Kurt A. Johnson

Partner

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Kurt Johnson's practice focuses on complex disputes, critical motions, and appeals.

Kurt has significant experience in antitrust matters, regulatory disputes, business and toxic tort litigation, intellectual property controversies, and constitutional challenges. He has drafted numerous winning briefs filed in courts across the country, including the Michigan Court of Appeals, the Michigan Supreme Court, the United States Courts of Appeals, and the Supreme Court of the United States. And he has presented oral argument before multiple U.S. Courts of Appeals, the Michigan Court of Appeals, and the Michigan Court of Claims.

Some of Kurt's recent victories include dismissal of group boycott and monopolization claims brought against a leading aerospace manufacturer; dismissal of conspiracy claims brought against a global automobile parts supplier; summary judgment in a toxic tort lawsuit for an industrial parts manufacturer; and reversal on appeal in a securities lawsuit for one of the country's largest financial institutions.

Kurt also devotes significant time to his pro bono practice. Most recently, he successfully briefed and argued a case before the Michigan Court of Appeals involving parole eligibility for habitual offenders.

Kurt is a member of the Michigan Bar Appellate Practice Section and the Michigan Supreme Court Historical Society.

Before joining Jones Day, Kurt served as a law clerk to Justice Neil Gorsuch of the Supreme Court of the United States and to Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. He also practiced for several years at an international law firm in Washington, D.C.

经验

  • IU Health secures big win in provider monopolization actionJones Day represented Indiana University Health, Inc. (IU Health) in an antitrust, defamation, and breach-of-contract action commenced by a former independent medical staff physician, Dr. Ricardo Vasquez.
  • Adient defends putative antitrust action alleging an unlawful boycott in the automotive seat cover industryJones Day is representing Adient plc in a putative antitrust action in which a Tier 2 supplier alleges that Tier 1 suppliers entered into an unlawful agreement with an OEM to refuse to purchase seat covers from the Tier 2 supplier.