The three Republican incumbent justices on the November 2008 ballot raised a total of almost $1.6 million for their reelection campaigns through the end of June 2008. The justices took 65 percent of this money from courtroom contributors who had recent business before the same justices. The justices’ dependence on courtroom contributions ranged from a low of 60 percent for Chief Justice Wallace Jefferson to a high of 71 percent for Justice Dale Wainwright. The Democrats challenging these justices (see the next section) raised a total of $722,167, taking 69 percent of it from lawyers and litigants who had recent business before the Texas Supreme Court.

 

Three Incumbents Took 65 Percent
of Their Campaign Funds
From Courtroom Contributors
Justice
Seeking Reelection
In Nov. 2008
Total
Raised
Jan. ‘07 To July ’08
Total
Courtroom
Contributions
Courtroom
Funds As
Share of Total
 Democratic Challenger
 Wallace Jefferson* (R)
$661,219
$396,420
60%
 Jim Jordan
 Phil Johnson (R)
$473,683
$306,371
65%
 Linda Yañez
 Dale Wainwright (R)
$450,718
$320,450
71%
 Sam Houston
TOTALS:
$1,585,620
$1,023,241
65%
 
               *Chief Justice.



The justices’ heavy reliance on courtroom contributors is all the more troubling given the court’s record of favoring the corporate defense interests that bankroll the justices’ campaigns. A recent law review article found that defendants prevailed in 87 percent of the 69 opinions that the Texas Supreme Court issued in tort cases in 2004 and 2005.10 That study also analyzed who benefited and who lost when the Supreme Court rejected petitions to review tort cases in 2004. These rejections benefited defendants 75 percent of the time. 

 

d

 

Governor Rick Perry first appointed Wallace Jefferson to a Supreme Court vacancy in 2001. Governor Perry then picked Justice Jefferson for yet another vacancy in 2004, when Chief Justice Tom Phillips retired mid-term. Voters elected Chief Justice Jefferson to finish the last two years of that term in 2006. Jefferson worked at Groce Locke & Hebdon until 1991, when he helped found Crofts Callaway & Jefferson. That firm, now Crofts & Callaway, has given $2,750 to the reelection campaigns of the three incumbent justices. Crofts & Callaway attorneys have had 47 matters before their former partner’s court since 2005.

 

Chief Justice Wallace Jefferson’s
Top Courtroom Contributors
Total
Amount
  Courtroom Contributor  Interest
$24,620
  Vinson & Elkins LLP  Law Firm
$21,250
  Haynes & Boone LLP  Law Firm
$17,650
  Fulbright & Jaworski LLP  Law Firm
$16,000
  Brock Person Guerra Reyna  Law Firm
$15,750
  AT&T, Inc.  Communications
$15,500
  United Services Automobile Assn.  Insurance
$15,000
  Bickel & Brewer  Law Firm
$12,500
  Davis Cedillo & Mendoza, Inc.  Law Firm
$11,500
  Cantey Hanger Roan & Autrey  Law Firm
$10,750
  Thompson & Knight LLP  Law Firm
$10,000
  Andrews & Kurth LLP  Law Firm
$10,000
  Texans For Lawsuit Reform  Anti-Liability business group
$9,000
  Baker Botts LLP  Law Firm
$6,500
  ExxonMobil Corp.  Energy/Natural Resources
$6,250
  Bracewell & Giuliani LLP  Law Firm
$6,000
  Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld  Law Firm
$6,000
  Beirne Maynard & Parsons  Law Firm
$6,000
  McGinnis Lochridge & Kilgore  Law Firm
$5,750
  Strasburger & Price  Law Firm
$5,500
  Winstead PC  Law Firm
$5,350
  Jackson Walker LLP  Law Firm
$5,000
  Hughes & Luce LLP  Law Firm
$5,000
  King & Spalding LLP  Law Firm
$5,000
  William D. Noel, Attorney at Law  Law Firm
$5,000
  PAJ, Inc.  Jewelry
$5,000
  Pfizer, Inc.  Pharmaceuticals
$5,000
  Thompson Coe Cousins & Irons  Law Firm

 

 

 

Governor Rick Perry tapped then-7th Court of Appeals Chief Justice Phil Johnson to fill a Supreme Court vacancy in 2005. The following year voters elected Justice Johnson to finish that now-expiring term. Before his election to the Amarillo-based appeals court in 1998, Johnson was a partner at Lubbock’s Crenshaw Dupree & Milan. Attorneys at this firm—which has had nine matters before the Supreme Court since 2005—contributed $2,250 to Johnson’s current reelection campaign. An earlier Texans For Public Justice study found that lawyers and law firms accounted for 68 percent of the money that Justice Johnson raised for his 7th Court of Appeals campaign in 2002.11

 

