Andrews Myers, P.C. > Austin, United States > Firm Profile

Andrews Myers, P.C.
919 Congress Avenue
Suite 1050
Austin, TX 78701
United States

Real estate > Construction (including construction litigation) Tier 4

Houston-based boutique Andrews Myers, P.C. handles the full range of advisory mandates and disputes in the construction arena, specialising in chemical production and infrastructure project matters. Counting EPC contractors, general contractors, and owners among its key roster of clients, the team is also noted for its expertise in negotiating, awarding, and drafting contracts for large-scale infrastructure projects. William Westcott acts for contractors, subcontractors, suppliers and owners on major commercial, energy and industrial projects. Westcott leads the practice alongside Jason Walker, who has demonstrable experience in litigating construction disputes, obtaining favorable jury verdicts and arbitration awards, and Carson Fisk, who counts general contractors, developers and owners, architects, engineers, subcontractors, suppliers, and sureties among his key roster of clients. Timothy Ross represents developers in luxury real estate claims, while William Andrews represents various EPC contractors. Bill Erwin is another key contact, leading on contract negotiation mandates.

Practice head(s):

William Westcott; Jason Walker; Carson Fisk

Other key lawyers:

Testimonials

‘The firm has very experienced construction attorneys. They are intelligent but exercise common sense in their actions and performance.’

Key clients

JE Dunn

Vitol

Buc-ee’s

Ameresco

MasTec North America

Enterprise Products

Turner Construction

Apache Industrial

Tellepsen

EE Reed/Davis Reed Construction

Work highlights

  • Representing JE Dunn Construction in a contentious litigation matter against Apple Inc. for unpaid retainage and delay damages claims.
  • Representing Pepper-Lawson Horizon International Group in seeking review from the Texas Supreme Court, which was confirmed in May 2023.
  • Represented represented Enterprise Products and its subsidiary Mont Belvieu Caverns against breach of contract and prompt payment claims brought by Clough USA, an EPC Contractor.
Firm Details

Managing Partners: Ben Westcott, Patrick Hayes

Number of partners: 34

Number of lawyers: 70

Firm Overview:

Proud to call Texas home for over 30 years, Andrews Myers is a law firm renowned for their proactive and practical approach to business and celebrated for its extensive background in construction law. Clients look to Andrews Myers for its proven skills and trusted counsel in these core areas: construction, real estate, corporate, energy, employment, bankruptcy-creditors’ rights, litigation and arbitration. Thanks to a strong entrepreneurial spirit, the firm is now one of the most recognized independent law firms in Texas, with a footprint that extends far beyond state lines.

Main Areas of Practice:

Construction

Real Estate

Corporate

Energy

Employment

Bankruptcy-Creditors’ Rights

Business Litigation/Arbitration

Appeals

Construction:

  • Counsel in every phrase of the construction project
  • Experience spans the widest range of construction projects in the public and private sector, from airports to highways and other infrastructure projects, mixed-use to sports venues, petrochemical plants to power plants, and upstream, midstream and downstream energy projects
  • Focus on claims, defaults and terminations, cost overruns, design and construction defects, contract drafting and negotiation, energy-related construction, mechanics’ liens, payment bond claims and collections
  • Known for complex, multi-party dispute resolution skills, especially related to EPC/LNG

Contact: William J ‘Jason’ Walker

Tel: 713.850.4234

Email: [email protected]

Real Estate:

  • Serve as counsel to buyers, sellers, landlords and tenants, on industrial, retail, office, hospitality, build-to-suit, mixed use, educational, multi-family and residential land developments
  • Focus on acquisitions and sales, title and survey review, financing and refinancing, and lease negotiations, options and renewals for owners/lessors and commercial tenants
  • Provide a long-term outlook for future lease considerations, assignment, adjustments or possibility of default or litigation

Contact: Patrick Hayes

Tel: 713.850.4226

Email: [email protected]

Corporate:

  • General corporate representation of companies
  • Formation of companies, including corporations, LLCs and partnerships
  • Representative experience in shareholder agreements, mergers and acquisitions, transaction structuring, owner sales and routine contractual issues
  • Counsel in finance and capital formation, private placements and venture capital transactions
  • Conversions, recapitalizations and reorganizations

Contact: Patrick Hayes

Tel: 713.850.4226

Email: [email protected]

Energy:

