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I draw on 30-plus years of legal experience, a deep understanding of the law, an ability to craft and deliver a persuasive narrative of the facts—and importantly, a background in finance and tax law, which greatly benefits clients. I’ve been involved in thousands of cases over my career, the large majority of them resulting in positive outcomes for my clients. I take pride in resolving their crises with a competitive passion, strategic approach and calm, reassuring demeanor.

Robert R. Burford

Partner

    • Texas, 1986

    • U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, 2017

    • U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, 2006

    • U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, 1986



    • Houston Bar Association

    • Texas Bar Foundation Fellow

    • University of Houston Law Center, J.D. cum laude, 1986

      • Order of the Coif

      • Order of the Baron

      • Member, Houston Law Review

    • University of Houston, BBA with Honors in Accounting, 1981

    • Top 50 Verdict of 2023, USA, TopVerdict

    • Top 20 Verdict of 2023, Texas, TopVerdict

    • Chambers and Partners USA, Litigation: General Commercial, 2022-2024

    • Litigation Star, Benchmark Litigation, 2024-present

    • The Best Lawyers in America© for Commercial Litigation, 2020-2025

    • Texas Super Lawyers, 2004-2024

    • America’s Top 100 High Stakes Litigators, 2020


    • Lead counsel for Laura Yosowitz, whose Greenlet LLC ownership was devalued by Martin Kay's asset transfer to a new company. Pursuing a derivative action, Burford Perry transformed the dispute into a nine-figure lawsuit. After a compelling trial, the jury found Kay liable for $138 million in damages, confirming Yosowitz's ownership. The judge awarded her $54 million in damages and $2 million in attorneys' fees. Laura Elizabeth Yosowitz, et al. v. Martin Lee Kay, et al. 

    • Lead counsel for Muhammad Salim, who funded a Houston imaging center chain until halted profit distributions left him shut out. Opting for arbitration during the pandemic, the firm exposed self-dealing fees and pursued derivative claims. Lead counsel in a nine-day online arbitration awarding Salim $7.4 million, resulting in a complete buyout as a one-third owner. Muhammad Salim, et al. v. Fuad Cochinwala, et al.

    • Defended Tellurian's former general counsel against a $500 million breach claim by Cheniere Energy. Aligned with Tellurian, the legal team played a key role in trial court proceedings, leading to Cheniere dismissing all of its claims without settlement. Parallax Enterprises LLC v. Cheniere Energy, Inc., v. Tellurian, Inc., et al.

    • Defended corporate executive against a $700 million Ponzi scheme claim, disproving accusations through cross-examination. The jury rejected the claim, resulting in a 3% judgment. In a post-judgment settlement, the firm secured the complete release of the CEO's partner during the appeal. H. Thomas Moran, et al. v. Brian Pardo, et al.

    • Lead counsel in a series of securities claims against a startup called Panton. Firm's clients lost their entire investment in a tech-driven roofing claims company. Revealing the company's sole asset was its insurance policy, the firm shifted the case to a Texas Securities Act claim to stay within coverage and eventually collect the entire policy. Exposing fraud during the CEO’s deposition, we settled through mediations, ensuring a return of investments and maximizing insurance funds for clients.

    • Represented Vinson & Elkins attorney D. Bobbitt Noel in a fraud and breach of fiduciary duty case against billionaire Trevor Rees-Jones, Chief Energy and Devon Energy. Noel alleged an old friend, Rees-Jones, cheated him when he bought out Noel’s stake in a highly successful shale gas company, Chief Energy. After a several week trial and favorable jury verdict, the trial court awarded a $196 million judgment for Noel. D. Bobbit Noel Jr. v Chief Energy and Devon Energy Holding, L.L.C., et al.

    • Obtained a summary judgment for his client, ConocoPhillips, in a $500 million breach of contract, fraud and negligent misrepresentation action. The case involved the sale of pipelines and gas processing facilities in West Texas. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court victory, and the Texas Supreme Court denied further review. WTG Gas Processing, L.P. v ConocoPhillips Company, et al.

    • Represented the Houston Police Officer’s Pension System in seeking police officers pension benefits from the City of Houston. The case settled out of Court with the City of Houston agreeing to pay more than $3 billion to police fund pension obligations. Houston Police Officers Pension System v. City of Houston

    • Obtained pretrial dismissal of a multimillion-dollar securities claim against Azurix, Ken Lay, Jeff Skilling and Rebecca Marks. The suit involved a securities fraud action brought by Azurix shareholders in the company’s IPO. The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the win for Azurix, Lay, Skilling and Marks during the midst of the Enron scandal. In re: Azurix Securities Litigation