From Verdicts and Settlements
"Specialty of The House"
By Bill Becker
Major employers flock to Ballard, Rosenberg & Golper because the firm's
close-knit, boutique mentality provides a high level of dedication and
expertise in all employment matters.
The three defense attorneys on the Stafford v. McDonnell
Douglas Corp. [USDC Case No. 94-5771 RSWL (Kx) (1999); Ninth Circuit
Court Case No. 95-56109; Supreme Court Case No. 97-1000; remanded back
to Los Angeles Superior Court Case No. BC109065] case agree on the phrase
that best describes Ballard, Rosenberg & Golper, their 25-attorney,
nine-partner firm. Formed in 1986, the firm is a "cutting-edge boutique"
for labor and employment law matters.
They also agree that the culture of their practice is
collegial and tightly knit, helping them react swiftly and knowledgeably
for their clients. Pointedly, they practice employment law exclusively
on behalf of management, said John B. Golper, partner and lead attorney
in Stafford. The firm's three areas of concentration are traditional
labor law (union relations), employment advice and employment litigation.
Lead name partner Ken Ballard, a union specialist, "has
probably ... negotiated more labor contracts for major hotels around the
country than any single labor lawyer in the country," said Golper. Another
major focus is aerospace labor and employment - the firm has ties to McDonnell-Douglas,
Boeing and Lockheed.
How does the firm view its track record? Admittedly,
some of it is the luck of the case," Golper said. He knows. He heads up
the litigation specialty. "You could be working on a case that has unique
issues. You luck out and get to advocate them. But, you're ready to advocate
them."
That was the case in Turner v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc.,
7 Cal.4th 1238 (1994), in which Golper and John J. Manier, first co-counsel
on the Stafford case, persuaded the California Supreme Court to establish
statewide, pro-employer standards applicable to the issue of constructive
discharge. To Golper, cutting-edge also means that the firm doesn't just
litigate. It can provide ongoing support and training, steeping its corporate
clients continuously in preventive law. Name partner Richard Rosenberg
typically leads the firm's employment-advice specialty. This service includes
counseling, and conducting "vulnerability audits" and lecture series for
employer groups throughout the state.
The partners say the boutique label signifies more than
just their singular focus - it also means they foster a culture of dedication.
Golper chose a labor and employment law career well before law school,
as did his associate on the Stafford case, sixth-year associate
Douglas N. Silverstein.
Before matriculating at the University of California,
Los Angeles School of Law, from which he graduated in 1975, Golper was
careful to determine that the law school staff included three labor-law
professors.
Silverstein, who has earned a master's degree in business
administration, said that his career path in employment law was shaped
by his childhood in Ohio, where his family owns a structural-steel business
that employs union labor. He maintained this interest through graduation
from Whittier Law School in 1994.
Silverstein started honing his litigation skills before
joining Ballard, Rosenberg. During his last semester at law school, he
worked full time as a judicial extern for Judge Alex Kozinski of the 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. He later worked in the same capacity for
Judge Irving Shimer of the Los Angeles County Superior Court.
Manier, senior associate and the firm's appellate specialist,
has extensively litigated employment-related cases in the decade since
his graduation from UCLA School of Law. His specialty practice has been
fundamental to the firm's numerous published appellate and Supreme Court
decisions, including Davis v. Consolidated Freightways, 29 Cal.App.4th
354 (1999), which created favorable law - for employers - on at-will employment
issues. He was counsel of record in Turner, is editor of the
firm's quarterly newsletter, Employment Law Update, and has contributed
practitioner articles to the Daily Journal on labor and employment issues.
Golper reinforces the virtues of the firm's smallness
and singular focus. He uses a number of methods to achieve that focus.
One tool is a weekly Friday-morning roundtable at which one of the firm's
associates presents and discusses new labor- and employment-law developments.
According to Golper, the meeting introduces all major cases in the appellate
reports and other publications of the previous week. This overview is
followed by several hours of discussion among all the lawyers.
"It's a training ground for the less experienced, younger
lawyers," posited Golper. The more experienced attorneys correct and advise
the newer ones on their strategies, thoughts and reactions with regard
to each development.
"We may have 15 different lawyers piping in with their
different opinions - how they would react, how they would advise the client.
... Whenever you get 15 to 25 employment lawyers together in a room discussing
a hot topic, the educational value is just amazing." In addition, a "firm
approach" to many of the issues emerges.
To the defense counsel in Stafford, "cutting-edge
boutique" boils down to the concept that the firm makes every effort to
solve its clients' problems - whether that means training big guns on
the adversaries or training clients.
"I think what truly separates us [from other firms] is
that we don't sound like a bunch of lawyers," said Silverstein.
"Lawyers are sometimes seen as problem makers, not problem
solvers. We're problem solvers. We present our clients with the broadest
array of solutions that could possibly resolve their potential labor and
employment issues."
Silverstein also stressed that less experienced associates
are given wide latitude to develop new clients, especially in such cutting-edge
fields as e-commerce. "The firm supports younger attorneys taking substantial
responsibility and developing business."
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