Gov Uscourts Delch 2018-0408-KSJM 387 0
Gov Uscourts Delch 2018-0408-KSJM 387 0
Gov Uscourts Delch 2018-0408-KSJM 387 0
Legal Document
Delaware Court of Chancery
Case No. 2018-0408-KSJM
Richard J. Tornetta v. Elon Musk
Document 387
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ARGUMENT ............................................................................................................4
i
B. Quantum Meruit Is Inapplicable And Tesla’s Authorities Are
Unavailing...........................................................................................38
CONCLUSION .......................................................................................................54
ii
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Page(s)
Cases
Baker v. Sadiq,
2016 WL 4375250 (Del. Ch. Aug. 16, 2016).....................................................12
Davis v. Holmes,
C.A. No. 638-N (Del. Ch. June 21, 2006) (TRANSCRIPT)..............................13
iii
Emerald Partners v. Berlin,
726 A.2d 1215 (Del. 1999).................................................................................48
Franchi v. Barabe,
C.A. No. 2020-0648-KSJM (Del. Ch. July 21, 2022) (TRANSCRIPT)..............4
Gantler v. Stephens,
965 A.2d 695 (Del. 2009)...................................................................................48
Knight v. Miller,
2023 WL 3750376 (Del. Ch. June 1, 2023) .......................................................42
iv
Krinsky v. Helfand,
156 A.2d 90 (Del. Ch. 1959) ..............................................................................42
LAMPERS v. Bergstein,
C.A. No. 7764-VCL (Del. Ch. Sept. 10, 2014) (ORDER).............................4, 41
Off v. Ross,
2009 WL 4725978 (Del. Ch. Dec. 10, 2009) .....................................................42
Sciabacucchi v. Howley,
2023 WL 4345406 (Del. Ch. July 3, 2023) ........................................................38
v
Sciabacucchi v. Salzberg,
2018 WL 6719718 (Del. Ch. Dec. 19, 2018) .....................................................44
Seinfeld v. Coker,
847 A.2d 330 (Del. Ch. 2000) ......................................................................34, 36
Tornetta v. Musk,
250 A.3d 793 (Del. Ch. 2019) ......................................................................47, 48
In re Xencor, Inc.,
C.A. No. 10742-CB (Del. Ch. Dec. 10, 2015) (TRANSCRIPT) .......................42
vi
Delaware Judge Likely Pushes TSLA to Incorporate in Texas-Musk
Could Get to 25%, Wedbush (Feb. 2, 2024) ......................................................26
Report of the Third Circuit Task Force, Court Awarded Attorney Fees,
108 F.R.D. 237 (1986)........................................................................................36
The Stock Price That Didn’t React: Tesla Reaction to Court’s Ruling,
CRA Insights Finance (Feb. 2024).....................................................................26
vii
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT1
the benefit created by Plaintiff’s total victory at trial; argue that benefit should be
measured as of 2018, not when it was conferred in 2024; propose a vastly lower
offsetting the benefit based on “appropriate” compensation for Musk (of which
Defendants declined to offer proof at trial); and claim the fee request on the
arguments relating to the June 13 “ratification” vote. Reading Tesla’s and the
Objectors’ papers would lead the casual observer to conclude that Plaintiff’s
“gaslighting,” the Florida Objectors assert the litigation led to a negative result.3
rescinded by the Court’s judgment via the Post-Trial Opinion were fully vested, and
Tesla’s own experts concede those deeply in-the-money options would be exercised
1Undefined capitalized terms have the meanings ascribed in Plaintiff’s Opening Brief in
Support of Application for an Award of Fees and Expenses (“OB” or “Opening Brief”)
(Dkt. 296). Citations to “Ex. __” refer to exhibits attached hereto.
2Tesla’s Answering Brief in Opposition to Plaintiff’s Counsel’s Request for an Award of
Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses (“AB”) (Dkt. 357).
