Following a significant drop in gross revenues and partner profits in 2012, Washington-based law firm Patton Boggs has laid off 30 lawyers and 35 other employees, firm managing partner Edward Newberry said Friday.
The 485-lawyer firm limited its lawyer dismissals to associates and staff attorneys. The laid-off staffers included paralegals, a public policy adviser and support staff. All told, the cuts saved the firm $14.7 million, according to Newberry.
No partners received pink slips. But Newberry said after his initial interview with the National Law Journal that about 18 partners were told that their performance here isnt satisfactory. In conversations during the past six weeks, he said, the partners were told that they should leave before the end of the year if their performance doesnt improve.
The biggest attorney cuts occurred in the firm's Newark, New Jersey, office. But Patton employees also lost jobs in Washington, New York, Dallas and Denver. The firm's outposts in Anchorage, Alaska, and the Middle East were spared. Newberry did not specify which practice groups the laid-off attorneys worked with.Newberry said in an interview after a meeting with partners Friday morning that Patton engaged in a "right-sizing exercise" on Thursday, and that he doesn't expect any further layoffs this year.
"We took the action we felt we needed to protect the profitability of the firm and the financial strength of the firm in light of what we anticipate revenue will be this year," he said, adding that Patton didn't lay off employees during the recession when many other law firms did.
Patton in 2013 could exceed the $318 million in gross revenues it received in 2012, Newberry said. But some work is ending and could take time to replace, he said.
Newberry blamed the firm's poor financial showing in 2012 on clients' changing payment patterns, deferred payments and a decline in demand from bigger clients.
The winding down of a major case in New Jersey contributed to many of the layoffs, Newberry said. But he declined to identify the specific matter. December, however, marked the end of another chapter in Patton Boggs' long-running fight representing a group of Ecuadorians against Chevron Corp.
In February 2012, Patton Boggs filed a complaint against Chevron, challenging U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan's injunction to prevent judgment payment. The firm is trying to collect the $21.8 million bond posted by Chevron to prevent payment. On December 17, the case, originally filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, was transferred to the Southern District of New York.
Subscribe to The National Law Journal














