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Elkins singlehandedly ran the firm until the late
1940s, when he began to parcel his authority to an executive committee
of senior partners he appointed and chaired. In the 1960s, David
Searls, a member of the executive committee and an internationally
respected antitrust litigator, patiently engineered a transition
from Elkins's autocratic leadership to a more modern and democratic
form of operation. He also encouraged the firm to diversify its
client list and focus more attention on international work to
serve domestic clients with major foreign interests and foreign
clients with interests in America and elsewhere. In 1971 Vinson
and Elkins established an office in London, and temporary Vinson
and Elkins detachments served clients in locations ranging from
Scotland to Malaysia. In the 1990s the firm opened offices in
Warsaw (since closed), Moscow, Mexico City, and Singapore. The
1970s and 1980s also saw domestic expansions, with new offices
in Austin, Dallas, and Washington, D.C. Neither Searls nor Elkins
lived to see these far-reaching changes, however, for both men
died in 1972. The firm's managing partners since Elkins's rule-Angie
Frank Smith, Jr.,qv J. Evans Attwell, and incumbent Harry M. Reasoner-have overseen
the continuing growth of the practice. In 1995 Vinson and Elkins
represented several thousand domestic and international clients
in virtually all areas of civil law and certain areas of white-collar
criminal law. Although oil and energy-related work continues
to be a mainstay of the firm's practice, other practices include
business, energy regulation, environmental regulation, intellectual
property, international law, real estate, securities, and taxation.
The firm's service orientation extends to the communities it serves
as well. Lawyers in all offices participate in pro bono, bar association,
and community service activities. The firm's pro bono efforts
were recognized in 1993 with the Houston Bar Foundation's Large
Law Firm Award. Particularly noteworthy is the firm's commitment
to the arts. Vinson and Elkins is the only law firm that has ever
received the prestigious Business in the Arts Award given by Forbes
magazine and New York's Business Committee for the Arts since
its founding by David Rockefeller in 1967.
The Handbook of Texas Online is a project of the Texas State Historical Association (http://www.tshaonline.org).
Copyright ©, The Texas State Historical Association, 1997-2002 |