3 See Dkt. 380 (“Florida Objection”).
1
and that the market price reflected the dilution inherent in that exercise. By
that dilution. And Tesla’s experts agree with both the value of those rescinded
reversal is properly valued at $50B.4 In his view, however, that $50B in value was
wiped out by market concerns that the Rescission would make Musk an “unhappy
camper and focus on other stuff.”5 Thus, Tesla’s own expert agrees that dilution
reversal has value and that the value is measured as Plaintiff’s experts describe. He
merely acknowledges that if the market does not value the Rescission as both sides’
economists do, it is only because the market anticipates Tesla’s supine Board will
Idiosyncratic concerns about Musk aside, Tesla conceded in open court6 the
Likewise, when creating the Grant, the Board “authoriz[ed] and reserv[ed]”
for issuance and directed the Company to “issue and deliver” upon exercise the
4See Deposition Transcript of Steven Grenadier (May 27, 2024) (“Grenadier Tr.”), at
178:15-19 (Dkt. 362, Ex. 5).
5 Id. at 84:15-85:1.
6Police & Fire Ret. Sys. City of Detroit v. Musk (“Director Compensation Action”), C.A
No. 2020-0477-KSJM (Del. Ch. Oct. 13, 2023) (TRANSCRIPT).
7 See infra Section II.C.
2
shares underlying the Grant’s 303,960,630 options. The Rescission means the shares
are no longer “reserved” for issuance and are available again to Tesla for any
purpose. They had real, quantifiable, agreed-upon value at the Rescission date—
approximately $51B.
This reply addresses the nature and extent of the benefit this Action created,
when that benefit should be measured, the unhelpful alternatives suggested by Tesla
and the Objectors, and the supposed windfall. Fortunately, Delaware law—
and without compromising the underlying claims. The Court should decline Tesla’s
While Plaintiff’s Counsel firmly believe the fee request is both supported by
the Court, Plaintiff includes herein a cash-based alternative structure the Court could
3
ARGUMENT
As Tesla concedes, “[t]he first Sugarland factor, the benefit achieved, is the
most important.”8 The primary benefits achieved through Plaintiff’s trial victory are
freeing up 303,960,630 Tesla shares exclusively reserved for the Grant and reversing
governance effects. Delaware law is also clear that in determining a fee award, the
Ignoring governing law, they argue that benefits to Tesla’s stockholders cannot be
8 AB 18; see also Dkt. 376, Ex. A (“CoC Amicus”) at 4 (acknowledging the Sugarland
factors “determine the fee award” and “Sugarland places the greatest weight on the benefit
achieved”); Dkt. 354 (“Steffens Objection”) at 16 (acknowledging Sugarland dictates the
fee determination).
9 See OB 24 n.85 (citing cases valuing options at time benefit was conferred);
see also, e.g., LAMPERS v. Bergstein, C.A. No. 7764-VCL, ¶¶2-4 (Del. Ch. Sept. 10,
2014) (ORDER) (calculating benefit conferred by modification to challenged option-based
plan based on present—rather than grant date—values of plans); id. Dkt. 150, ¶20
(Affidavit of Allan Ferrell) (reflecting valuation based on options’ present value); id.
Dkt. 57, at 12 (Ross Aronstam & Moritz LLP citing Compellent for proposition that value
of cash rights underlying warrants should be “measured at the time the parties reached
agreement” (emphasis added)); accord id. Dkt. 51, at 23; Franchi v. Barabe,
C.A. No. 2020-0648-KSJM, at 55-56 (Del. Ch. July 21, 2022) (TRANSCRIPT) (valuing,
as of settlement entry, benefit conferred by waiver of rights to receive cash under warrants).
