Richard Hess represents both plaintiffs and defendants in nearly every type of civil litigation. On the plaintiff side, his practice includes commercial disputes between businesses, compensation and non-compete disputes from employers against former executives, commercial class actions, partnership disputes, and whistleblower cases. On the defense side, Hess has helped clients of all sizes, from the largest corporations to startups, individual entrepreneurs and inventors, business executives and doctors.
A typical case for Hess is in a federal district court, but his work takes him to state trial courts, state and federal appeals courts, hearings before single and multiple arbitrators and even probate court. He has appeared and argued in court in Delaware, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, and of course, in Texas.
In January 2016, his partners appointed Hess as Susman Godfrey’s General Counsel. From 2016–2018, in addition to his regular practice, he advised the firm and over 100 partners and associates in four offices around the country.
Lawdragon Honors
Hess has served as lead counsel in a week-long private arbitration in New York, and has examined and cross-examined expert and fact witnesses in trials and arbitrations around the country. He advised the board of one of the nation’s largest medical device manufacturers as Counsel to its Special Litigation Committee. And he won—in a Texas state court—summary judgment for client TMZ and its host Harvey Levin in a defamation case brought against the entertainment news giant by the mother of the late model/actress Anna Nicole Smith.
In addition to his trial and arbitration hearing work, Hess has argued all types of court hearings, including motions to dismiss, discovery disputes, Daubert hearings, and temporary restraining orders. He has also successfully petitioned the Texas Supreme Court, obtaining extraordinary relief for a client and stopping runaway litigation in a jurisdiction considered by some to be a “judicial hellhole.”
Hess is admitted to practice in every U.S. District Court in Texas, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the Courts of Appeals for the Second, Fifth and Federal Circuits, and every state court in Texas.
