ABOUT ACC
The Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC) is the world’s largest organization serving the professional and business interests of attorneys who practice in the legal departments of corporations, associations and other private-sector organizations around the globe. We promote the common interests of our members, provide resources to help save time, money and effort, contribute to their c
ontinuing education, help them succeed in their careers and provide a voice on issues of national and international importance. ACC connects its members to each other, and to the people and resources necessary for their personal and professional growth. HISTORY
On December 1, 1981, Robert Banks, then vice president and general counsel of Xerox Corporation, hosted a luncheon that triggered a chain of events that would change the legal profession. The participants -- mostly general counsel of their companies -- included Lawrence Kraus (U.S. (Sears, Roebuck and Co.), Carl Liggio (Arthur Young and Company), Stephen Middlebrook (Aetna Life and Casualty), Donald Walsh (Sun Company, Inc.), William Weitzel, Jr. (Texaco, Inc.), Irving Yoskowitz, (United Technologies Corporation), and Guy Zoghby (IBM Corporation). Within an hour, their spirited and free-wheeling discussion boiled down to one action item: To lead a charge to create a bar association for in-house counsel. The group next sought to call a larger meeting to ascertain the level of support they could garner for the idea and discuss whether the form might be as a new ABA section or as an independent organization. As a result of that December 1, 1981 luncheon meeting, 55 leading general counsel were invited to attend a March 14, 1982 meeting at the AMFAC (now Hyatt) Hotel at the Dallas Fort Worth Airport to discuss the formation of an organized group for in-house counsel. Although no one knew how the invitation would be received, 53 out of the 55 invited general counsel showed up. This overwhelming response demonstrated that a common chord had been struck. In turn, 51 of the 53 general counsel in attendance supported the formation of an independent organization separate from the ABA. Each of these 51 counsel pledged to enroll their entire legal departments for several years so that the new organization would have a sustainable membership base. And so what began as a brainstorming session only months earlier ended with a flurry of activity in 1982: the American Corporate Counsel Association (“ACC-Socal”) had been born, officers were elected, and initial membership totaled 2400 in-house counsel. Robert Banks served as the first Chairman of ACCA’s Board of Directors. From its founding, ACC-Socal’s stated purpose was clear: To provide an organization for the promotion and improvement of the common business and professional interests and responsibilities of attorneys who are engaged in the active practice of law on behalf of organizations in the private sector and who do not hold themselves out to the public for the practice of law. This premise remains true today. The lunchtime thoughts of nine visionary in-house counsel took root and have grown into America’s -- and the world’s -- leading in-house counsel bar association. On a global basis, ACC-SoCal currently has over 20,000 members in the U.S. In 2003, ACCA changed its name to Association of Corporate Counsel or ACC, in acknowledgement of its global status. CHAPTERS
ACC's 51 chapters represent more than 24,000 corporate counsel around the world. Chapters offer a unique opportunity for members to connect with in-house counsel in their local areas, sharpen their skills with CLE programs, and hone their leadership abilities through involvement in their local chapters. In Southern California, Peter Zeughauser (The Irvine Company), Oscar Glass and several other talented in-house counsel took the initiative in late 1984 and founded the Southern California Chapter of the Association of Corporate Counsel America ("ACC-SoCal") to serve the professional interests of ACC-SoCal members in Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura, and Santa Barbara counties, as well as portions of Riverside and San Bernardino counties. Zeughauser later served as the 1991 Chair of ACC-SoCal’s Board of Directors. Since the founding of ACC-SoCal, hundreds of energetic, civic-minded, and service-oriented in-house attorneys of diverse backgrounds have volunteered their time and talents to serve as Officers, members of the Board of Directors, and Committee Members for ACC-SoCal. In addition, many other ACC-SoCal members have served in leadership positions at the national ACC level, such as on the Board of Directors and as National Committee members. To date, ACC-SoCal has over 1,400 members in Southern California, all of whom are in-house counsel. The countless hours of hard work and selfless devotion of our volunteer leaders have contributed to both ACC and ACC-SoCal evolving into, in the words of one ACC-SoCal member who is the General Counsel of a Fortune 100 company, "the best professional association choice that any in-house counsel could ever make." With the continuing efforts of in-house attorneys of similar character, leadership, and vision as those who came before them, ACC and ACC-SoCal will continue to grow to better serve our profession, our companies, and our communities, and to be the best professional association available to all in-house counsel.