4
the basis for a fee since Tesla (the entity) did not benefit separately from its owners.
must be measured not upon conferral, but instead over six years ago when Tesla
issued the Grant.10 But Tesla’s own experts concede that Plaintiff’s expert correctly
January 30, 2024 Post-Trial Opinion.11 Ignoring governing law, Tesla directed its
experts to measure only the benefits as of the grant date.12 That directive violates
existing over six years prior, particularly given Tesla’s inherently unreliable and
severely understated $2.3B grant date fair value (“GDFV”) estimate13—which even
¶67 (Dkt. 359) (“[I]f the relevant consideration is placing the firm back into the same
position as just prior to the date on which the options were granted (a legal issue I take no
position on), then an ex ante analysis of value is reasonable.” (emphasis added)); Skinner
Tr. 179:3-180:1.
13 See infra Section III.
5
Defendants conceded is “flawed as a measure of value”14—makes little sense. Tesla
would presumably agree that in valuing the benefit conferred by disgorging $51B in
cash received by an executive from selling disloyally obtained stock options, the
Court would use the $51B in recovered cash, not the options’ $2.3B GDFV. The
only difference between that scenario and this Action is the form of the benefit
conferred (i.e., cash versus options), which is irrelevant to when the benefit’s value
should be measured.
Tesla ignored all five cases cited in Plaintiff’s Opening Brief establishing that
the conferred benefit’s value is measured at conferral. And the lone case Tesla cites
measured upon conferral—i.e., “as of the time [the settlement] was agreed to” in
Compellent, and “as of the time” of the Opinion granting Rescission here.16
14Director Defendants’ Pretrial Brief (Dkt. 227), at 57; see also id. at 56-57 (conceding
that GDFV “represent[s] the stock-based compensation expense a company recognizes for
an option award, not the value to Musk or to Tesla’s stockholders”).
15 In re Compellent Techs., Inc. S’holder Litig., 2011 WL 6382523, at *20
(Del. Ch. Dec. 9, 2011) (AB 28).
16 Id. Ironically, Tesla violates Compellent’s prohibition on considering “after-the-fact
events” post-dating benefit conferral (id.) by infecting the Sugarland analysis with: (i) the
Board’s unlawful attempts to reinstate the Grant; and (ii) purported potential harm arising
from Musk’s threats to usurp Tesla’s corporate opportunities unless he is given 25% of
Tesla. See also Steffens Objection 4 (Dkt. 354). In the highly unlikely extent after-the-
fact events could ever warrant a post hoc reduction of a post-trial benefit conferred, no such
reduction can be warranted by a board’s stated attempt to evade a post-trial judgment, or a
6
Tesla’s ex ante approach also misconstrues the nature of the rescission
interests ahead of the interests of its beneficiary” and that these damages “can be
measured at the time of judgment, the time of resale, or at an intervening point when
the stock had a higher value and remained in control of the disloyal fiduciary.”18
damages because they are measured “as of a point in time after the transaction” and
can be measured at any point between the breach and judgment, including the highest
CEO/controlling stockholder’s violations of his loyalty duty. Nor does Tesla—or Objector
Steffens—explain how the Court could possibly determine the appropriate scope or
endpoint for any such after-the-fact analysis.
17 In re Orchard Enters. Inc. S’holder Litig., 88 A.3d 1 (Del. Ch. 2014).
18 Id. at 39.
19Firmenich Inc. v. Nat. Flavors, Inc., 2020 WL 1816191, at *8 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 7,
2020).
7
point between the two,20 the Court likewise should incorporate changes in the
rescinded options’ value between the breach and the judgment in valuing the benefit
Indeed here, Tesla has claimed the Court must ignore the actual intrinsic value
of the benefit conferred by rescinding 303,960,630 options worth ~$51B, and instead
reduce the remedy’s value to remove market value appreciation, which the Court is
stands the remedy on its head and flatly contradicts Delaware law.
Each side’s experts agree that Tesla’s common stock priced-in the dilutive
expert Grenadier admitted that dilution was “looming” and priced into the shares.22
20Here, that value is $125,991,681,135 (i.e., $414.50 (Tesla’s peak price on November 4,
2021) x 303,960,630 options).
