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Tesla's law firm helps draft legislation that some experts say could restore Musk's $55B pay package
Tesla's law firm helps draft legislation that some experts say could restore Musk's $55B pay package

Yahoo

time20-02-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Tesla's law firm helps draft legislation that some experts say could restore Musk's $55B pay package

A law firm representing Elon Musk and Tesla helped draft legislation to overhaul Delaware's corporate law amid an ongoing court battle over Musk's multibillion-dollar compensation package from his electric car company, sources familiar with the matter confirmed to ABC News. The proposed state legislation would amend the Delaware General Corporation Law to ease the rules that determine whether a shareholder is deemed a "controller," a designation that blocked Musk from receiving a compensation plan of up to $55.8 billion from Tesla last year. Musk lost his compensation package -- reportedly the largest CEO compensation plan in public corporation history -- after being recognized as a "controller" of Tesla even though he held less than a third of the company's shares. MORE: Tesla shares have plunged while Musk takes on Washington. Is that the reason? Under the existing law, shareholders below the one-third threshold still receive the "controller" classification if they exert other avenues of control. In contrast, the proposed law would set a requirement that a shareholder hold at least a third of a company's shares in order to be deemed a "controller." Legal experts are divided on whether the proposed legislation, if enacted, could impact Musk's Tesla compensation package currently on appeal to the state's Supreme Court -- a point of contention that has arisen from the fact the bill lacks an explicit mention forbidding its application to pending cases. The law firm representing Musk and Tesla, Richards, Layton & Finger, confirmed to ABC News its involvement in drafting the legislation. The firm claimed the legislation, if enacted, would not be retroactive and suggested it would not impact Musk's case. The firm also said that its role in the process "was not on behalf of or otherwise influenced by any firm client," stressing that it was among a group of lawyers, professors and experts that helped draft the proposal and that the firm has played a major role in shaping Delaware's business statutes for more than 125 years. "As many have recognized, statutory changes are necessary to restore the core principles that have been the hallmark of Delaware for over a century and ensure that Delaware remains the preeminent jurisdiction for incorporation," Richards, Layton & Finger President Lisa Schmidt wrote in a statement to ABC News. The bill's sponsor, Delaware Democratic state Sen. Bryan Townsend, echoed the claim, telling ABC News that the bill is "not retroactive and would not affect the litigation regarding Elon Musk's compensation package at Tesla." Townsend also stressed that an attorney from Richards, Layton & Finger was invited to advise on the legislation as an industry expert and a member of the Delaware State Bar Association's Corporation Law Council, along with many other experts -- and that legislators were fully responsible for the bill's final draft. But other legal experts told ABC News that the proposed law could allow the Delaware court to reverse its decision and grant Musk the pay package. The bill lacks an explicit mention forbidding application to pending cases, making possible a court finding that alters the outcome of Musk's case, legal experts said. "It's possible," Sarath Sanga, a professor of corporate law at Yale University, said of the potential use of the proposed law to revive Musk's pay package. "There's nothing in the law requiring it and there's nothing preventing it." MORE: Musk misreads Social Security data, millions of dead people not getting benefits, experts say Ann Lipton, a law professor at Tulane University, said the absence of any stipulation preventing application to pending cases could function as a signal to the court to reverse its decision about Musk's pay. "It sends a strong signal to the Delaware Supreme Court that we want you to interpret this to give Elon his pay package back," Lipton said. Boston College Law Professor Brian Quinn said that it's unclear if the legislation will be retroactive or not -- but added, "It's entirely possible that the court reverses the trial opinion for reasons not related to this amendment, and the package is reinstated." Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick, who oversees the Delaware trial court that handles commercial litigation, rejected the 2018 compensation package that Tesla voted to provide to Musk. McCormick found that the negotiations surrounding the package had been inappropriate, due to a lack of independence among board members and Musk's influence over the negotiations. MORE: Contradictory statements about Musk make it unclear who runs DOGE The proposed changes to the law could ease the scrutiny applied to Musk, resulting in a reversal of the court's judgment, some experts told ABC News. The proposed law bypassed a typical process of consideration before the Corporate Law Council, a section of the Delaware Bar Association, Sanga said. He said he could not recall an instance in which a proposed change to Delaware corporate law did not go through that process. Tesla's law firm helps draft legislation that some experts say could restore Musk's $55B pay package originally appeared on Sign in to access your portfolio

Tesla's law firm drafts Delaware bill that could salvage Musk pay package
Tesla's law firm drafts Delaware bill that could salvage Musk pay package

NBC News

time18-02-2025

  • Business
  • NBC News

Tesla's law firm drafts Delaware bill that could salvage Musk pay package

A law firm that represents Tesla and Elon Musk has written proposed legislation that would alter Delaware corporate law, according to a person directly familiar with the drafting of the bill. The proposed legislation, drafted by Richards, Layton & Finger, or RLF, would amend Delaware General Corporation Law, and if adopted, could pave the way for the reinstatement of Musk's 2018 CEO pay package at Tesla, worth tens of billions of dollars in options. RLF confirmed their involvement to CNBC. 'Statutory changes are necessary to restore the core principles that have been the hallmark of Delaware for over a century and ensure that Delaware remains the preeminent jurisdiction for incorporation,' Lisa Schmidt, president of RLF, said in a statement. The bill was introduced in the Delaware General Assembly on Monday and would require approval by the state's two chambers as well as Gov. Matt Meyer before it could become law. The pay package Tesla granted to Musk in 2018 was the largest CEO compensation plan in public corporate history, but the Delaware Court of Chancery in early 2024 ordered it to be rescinded. In her ruling, Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick wrote that the pay plan was inappropriately set by Tesla's board, which was controlled by Musk, and that it was approved by shareholders who were misled by Tesla's proxy materials before they were asked to vote on it. Under the proposed legislation, Musk might no longer be considered a 'controller' of Tesla, said Brian JM Quinn, a Boston College Law professor. Transactions that involve self-dealing with controllers or directors would be subject to less review than they are now, Quinn said. Those transactions range from going-private deals, to mergers and acquisitions, to board and executive compensation decisions. 'The real role of corporate law is to protect minority investors,' Quinn said. 'With this bill, the legislature is saying, 'Now, you know what? Protect them less.'' The proposed legislation would also limit the kinds of documents that minority stakeholders are able to obtain through 'books and records' inspection requests, Quinn said. Those stakeholders would be limited to formal items such as a certificate of incorporation or minutes of stockholder meetings but they'd lose access to informal communications such as emails or other messages between board members and executives, Quinn said. After the Court of Chancery's ruling last year, Musk started a campaign to persuade companies not to incorporate in Delaware and moved the site of incorporation for his businesses out of the state. He has aimed his ire at McCormick with repeated and disparaging posts about her on X, his social network. Other prominent executives, including Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and Bill Ackman of Pershing Square, have also criticized the Delaware judiciary. 'Delaware has taken some heat for supposedly being too hard on controller transactions,' said Renee Zaytsev, partner at Boies Schiller and co-chair of the firm's securities and shareholder dispute practice. 'These amendments seem to be a course correction that would make it significantly easier for boards and controllers to avoid judicial scrutiny of their transactions,' she said.

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