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ExxonMobils Alabama Paydirt
by Scott Horton
Back in 1904, Ida Tarbell published what ultimately was to be seen as the seminal work of the muckrakers, The History of Standard Oil.
It appeared first in nineteen installments in McClures Magazine, a rather less successful competitor of Harpers, and shortly after the last installment appeared, Tarbell published the work in book form as well.
In her work, Tarbell exposed the dark underside of corporate deal-making, the series of interlocking directorates and manipulations which had allowed John D. Rockefeller to build the oil leviathan and dominate the American market.
Tarbell demonstrated that Rockefellers success came not so much from business acumen (though she never contested that he had plenty of that) as through a thorough understanding of how to game the system.
John D. Rockefeller was a power unto himself. Politicians around the country were made and broken to suit him.
But
Tarbells disclosures fueled the drive for antitrust legislation and a
fairer and more competitive business environmenta drive which was, in
its time, championed by progressive politicians of both parties, but
particularly by Theodore Roosevelt. By 1911, Standard Oil was broken
into thirty companies.
But over time, like the liquid-metal monster in the
Terminator series, Standard Oil pulled itself back together again. It
was aided in this process by a change in attitudes across the political
spectrum, but most particularly it was aided by Americas campaign
finance system in which politicians standing for election require
increasingly larger sums of money to pursue their campaigns, and
support from the corporate till is essential.
 The final act of rebirth
occurred when the two principal surviving pieces of the company, Exxon
and Mobil, merged at the close of 1999. The resulting behemoth,
ExxonMobil, is the largest publicly traded integrated petroleum and
natural gas company in the world. It is also the worlds largest
petroleum and natural gas company by revenue, with revenues of $377.6
billion in fiscal year 2006.
The State of Alabama believes
that it was victimized by ExxonMobil. According to the states
complaint launched by the Administration of Governor Don Siegelman,
ExxonMobil committed fraud and underpaid the state in a contract
dispute over natural gas pumped from Mobile Bay. Alabama won that
litigation, and a jury awarded the state a judgment against ExxonMobil
of roughly $3.6 billion. Not chump change, even for ExxonMobil. And for
Alabama, an immense sum of money (roughly a third of the states annual
budget).
But ExxonMobil appealed, secured a stay, and
ultimately took the matter to the Alabama Supreme Court. Thursday, the
states High Court handed down its decision, by a vote of 8-1. The
Court sided with ExxonMobil and against Alabama. The punitive damage
award was rejected, and Alabama was left with a compensatory award of
$51.9 million, a pittance.
Ill put my cards on the table. I
have spent my career as a corporate lawyer representing firms much like
ExxonMobil, including a Rockefeller or two. I believe that the United
States is a litigation-crazed society, and that punitive damage awards
have gotten out of control. So I am on board [with] the tort-reform bandwagon.
In fact, had I been on this court, I almost certainly would have
supported a reduction of the judgment.
Nevertheless, there is
something very foul and unseemly in the air surrounding this decision.
It expunged the punitive award altogether. And the decision was 8-1.
Every Republican justice sided with ExxonMobil and the courts sole
Democrat sided with the state. This serves to underscore and highlight
what really looks like a partisan and political divide. That also is
extremely telling.
Over the last fifteen years, judicial
elections in Alabama have been increasingly politicized, with enormous
sums of money entering the state from the national business community
in an effort to seize control of the states courts. This money was
largely channeled by the Chamber of Commerce and entities controlled by
it and by the Business Council of Alabama, run by William Canarythe
key figure in the scandal surrounding the politically manipulated
prosecution of former Governor Siegelman.
 William Canary is a
campaign partner of Karl Roves and worked with Rove in Alabama Court
politics starting with 1992; Toby Roth, the former chief of staff to
Governor Bill Riley was a third member of their team. The
Rove-Canary-Roth team scored a series of quite astonishing successes,
and in the end it totally transformed the Alabama court landscape,
starting with the states Supreme Court.
I have no reason to link Rove,
Canary and Roth to the specific litigation between ExxonMobil and the
State of Alabama in particular. But in broader terms, the ExxonMobil
decision should be counted the ultimate triumph of the Rove-Canary-Roth
game plan. It got the oil and gas community exactly what it was aiming
for from the beginning: the elimination of punitive damage awards in
commercial cases.
The eight Republican judges on Alabamas
high court who backed ExxonMobil were put in office with the money of
the business community, and the money of the oil and gas community. No
matter what these eight judges say and do, they have laid themselves
open to the charge that they hold the interests of their corporate
donors very dear, but not the interests of the people of the state of
Alabama. And its unlikely that their electors intended that result.
Alabamas
courts and prosecutors have become a cesspool. The unjust prosecution
of former Governor Siegelman is only one of the more obvious
reflections of this inequity; the decision in the ExxonMobil case is
just as blatant and reflects no less the stench of corruption.
Another
thing troubled me about this case. When I spoke with a number of
Alabama lawyers to gain their impressions about the case, several of
them directly questioned the intervention of Governor Bob Riley in it.
According to two lawyers, Riley insisted that the firm which handled
the litigation (and which obviously did a splendid job at the trial
level, though it had troubles on appeal) affiliate a second firm on the
case.
According to this account, if the firm refused to cut his lawyer
friends into the action, Riley suggested he would simply hire new
counsel. The law firm he pressured the states counsel to affiliate is
described as having a close relationship with the Governors son, a
Birmingham lawyer. These dealings need to be fully explored and exposed
to the light of day.
If the governor was intervening in the matter in a
way calculated to produce economic benefit for his son, that would
obviously raise serious ethics issues. However, in the current
environment in Alabama, no misdeeds of the government are exposed in
the states lapdog press or seriously investigated by its law
enforcement agencies, which have long ceased to function as
dispassionate law enforcement.
All of this is evidence of the
states complete political putrifaction, in which courts and
prosecutors have been rendered into agents of corruption rather than
safeguarders of state ethics. The Siegelman case demonstrates that
claims of clean government have been wielded fraudulently, as a
cynical political tool, destroying confidence in the impartial
administration of justice.
The treatment of the Lanny Young charges
against Sessions and Pryor shows that there is no interest in the
pursuit of corruption when the trail leads to those in power. The
ruling in ExxonMobil and the conduct of the Siegelman case shows a
judiciary enslaved to the interests of its sponsors and indifferent to
justice.
The voters of Alabama need to recognize that they got
just what the business community paid for. For corporate lawyers like
me, thats all fine and good. But the voters may find on further
reflection, it doesnt much suit their interests, nor the interests of
justice.
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I read everything you write and am happy to have heard you on the Sam Seder show a couple of times. You are one well connected and great writer and I want to thank you for the work you do. It's appreciated.
I'm sending this link to Bobby Kennedy and Mike Papantonio. I know they will be interested in this story.
Thanks again!