Cayley Rodd is a lawyer at Pavey, Law & Witteveen LLP in Cambridge, Ontario. Cayley acts for many individuals and businesses in the practices areas of Business law/Corporate law, Wills, Trusts, Estate Administration, Real Estate and Commercial Leasing.

Cayley is new to the Cambridge area, having practiced with Torys, LLP in Toronto prior to joining the firm in 2008. There she was focused on large, corporate work and spent two months in Torys' New York office exploring the American side of transactional corporate law.
Cayley currently represents large and small corporations as well as individuals in and around Cambridge, helping with their business and personal legal needs. She has assisted with the purchase and sale of companies, incorporation of for-profit and not-for-profit companies, professional corporations and sole proprietorships, as well as helping existing companies with shareholder agreements, restructuring and creating family trusts. Cayley provides advice to business owners and individuals alike on their wills and estates issues and helps executors in the administration of estates. She has extensive experience in both rental and residential home purchase and sales and refinancing, as well as in commercial real estate purchases and sales.
Cayley has presented at seminars hosted by the Cambridge Chamber of Commerce as well as to smaller groups organized by local banking institutions, other organizations and individuals. She was a member of the organizing committee of the 2009 Tour de Grand and looks forward to next year's event. She is a member of the Preston-Hespeler Rotary Club and a local chapter of the Canadian Federation of University Women and is very interested in getting involved in the Cambridge community.
Cayley is expanding her knowledge of the area by exploring its highways by bicycle. Outside of the office, she enjoys reading all variety of books, has very eclectic tastes in music and stays active by curling, cross-country skiing, snow-shoeing and cycling.
Cayley is a member of the Shades' Mill (Cambridge) and Waterloo Law Associations, as well as the Ontario and Canadian Bar Associations and the Ontario Young Lawyers' Division.