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The Legal Elite

The Legal Elite 2006: Civil Litigation
James L. Sanderlin
Dominion Resources Inc.
Richmond

LEGAL ELITE PROFILES
LEGAL ELITE LISTS
READER REACTION

by Garry Kranz
for Virginia Business
December 2006

You could describe Jim Sanderlin as an accidental lawyer. When he was earning a bachelor's degree at Randolph-Macon College, he did not intend to have a law career.

"But there wasn't much you could do with an English degree except teach, write or go into some profession that requires you to articulate. I thought a career in law might be the answer," says Sanderlin, 65, now senior vice president-law for Richmond-based utility giant Dominion Resources Inc.

He opted to pursue a law degree at the University of Virginia, graduating in 1966. Now 40 years and thousands of cases later, Sanderlin is known as one of the keenest analytical minds among Virginia's legal community - even though he is no longer an active trial lawyer.

Sanderlin spent more than 30 years in civil litigation with McGuireWoods in Richmond before joining Dominion in 2000. During that time, he burnished his reputation as a lawyer.

"Jim is an outstanding lawyer with one of the very best legal minds I have worked with," says Robert Burrus, a partner and chairman at McGuireWoods. "He has a unique ability to review a case or transaction and pinpoint the winning issues."

As a McGuireWoods lawyer, Sanderlin represented Dominion in its 1994 dispute with Virginia Power, its principal subsidiary. The friction stemmed from a power struggle between the management of the two companies, with the State Corporation Commission eventually intervening to bring about a settlement.

Sanderlin was pried away from McGuireWoods to head Dominion's law department after the company acquired Pittsburgh-based Consolidated Natural Gas in 2000.

A corporate headquarters is a different world compared with the hurly burly of the courtroom. Sanderlin's biggest adjustment centers on the bevy of government regulations with which Dominion and other utilities must comply, especially those that pertain to the environment.

"We are a highly regulated company with so many government [laws] to deal with," says Sanderlin. "My first three years here I spent dealing with the EPA over environmental issues - it's just a totally different perspective" than being a courtroom lawyer.

The ability to make sound judgments, a skill developed in his trial work, has been his biggest asset. "The position I have requires me to exercise judgment on a lot of things. You have experts who can clue you in to the specifics, but my job is to intuit and reason and figure out what to do," says Sanderlin.

Aside from representing Dominion, Sanderlin's time at McGuireWoods included handling cases for other high-profile companies. Sanderlin represented CSX Corp. in federal court in 1997 in its unsuccessful suit against the U.S. government involving overpayment of taxes. That suit centered on a $3.9 million tax burden that CSX argued it was not liable for under federal alternative minimum tax laws.

Jim Roberts, a lawyer with the Richmond office of Atlanta-based law firm Troutman Sanders, praises Sanderlin's grasp of complex legal matters. "Jim has a good analytical mind for determining the strengths and weaknesses of a case. He is a very intelligent lawyer and a man of the highest integrity," says Roberts.

Although Sanderlin was the first member of his family to become a lawyer, the profession is now in his bloodlines. One daughter, Meredith, is following in her father's footsteps, practicing corporate finance and securities law at McGuireWoods. She joined the firm just as her father was leaving. Sanderlin's other daughter, Elaine, recently started law school at the University of Richmond.

His son Barry, on the other hand, is a second-year medical student at the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine.

Sanderlin and his wife, Ginger, live in Goochland County, along with a contingent of six dogs.

When not working, Sanderlin is either reading a good book or working on one. "I've been working on a novel for 20-some years, and when I retire I'm going to finish it," Sanderlin vows, revealing that the work features "humor and mystery" surrounding his main character - a lawyer.

 

 

 


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