Barnett's Notes
On Commercial Litigation 

Vol. II, Issue 2

February 2006

In This Issue

1. Does Antitrust Matter?  Only if you like competition.

2. Did You Know?   Stars, rising and otherwise. 

3. Techniques for Expediting Litigation.  Slimming down before trial.

4. 20 Years Already! Well, not quite. 

5.  Cheering for Contingent Fees.  The American Enterprise Institute shows its populist side.

6.  Hot Lunch.  Truth and D&O insurance.


Did You Know?

All six partners in the Dallas office of Susman Godfrey L.L.P. have won designation as Texas Super Lawyers or Rising Stars in 2005-2006, according to Texas Monthly magazine.  Two of our associates also made the Texas Monthly Rising Stars list. 

Congratulations to Terry Oxford, Ophelia Camina, Bill Carmody, Jonathan Bridges (new partner), John Turner (new partner), Michael Fritz, Gretchen Sween, and Your Editor.

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20 Years Already!

The magnificent ice sculpture you see above marked the spot where friends and guests, who braved an ice storm on December 8 to attend our Holiday Open House, could feast on ice-cold crab claws and jumbo shrimp. 

In the tradition of the Walt Disney Company -- which celebrates all of its anniversaries for two years instead of just one -- we dedicated the Open House to the start of our 20th year in Dallas.  That means we just finished our 19th year.  And our actual 20th anniversary won't arrive until December 2006. 

2006 Open House theme:  Our Third Decade in Dallas.

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Hot Lunch.

The Truth About D&O Insurance reviews the recent history of liability insurance for corporate directors and officers and the companies they serve.  The presentation summarizes the types of D&O coverage (Sides A, B, and C), describes common conflicts between the insureds and the insurance carrier (settle early vs. late), notes the surge of cases in which payments exceeded available insurance proceeds, identifies frequent causes of action against directors and officers, and recommends strategic options for directors, officers, and companies seeking D&O coverage. 

Your Editor presented a version of The Truth About D&O Insurance at the Susman Godfrey Forum in September 2005.

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Does Antitrust Matter?

The editorial and opinion pages of The Wall Street Journal suggest that antitrust law has outlived its usefulness as a corrective to abuses of private economic power.  They -- and a profusion of bloggers -- decry enforcement of the Sherman Act as punishing bigness for its own sake and, worse, hindering vigorous competition.

Has the law that the Supreme Court once called "a comprehensive charter of economic liberty" become an instrument of economic oppression?  Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. United States, 356 U.S. 1, 4 (1958).  In a word, no.  The Sherman Act doesn't prohibit monopolies; it doesn't even discourage them.  But it does ban a company that wields monopoly power from misusing it to injure rivals, particularly innovators that offer superior products and services and lower costs to consumers.  The Act also forbids competitors from banding together to fix the prices at which they will sell to consumers, to limit the goods and services available to buyers, or to allocate customers and territories among themselves.  Consumers benefit from the rough-and-tumble competition that the Sherman Act aims to foster.

Antitrust litigation has another virtue  -- it beats the pants off of government regulation, which often favors the status quo.  Can you think of a more effective way to thwart innovation than having an agency regulate it?

Lawsuits under the Sherman Act require a huge investment of time and money, often lasting years and costing millions of dollars.  But they remain the single most effective way to assure that businesses large and small have a fighting chance to become . . . the next Microsoft.

Barry Barnett, Editor

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Techniques for Expediting and Streamlining Commercial Litigation

We looked in the last issue of Barnett's Notes at transfer, consolidation, and coordination of similar cases as techniques for expediting and streamlining litigation.  Now we move on to pre-trial conferences, scheduling orders, and other case management orders.

Copyright © 2005 Thomson * West.  All rights reserved.  Used with permission.

The excerpt comes from Chapter 55 in the ABA-and-West treatise on Business and Commercial Litigation in Federal Courts (2005 2d ed. Robert L. Haig, editor).  

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Cheering for Contingent Fees

Speaking of institutions that question the utility of litigation, the American Enterprise Institute lately published a study that raises Two Cheers for Contingent Fees (AEI Press Sept. 2005).  The authors, economists Alexander Tabarrok and Eric Helland from George Mason University and Claremont-McKenna College, respectively, empirically examined the effects of setting limits on contingent fees.  They found that contingent fees:

  • Motivate performance by lawyers.
  • Improve access to courts for the less wealthy.
  • Spread risk to the lawyer.
  • Reduce the number of "junk suits".
  • Decrease the amount of time to settlement.
  • Do not inflate the size of damages awards.
  • Have been common in the U.S. for more than 100 years.

According to the AEI press release , the authors of Two Cheers for Contingent Fees conclude that, "while tort reform is an important goal, limiting the contractual rights of plaintiffs and their lawyers is an unattractive and likely ineffective method of achieving that goal."

The principal findings of Two Cheers shouldn't come as a surprise.  Contingent fees use economic incentives to align lawyers' interests with their clients' -- allowing free-market forces to encourage outcomes that optimize benefits to both.  Economists, even conservative ones, love that kind of stuff.

Still, this AEI publication gratifyingly confirms the populist idea that contingent fees provide the keys to the courthouse for small businesses and individuals -- and that restricting clients' right to contract for a contingent fee arrangement does harm rather than good.

Courthouse Keys for Marion County, OH (1833-83).

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Copyright © The New Yorker.  Used with permission.

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Barry Barnett, Editor
901 Main Street, Suite 5100
Dallas, Texas 75202
Phone: 214-754-1903

Copyright  © 2006 SUSMAN GODFREY L.L.P Attorneys at Law.  All rights reserved.

Barnett's Notes on Commercial Litigation is for informational purposes only and is not intended to provide legal advice.

Transmission is not intended to create and receipt does not establish an attorney-client relationship.

 

 

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