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Return to Virginia Business - December 2002

Civil Litigation
John Jessee
Flippin Densmore Morse & Jessee

Related links:
— Legal Elite in Virginia:

— Business Law: Nicholas Conte
— Civil Litigation: John Jessee
— Criminal Law: Steven D. Benjamin
— Family / Domestic Relations: Franklin R. Blatt
— Immigration / Naturalization: Debra J.C. Dowd
— Labor / Employment: Thomas Bagby
— Lobbying / Regulatory: Ralph L. "Bill" Axselle Jr.
— Real Estate / Construction: John Sills
— Taxes / Estates / Trusts: David E. Perry
— Transport / Admiralty / Intermodal Daniel R. Warman


by Glenn Garelik
Jessee
John Jessee

If lawyers were rated like football teams — by their win-loss records — Roanoke litigator John Jessee would have plenty to brag about. A partner at Flippin Densmore Morse & Jessee, he has chalked up an impressive record in defending health care providers in medical malpractice suits.

For example, Jessee took on a tough case representing a spine surgeon who had been sued by 56 patients in the Roanoke area alone. Many of the cases involved claims that the surgeon used a highly controversial medical device in back surgery that is no longer frequently used. “We tried four of those to jury verdicts, and won them all,” he says. “[We] then tried three or four more to medical malpractice review panels, and won them all.” The other plaintiffs gave up and abandoned their cases. So of the 56 suits brought in the Roanoke area, Jessee didn’t lose one.

Diligent pretrial legwork was a big part of his success, says Jessee. “We scoured the country for some of the greatest experts in this area of medicine, and we had a wonderful private eye.” The trick was to “bring to trial early on some of the cases where we had information from the private eye that helped the defense.” For instance, the detective observed some plaintiffs engaging in activities inconsistent with their testimony in terms of how the doctor’s alleged failure had ruined their lives.

Part of what it takes to win tough cases — persistence — comes into play in Jessee’s favorite pastime away from the office. About 15 years ago he took up fox hunting and purchased a thoroughbred Percheron cross named Levi. Jessee considers fox hunting “the ultimate challenge. You jump, you charge, you ride, and whatever is in front of you, you go around it or over it.”

Friends say Jessee applies that same dogged persistence to his legal game. He traces his success to key mentors, including the late John Field Jr. of Charleston, W.Va., a judge for the Richmond-based Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. Jessee clerked for Field after graduating from the Washington & Lee University School of Law in 1979. Field, Jessee recalls, “had a wonderful story with a [moral] for every issue, always giving extra time to help us understand and appreciate what the law really meant, and what it could do for people.”

Another inspiration was his mother, a schoolteacher in West Virginia during early integration, when she was a leader in working with African-Americans. “She taught me lessons in kindness, concern, and paying attention to what other people are going through.” In turn, he tries to mentor younger people with whom he works. Dale Burroughs Frisby, now a malpractice attorney in Houston, worked with Jessee fresh out of law school for what she thought would be just one suit, but her stay continued for 10 years. “John is probably the best trial lawyer I’ve ever seen,” she says. “He’s a tremendous orator, he’s very smart and he can think wonderfully on his feet.”

As central as law is in his life, Jessee says he sees himself primarily as a father of four girls, ages 6 to 11. “As much free time as I can muster,” he says, “I try to be involved with them and their activities.” Often he takes one or another of the girls along on business trips, making sure to bring any homework assignments they’d be missing.
Jessee’s interest in health care issues extends outside the law firm. He’s a former president of the Julian Stanley Wise Foundation, named for the Roanoke man who in 1928 organized the country’s first volunteer rescue squad. Jessee says his interest was sparked when he and his former wife were in an auto accident, and she became trapped inside. Fuel was leaking onto the ground. “Here were these incredibly brave people, standing in gasoline,” and risking their lives to save her, he says.

Then there’s his artistic side: Jessee is vice president of Roanoke’s acclaimed Mill Mountain Theatre and former president of the Southwest Virginia Opera Society. “John’s a well-rounded guy,” says law partner G. Franklin Flippin. “He’s everything you’d want in a lawyer: a terrific intellect, a prodigious worker, generous with his time and absolutely committed.”

Return to Virginia Business - December 2002


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