21 Opinion 7 (“The defendants insisted that the plan worked in that it delivered to
stockholders all that was promised, but they made no effort to prove causation.”).
22Grenadier Report 11 n.40 (“[T]he impact of the looming dilution would have been priced
in prior to the Opinion.”); see also id. ¶42 (calculating “8.2% expected dilution” from the
Grant); Deposition Transcript of Daniel Fischel (May 31, 2024) (“Fischel Tr.”), at 112:6-
9 (Dkt. 362, Ex. 4).
8
Tesla’s expert Skinner admitted the options were “deeply in the money”23 as of the
The experts also agree that rescinding the Grant eliminates its dilution. As
Tesla’s Grenadier concedes, “a rescission of the 2018 Grant would decrease the
9
Bebchuk and Jackson quantified the value of reversing the dilution as the
market value of the shares underlying the rescinded options, logically explaining that
once shares that the market had already priced into Tesla’s trading price are no
longer “looming,” the value of the reversal of that already-priced dilution is the
shares’ market value.28 Tesla’s Grenadier stated in his report that, “all else equal”
Tesla’s share price,”29 and testified that “$50[B] by itself is the antidilution effect.”30
In short, both sides agree: (i) the Grant caused ~8% dilution, valued at ~$50B;
(ii) as of the Court’s Opinion, the Grant’s options were so deeply in-the-money that
the dilution was priced into the market for Tesla shares; and (iii) the Court’s Opinion
rescinding the options reversed that dilution, creating tangible and substantial value
equal to the market price of the shares underlying the rescinded options.31
Removing ~8% dilution was a benefit indisputably achieved through this Action,
10
Tesla therefore argues that reversing dilution is not a benefit to Tesla. Plaintiff
“traditional rule that dilution claims are classically derivative.”33 In doing so, it held
that “economic and voting power dilution”—which Tesla faced until the
shares” and remedies flow to the stockholders “derivatively via the corporation.”34
Thus, “[t]o the extent the corporation’s issuance of equity does not result in a shift
Applying those principles to the overpayment here (i.e., the entire Grant), the
“economic dilution in the value of [Tesla’s] stock is the unavoidable result of the
reduction in the value of the entire corporate entity, of which each share of equity
exclusively derivative,” and reversing the Grant’s dilution confers value to “the
33 Brookfield Asset Mgmt., Inc. v. Rosson, 261 A.3d 1251, 1266-67 (Del. 2021).
34 Id. (emphasis added).
35 Id. (emphasis added).
36 Id. (emphasis added).
11
entire corporate entity.”37 Indeed, the parties’ Court-ordered joint stipulation
dismissing Plaintiff’s direct claims in this Action expressly noted that Brookfield
But even if the Rescission’s anti-dilution benefit were not derivative (it is), it
would still be fully compensable. Defendants ignore well-settled Delaware law that
action that asserts claims for breaches of fiduciary duty…and an investor class action
investor-level recovery and vice versa” and one can be “reframed” as the other.40
Indeed, under these principles, derivative actions are routinely resolved “using
37 Id.
38 Dkt. 175 (emphasis added).
39 Baker v. Sadiq, 2016 WL 4375250, at *1 (Del. Ch. Aug. 16, 2016).
40 Id. at *1.
41 Id. at *1-3 (collecting cases); see also, e.g., Fishel v. Liberty Media Corp., C.A. No.
2021-0820-KSJM, at 43 (Del. Ch. Apr. 8, 2024) (TRANSCRIPT) (“Damages on the
derivative claims would have gone to Sirius XM. Minority stockholders would not
necessarily have received benefits as a consequence. The proposed settlement avoids this
result by paying the settlement fund directly to minority stockholders.”); accord Lacey v.
12
Tandycrafts, Inc. v. Initio Partners, “the form of suit is not a deciding factor [in
benefit on others.”42
corporation”43 is not only wrong but irrelevant. Even if the anti-dilution benefit
conferred here were considered an investor-level (i.e., direct) benefit, it would still
be fully compensable.
