McKool Smith

McKool Smith is a U.S. trial firm with more than 175 trial lawyers across offices in Austin, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Marshall, New York, Silicon Valley, and Washington, DC. The firm has won more National Law Journal and VerdictSearch “Top 100 Verdicts” over the last five years than any other law firm.[1][2] McKool Smith represents leading clients in disputes involving complex commercial litigation, intellectual property (IP), bankruptcy, and white collar defense matters.

History

McKool Smith was founded in Dallas, Texas in 1991 by Chairman Mike McKool and Phil Smith. In 1996, the firm expanded into Marshall, in the Eastern District of Texas. McKool Smith launched an intellectual property litigation practice in 2000 with the opening of its Austin, Texas office. The firm enhanced this practice with the addition of an International Trade Commission (ITC) litigation practice and a new Washington, DC office in 2007. This same year, the firm opened an office in New York and added a white collar defense practice. In 2009, McKool Smith expanded into bankruptcy litigation with the opening of its Houston, Texas office. In September, 2011, McKool Smith announced the joining of Hennigan Dorman, a Los Angeles, California-based trial firm specializing in business disputes and IP litigation. The combination added 35 trial lawyers to McKool Smith’s ranks and launched the firm’s first California office. The combined firm, McKool Smith, conducts business as McKool Smith Hennigan in California.[3]

Recognition and Rankings

Notable Matters

i4i Limited Partnership

McKool Smith represents the plaintiff, i4i, in ongoing patent infringement actions against Microsoft (i4i Limited Partnership v. Microsoft Corporation, No. 6:07-CV-113 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas).

Versata Software

McKool Smith represented the plaintiff Versata Software (Versata Software Inc. v. SAP America Inc., 07cv153, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Texas (Marshall) in this patent infringement case. A federal jury in Texas found that SAP America Inc. infringed three claims of a Versata patent for product pricing software and awarded Versata $260 million in compensation and $85 million in royalties.[14]

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