High profile: Joe Jamail
Once a crusader
...
Love him or hate him, Joe Jamail still commands respect after 50
years as a lawyer. And he's as adamant as ever about the
importance of juries.
01:34 PM CST on Friday, November 28,
2003
By STEVE QUINN /
The Dallas Morning News
Joe Jamail loves getting in the last word.
After all, he is a lawyer, and at 77, he's as chatty as ever.
Whether it's cross-examinations in a courtroom, discourse at
a reception – interrupted only when a glass of scotch is
reaching the depletion stage – or text in his new book,
Lawyer, Mr. Jamail's got something to say.
And no matter what, this Houston lawyer will have a captive
audience: a jury seated for trial; people wondering what brings
him back to the courtroom; or folks simply wanting to know
what's on his mind.
Practicing law is no longer about the big payday because, as
of Nov. 20, 1985, he had one of the biggest: On that day, he
successfully convinced a Houston jury that Texaco Inc. derailed
his client's efforts to buy Getty Oil Co. and won a $10.53
billion judgment for Pennzoil Co.
| Birth date and place:
Oct. 19, 1925, Houston
Family: Wife, Lee; children, Dahr, Randall and
Rob
Favorite book: All of Mark Twain's
Favorite movie: Gone With the Wind
People I most admire: My mother and father
Favorite case tried: Too many to have a
favorite
What people say behind my back: He's lucky
Most relaxing time of the day: At 5:30 p.m.,
when I have my first scotch |
|
A settlement later reduced the payout to $3.3 billion, which
still meant a $400-million-plus payout for Mr. Jamail. So, with
all the money he could use and 50 years of trials under his
belt, why does he keep coming back to the courthouse?
"Ego," he says. "I need the light on me, but you know, I
still think I'm doing some good.
"It gives me a real sense of power that I'm not going to let
you run over somebody. I don't care how big you are."
A tight family
A grocer's son and of Lebanese descent, Mr. Jamail grew up in
Houston in the "Jamail Compound," where aunts, uncles, and
cousins also lived.
As a neighborhood runt and facing pressure of being as good
as his older brother, George, he quickly grew to resent
authority.
But the chip on his shoulder "the size of a manhole cover"
taught him to fight back, long before he started taking on big
corporations.
Once, sick of being a bully's punching bag, young Joe kept a
sock loaded with marbles handy.
"I just got tired of it, so when he got close, I nailed him,"
Mr. Jamail recalls. "It taught me something. If you don't stand
up for something, then what are you going to do?"
That same chip, however, produced a slow start at the
University of Texas in Austin, so the young man joined the
Marines during World War II and returned home in 1946.
A chance barroom encounter with Louisiana lawyer Kaliste
Saloom proved fortuitous. Mr. Jamail later visited him and
watched him assure clients he could help.
The meeting had Mr. Jamail thinking, "I can get paid for
this?" and drove him to harness his energy and resume school.
He earned a liberal arts degree in 1949 at UT, then earned
his law degree in January 1953, six months after passing
the bar.
Thanks to a bet – driven by plenty of hubris – Mr. Jamail
took the exam before his final semester. Tired of hearing law
grads bellyache about the upcoming exam, he wagered $100 that he
could pass it.
He won by exceeding the cutoff by one point. And today his
connection with UT remains strong. The Jamail name is on its
football field, the law school library and a natatorium, as well
as several endowed chairs.
The court as a stage
If the legal world were a theater, the courtroom would be Mr.
Jamail's stage. Although his workload has been scaled back after
nearly 50 years of practicing law, the courtroom still energizes
him.
He enters a room walking with a slight hunch and speaking
with hoarse voice, punctuated with a country drawl and smile.
Other lawyers will come to the courtroom to watch just
because he'll be trying a case. Sometimes, it'll be a case other
lawyers wouldn't touch.
"He still has suppleness and agility he had as a young man,"
says Houston colleague Harry Reasoner, 64, who worked with Mr.
Jamail during the Pennzoil-Texaco appeal.
"A trial is theater, but in a classic sense like Greek
theater, where you get catharsis and truth from the exercise.
