Shareholders allege Elon Musk used his control of Tesla to force the company in 2016 to rescue SolarCity, saving the solar panel maker - and Musk's investment in the company - from bankruptcy.
Does
Elon Musk control
Tesla Inc or does
Tesla control
Elon Musk?
More than $2 billion hinges on that question as a trial kicks off on Monday. Shareholders allege that Musk used his control of
Tesla to force the company in 2016 to rescue SolarCity, saving the solar panel maker - and Musk's investment in the company - from bankruptcy.
The union pension funds and asset managers leading the case want Musk to repay to
Tesla the cost of the $2.6 billion deal and to disgorge the profits on his SolarCity stock. If they win, it would be one of the largest judgments against an individual.
The two-week trial in the Court of Chancery in Wilmington, Delaware, will boil down to whether Musk, who owned about 22% of
Tesla at the time of the deal, is that rare controlling stockholder who does not hold a majority stake.
"I think it's going to be very hard for the court to ignore the reality that
Elon Musk is
Elon Musk and his relationship with
Tesla," said Ann Lipton, a professor at Tulane University Law School.
She said the case might present an unusual situation given Musk's celebrity status, his personal ties to
Tesla board members and those board members' financial ties to SolarCity.
"Put it all together, and it might be enough to count as a controlling shareholder," she said.
Few executives dominate their company's image as much Musk, known for taunting regulators, battling naysayers and personally engaging with his 57 million Twitter followers.
"We are highly dependent on the services of
Elon Musk, Technoking of
Tesla and our Chief Executive Officer," said
Tesla's 2020 annual report.
Plaintiffs allege that Musk drove the negotiations and even pushed
Tesla's board to raise, not lower, the price for SolarCity.
A higher price benefited Musk, who was the largest shareholder of SolarCity, with a stake of about 22%, as well as four members of
Tesla's board, who directly or indirectly owned SolarCity stock, according to court records.
Board members settled allegations against them last year for $60 million and did not admit to any fault.
Plaintiffs also allege the deal benefited two of Musk's cousins who founded SolarCity, saving a company that was rapidly running low on cash.
Musk has said he was "fully recused" from board negotiations and that shareholders voted to approve the deal because it was central to his "Master Plan, Part Deux" that aims to integrate sustainable solar energy with electric self-driving cars.
He has said that what plaintiffs see as evidence of control is little more than strong management.
"Taken to its natural conclusion, virtually all 'hands-on' and 'inspirational' CEOs with minority stock ownership would be deemed controllers," Musk's lawyers wrote in a court filing.
If Vice Chancellor Joseph Slights determines Musk was a controlling shareholder, it will fall to Musk to prove the SolarCity deal met the high bar of the "entire fairness" standard, which examines process and price, said legal experts.
Musk has noted in court papers that the SolarCity deal has been a huge success for
Tesla shareholders, demonstrating the deal was not only fair, but a boon. After
Tesla split its stock 5-1 in 2020, it has risen to $652 on Thursday from near $37 a share when the deal closed in November 2016.
"If the vice chancellor thinks this deal was awful and was not effectively negotiated on behalf of the company, he'll strike it down," said Larry Hamermesh, a professor at Delaware Law School.