Payola Justice: How Texas Supreme Court Justices Raise Money from Court Litigants
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Legal Aid
Lawyers and law firms account
for $3,818,125—or 42 percent—of the money that the seven justices received
in contributions of $100 or more. Of this amount, the report links $3,059,914
(80 percent) to the Supreme Court docket.
The lawyers and PACs associated with the top 15 law firms that paid tribute
to the seven justices contributed a total of $1,536,255, or 17 percent
of the total that the justices received in contributions of $100 or more.
Lawyers in these 15 firms all argued cases before the court. The court
delivered 530 decisions during the period studied; Baker & Botts lawyers
alone had a hand in 21 of these cases.
The Most Financially Persuasive
Law Firms
Appearing Before the Court
Law Firm (Lawyers & PAC) | Tribute To 7 Justices | Main TX Office | Supreme Case Load |
Vinson & Elkins | $244,018 | Houston | 12 |
Baker & Botts | $169,993 | Houston | 21 |
Fulbright & Jaworski | $164,634 | Houston | 17 |
Susman Godfrey | $115,945 | Houston | 1 |
Kelly Hart & Hallman | $108,460 | Ft. Worth | 1 |
Liddell Sapp Zivley Hill & LaBoon | $100,873 | Houston | 3 |
Locke Purnell Rain & Harrell | $87,373 | Dallas | 3 |
Bracewell & Patterson | $87,125 | Houston | 11 |
Haynes & Boone | $80,935 | Dallas | 12 |
Thompson & Knight | $72,160 | Dallas | 10 |
Strasburger & Price | $70,800 | Dallas | 9 |
Andrews & Kurth | $69,640 | Houston | 4 |
Thompson Coe Cousins & Irons | $58,100 | Dallas | 1 |
Gardere Wynne Sewell & Riggs | $54,638 | Dallas | 6 |
Hughes & Luce | $51,561 | Dallas | 2 |
$1,536,255 | Total | 113 |
Vinson & Elkins is the firm that
most supported the justices' political fundraising. Its lawyers and political
action committee (PAC) contributed almost a quarter of a million dollars
to the seven justices during the period covered by this report. Vinson
& Elkins lawyers argued 12 cases before the court during the period
studied.
Two other top corporate law firms, Fulbright & Jaworski and
Chief Justice Phillips' former firm of Baker & Botts, cleared
$160,000 each in contributions to the seven justices. During the period
studied, Baker & Botts lawyers argued 21 cases before the court; Fulbright
& Jaworski lawyers argued 17. The PACs and lawyers of three other defense
firms contributed more than $100,000 per firm. Of these, Liddell, Sapp,
Zivley, Hill & LaBoon argued three cases before the court during
the period studied, while the firms of Susman Godfrey and Kelly
Hart & Hallman each argued one court case.
Knowing the judge
The law firm contributions presented
above count contributions by each firm's PAC as well as its lawyers. The
contributions presented below show the individual lawyers who have contributed
the most money. Ten attorneys gave more than $10,000 apiece to the seven
justices. Four of the top five individual contributors are name partners
of their firms. Apparently, when power lawyers appear in court, they know
that it helps to know the law—and it helps to know the judge.
Power Lawyers
Top Contributing Attorneys
Lawyer | Funding of 7 Justices |
# of Court Cases |
Firm | Firm |
Ben Vaughan III | $27,750 | 0 | 7 | Graves Dougherty Hearon & Moody |
James Elkins, Jr. | $17,750 | 0 | 12 | Vinson & Elkins |
Joseph Jamail III | $15,000 | 0 | 0 | Jamail & Kolius |
Stephen Susman | $15,000 | 1 | 1 | Susman Godfrey |
H. Godfrey | $14,000 | 0 | 1 | Susman Godfrey |
Michael Gallagher | $13,498 | 2 | 4 | Fisher Gallagher & Lewis |
David Crump | $12,700 | 0 | 12 | Haynes & Boone |
Harry Reasoner | $11,936 | 5 | 12 | Vinson & Elkins |
Frank Branson | $11,000 | 1 | 1 | Law Offices of Frank Branson |
Steven Gordon | $10,500 | 0 | 0 | Lipnick & Gordon |
Total | $149,141 | 9 | 37 |
During the Texas Supreme Court scandal of
a decade ago, former Chief Justice Jack Pope criticized six fellow justices
for attending a ball thrown by Corpus Christi trial lawyer Bill Edwards,
who had just won an important Supreme Court case. "Supreme Court judges
need to be careful with all attorneys, because if they don't have a case
before you, they either had one or hope to get one," Pope said. "Supreme
Court justices do not "need the help of lawyers [with cases before
the court] except for what they put in written briefs," Pope added.13
A Dallas Times Herald study helped fuel the court
scandal in 1987 when it found that just eight lawyers and law firms contributed
18 percent of the money justices raised over the previous 10 years14.
This study finds that lawyers and law firms—many with cases before the
court—contributed 42 percent of the $9.2 million raised in the most recent
election cycles of the seven justices studied here.
In a bizarre January 22, 1998 decision, the court appeared to pay back
these major funders. The court majority (Justices Enoch, Gonzalez, Owen,
Baker and Hankinson) held in Bohatch v. Butler & Binion that
no legal barriers prevent a law firm from firing a partner who complains
about a client being over billed. Justices Phillips and Spector dissented,
arguing that the ruling wrongly suggests that "the rules of professional
responsibility are subordinate to a law firm's other interests." Justice
Abbott recused himself since the case involved the law firm he practiced
with before joining the court.15
One disturbing court trend is that it is becoming increasingly
rare for the public to know how individual justices weighed in on cases
such as Bohatch v. Butler & Binion. A July 1997 Texas Citizen
Action study, "The Texas Supreme Court in 1996-97," found that,
for two years running, the court has issued more per curiam opinions
than signed ones. In a per curiam, a court majority backs an anonymously
written opinion, disagreeing justices fail to write dissents and the voting
records of individual justices are kept secret. For justices who raise
huge sums of money from parties who have business before the court, per
curiam decisions offer a way to vote for financial backers without
the accountability that an on-the-record vote imposes.
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