Albuquerque Journal

Suit can seriously disrupt firm’s operations

- BY JOYCE M. ROSENBERG ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — When a small business is involved in a lawsuit, an owner’s concern can’t only be about winning or losing — it also has to be about making sure the company stays on track.

Owners who have been sued or who brought lawsuits themselves must meet with lawyers, gather evidence and sometimes give deposition­s. If they have employees whose testimony is needed, bosses must spend time with them explaining the situation. The time and energy it takes can be a huge disruption to normal operations.

“It was like I had to take on another job — being a defendant. It probably added three hours to my day,” Burke Files recalls of the lawsuit brought against his company, Financial Examinatio­ns & Evaluation­s, in 2010. Another business charged Files’ company with libel because of informatio­n one of his employees posted on a website unconnecte­d to Files’ Tempe, Arizona-based firm.

Files hired a legal clerk to read and gather documents, but oversaw the litigation himself and still had to go through company’s records in search of evidence: “all the communicat­ions for the past five years of every single person in the firm.”

The lawsuit kept Files from focusing on running the company, and he estimates that the case cost him more than $500,000 in lost business and $15,000 in legal costs. The firm, which investigat­es companies’ finances, prevailed nine months after the suit was filed, when its opponent dropped the case.

Although lawsuits brought by other companies can be distractin­g, they tend to be less time-consuming and disruptive than product liability suits or cases brought by employees for harassment or back pay, says Joshua Bauchner, an attorney with Ansell, Grimm & Aaron in Woodland Park, N.J. The vast majority of business cases are settled before going to trial, he says. Still, the companies do go through discovery, the process of sharing documents and evidence, and often deposition­s are taken.

Lawsuits brought by current or former employees can be devastatin­g to a small business, especially when other staffers

are deposed, Bauchner says. “It can be invasive into the company’s operations and it can be invasive to its personnel,” he says. “There’s a loss of productivi­ty because everyone’s on pins and needles.”

Jerry Lang’s travel agency was sued for back pay by a former staffer who quit following a dispute. Lang estimates it took more than 1,500 hours of work by several managers and Lang himself to wade through more than 100,000 emails and other records at House of Travel in Aventura, Fla.

Lang found that meetings with his attorney ate up more time than expected, and that cut into time he could spend with clients. A twohour meeting at a lawyer’s office meant four to five hours out of his day with travel time, he says.

House of Travel won the case, but Lang felt he had to make adjustment­s. After nearly 30 years of using the honor system when it came to staffers’ hours and workweeks, Lang implemente­d a system of clocking in and out.

“The lawsuit made us change our whole culture from one of family to being a business,” Lang says.

A half-dozen lawsuits over contract issues and unpaid invoices have taught David Jackson to set some mental boundaries while a case is going on.

“You have to be careful not to allow it to distract you. It can take over your mind and where you’re focusing your emotional energy on a daily basis,” says Jackson, CEO of FullStack Labs, an app and software developer in Granite Bay, Calif.

He tries to hand the cases over to his attorney, or, if he needs help from the staff, asks one employee to be responsibl­e for securing documents and making sure deadlines are met.

“You want to see justice happen, but you have to understand it’s not a good use of your time” as an owner to concentrat­e on a suit, Jackson says.

FullStack Labs has settled its suits, something Jackson attributes to open communicat­ion with opponents. “I think we’re justified, I think we’re going to win, but I’m open to settling,” he tells them. Faced with mounting lawyers’ fees, both parties have come to an agreement in each case.

Patent infringeme­nt suits have become part of the business at MONKEYMedi­a, which researches and develops virtual reality and other video and sound technology, but the firm is the one bringing the suits, often against big entertainm­ent companies. Employees not only have to gather documents and other evidence and be deposed, they also sometimes must explain the technologi­es involved to attorneys.

“All of these activities take time away from productive R&D activities and normal business relationsh­ip developmen­t activities,” says Eric Bear, CEO of the Austin, Texasbased company.

Because the company has brought several suits, it has — in Bear’s words — gotten good at juggling technology production with managing, and sometimes settling, cases. He makes sure that MONKEYMedi­a’s business is the priority.

“We need to keep creating things. It’s who we are and what we do,” Bear says.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lawsuits have taught David Jackson, CEO of FullStack Labs in Granite Bay, Calif., to set mental boundaries while a case is going on.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ASSOCIATED PRESS Lawsuits have taught David Jackson, CEO of FullStack Labs in Granite Bay, Calif., to set mental boundaries while a case is going on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States