JOHN LANGDOC, Partner
John L. Langdoc joined Kazan Law as partner in January 2016. Prior to this, Mr. Langdoc was a shareholder and lead trial lawyer for the well-respected Baron & Budd law firm, headquartered in Dallas, Texas.
John Langdoc was a scientist before he was a lawyer. At Baylor College of Medicine, Langdoc researched the brain. Earlier, in graduate school, he researched how prescription drugs like Prozac can cause brain defects in babies born to mothers taking the medications.
Today, as a lawyer, much of Langdoc’s practice remains focused on scientific issues, particularly dissecting industry-funded “studies” that invariably show that known industrial toxins are “safe.”
In 2015 Mr. Langdoc’s $48 million dollar verdict – on behalf of a California mesothelioma patient and his wife– was affirmed after numerous unsuccessful appeals by the asbestos company; this landmark case was recognized by Legal 500 as one of the most significant toxic exposure verdicts in the nation, and selected by the National Law Journal as one of the Top 100 Verdicts of the year.
Mr. Langdoc was inducted into the inaugural Texas Lawyer’s Verdicts Hall of Fame. He was recognized for the top California toxic exposure verdict of 2012, and for both the first place and second place largest product liability verdicts in Texas in 2011.
Langdoc’s recent trial successes include:
- $48 million verdict against Union Carbide Corporation for causing a construction worker’s cancer
- $9 million verdict against Dow Chemical Company for exposing a worker to carcinogens at a Texas chemical refinery
- $12 million verdict for a man who was exposed to carcinogens at a Pennsylvania paper mill
- $20 million verdict against Georgia-Pacific for a woman who developed cancer from being exposed to asbestos in the Koch Industries subsidiary’s home remodeling products
- $8 million verdict for the wife of a man who was exposed to carcinogens from Ashland Inc.’s Haveg pipe
- $6 million verdict for a man who was exposed to carcinogens at a Dow Chemical Company plant in Louisiana
- $5.5 million verdict for the families of men exposed to asbestos, which included Ericsson’s asbestos containing wire and cable
- $11 million verdict for a man who was exposed to carcinogens as a painter
Education
- University of Houston Law Center, Houston, Texas
- Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
- Baylor University, Houston, Texas
Bar and Court Admissions
- State Bar of Texas
- State Bar of California
OUR ATTORNEYS
Partners
DAVID McCLAINDENISE ABRAMS
DENYSE CLANCY
GORDON GREENWOOD
JOHN LANGDOC
JOSEPH SATTERLEY
JUSTIN BOSL
PHILIP A. HARLEY
STEVEN KAZAN
Of Counsel
FRANCES SCHREIBERGAssociates
ANDREA HUSTONARCELIA HURTADO
DENISE SMITH
HENRY STEINBERG
IAN RIVAMONTE
LAUREL HALBANY
MATTHEW THIEL
MICHAEL T. STEWART
PETRA DeJESUS
SIMARJIT KAUR
TOVEN LIM