  • Counsel clients with respect to energy litigation, arbitration and mediation
  • Focus on downstream commodity transactions, chemical terminaling and storage agreements, and turnkey drilling contracts
  • Advising on wellsite risk management, mineral liens, and procurement agreements
  • Four attorneys are former in-house counsel for multinational firms in the LNG, petrochemical and chemical industries

Contact: Champe Fitzhugh

Tel: 512.900.3012

Email: [email protected]

Employment:

  • Counsel clients with respect to OSHA compliance and defense of OSHA citations
  • Defense of state and federal discrimination claims, wage and hour compliance, noncompetition agreements, and employment policy review
  • Emphasis on preventative measures and workplace education
  • Two attorneys with Board Certification in Labor and Employment Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization

Contact: Anthony ‘Tony’ Stergio

Tel: 713.850.4214

Email: [email protected]

Bankruptcy-Creditors’ Rights:

  • Serve as counsel to secured and unsecured creditors, protecting their rights and maximizing their recovery from debtors in bankruptcy
  • Focus on preference actions, fraudulent transfer litigation, claim objections, contested confirmation hearings, assumption and rejection of contracts and leases, and automatic stay litigation
  • Acquisition of assets from financially distressed companies

Contact: Ed Ripley

Tel: 713.850.4227

Email: [email protected]

Business Litigation:

  • Counsel companies in a wide spectrum of legal entanglements, providing both plaintiff and defense support from pre-litigation through appeal
  • Experience with real estate development, hospitality, energy and petrochemical, medical, manufacturing, financial services, and insurance industries
  • Focus on breach of contract, business dissolution, enforcement of trade secrets, intellectual property, insurance coverage, lender liability, bidding disputes and uniform commercial code

Contact: Hunter M. Barrow

Tel: 713.351.0349

Email: [email protected]

Arbitration:

  • Four attorneys are members of the National Panel of Construction Arbitrators for the American Arbitration Association
  • Attorney on the National Panel of Commercial Arbitrators for the American Arbitration Association
  • Bill Andrews is a founding member of the Construction Mega-Projects Panel of Arbitrators for the American Arbitration Association
  • Routinely called upon to mediate and arbitrate the most complex construction, real estate and business contract disputes

Contact: William K ‘Bill’ Andrews

Tel: 713.850.4212

Email: [email protected]

Offices:

Houston Office: 1885 Saint James Place, 15th Floor, Houston, Texas 77056 USA

Austin Office: 919 Congress Avenue, Suite 1050, Austin, Texas 78701 USA

www.andrewsmyers.com | [email protected] | 866.535.2329

Department Name Email Telephone
COO Cynthia Birdwell [email protected]
Marketing & Business Development Manager Shannon Giordano [email protected]
Photo Name Position Profile
R. Carson Fisk photo R. Carson Fisk Practice Areas: Construction Litigation Mediation Arbitration
Seth Russell photo Seth Russell Practice Areas: Complex Construction and Engineering Matters Litigation Project Transactional and Counseling…
William B. William B. "Ben" Westcott Practice Areas Construction Litigation and Transactional Energy  
Shareholders : 34
Administration :
Management :
Attorneys : 70

William B. “Ben” Westcott, Co-Managing Shareholder

My name is Ben Westcott, and I joined Andrews Myers in 2008 as a partner. Shortly after this I became a section chair, and then Co-managing partner in 2014, alongside my colleague Patrick Hayes.  During this time, we have split the responsibilities between the litigation and the corporate side of the business between us. All other matters have been jointly managed.

I am board certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and I am rolling into 25 years of practicing as a construction lawyer. I also maintain an active alternative dispute resolution practice mediating and arbitrating construction disputes and I am a member of the Panel of Arbitrators of the American Arbitration Association.

 

What do you see as the main points that differentiate Andrews Myers from your competitors?

  1. We are industry experts in Texas construction and real estate.
  2. We are well positioned with big firm lawyers at midsize firm rates; we’ve made significant inroads in attracting publicly traded and large scale, Texas-based companies who are experiencing Big Law rate fatigue.
  3. We embrace change including adapting to new regulations, technologies and business sectors to stay ahead of the competition.

Our industry expertise is what separates us from our competitors. We’re not generalists, we’re specialists and so when you come to us with a problem in real estate or construction, we’re going to be asking you advanced questions that will allow us to jump in midstream and efficiently help you solve your problem.

You are not going to have to educate us on terminology, local custom nor who your opponent is because we’re dealing in that market every single day. This gives us a huge competitive advantage and gives our clients an efficiency advantage as well.

