Eric Magnuson, the former Minnesota Supreme Court chief justice and veteran appellate court attorney, has joined Minneapolis-based Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi, the latest undertaking for a guy who has been praised by Democrats and Republicans for his smarts and integrity as advocate and jurist in a variety of high-profile cases and public commissions.
Asked if he was leaving smaller Briggs & Morgan for love or money, Magnuson said: "I see this as a great opportunity to expand my practice to a national scale. Robins has litigation pretty much all over the country, and the volume of litigation at Robins is substantial. I'm 62 and I plan to work for another 10 years, at least. I've written books, done a lot of teaching and I just want to do more appellate work."
Magnuson has represented Robins in cases and competed against Robins lawyers.
"I decided I needed an additional challenge, and Robins was the natural place," he said. "Briggs is a tremendous firm … but a different platform."
Magnuson left the Supreme Court in 2010, after two eventful years at the $160,000-a-year job, for what he said were family reasons; it was widely viewed in the legal community as a need to return to the more lucrative pay of private practice for a successful litigator.
Magnuson, a methodical, analytical guy, was a self-proclaimed unhappy trial lawyer early in his career.
"It's lawyers doing things at the last minute, judges not holding people to the rules, surprise witnesses and a high degree of unpredictability," Magnuson said. "For a good trial lawyer, that's what makes it fun. In an appellate case … the record is set. … You don't argue the facts; you argue the law.''
ENERGIzed community
The first community solar generator in Minnesota is making electricity. Wright-Hennepin Electric Cooperative, which serves 46,000 customers northwest of the Twin Cities, built the solar array in partnership with the Clean Energy Collective, a Boulder, Colo., company that develops and manages such projects.