- Process used to grant Musk record $55 billion ‘deeply flawed’
- Musk says he wants bigger Tesla stake, funding to get to Mars
In throwing out
After about a year’s consideration and 200 pages of legal reasoning, her answer was clear: Yes. Yes he was.
Chancery Court Chief Judge
The ruling threatens to drop Musk to the third-
Here are some takeaways from the judge’s historic opinion:
Biggest Payday Ever
“The plan is the largest potential compensation opportunity ever observed in public markets by multiple orders of magnitude,” McCormick wrote. It was 250 times bigger than the median of his CEO peers. It was more than 33 times the runner-up plan — Musk’s 2012 compensation. The judge called the payout “an unfathomable sum,” “historically unprecedented” and “incredible.”
Still, McCormick noted, “Musk does not dally in the conventional amenities of ordinary billionaires. For example, he owns only one home.” She then pointed to his deposition where he testified: “I tried to put it on Airbnb, but they banned Airbnb in Hillsborough. They’re so uptight.”
Conflicted Board Members
The judge called Tesla’s process of approving the pay package “deeply flawed” because the board members on the compensation committee tasked with negotiating on the company’s behalf were “beholden” to the CEO. That included former General Counsel
“It is unsurprising that there was no meaningful negotiation over any of the terms of the plan,” McCormick wrote. “They did not take a position ‘on the other side’ of Musk,” the judge said. “It was a cooperative venture. There were no positional negotiations. Musk proposed a grant size and structure, and that proposal supplied the terms considered by the compensation committee and the board until Musk unilaterally lowered his ask six months later. Musk did not seem to care much about the other details. They got ironed out.”
Funding Mars Trips
Musk has spent years in pursuit of his ambitions to go to Mars through
Musk testified that he views
“Colonizing Mars is an expensive endeavor,” McCormick said. “Musk believes he has a moral obligation to direct his wealth toward that goal, and Musk views his compensation from Tesla as a means of bankrolling that mission.” Citing his trial testimony, she said Musk views his work at Tesla as worthwhile only if the money it generates can be applied to “making life multi-planetary.”
‘Starry Eyed’ Board
In defending Musk’s compensation, Tesla lawyers failed to explain why the plan was necessary to motivate the CEO to achieve “transformative growth,” the judge said. Musk had no intention of leaving Tesla, and his ownership stake was sufficient motivation to keep him focused on growth, she said.
“Swept up by the rhetoric of ‘all upside,’ or perhaps starry eyed by Musk’s superstar appeal, the board never asked the $55.8 billion question: Was the plan even necessary for Tesla to retain Musk and achieve its goals?” McCormick wrote.
‘Superstar’ CEO’s Control
In assessing whether the pay deal was acceptable, the judge asked “Does Musk control Tesla?”
In answering the question, which Delaware judges had avoided in earlier litigation, McCormick looked to Star Trek and Henry V for inspiration. She said she would “boldly go where no man has gone before” to answer the question, quoting the classic 1960s science fiction classic, later declaiming “once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more,” invoking William Shakespeare’s warrior king.
McCormick noted Musk held 21.9% of Tesla’s equity, his status as “Superstar CEO” and his “extensive ties with the persons tasked with negotiating on Tesla’s behalf.”
“Musk wielded the maximum influence that a manager can wield over a company,” she said, saying the board members “were there to cooperate with Musk, not negotiate against him.”
“At least as to this transaction, Musk controlled Tesla,” the judge said, calling the process leading to his pay deal “deeply flawed.”
‘Unenviable Task’
The judge offered kind words to Musk’s legal team, led by lawyers from the powerhouse firm
“If any set of attorneys could have achieved victory in these unlikely circumstances, it was the talented defense attorneys here,” McCormick wrote. “But the task proved too tall an order.”
Like a Defective Car
In the end, the judge concluded that Musk and Tesla had failed to properly justify the huge pay package, which she compared to a flawed car design.
“In the final analysis, Musk launched a self-driving process, recalibrating the speed and direction along the way as he saw fit,” McCormick wrote. “The process arrived at an unfair price.” The investor suing to block the plan, on behalf of Tesla and its investors, “requests a recall,” she said before granting it. “The plaintiff is entitled to rescission.”
(Updates with judge comment in ‘Superstar’ section)
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Steve Stroth
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