Source: https://www.bafirm.com/attorney/james-w-quinn/
Timestamp: 2019-04-26 16:06:34+00:00

Document:
Jim Quinn is an accomplished trial lawyer who served for many years as head of the Litigation Department of the international law firm of Weil, Gotshal & Manges. Mr. Quinn specializes in high stakes commercial disputes. He has practiced in all areas of complex litigation and alternative dispute resolution, with particular emphasis on antitrust, securities, false advertising, sports, entertainment, patent and related complex intellectual property litigation. Known for his judgment, thorough preparation and mastery of detail, Mr. Quinn is able to take command of the courtroom with penetrating cross-examination of witnesses and logically compelling arguments. Clients call upon him in matters that are high-profile, high-stakes and, often, international in scope.
Mr. Quinn’s most recent notable engagements include obtaining for CBS the dismissal with prejudice of a landmark putative class action in which current and former NCAA Division I college football and basketball players alleged that CBS, along with a host of college athletic conferences, other networks and licensors, profited from the broadcast and use of those Student-Athletes’ names, likenesses and images without permission; winning for CBS Corporation the dismissal, affirmed on appeal, of a putative securities fraud class action relating to a $14 billion impairment; obtaining a complete dismissal for ESPN, Inc. and certain Walt Disney Co. companies in a $130 million suit brought by Echostar concerning alleged contract breaches relating to rights to ESPN and Disney’s high-definition television networks; securing a complete dismissal for CBS Corporation in a $70 million breach of contract, fraud, and breach of fiduciary duty suit filed by its former anchorman and correspondent Dan Rather stemming from his departure from the network in 2006; on behalf of ExxonMobil, defeating class certification of a purported national class alleging that major petroleum companies conspired to restrict the supply of gasoline; and securing summary judgment for ESPN, Inc. in litigation against boxing promoter Don King who alleged defamation and false light invasion of privacy and sought $2.5 billion in damages.
In another recent and high-profile matter, he served as lead trial counsel for ExxonMobil during a three-month trial in New Hampshire state court of claims brought by the State of New Hampshire relating to the use of the chemical MTBE as a gasoline additive. Earlier, he served as co-lead counsel for Vivendi in In re Vivendi Universal, S.A. Securities Litigation, the largest shareholder class action ever to go to trial.
Mr. Quinn recently succeeded in winning dismissal of $100 million in shareholder claims against Vivendi; convinced a federal court in California to deny class certification in a $500 million lawsuit filed against CBS regarding college athlete photos being sold on the internet, ultimately winning dismissal of the entire case on the merits; obtained dismissal of a series of lawsuits filed against Marvel Entertainment, Inc. potentially worth billions of dollars regarding many of the most iconic comic book characters owned by Marvel, in which the courts ordered the plaintiffs to pay almost a half million dollars in legal fees to Marvel; and represented Powder Corp., a major operator of ski resorts, in a high-profile dispute over the ownership of the Park City Mountain Ski Resort.
Throughout the past decade and beyond, Mr. Quinn has established himself as a leading commercial litigator with a string of impressive wins, including a $417 million verdict for ExxonMobil (Exxon Mobil v. SABIC) which was among the largest verdicts in the United States in 2003 and remains the largest in a commercial case in Delaware’s history; a complete defense verdict for Procter & Gamble Co. on an $80 million false advertising claim brought by the Colgate-Palmolive Co., relating to home teeth-whitening products; and representation of the Arthur Andersen Worldwide Member Firms in the largest International Chamber of Commerce arbitration in history, which involved nearly 300 parties and almost $15 billion in claims. During this time, Mr. Quinn also scored significant wins for UnitedHealth Group, Johnson & Johnson, and Disney, among others.
Additionally, Mr. Quinn has earned a reputation with his clients for his unmatched experience in sports and entertainment litigation. He is the most successful and influential litigator of sports antitrust cases in the quarter-century that these cases have been played out in the national arena. He is known for his strategic personal assessment of each client and his keen execution of the facts in the courtroom. Mr. Quinn has counseled and represented players associations in Major League Baseball, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, the National Hockey League and Major League Soccer. Mr. Quinn served as the lead counsel for the NFL players in their successful antitrust challenge to the player restrictions in the League (McNeil v. NFL). In this three month jury trial, Mr. Quinn ensured that a fair jury was chosen for his clients, and his winning strategy secured for his clients a multi-million dollar treble damage verdict as well as the right to free agency. He is able to make juries understand complicated cases by presenting his client’s points in a readily comprehensible and persuasive manner. The New York Times labeled Mr. Quinn’s participation at trial as “instrumental in helping change the face of major professional sports.” In 2016, Mr. Quinn was named as one of 17 “Elite” Power Players for sports law by Sports Business Journal.