Justice Phil Johnson’s
Top Courtroom Contributors
Total
Amount
  Courtroom Contributor  Interest
$22,422
  Vinson & Elkins LLP  Law Firm
$20,450
  Haynes & Boone LLP  Law Firm
$16,250
  Fulbright & Jaworski LLP  Law Firm
$11,000
  Thompson & Knight LLP  Law Firm
$10,500
  United Services Automobile Assn.  Insurance
$10,350
  Bracewell & Giuliani LLP  Law Firm
$10,000
  Andrews & Kurth LLP  Law Firm
$10,000
  Jackson Walker LLP  Law Firm
$9,500
  King & Spalding LLP  Law Firm
$8,000
  Locke Liddell & Sapp LLP  Law Firm
$7,500
  Baker Botts LLP  Law Firm
$6,000
  Cantey Hanger Roan & Autrey  Law Firm
$5,500
  Winstead PC  Law Firm
$5,250
  McGinnis Lochridge & Kilgore  Law Firm
$5,000
  Beirne Maynard & Parsons  Law Firm
$5,000
  Bickel & Brewer  Law Firm
$5,000
  BP Capital  Energy/Investments
$5,000
  ExxonMobil Corp.  Energy/Natural Resources
$5,000
  Hughes & Luce LLP  Law Firm
$5,000
  Strasburger & Price  Law Firm
$5,000
  TX Assn. of Defense Counsel  Attorney trade group
$5,000
  Thompson Coe Cousins & Irons  Law Firm
$5,000
  TRT Holdings, Inc.  Energy/Investments
$4,500
  Texas Civil Justice League  Anti-Liability business group

 

 

 

Justice Wainwright is facing his first reelection campaign after voters elected him to his first high-court term in 2002. Then-Governor George Bush appointed Wainwright to a vacant Harris County district judge seat in 1999. Wainwright’s former employers—Haynes & Boone and Andrews & Kurth—rank among the top courtroom contributors to his reelection campaign. Haynes & Boone has had 77 matters before the Supreme Court since 2005 and Andrews Kurth had 66.


The Houston Chronicle recently reported on a campaign fundraiser that Justice Wainwright held in September 2008—after the period covered in this report.12 Yet some of the sponsors of that event already had established themselves as courtroom contributors. These sponsors—who do business before the court and finance its political campaigns—include: AT&T, Inc. ($15,750 to current Supreme Court campaigns); the Texas Civil Justice League ($13,500); Pfizer, Inc. ($6,000); Koch Industries ($5,500); and American Electric Power ($1,000). George Christian, who heads the Texas Civil Justice League, an anti-liability business group, said his group is constantly sending checks and briefs to the justices. Referring to the tawdry nature of Texas’ judicial-selection system, Christian told the Chronicle, “It ain’t pretty.”

Justice Dale Wainwright's
Top Courtroom Contributors
Total
Amount
  Courtroom Contributor  Interest
$23,450
  Haynes & Boone LLP  Law Firm
$16,450
  Fulbright & Jaworski LLP  Law Firm
$12,500
  Vinson & Elkins LLP  Law Firm
$10,600
  Bracewell & Giuliani LLP  Law Firm
$10,500
  Jackson Walker LLP  Law Firm
$10,000
  Andrews & Kurth LLP  Law Firm
$10,000
  Texans For Lawsuit Reform  Anti-Liability business group
$10,000
  United Services Automobile Assn.  Insurance
$10,000
  Zachry Construction Corp.  Construction
$9,500
  King & Spalding LLP  Law Firm
$9,000
  Baker Botts LLP  Law Firm
$7,750
  McGinnis Lochridge & Kilgore  Law Firm
$7,500
  Fisher Boyd Brown Boudreaux…  Law Firm
$6,750
  Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld  Law Firm
$6,250
  Thompson & Knight LLP  Law Firm
$6,250
  Graves Dougherty Hearon & Moody  Law Firm
$6,000
  Abraham Watkins Nichols Sorrells…  Law Firm
$5,500
  Locke Liddell & Sapp LLP  Law Firm
$5,200
  Gardere Wynne Sewell & Riggs  Law Firm
$5,000
  Beirne Maynard & Parsons  Law Firm
$5,000
  Hughes & Luce LLP  Law Firm
$5,000
  Kinetic Concepts, Inc.  Hospital bed manufacturer
$5,000
  Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Preston Gates  Law Firm
$5,000
  Strasburger & Price  Law Firm
$5,000
  Valero Energy Corp.  Energy/Natural Resources
$5,000
  Winstead PC  Law Firm

                   

 


10 “Judicial Tort Reform in Texas,” University of Texas School of Law Professor David A. Anderson, The Review of Litigation, Winter 2007.
11 “Lowering the Bar: Lawyers Keep Texas Appeals Judges on Retainer,” Texans For Public Justice, May 2003. http://www.tpj.org/docs/2002/05/reports/apcourt/
12 Here’s When Campaigning Feels Shifty,” Houston Chronicle, September 28, 2008.