Product Liability
Insurance Defense
Insurance Coverage
Bad Faith Litigation
Cargo Litigation
Commercial Litigation
Construction Litigation
Consumer Litigation
Mr. McGary has more than 20 years of experience in handling complex
litigation in a variety of settings, including product liability, insurance,
medical malpractice and general business disputes. For the last
decade Mr. McGary has focused his practice on representing insurers
and manufacturers in fire-related products liability litigation. Mr.
McGary currently serves as national counsel for several major manufacturers
of consumer electronics products in their nationwide product liability
program. He also serves as local counsel for other manufacturers
of electronic products.
In addition to his product liability practice, Mr. McGary has extensive experience
representing insurance companies and their insureds in a wide variety of litigation
involving both property and casualty claims.
Mr. McGary has successfully represented clients in a wide range of complex
matters, including cases involving:
• Product liability claims involving fires, shock and other electrical phenomena
• Arson claims
• Insurance Coverage disputes
• Construction litigation
• Premises Liability claims
• Consumer Product Safety Commission disputes
• Cargo/Transportation claims
• Wrongful foreclosure
• Lender Liability
• Medical Malpractice
• Member, State Bar of Texas
Insurance Section
Litigation Section
• Member, Dallas Bar Association
• Member, International Association of Arson Investigators
• Member, National Fire Protection Association
• Member, Defense Research Institute
• Property Loss Research Bureau - 1993 & 1994 Property Loss
Managers
Conference, - Examinations Under Oath.
• RSX Risk Management 1996 Insurance Conference - The
Struggle with Emotional Distress & Mental Anguish: Are Emotional
Distress and Mental Anguish "Bodily Injuries?
• Consumer Electronics Association 2007 Annual Winter Technology & Standards
Forum: Defending Product Liability Claims - A Systematic Approach.
• Consumer Electronics Association, 2007 Industry Forum,
Dispelling the Myth: Successfully Defending Product Liability Claims.
• Consumer Electronics Association, 2007 Industry Forum, Dispelling the
Myth: A Strategic Grasp of Conducting a Fire Investigation.
• Texas Tech Law Review
• Texas Bank Lawyer
• Political Science National Honor Society
• Economics National Honor Society
• Admitted, Texas
• United States District Court for the Northern, Southern and Eastern
Districts in the State of Texas
• United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals
• Admitted pro hac vice in Arizona, California, Colorado, Indiana,
Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri,
Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Tennessee
and Utah
• J.D., (cum laude), Texas Tech University School of Law,
1985
• B.A., Political Science, University of Texas at Arlington, 1982
Mr. McGary’s successful experience in handling lawsuits and their
appeal through the various appellate courts is reflected in the following
reported cases:
• Tarter v. Metropolitan Sav. & Loan Assoc., 744 S.W.2d
926 (Tex. 1988), a lender liability claim involving the application and use of
offensive collateral estoppel.
• MBank Abilene v. LeMaire, No. C14-86-00834-CV (March 25, 1989),
a lender liability suit wherein the Court of Appeals for the Fourteenth District
of Texas affirmed the trial court's award of over 33 Million Dollars to Mr. McGary's
clients.
• Nagel v. Kentucky Cent. Ins. Co., 894 S.W.2d 19 (Tex. App. – Austin
1994, no writ) a coverage dispute denying Insureds the right to recover from
insurers for pre-notice defense costs under quantum meruit when each
policy contained an express provision prohibiting the insureds from incurring
such expenses, except at their own cost.
• George Grubbs Enterprises, Inc. v. Bien, 881
S.W.2d 843 (Tx. App. – Fort Worth, 1994), reversed on other grounds, delineating
the elements of a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
• First Oak Brook Corporation Syndicate, Inc. v. Southeastern Texas
Financial Corp., No. 95-2027 (United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals,
December 8, 1995), affirming the trial court’s summary judgment in favor
of Mr. McGary clients construing an exclusion in an ISO Commercial Insurance
Policy which previously had never been construed.
• Moritz v. General Electric Company, No. 04-0871, (Texas Supreme
Court slip opinion, June 13, 2008), reversing the appellate court and reinstating
the trial court summary judgment in favor of Mr. McGary’s clients. The
court reaffirmed its prior holdings that a Landlord does not owe a duty to an
independent contractor to warn of open and obvious dangers on the property.