Among many honors and awards, Mr. Quinn was selected in 1993 and 2004 by The National Law Journal as one of the ten top trial lawyers in the United States in its annual feature, “Winning: Successful Strategies From 10 of the Nation’s Top Litigators” (only a handful of lawyers have ever been selected twice for this prestigious award).
Chambers USA has ranked Mr. Quinn as a leader in nationwide sports law and New York commercial litigation since 2005, and as a top U.S. trial attorney since 2010. In 2013, he received the Chambers USA “Award for Excellence” in the category of “Litigation: Business Trial Lawyer” after being shortlisted for the award since 2009; he subsequently has been named to the shortlist for the inaugural, 2014 edition of “The Chambers 100,” a list of the top 100 business lawyers in the United States. Additionally, he has been ranked as a leading trial lawyer by Chambers Global in 2004/2005 and 2009-2016, with client commentators describing him as “an outstanding lawyer” and “one of the greatest trial lawyers in the country.” Legal 500 also recognized Mr. Quinn as a Leading Trial Lawyer since 2011, and separately in the areas of Appellate, Commercial Litigation, Sports and Antitrust, with commentators calling him a “legendary litigator.” He was also listed as highly recommended in PLC Which Lawyer? Yearbook 2006-2009 for Dispute Resolution, and was included in Euromoney’s 2004 Guide to the World’s Leading Experts In Commercial Arbitration, and The International Who’s Who of Commercial Litigators 2006, 2008, 2009 and 2013. Mr. Quinn has been selected by his peers for inclusion in the 2009-2016 editions of The Best Lawyers in America in a number of specialty areas, including Bet-the-Company Litigation, Commercial Litigation, International Arbitration, Litigation – Antitrust, Litigation – IP, Litigation – Securities and Sports Law. Benchmark Litigation recognized Mr. Quinn as one of its Top 100 Trial Lawyers in its 2016 and 2017 editions, and has also recognized him as a “Local Litigation Star” and a national “Litigation Star” since 2010, including in the areas of General Commercial Litigation and Securities Litigation, among others. In 2013, Mr. Quinn was recognized as a “Client Service All-Star” in BTI Consulting Group’s annual survey of corporate counsel. In 2015, Mr. Quinn was again elected by vote of his peers as one of the Top 100 Lawyers in the Metro New York area by Super Lawyers.
Mr. Quinn is a Fellow of the International Academy of Trial Lawyers and the American College of Trial Lawyers and a member of the International Society of Barristers. He is also a Fellow of The New York Bar Foundation. He has chaired a variety of committees of both The American Bar Association and The Bar Association of The City of New York. He is a member of the Advisory Board of The National Judicial College and the Panel of Distinguished Neutrals of the Center for Public Resources.
Stan Lee Media v. Marvel Inc., et al. – Successfully dismissed a series of copyright lawsuits filed around the country asserting ownership claims to many of Marvel’s most valuable characters, including Spider Man, the Fantastic Four, the Hulk, Iron Man, and dozens of others, and obtained attorney fees awards worth nearly half a million dollars in favor of Marvel.
Javon Marshall, et al. v. ESPN, Inc., CBS Broadcasting, Inc., et al. – Lead counsel for CBS in obtaining dismissal with prejudice of putative nationwide right of publicity and antitrust class action regarding names, images, and likenesses of student-athletes in college football and basketball broadcasts.
Yahchaaroah Lightbourne et al. v. CBS Interactive – Defeated motion for class certification and obtained ultimate dismissal of a putative class action seeking a half billion dollars in damages for the alleged violation of college athletes rights of publicity in connection with the sale of their photographs on the internet.
City of Omaha v. CBS Corp. – Obtained dismissal, affirmed by the Second Circuit, of putative securities fraud class action concerning a $14 billion impairment.
