts since 2019; and in the Top 3 since 2021
- Hall of Fame, Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly
Other Sources of Feedback About Lisa C. Goodheart
Included on the 2026Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
Past Lists
- 2025 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2024 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2023 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2022 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2021 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2020 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2019 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2018 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2017 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2016 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2015 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2014 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2013 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2012 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2011 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2010 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2009 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2008 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2007 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2006 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2005 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
- 2004 Massachusetts Super Lawyers list
Education
-
Legal Education
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University of Pennsylvania Law School,
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, 1985
J.D.
Honors: cum laude
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University of Pennsylvania Law School,
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, 1985
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Non Legal Education
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Williams College, 1982
B.A.
Honors: cum laude
Honors: Phi Beta Kappa
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Williams College, 1982
Current Employment Position(s)
-
Partner
Past Positions
- DLA Piper US LLP, Partner
Representative Cases
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Maureen’s Mirtilli, LLC v. Idlewild Acres LLC, 2025 WL 2058253. (Mass. App. Ct. 2025) (successfully defended of property owner against claims to enforce alleged easement rights over registered and unregistered land)
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Janey Construction Mgt. and Consulting, Inc. v. Estate of Valerie Whitmore Guscott, C.A. No. 1982-cv-01520 (Mass. Super. Norfolk Cty.) (successfully defended against collection action and prevailed on counterclaim against construction contractor for unfair or deceptive business practices, at jury trial and on post-trial judicial findings) (appeal pending, as of 9/25)
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Bartok v. Hometown America Mgt., LLC, Case 4:21-cv-10790-LTS (D. Mass.) (ECF Doc. 83, March 30, 2022) (successfully obtained dismissal without prejudice of an early motion for class certification following limited discovery, in action challenging the rent structures at two manufactured housing communities)
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In the Matter of Brockton Power Co., LLC, OADR Docket Nos. 2011-026, File No. W207973, Brockton, MA (Mass. Dep. Env. Prot.)
- Citation: (on behalf of petitioner residents, successfully persuaded Commissioner of Department of Environmental Protection to issue an unprecedented second interlocutory remand decision requiring re-opening of administrative record for purposes of conducting a Health Impact Assessment study of proposed power plant’s anticipated impacts on vulnerable Environmental Justice community); the case was ultimately resolved in petitioners’ favor after further proceedings by MassDEP Commissioner’s Final Decision on Second Remand, 32 DEPR 30 (2025) (vacating revised draft permit and dismissing appeal)
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Craw v. Hometown America, LLC, Case 1:18-cv-12149-LTS (D. Mass.) (ECF Doc. 216, Sept. 23, 2021) (order on final approval, confirming class action settlement affording injunctive relief and money damages to resolve claims about stormwater management and maintenance of permanent elements of leased home sites at an Attleboro manufactured housing community)
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Nordic Fisheries, Inc. v. City of New Bedford, 2021 WL 4471404 (Mass. Super.) (prevailed on motion to dismiss complaint against municipality and municipal port authority, thereby enabling major public port expansion project to proceed based on terms of lease agreement, notwithstanding the resulting elimination of direct water access from City-owned land leased by plaintiffs for their commercial fishing business operations)
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Alenci v. Hometown America Management, LLC, 2020 WL 25159872 (D. Mass.) (prevailed on motion to dismiss amended complaint brought by plaintiff for himself and a proposed class composed of similarly situated residents of a manufactured housing community, presenting an array of statutory, regulatory, and common law challenges to a longstanding residential water supply arrangement)
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In the Matter of Kevin Dwan, 2020 WL 3058249 and 2020 WL 3058254 (Mass. Dep. Env. Prot.) (following an adjudicatory hearing with expert testimony, successfully obtained final decision allowing client’s proposed construction of a pier, seasonal gangway, and seasonal floating dock off the western coast of a peninsula, based on proof of best available measures to minimize impacts on eelgrass, and lack of feasible alternative locations)
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Thomas & Betts v. New Albertson’s, Inc., 915 F.3d 39 (1st Cir. 2019) (successful appellate representation of prevailing defendant and counterclaim plaintiff in a multi-party environmental cost recovery case arising from a challenging PCB remediation, resulting in the client’s preservation of a multi-million dollar judgment on a jury verdict, a total attorneys’ fee recovery of nearly $2 million
- Citation: and an appellate decision interpreting a little-used statutory liability exemption as an issue of first impression)
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Boston Taxi Owners Association, Inc. v. Baker, 2017 WL 354010 (D. Mass.) (on behalf of independent state authority, successfully moved for dismissal of federal case brought on constitutional and other grounds by taxicab medallion owners, who challenged a new state regulatory scheme for transportation network companies [e.g., Uber and Lyft] that differs from the pre-existing municipal regulation of taxicabs)
