Texas launched its specialized business courts in 2024, marketed as a Delaware-style upgrade for complex commercial disputes. Supporters described them as efficient, expert, and good for the state’s reputation as a corporate domicile. The reality is more complicated. The structure of the courts โ judicial selection, jurisdictional thresholds, and removal mechanics โ quietly tilts toward defendants in ways that go beyond what efficiency alone would require.
That doesn’t make the courts illegitimate, but it does deserve a closer look than the press release framing has gotten.
How the courts are structured
The Texas business courts hear commercial disputes above specified amount thresholds, with judges appointed by the governor for two-year terms rather than elected. Cases can be removed from district court to business court when they meet the jurisdictional criteria. The judges have specialized backgrounds, often drawn from business litigation practice. On paper, this sounds like Delaware’s Court of Chancery โ a venue where judges deeply understand corporate law and rule efficiently on complex matters. In practice, several design choices create asymmetries that Delaware doesn’t have, particularly around appointment and the political accountability of the bench.
Appointment versus election changes incentives
In most Texas courts, judges are elected and accountable to voters. Business court judges are appointed by the governor, which means they’re accountable to whoever appointed them and the appointment apparatus around the governor’s office. That apparatus is heavily influenced by the donors and trade associations that funded the push for business courts in the first place. The result isn’t necessarily corruption โ these judges may be perfectly capable โ but the selection mechanism is structurally favorable to large corporate interests. Plaintiffs’ lawyers have noticed the pattern: cases removed to business court often see different rulings on motions to dismiss than they would have seen in district court.
The removal mechanic favors defendants
Cases meeting the jurisdictional thresholds can be moved to business court, and in most contested situations the party seeking removal is the corporate defendant. That’s because plaintiffs filed in district court for a reason โ typically because their counsel believes the case fares better there. Letting defendants pull cases into a more favorable forum after the fact is essentially a one-way ratchet. Delaware’s Chancery, by contrast, has well-defined exclusive jurisdiction over specific corporate matters and isn’t a venue defendants can drag general business disputes into.
What “efficiency” obscures
The efficiency case for specialized courts is genuine. Complex commercial disputes do benefit from judges who understand them, and faster resolution reduces costs for everyone. But efficiency arguments often serve as cover for substantive changes in outcomes. If business courts dispose of cases at higher rates on early motions, that’s efficient โ and it’s also a structural shift in who wins. Texas is following a national trend of reframing tort reform as procedural modernization. The procedure isn’t neutral if its design predictably favors one side.
The bottom line
Texas’s business courts deliver real efficiency gains and real structural advantages to corporate defendants. Treating them as pure technocratic upgrades misses the politics baked into the design. The courts aren’t a scandal โ they’re a policy choice that should be debated as one.
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