EchoStar, Inc. v. ESPN, Inc., et al. – Lead trial lawyer in a multiweek jury trial in New York State Supreme Court representing defendants ESPN, Inc. and related Walt Disney Companies. Plaintiff EchoStar sought over $130 million in damages for alleged contract breaches relating to rights to ESPN and Disney’s high-definition television networks. The jury rejected all of plaintiff’s claims and rendered a complete defense verdict on behalf of ESPN and Disney.
Eventim LLP v. Live Nation, Inc. – Lead lawyer for claimant Eventim seeking nearly a billion dollars in damages for breach of contract and breach of the covenant good faith and fair dealing in connection with a long term licensing agreement involving Eventim’s world renowned ticketing system. The claims were litigated before a single arbitrator from the International Chamber of Commerce in Paris.
Dan Rather v CBS Corporation, et al. – Obtained a complete dismissal for CBS Corporation in a $70 million breach of contract, fraud, and breach of fiduciary duty suit filed by its former anchorman and correspondent Dan Rather stemming from his departure from the network in 2006.
In re Vivendi Universal, S.A. Securities Litigation – Co-lead trial counsel representing Vivendi, S.A. in the largest shareholder class action ever to go to trial, in which the plaintiffs alleged that Vivendi violated federal securities laws by misrepresenting or concealing material information about its financial condition.
In re Ethylene Propylene Diene Monomer (EPDM) Antitrust Litigation – Lead counsel for ExxonMobil in this litigation for which Weil handled a consolidated multidistrict federal class action, 13 state class actions, and two opt-out cases brought by major purchasers of EPDM, alleging that ExxonMobil and co-defendants unlawfully conspired to fix prices in the market for EPDM, which, historically, has exhibited the greatest growth rate among major types of rubber since it was first manufactured in the 1960s. Unlike other defendants in similar actions – who paid in total over $80 million in settlements – ExxonMobil paid nothing in damages or settlement in any of the 16 separate EPDM suits that Weil handled.
Siegel et al. v. Shell Oil Company, et al. – Successfully defeated certification of a national class on behalf of Exxon Mobil Corporation and co-defendants BP, Citgo Petroleum Corp., Marathon Oil Corp., and Shell Oil Company in a litigation alleging conspiracy among major integrated oil companies to restrict the supply of gasoline and thus increase gas prices. The plaintiff had asked for over $1 billion in damages.
Applied Medical v. Johnson & Johnson Co. – Lead counsel for J&J in a successful defense of a $54 million antitrust claim brought by a smaller competitor. The suit involved allegations of monopolization via the so-called “bundling” of discounts across a variety of different medical and surgical product markets. The jury of nine, sitting in federal court in Southern California listened to seven weeks of complex medical and economic testimony before it rejected plaintiff’s claims finding for J&J on all counts.
In re Managed Care Multidistrict Litigation – Lead counsel for UnitedHealth Group in defense of multi-billion dollar RICO and related conspiracy claims brought by a nationwide class of 700,000 doctors. All but one of the other 10 defendants settled out for more than a billion dollars. After three separate hearings, the federal court in Miami granted summary judgment, finding insufficient evidence of either conspiracy or fraud.
In the Matter of Madison Square Garden, L.P. v. New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority and Jets Development, LLC – Lead counsel in defense of the MTA in a lawsuit brought by MSG and several community groups seeking to overturn the MTA’s Board’s decision to proceed with negotiations with the New York Jets football team to allow the Jets to build a new football stadium over the Long Island Rail Road railyards on Manhattan’s West Side.
Colgate-Palmolive Co. v. Procter & Gamble Co. – Lead counsel in successful defense of an $80 million claim brought against Procter & Gamble by competitor Colgate-Palmolive in federal court in the Southern District of New York. The suit stemmed from Colgate’s allegations that P&G’s advertising for its highly successful at-home tooth-whitening products, Crest Whitestrips and Crest Night Effects, were false under the federal Lanham Act. Following a three-week trial, the jury wholly rejected Colgate’s claims and awarded no damages, resulting in a complete victory for P&G.