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In the Matter of NSTAR Electric Company d/b/a Eversource Energy, EFSB 14-04/DPU 14-153/14-154 (2017) (following a multi-day adjudicatory hearing with experts before the Massachusetts Energy Facilities Siting Board, achieved industrial client’s goal of accomplishing the relocation of a proposed electrical substation,further away from the client’s facility, via inclusion of an unusual special condition in the Board’s final decision,which triggered the project proponents agreement to relocate)
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Thomas & Betts v. New Albertson’s, Inc.,Case 10-CV-11947-WGY (D. Mass.)(successfully led client team through all phases of multi-party trial court litigation, including a six-week jury trial in 2015 with numerous technical experts and extensive post-trial proceedings, resulting in client’s multi-million dollar recovery of environmental response costs, a substantial attorneys’ fee award, and a confirmed finding of the client’s lack of causal responsibility for the PCB contamination at issue)
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City of New Bedford / Settlement of PCB Response Cost Recovery Litigation (served as special outside environmental counsel to a large municipality on multiple hazardous waste site cleanup claims against PCB waste generators and transporters; the matters were resolved by a series of settlements including novel arrangements for contingencies, resulting in what was reported to be the largest settlement recovery in the City’s history, with payments of over $9.2 million to the City through 2024)
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City of Brockton v. Energy Facilities Siting Bd., 469 Mass. 196 (2014) (presented state environmental justice policy issue of first impression to Supreme Judicial Court on behalf of affected community residents, with support from civil rights and environmental amici curiae)
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Brockton Power Co. LLC v. Energy Facilities Siting Bd., 469 Mass. 215 (2014) (successful defense, on behalf of affected community residents, of Siting Board decision to disallow use of potable municipal water supply as source of cooling water for electricity generating facility)
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New England Forestry Foundation, Inc. v. Board of Assessors of Hawley, 468 Mass. 138 (2014) (amicus brief for conservation organization discussed at length in court’s decision, in tax appeal confirming land conservation as charitable purpose and establishing legal standard for “occupancy” of conservation land sufficient to establish tax exemption)
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Regis College v. Town of Weston, 462 Mass. 280 (2012) (successful litigation in Land Court and the Supreme Judicial Court, resulting in a landmark decision on the legal standard for determining whether an educational institution’s proposed real estate development project constitutes a land use “for educational purposes” that is exempt from zoning restrictions under the Dover Amendment)
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Ware Real Estate, LLC v. Town of Ware, 2012 WL 751739 (Mass. App. Ct. 2012) (successful pursuit of declaratory and injunctive relief against municipality that sought to revoke a special permit for operation of construction and demolition waste recycling facility, through a multi-day Superior Court bench trial and on appeal)
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President and Fellows of Harvard College v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co., 28 Mass. L. Rptr. 113 (2011) (successful pursuit of summary judgment for policyholder on CGL insurer’s duty to defend environmental response action claim arising from ownership of property first acquired by insured after expiration of pertinent policy periods)
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Bank v. Thermo Elemental Inc., 451 Mass. 638 (2008) (successful pursuit of contractual indemnity claim and claims for environmental response costs and attorneys’ fees, through a three-week Superior Court jury trial, a related one-week bench trial, post-trial proceedings, and an appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court)
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Friends and Fishers of Edgartown Great Pond, Inc. v. Department of Environmental Protection, 446 Mass. 830 (2006) (successful defense of MassDEP groundwater discharge permit, for an expanded municipal wastewater treatment plant in ecologically sensitive watershed, through all stages of litigation including a multi-day adjudicatory hearing, judicial review by the Superior Court, and an appeal heard by the Supreme Judicial Court, which took the case sua sponte)
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Weston Forest and Trail Ass’n v. Fishman, 66 Mass. App. Ct. 654 (2006) (successful enforcement of conservation restriction, establishing that laches and estoppel are not available as defenses to actions by private entities to protect the public interest in conservation restrictions, through summary judgment in Land Court and on appeal)
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Emmons v. White, 58 Mass. App. Ct. 54 (2003) (successful enforcement of unrecorded release of easement, based on buyer’s actual knowledge of release agreement, through a Land Court bench trial and on appeal)
Bar Admissions
- Massachusetts
- U.S. District Court Eastern District of Pennsylvania
- U.S. District Court District of Massachusetts
- U.S. Court of Appeals 1st Circuit
- U.S. Court of Appeals 2nd Circuit
Other Affiliations
- Fellow, American College of Trial Lawyers
- Fellow, American College of Environmental Lawyers
- Fellow, International Academy of Trial Attorneys
- Former President of the Boston Bar Association
- Former President of the Boston Bar Foundation
- Former President of CREW Boston (formerly New England Women in Real Estate)
- Former member of the American Bar Association’s Standing Committee on Environmental Law, and Co-Chair of an early National Law and Policy Conference on Global Warming
Contact
84 State Street
11th Floor
Boston, MA 02109 - 3119
Phone: 617-542-5542
Fax: 617-542-1542
Email: Send a message
Website: https://www.fitchlp.com
Hours: Monday - Friday; 8:30 AM to 5:30 PM
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