Lawsuited & Booted:   

October 24, 2007

Justices Probe
Lord Browne's Bulging Briefs

The Texas Supreme Court is weighing a $2 million aristocratic appeal. British oil giant BP has asked the justices to reverse lower-court orders that direct the company’s knighted ex-CEO to tell plaintiffs what he knows about the 2005 explosion of a BP refinery in Texas City, which killed 15 workers and injured scores more.

Addressing the justices last week, a plaintiff attorney said he wanted to depose then-CEO John Browne about draconian budget cuts he ordered that may have undermined safety at the explosive refinery. BP attorneys are seeking to shield Browne by invoking a legal doctrine that prevents plaintiffs from deposing top corporate brass unless they show that the executive has unique knowledge of pertinent facts. This “apex” doctrine bars plaintiffs from harassing top executives unnecessarily.

Complicating this defense is the fact that Browne—who was knighted in 1998 and joined the House of Lords in 2001—no longer heads the company. He resigned in May during a tabloid scandal that climaxed when Lord Brown lied to a British court in a bid to block a London paper from reporting that he used BP resources to subsidize a boyfriend he met through an escort service called “Suited and Booted.” A BP attorney told Texas justices last week that Lord Browne’s apex protection should survive his resignation or should have resumed in August when he became a lower-level executive at an investment fund.

While Lord Browne has fallen from the lofty heights at BP’s apex, top executives closer to home are urging the Texas justices to shield him from BP’s victims. In February some of Texas’ most powerful corporate interests submitted a friend-of-the-court brief on the nobleman’s behalf, arguing that businesses will be reluctant to invest in Texas if its courts allow plaintiffs to depose corporate executives in cases such as this.

Though just nine pages long, this brief carries unusual heft with the nine justices. Since 2001 they have taken $1.7 million from the trade groups, affiliated companies and law firm that filed it. When combined with the $307,612 that the justices have taken from defendants and defense attorneys in the BP case, Lord Browne’s briefs come before the court stuffed with $2 million.

Texas Justices Took More Than $2 Million From
Business Interests and Attorneys Aligned With the Defense in the BP Case

 Justice
BP-Linked
Amount
BP-Linked
Share of Total
Raised (2001-2006)
Justices’
Latest
Elections
 Don Willett
$475,369
27%
2006
 Wallace Jefferson
*$441,811
27%
2002; 2006
 Jesse Wainwright
$349,444
31%
2002
 Phil Johnson
$164,200
33%
2006
 Paul Green
$161,350
16%
2004
 Scott Brister
$156,400
29%
2004
 David Medina
$152,275
33%
2006
 Harriet O'Neill
$64,850
23%
2004
 Nathan Hecht
$59,000
32%
2006
                       TOTALS
$2,024,699
27%
 
Note: Justice O’Neill has recused herself from the BP case.
*Includes $350 from the Holman Firm, which represents BP plaintiffs.

 

Breakdown of the Campaign Funds
Shadowing Lord Browne’s Case

 Connection
 To BP Case
Affiliated
Contributions
To Justices
(2001 - 2006)
 Defendants
$1,100
 Defense Attorneys
$306,512
 Plaintiff Attorneys
$350
 Friend-of-Court Parties1
$1,586,548
 Friend-of-Court Attorneys
$130,189
TOTAL:
$2,024,699
Source: Texans for Public Justice from Texas Ethics Commission filings.

The $2 million tied to the BP case accounts for 27 percent of all the campaign cash that the justices raised in the last six years. Yet Brits would be presumptuous to assume that Texas justice is one-sided. During the same period, Chief Justice Wallace Jefferson took $350 from attorneys for the BP plaintiffs.


1  Amicus signatories accounting for this campaign money include: Texas Association of Business, Texas Oil & Gas Association, Texas Chemical Council and ExxonMobil. Trade group figures include contributions affiliated with member companies.