"It's his ability to capture your attention, keep it
interesting and engaging and then allow you to learn from it
that makes it classic theater. That's Joe in the courtroom."
Even foes acknowledge Mr. Jamail's courtroom presence.
"He's a shrewd person about weaknesses of people," says
Richard Miller, who represented Texaco during the suit. "He
understands human frailty, and that's a big part of his success;
nobody can deny that."
But Mr. Miller adds success can breed contempt.
"Some consider him a friend, others don't; I don't consider
myself either one," Mr. Miller says. "But he is not a loved
person. People who say they are his friends are afraid of him
because of his money." Nevertheless, Mr. Jamail is still winning
in the courtroom, colleagues say, because he keeps law simple
while mincing no words.
He breaks down cases to their essence rather than relying on
a sleight-of-hand shell game. It's basic execution that is held
up as an example in classrooms, especially in UT law classes.
"He almost always uses very traditional theories of
liability," says Bill Powers, who is the dean for UT's School of
Law and still teaches tort-law classes.
"His forte has always been his technique. He takes the core
legal principles and tells a great story to the jury under those
traditional principles: If they are violated, then someone ought
to pay."
Mr. Jamail will stun juries with blunt deliveries, just as he
did one afternoon when admitting that his client, paralyzed in
an accident, registered a .31 blood alcohol content – more than
three times the legal limit.
He went on to convince the jury that his client, despite
being drunk, was not weaving or causing his own peril but was
forced off the road by a commercial truck. The jury returned
with a $6 million award.
"Any attorney who goes into court thinking he's going to flim-flam
a jury is nuts," he says.
"That's why I told the jury during voir dire: 'I want you to
know right off my client was drunk. I don't care what you've
seen, you've never seen anybody as drunk as he was the night
this happened, so if anyone who feels it's open season on drunks
and they are not entitled to protections of the law, I need to
know.' Half wouldn't give a drunk a fair trial."
"A recreational process"
For all the talking Mr. Jamail does, conversations with Gus
Kolius are an absolute must for him.
First a formidable opponent then an employee who one day
found his name on the same letterhead as Mr. Jamail without
explanation, Mr. Kolius still looks forward to his friend's
calls.
Sometimes it's to talk about current cases, other times to
reflect on old ones.
Mr. Kolius, now 84, worked 20 years with Mr. Jamail. Mr.
Kolius "called in rich" and retired in his 70s, but his longtime
friend keeps working.
"Practicing law is really the only thing Joe really enjoys,"
Mr. Kolius says. "It's a recreational process for him. I think
he just gets a kick out of it. I don't think he'll ever quit or
run out of cases."
Mr. Jamail believes he and other lawyers are losing ground
outside the courtroom.
A steadfast believer in the jury system, he believes the
court's role is being slowly removed from conflict resolution.
Even in defeat, Mr. Jamail still supports jury trials, as he
did in 1993 during a losing effort on behalf of Northwest
Airlines, which lost an antitrust suit to American Airlines.
Corporations and legislators, he says, are making inroads at
lessening their accountability for their products, actions and
policies.
He argues in Lawyer that it's the court system – and
not legislators – that has produced the most telling societal
changes: desegregation; products liability; free press;
compensation for bereaved; the rights of illegitimate children.
If more legislators had their way, he says, disputes would
progressively be worked outside the courtroom. This thought
sends Mr. Jamail into a closing-argument-like diatribe.
"What is justice? It isn't some magical thing that needs to
be decoded. No, it's an opportunity to have whatever dispute
you've got heard," he says
"Who is the guardian of human rights? Do you think it's the
legislators? No, my friend. It's the courthouse. It's the
juries. "
"Even the ones I lost, based on what the jury had, I'd have
to agree they were right. They may make mistakes from time to
time, but we have courts who can rectify those mistakes. "
"And if we don't continue to have an independent judicial
system, they will settle disputes in the streets. Is that what
we want?"
"I'll tell you this. I'm proud to be a lawyer. It's the last
place to fight for people legitimately without swords, knives
and machine guns and tell the corporate world they are not going
to get away with this."
E-mail
squinn@dallasnews.com |