Exxon Mobil v. SABIC – Co-lead counsel for Exxon Mobil in this breach-of-contract suit against Saudi Basic Industries Corporation. Exxon claimed that SABIC had overcharged Exxon in two joint venture agreements concerning the technology responsible for petrochemical products used in a variety of plastics products sold worldwide. After Mr. Quinn’s careful jury selection due to the international nature of the case, the trial was complicated by the fact that the two contracts in question were both governed by unique Saudi law principles, and therefore Saudi law would be applied to the case. Mr. Quinn won every single count against SABIC, and the jury awarded Exxon with $416.8 million in compensatory damages. This is one of the largest verdicts in the United States in 2003 and the largest verdict in a commercial case in the history of Delaware. Every challenge that SABIC has exercised through post-trial motions has been defeated.
Furnas SA v. Westinghouse – Mr. Quinn handled this international arbitration brought by a Brazilian utility asserting a multi-billion dollar claim against our client Westinghouse before a panel of three arbitrators in the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) in Paris. After extensive evidentiary hearings and voluminous submissions by both sides over several years, the panel dismissed all claims against Westinghouse and instead awarded Westinghouse millions of dollars in costs and expenses related to the arbitration.
McNeil v. NFL – Lead counsel for the NFL players in this historic dispute concerning the players’ challenge to the antitrust player restrictions in the National Football League. Mr. Quinn guaranteed that a fair jury was chosen for his client after he cited a psychologist expert in sports fans who had concluded that avid sports fans were unable to be convinced that athletes had the right to sue for free agency or higher salaries. Mr. Quinn was just as resourceful during pretrial strategy as he was during jury selection. Due to the dismissal of a previous antitrust suit, Mr. Quinn had the players’ association disband, in order to thwart the defendants’ accusations that the players already had a union for a labor solution. After lengthy cross-examination of witnesses and a three-month jury trial, Mr. Quinn persuaded the jury to grant his eight players millions in damages which led to a $200 million damage settlement to the players in the NFL and true free agency for NFL players for the first time in the history of the NFL.
Buffalo Broadcasting v. American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers – As Class Counsel for Buffalo Broadcasting and 600 other television stations nationwide in this antitrust class-action concerning blanket licensing, Mr. Quinn led a three-month bench trial after which the Court held that so-called “blanket” licensing of music performing rights was an impermissible restraint on trade. While the case was later reversed on other grounds, this landmark ruling led to a complete reconstruction of music licensing rights in television and radio industries across the United States.
Houston Light & Power v. Westinghouse – Mr. Quinn represented Westinghouse in this six-month trial involving yet another multi-billion dollar claim. This time a group of utilities sued for breach of contract and fraud involving corroding steam generating equipment supplied to the largest nuclear power plant in the United States. More than a dozen lawsuits and arbitration of this kind were filed against Westinghouse in the United States and Europe, and Mr. Quinn successfully resolved every one of them.
North American Soccer League v. NFL – As lead counsel for the North American Soccer League and its teams in this suit against the NFL, Mr. Quinn successfully attacked an NFL regulation prohibiting NFL team owners from owning other professional sports teams. After an eight-week trial and an appeal to the Second Circuit, Mr. Quinn established the law that allows professional sports owners today to participate in the cross-ownership of major league teams.
Oscar Robertson, et al v. NBA – This antitrust class action was filed by 14 NBA players union against team owners in search of free agency in professional basketball. After completing 200 depositions in five cities over the course of six months, the players and owners settled, and Mr. Quinn won in the biggest case in basketball history, establishing that basketball players were free agents. In the early 1980s, Mr. Quinn won again, this time with a new collective bargaining agreement guaranteeing players 53 percent of gross revenues in exchange for a league-wide salary cap.
James W. Quinn, Winning at Trial: Insights from the Bench and Leading Litigators, Law Journal Press (April 2014).
James W. Quinn & Yehudah L. Buchweitz, Marketing To Potential Corporate Clients, Successful Partnering Between Inside and Outside Counsel, Vol. I (2000).
Speaker, “At the Table with the Player’s Union,” Bloomberg Sports Business Summit, New York, New York, September 10, 2013.
Speaker, “Mediation Strategies,” New York, New York, September 25, 2016.
Named Among the Top 100 Lawyers in the United States by Benchmark Litigation, 2014 to present.
Ranked Band 1 for Litigation: Trial Lawyers, USA by Chambers Global, 2004, 2009 to present.
Award of Excellence, Chambers USA, 2013.
Named a “Leading Trial Lawyer” in the U.S. by Legal 500 US, 2011 to present.
Recognized as “Local Litigation Star” for Antitrust in New York by Benchmark Litigation, 2009 to present.

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