The Atlanta Lawyer November 2018 | Page 22

BOOK REVIEW BUSINESS and COMMERCIAL LITIGATION in FEDERAL COURTS (FOURTH EDITION) By E. Clayton Scofield III United States Magistate Judge, N.D. Ga.(Retired) The new Fourth Edition of Busi- ness and Commercial Litigation in Federal Courts is a tour de force in the literature of business and commercial litigation. Now in fourteen volumes with chapters by 296 distinguished authors, this panoramic work brings together an incredible volume and range of information addressing virtually every aspect of commercial litiga- tion in the federal courts. Volumes One through Five cover what you would expect -- jurisdic- tion, pleadings, discovery, mo- tions, jury trial, mediation, arbi- tration and appeal, but with much more to follow. What follows thereafter are articles that focus on specific subject matters saturat- ing the landscape of federal com- mercial litigation. In Volumes Six through Twelve, the usual suspects of banking, antitrust, and securi- ties litigation are covered, along with, of course, patents, labor and employment, business torts, and ERISA. Volume Thirteen addresses important criminal law aspects relating to commercial litigation, to include money laundering and quia timet litigation. 22 November 2018 Volume Fourteen takes on E- Commerce, Info-Tech, Enter- tainment, Fashion and Retail, and Envirnonmental Litigation. I was also impressed with the chapters addressing more peripheral issues relating to business development, marketing, litigation management, teaching trial skills, pro bono, and civility. See Crisis Manage- ment (Chapter 64), Marketing to Potential Clients (Chapter 70), Litigation Management by Cor- porations (Chapter 69), Teaching Litigation Skills (Chapter 71), Pro Bono (Chapter 72), and Civility (Chapter 74). The new Fourth Edition, published in 2016 by Thomson Reuters, in cooperation with the American Bar Association Litigation Section, added twenty-five new chapters to the Third Edition. These new chapters notably include Civil Jus- tice Reform, Cross-Border Litiga- tion, Mediation, Arbitration, Social Media, Healthcare Institutions, Marketing to Potential Clients, and Mass Torts, all topics whose im- portance has markedly increased in recent years. Since the publication of the Fourth Edition, the authors have already supplemented each volume with updates for 2017-18, editing and expanding text and footnotes as changes and developments in the subject matter have occurred. It is also important to note that this series of volumes is accompanied by paperback volumes Fifteen and Sixteen which comprise a Table of Cases and a Table of Jury Instruc- tions, Forms, Law and Rules, and an Index to all the chapters con- taining forms, jury instructions, and other material that can be re- vised and adapted for use. There is also a CD Rom with forms and other reviseable material. These revisable forms and instructions should be invaluable to the prac- titioner. This treatise has been favorably reviewed in this publication be- fore, by former Presidents Jeff Bramlett and Rita Sheffey, whom I acknowledge. I would also be re- miss if I failed to give a shout out to our home-grown contributors to this outstanding publication. Indeed, the chapter on Litiga- tion Management by Law firms (Chapter 68) is authored by Hal Daniel with Holland and Knight,