Musk fights US state of Delaware after Tesla pay debacle

Musk fights US state of Delaware after Tesla pay debacle

Musk is furious at the Delaware court, seeing it has a haven for over-litigious lawyers and meddlesome judges that are getting in the way of his business decisions and vision
Musk is furious at the Delaware court, seeing it has a haven for over-litigious lawyers and meddlesome judges that are getting in the way of his business decisions and vision. Photo: Michael A. McCoy / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/Getty Images via AFP
Source: AFP

Elon Musk is on the warpath against Delaware and its powerful business court, moving his SpaceX company out of the eastern US state after a judge struck down his $56 billion compensation package at Tesla.

For more than a century, the Delaware Chancery Court has been a pillar of US capitalism, the jurisdiction where roughly two thirds of American Fortune 500 companies register their company.

And according to state data, nearly 80 percent of initial public offerings in 2022 were registered in Delaware, seeking the reliability and stability of its court and the expertise of its judges.

But Musk is furious at the court, seeing it has a haven for over-litigious lawyers and meddlesome judges that are getting in the way of his business decisions and vision.

"SpaceX has moved its state of incorporation from Delaware to Texas!" Musk said on X on Wednesday.

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"If your company is still incorporated in Delaware, I recommend moving to another state as soon as possible," he added.

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The move came just weeks after Judge Kathaleen McCormick voided his eye-watering compensation package at Tesla, taking sides with a shareholder who claimed the entrepreneur was overpaid.

'Good job'

The very first state to join the union, Delaware and its courts have long played an integral role in American industry.

The Chancery court "is almost like a de facto government agency in its own right" that sets the rules for corporate America, said Omari Scott Simmons, a law professor at George Washington University

A pillar of business, it is the agreed upon institution that guides the internal running of US corporate behemoths and that is not, crucially, the federal government.

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"It's a very curious situation in the United States, where if you form a company, you can decide what laws will apply to it, and what courts will hear those laws," said Simon Lorne, Vice Chairman and Chief Legal Officer at Millennium Management LLC.

"The only alternative could be federal law, which I think would be a big mistake for the system. Delaware has done a very good job for over 100 years," added, Lorne, who also teaches law at the University of Texas.

On matters like conflict resolution and governance, US big business abides by the decisions of the court and its decades of jurisprudence.

Also a selling point, Delaware judges are not nominated by elections or direct political appointment, but get picked by a non-partisan commission that values expertise above all else, said Simmons.

And unlike a federal agency, Delaware courts are shielded from the whims of interest group pressure or shifting political winds and the judges are left to give their decisions impartially.

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Moreover, unlike many US states, there is no chance of facing a runaway jury in Delaware: decisions are reasoned and handed down by the judges alone.

No exit

Musk's wrath has brought him to Texas, one of a few states along with Nevada that are trying to build up a legal system that could eventually compete with Delaware.

While unseating the East Coast state seems a longshot, some observers worry that the trend could instigate a race to the bottom, with companies shopping for jurisdictions with the lightest corporate oversight.

Besides SpaceX, Musk is moving his brain chip startup, Neuralink, from Delaware to Nevada, where he moved X, formerly Twitter, after he bought the social platform.

Those are private companies where Musk has complete control.

But lifting stakes at the publicly traded Tesla could prove much trickier, with only the smallest of shareholders able to object and potentially block the move.

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This has been the fate of Trip Advisor, where the parent company’s CEO has so far failed to move the business out of Delaware because of the objections of a few shareholders.

The Delaware court is expected to give its decision on the matter this month.

Source: AFP

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