This is the culmination of a lengthy peer voting process that asked San Diego County lawyers to name those among their peers who were worthy of recognition. Top Attorneys 2008 represents and pays tribute to San Diego County's legal cream of the crop.
Education
Law School/Year: J.D., Pittsburgh School of Law, 1970
College/Year: B.A., University of Pittsburgh, 1967
Bar Admissions
California, 1973; Pennsylvania, 1970; Washington, D.C., 1972
Practice Areas
Business Litigation, Civil Litigation, Personal Injury & Property Damage, Product Liability, Real Estate
Major Cases
Some major cases I've been involved in: Arendsee v. SDGE, $3.1 million result for a 15-year-old boy electrocuted by SDG&E power lines equipment and had his left arm traumatically amputated; Passante v. Upper Deck, received a $33 million judgment for an attorney against the Upper Deck Co. for breaching an oral contract promising him a percentage ownership of the company when it first started; Border Business Park v. City of San Diego, received $94.5 million plus attorney fees, costs (and interest), resulting in approximately $150 million verdict against the city for breach of a development agreement it had with business man Roque De La Fuente; Mesdaq v. CCDC, $7.8 million verdict against CCDC for condemning Mesdaq's thriving cigar shop/pastry business and giving the property to another developer.
Professional Background
After graduating from Law School at the University of Pittsburgh in 1970, I went on active duty with the U.S. Marine Corps. After starting as an infantry rifleman, an opportunity presented itself to change my military occupational specialty from rifleman JAG officer. After volunteering for Vietnam and serving there as a JAG officer and part of a Marine Fighter Squadron, I came to San Diego and joined Higgs, Fletcher & Mack (an insurance defense firm). After four years there and an opportunity for partnership, I decided to start my own firm representing the injured victims of tragedy, i.e., plaintiffs. I started Thorsnes Bartolotta McGuire in 1978, and this year is our 30th anniversary.
Professional Affiliations
Over the years I have been intimately involved in several professional organizations related to the practice of law. Specifically, I have been the past President of the San Diego Trial Lawyers Association (now called Consumer Attorneys of San Diego). I also served as the president (and all offices) of the American Board of Trial Advocates, San Diego Chapter and have been recognized as the Trial Lawyer of the Year for California's ABOTA Organization. I'm a member of American Trial Lawyers Association, American Bar Association, The Lawyers Club and the American Board of Trial Lawyers. I enjoy spending time with other lawyers and relish the opportunity to exchange ideas and information with them as a result of working in these various organizations.
Personal Affiliations
I was raised with the idea that "giving back" is an important part of life. As such, I've spent a lot of time with numerous organizations. These include chairman of the board of St. Vincent de Paul, co-chair of St. Vincent's 100 Million Dollar Fund Raising Campaign, board member of Nice Guys of San Diego, past president of the American Trauma Society, member of the board of advocates for UCSD Regional Burn Center, coordinator and sponsor of the Mercy Hospital Surgical Programs for more than 1,000 Mexican children, coordinator and project manager of building two Mexican orphanages, board of governors member and past president of Rancho Santa Fe Youth/Community Center, advisory board member of the San Diego Soccer's Professional Soccer Team, former member of Torrey Pines High School Athletic Booster Board, and project coordinator for the Year Round Medical Clinic run for orphans in Mexico.
Personal Background
I was born and raised in a small coalmining town in Western Pennsylvania named Monongahela. My father was a coal miner and my mother became a nurse. I have two sisters (both older than me) and have worked at serious jobs since the age of 10, including paperboy, grocery clerk, stock boy, tractor/trailer unloader, laborer in the blast furnaces at a steel mill and ironworker. I was also for several years a professional scuba diver and received a full athletic scholarship to the University of Pittsburgh, where I played soccer and was a first alternate on the U.S. Olympic team in 1968. I attribute much of my success as a trial lawyer representing plaintiffs as the result of these various jobs. It is easy for me to relate to clients and understand their pain.