1980–2010 After the
Corrugated Container case, other notable cases won by Steve Susman include a $536 million jury verdict on a counterclaim in
El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. GHR Energy Corp in 1988, a $1.1 billion settlement in the breach of contract case
Samsung Electronics v. Texas Instruments in 1996 on behalf of
Texas Instruments, and a $140 million jury verdict for the plaintiff in
Masimo v. Tyco Healthcare Group in 2005. The Hunt Brothers, scions of an oil fortune, hired Susman in 1986 to take over their $1.5 billion lending-fraud lawsuits against 22 banks that they alleged conspired to bankrupt their companies, Placid Oil Company and Penrod Drilling Company. In 1989, Susman represented
Jim Wright, the
48th speaker of the United States House of Representatives, against charges made by the
House ethics committee that Wright had violated House ethics rules, such as accepting improper gifts. Wright later resigned. Susman also represented software company
Caldera Inc. in an antitrust lawsuit against
Microsoft. In 2000, Microsoft reportedly agreed to pay an estimated settlement of $275 million to Caldera. Lee Godfrey handled several high-profile cases for the firm, representing Northrup in a case contesting an aborted sale of F-18 fighter jets,
Gulf Oil Corporation pension holders who were concerned about the invasion of their pension fund, the Kentucky Speedway in an antitrust case against
NASCAR, and shareholders of
American Shell Oil Company opposing
Royal Dutch Shell's going-private transaction.
2011–present Stephen Susman and co-trial counsel Marc Seltzer represented
Frank McCourt, former owner of the
Los Angeles Dodgers, in his divorce from
Jamie McCourt, which was finalized in 2012. It was reportedly "one of the costliest splits in California history". In 2017, in what has been called "the tech trial of the century",
Waymo,
Google's self-driving car company, sued
Uber, the ride-hail service, for theft of trade secrets covering self-driving car technology. Susman Godfrey, led by partner
Bill Carmody, was Uber's lead counsel at trial. The parties settled after 4 days of trial. As part of the settlement, Uber agreed that it would not use Waymo's hardware or software intellectual property in their autonomous car technology. The company also committed to paying Waymo a settlement of 0.34 percent of Uber equity, worth roughly $245 million. HouseCanary, a tech startup that develops real estate analytics software, won a $706.2 million jury verdict against
Quicken Loans over misappropriated trade secrets and a breach of contract in 2018. Susman Godfrey, led by partners Max Tribble and Kalpana Srinivasan, represented HouseCanary in a 7-week trial, which ended with the jury ruling that Quicken pay HouseCanary $235.4 million in damages for misappropriation of the trade secrets and fraud claims and an additional $471.4 million in punitive damages. As part of the firm's pro bono work, partner Neal Manne represented Alfred Dewayne Brown in a lawsuit against the Texas Comptroller's office after it denied Brown compensation for his wrongful conviction for the 2003 killing of a policeman. Brown served 12 years in prison on death row until his conviction was overturned in 2014 after evidence that supported his alibi was discovered. In 2020, the Texas Supreme Court ruled that the state agency shouldn't have denied compensation to Brown, who was eligible for nearly $2 million. "Now I think (Brown) can finally close this chapter of his life knowing that the very highest court in Texas unanimously agreed he was treated wrongly," Manne said of the judgment. Susman Godfrey represented
WeWork co-founder
Adam Neumann in a breach of contract suit against
SoftBank, reportedly getting a $480 million settlement in 2021 as well as $50 million to cover Neumann's legal fees.
Dominion Voting Systems launched a $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against
Fox News in 2021 (
Dominion Voting Systems v. Fox News Network) over lies the media company and its anchors spread about Dominion voting machines during the 2020 presidential election. Several Fox programs broadcast false statements that Dominion machines had been rigged to steal votes from then-president
Donald Trump in favor of his Democratic opponent
Joe Biden. Susman Godfrey, led by partners Davida Brook, Justin Nelson, and Stephen Shackelford, represented Dominion Voting Systems and secured a historic $787.5 million settlement with Fox just before the trial was set to begin in Delaware Superior Court. It is one of the largest defamation settlements in U.S. history. After the settlement was struck, Shackelford told MSNBC, "The number itself also helps them [Dominion employees] prove to the world exactly what Fox did and that Fox is taking some measure of accountability for it." Susman Godfrey also led similar litigation against Mike Lindell, Patrick Byrne, Rudy Giuliani, and Sidney Powell. The firm represented subscribers in a class action lawsuit against the
National Football League (NFL) because the league violated antitrust laws with its
NFL Sunday Ticket broadcast package. An 8-person jury ruled in favor of the plaintiffs, awarding more than $4.7 billion to 2.4 million residential and 48,000 commercial subscribers from 2011 to 2022. "It's a great verdict for the consumers of America," Bill Carmody, plaintiff's lead trial attorney, told reporters, noting that the jury upheld antitrust laws "despite the star power of the defendants". In August 2024, a court vacated the $4.7 billion award, citing that expert witnesses had used a flawed methodology to mislead jurors. The case is on appeal. When the
City of Baltimore opted out of national litigation against pharmaceutical companies responsible for the opioid epidemic, it partnered with Susman Godfrey to bring individual suits against multiple opioid manufacturers and distributors. In 2024, the firm secured $427.5 million in pre-trial settlements for the City. Then the firm won a $266 million jury verdict against
McKesson and
AmerisourceBergen, in the only Baltimore case to be tried. The jury found the defendants responsible for 97% of the harm from opioids experienced by the City of Baltimore from 2011 through the future date of 2029. Maryland Circuit Court Judge Lawerence Fletcher-Hill reduced the award to $52.4 million and later determined the City was entitled to $100 million in abatement and entered judgment for $152.4 million. Mayor
Brandon Scott stated, "While this amount is lower than the jury awarded us, this award still dwarfs the original amount the city would have received, had we not brought this separate litigation on behalf of our city." In 2025, partners Shawn Rabin and Krysta Pachman led an arbitration on behalf of PWNHealth, now known as Everly Health, in a contract and Lanham Act dispute with
Walgreens over COVID-19 testing, obtaining an award of $987 million. Walgreens challenged the decision in a federal district court in Delaware, where it was upheld. To avoid the cost of accrual of post-award interest on the arbitration award, Walgreens entered into a settlement agreement for $595 million. The firm, led by partner Jacob Buchdahl, won a $1.6 billion judgment in a bench trial for BML Properties in 2025 in its fraud suit against
China Construction America Inc. over delays that sabotaged the company's
Baha Mar resort in the Bahamas. In one of the largest copyright settlements involving generative artificial intelligence,
Anthropic AI agreed to pay a $1.5 billion settlement to a group of authors and publishers for downloading and storing millions of copyrighted books. As co-lead class counsel, Susman Godfrey represented the plaintiffs in this class action lawsuit. The settlement is the largest payout—$3,000 per work to 500,000 authors—in the history of U.S. copyright cases. == Controversies ==