Firm Profiles
IN-DEPTH RESEARCH REPORT
on Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP
- - Financial Information
- - Compensation
- - Billing Rates
- - Lateral Partner Moves
- - Pro bono
- - Key Contacts
Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker
- Designation: National
- Head Count: 899
- Gross Revenues: $908,000,000
- Revenue Per Lawyer: $1,010,000
- Profits Per Partner: $2,080,000
- Year Over Year Change: no change
They took off with Los Angeles, three middle–aged lawyers who opened up shop in 1951, covering the core California legal food groups: employment, real estate, and litigation. They added corporate and tax along the way and today Paul Hastings’s 900 lawyers are spread across 18 offices on three continents. They do well—profits per partner hover around $2 million—and they do good. Recent years have seen the firm dramatically improve in key noneconomic measures. Associate satisfaction—which had ranked 103rd on The American Lawyer’s 2008 Midlevel Associates Survey—ranked second on our 2010 tally and sixth in 2011. Meanwhile, Paul Hastings has morphed into an industry leader in pro bono, placing second of 200 firms on our 2011 Pro Bono report (with attorneys averaging a stratospheric 130 hours of nonpaying work). Diversity ranks well above average, too: Nearly 20 percent of the firm’s U.S. attorneys are minorities. Paul Hastings was named to The American Lawyer’s A–List—which looks at financial and nonfinancial metrics to identify the country’s most elite firms—in 2010 and 2011.
They haven’t abandoned their roots. Paul Hastings was named The American Lawyer’s Labor and Employment Litigation Department of the Year in 2010 and 2004, and was a finalist for the title in 2006 and 2008 (the contest is held every two years). It’s a bi–coastal real estate power, having absorbed an Am Law Second Hundred firm in 2000 with a lucrative New York practice. And it continues to build on its early push into the Asia–Pacific region, opening a Tokyo office in 1988 and expanding its footprint to Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Beijing in the early 2000s. Paul Hastings did lay off several dozen associates during the recession, but didn’t see the dramatic declines in revenues and profitability that many of its peers did.
—Updated as of 1/1/12
Firm Rankings
| Survey | Rank | Year Over Year Change | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Am Law 100 | 24 | no change | Gross revenue |
| Am Law 200 | 24 | no change | Gross revenue |
| NLJ 250 | 30 | 6 | Lawyer head count |
| The A-List | 2 | 1 | Overall excellence |
| Pro Bono Scorecard | 2 | 5 | Pro-bono commitment |
| Diversity Scorecard | 20 | 6 | Minority head count |
| Midlevel Associates Survey | 2 | 4 | Job satisfaction |
| Summer Associates Survey | NR | N/A | Summer programs |
In the News
Sedgwick Bids to Trim Claims Arising From Ponzi Scheme
Amanda Bronstad : The National Law Journal : May 16, 2013
Sedgwick LLP has moved to dismiss what it called "over-reaching" claims in a $200 million malpractice lawsuit filed by the receiver of a purported medical receivables purchasing company in California that was revealed to be a $1 billion Ponzi scheme.
Contrite Companies Can Be Forgiven in Bribery Cases
Amanda Bronstad : The National Law Journal : May 15, 2013
When apparel maker Ralph Lauren Corp. first discovered that one of its employees had been bribing custom officials in Argentina, the company immediately notified the U.S. government, offering its employees for interviews and turning over documents.
Texas' Top Deals of 2012
Brenda Sapino Jeffreys : Texas Lawyer : May 13, 2013
The top 10 deals in Texas in 2012.
Contrite Companies Can Win Forgiveness in Bribery Cases
Amanda Bronstad : The National Law Journal : May 13, 2013
More companies are beginning to realize that cooperation and compliance with FCPA regulations could lead to reduced fines and spare them criminal actions. The government, meanwhile, avoids the substantial effort entailed in investigating and bringing cases to trial.
Law Firms and Laterals Keep Houston Market Humming
Tom Huddleston Jr. : The Am Law Daily : May 13, 2013
Taken together, Katten Muchin Rosenman's recent move into Houston and a spate of lateral hires shows that a boom in energy-related work continues to attract new Am Law firms to Space City while motivating those already doing business there to bulk up.
The Duty to Preserve: 'VOOM' One Year Later
Mark A. Berman : New York Law Journal : May 13, 2013
While it is not possible to determine whether 'Voom' has altered corporate practices in preserving ESI, the few reported and unreported decisions citing to 'Voom' reveal that they provide clearer rulings dealing with issues involving the deletion of ESI as it relates to a party's obligation to preserve.
On the Move
: The Recorder : May 10, 2013
A weekly report of lawyer moves and law firm changes. Keep abreast of where movers and shakers are going and what they're doing.
Interop Holds Court in Vegas, With Much to Offer Legal.
Sean Doherty : Law Technology News : May 9, 2013
The Interop event at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center in Las Vegas from May 6 to 10 has much to offer law firms and other legal organizations. The event includes five days of training and education and access to more than 350 exhibitors on the Expo floor.
Outsourcing Group Jumps to Bryan Cave
Meredith Hobbs : Daily Report : May 9, 2013
An eight-person outsourcing practice group has left Sutherland for Bryan Cave. Scott Hobby, Derek Johnston, Charles Hollis and Sean Christy join Bryan Cave as partners. Hobby, who started out at Bryan Cave predecessor firm Powell Goldstein in 1973, said Bryan Cave's larger size nationally and broader client base offered greater opportunities.
Outsourcing Group Jumps to Bryan Cave
Meredith Hobbs : Daily Report : May 8, 2013
After six years at Sutherland, Scott Hobby has taken his eight-person outsourcing practice to Bryan Cave in a move that brings him full circle. Joining Bryan Cave as partners, from left, are Charles Hollis, Derek Johnston, Scott Hobby and Sean Christy.
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