There’s a continuous influx of Fortune 500 companies looking to improve on the average rate per lawyer that they pay for in their legal service, and Andrews Myers are very well positioned in terms of rates both locally and nationally to provide a significant cost savings over some of the national and international firms that we compete against.

We also have a good mix of young up and coming lawyers who are willing to embrace change and technology whether it be in EV, Solar, Wind or battery storage environments.

We recognize the impact of new regulations and new business sectors that are developing to address these new regulatory environments, and we are constantly educating ourselves and our clients to make sure that we’re on the leading edge of those types of situations.

 

Which practices do you see growing in the next 12 months? What are the drivers behind that?

If you’re monitoring the national news there is a major push to upgrade and improve our infrastructure in the United States, both in terms of water delivery and power delivery because we really have fallen behind in the resources we have dedicated to those services.

We cannot transition or make the move towards alternative energy sources without improved energy transmission.  We also cannot expect our population growth to be satisfied with our existing water resources and so both of those things are huge in terms of federal investment as well as private adaptation. There are construction companies that specialize in that business, but there aren’t enough of them.  This leads to an increasing rate of businesses looking to expand their client base by learning how to perform that work and by acquiring talent in those locations and industries where that work is available. We help those clients both learn regulations, understand what the market drivers and are and help them adapt their systems and programmes to be successful in those industries.

 

What are the main changes you’ve made in the firm that will benefit clients

We have advanced our cybersecurity, online project management and document management expertise, both in terms of training ourselves to run our own business, and then also at the same time training our clients on the risks involved in those systems. For an example, we are often asked to evaluate cybersecurity requirements and agreements between governments and banks and their trade partners. You cannot effectively educate your client on the risks associated with those agreements unless you understand the terminology and the requirements of those agreements in the first place.  So, we really have to understand what those technical terms are, what those risks are, and then we also have to partner with consultants and other industry experts to make sure that we’re learning as fast as the rules are changing. Every company is facing growing cyber security risks and as a result we must ask ourselves how we can adapt to meet the required standards of care.

 

Is technology changing the way you interact with your clients, and the services you can provide them?

Lawyers have always been challenged by the volume of information and data that is generated in connection with the litigation or arbitration matter and how do you efficiently and effectively manage that data? At Andrews Myers we have been partnering with an online document management company to create a direct client interface where they do not have to hire a third party, they only must hire us, and we handle all the data management as a single source. We have 3 full time employees whose roles centre on this, and we have standardised rates that apply to all our customers which is now included in our engagement agreement. This empowers our clients to have peace of mind so that they don’t have to hit the free market every single time they get into a dispute with an opposing party. This historically has been a very challenging and unpredictable scenario and by reducing this risk we are improving our interactions with clients and the services we provide them.

 

Can you give us a practical example of how you have helped a client to add value to their business?

We had a large-scale general contractor who was building power plants, nuclear facilities, refineries, bridges that found themselves in bankruptcy earlier this year.

It provided an opportunity for us to both leverage our existing relationships with that client, but also to educate our customer base on how to be prepared for those situations when they arise in the future. Even the largest and strongest companies that you’re aware of can be pushed into bankruptcy and that was really the shocking lesson that all of us had to realize. Understanding that contract terms, lien rights, alternative forms of performance security and other things that we often forget about or minimize are just so important in connection with any risk assessment of a large-scale construction project.

 

Are clients looking for stability and strategic direction from their law firms – where do you see the firm in three years’ time?

I think your primary goal as an attorney is to think about your clients’ strategic direction. If the conversation doesn’t start with that then then then you haven’t really begun the process where you should have. In my opinion, our clients are looking to us for strategic direction and in fact I feel like we’re not giving them the services we should be giving them if we don’t. Given our history in this market, one of the strategic directions we are often asked to contemplate is a merger or a joint venture or a partnership or something that will allow two great companies to join forces to pursue an area of work that, by themselves, they might not be able to pursue. This is one of the areas where we are called upon frequently to drive strategic thinking and therefore reaffirms that clients have and are still seeking advice relating to stability and strategic direction from law firms.

In three years’ time we would like to build some of our core practise areas out so that we have the same bench and strength as our construction practice. We have great leaders in all our other practice areas whether it is employment, real estate, business litigation or bankruptcy. We can do a better job of filling out all the positions in those groups and at same time, inspiring and supporting new business generators from within our existing attorneys. Quite simply, I would like to see us get better at the things that we’re already doing.

With the number of companies moving to Texas, particularly in Houston, Dallas and Austin, there is going to be plenty of opportunity for us.