Elevating form over economic substance, Tesla argues that because Musk had
not yet exercised the Grant’s options, no shares were actually issued and, therefore,
no shares were “returned” to Tesla via this Action. Tesla thus illogically claims the
13
As discussed supra at Section II.A, the parties agree the Grant’s options were
fully vested, deeply in-the-money, and capable of exercise at any time. Likewise—
and as also discussed above—the experts agree that, as a matter of economics, the
market for Tesla shares had already priced-in the dilutive effect of the looming
issuance because Musk’s exercise of the options was a foregone conclusion given
When awarding the Grant, the Board’s resolutions reserved shares for
issuance, directed the transfer agent to so note, and authorized Tesla to “issue and
to be issued pursuant to any vesting and exercise” of the Grant.44 The Board
restriction on the shares earmarked for and underlying the Grant’s options, and
Critically, Tesla itself recently told the Court precisely how this situation
should be assessed and how such options should be valued. Contesting the fee
petition in the Director Compensation Action, Tesla’s counsel disputed the value of
44 JX0791.0006.
45Id. Tesla’s suggestion that Plaintiff asks the Court to order registration of shares ignores
the Board’s prior directive to do just that.
14
invalidated options within Tesla’s generalized employee/executive option pool on
46Director Compensation Action, C.A No. 2020-0477-KSJM, Tr. at 68. See also id. at 62-
63 (Tesla Counsel: “A share goes back into what can be awarded under the EIP. But now
what happens? We don’t have a share that’s free to go out there and do whatever we want
to for corporate purposes. It’s still reserved. Today it’s reserved for the returned options
in case they were right now exercised. Right? Tomorrow, if the settlement is approved,
they are still going to be reserved. They are now reserved for future awards. So you can’t
go monetize them….”).
47 Id. at 78-79 (emphasis added).
15
This Action presents “[e]xactly” the situation described by Tesla in the
Director Compensation Action, and the Court should treat the value created here
Tesla now argues that because it had many authorized but unissued shares
Plaintiff’s experts established that because dilution attributable to those shares was
already priced into the Tesla stock, avoiding those shares’ imminent issuance would
have allowed them to be sold for full market price.49 In short, Tesla had it right the
first time and cannot now legitimately take an antithetical position in a related
proceeding.50
48 AB 24-25.
49 Bebchuk Tr. 60:9-18 (“Tesla does now have, as a result of the rescission, roughly 300[M]
shares which were earlier set aside and now Tesla is free to sell.”); id. at 76:10-20 (“[I]t is
valuable…to get the shares…set aside back to the treasury” regardless of whether there are
“authorized shares in reserve” because Musk’s “300[M] options…create an expected
dilution” and result in a lower share price); Jackson Tr. 111:3-22 (“[Rescission] eliminates
Mr. Musk’s contractual right to acquire several hundred million shares on…advantageous
terms” and “removes the prospect of…looming dilution”).
50 Director Compensation Action, C.A. No. 2020-0477-KSJM, Dkt. 183 at 1-2 (Del. Ch.
Jan. 31, 2024) (Letter from Court) (“Given…the likelihood that [the Tornetta Action] will
raise legal arguments similar to those at issue here, I am holding the pending motions in
this action in abeyance.”); cf. MidAtlantic Farm Credit, ACA v. Morgan, 2015 WL
1035423, at *5 (Del. Ch. Mar. 4, 2015) (estopping “shifting positions” in related litigation).
16
D. The Litigation Created Additional Non-Quantified Value
The Action exposed the Board’s significant conflicts and that—at least here—
Musk controlled the Board. Indeed, even Objector Steffens concedes that “[t]he
Opinion clarified additional disclosure and process requirements for the stockholder
vote and special committee process, and Tesla will presumably govern itself in
accordance with those requirements in the future.”51 The Post-Trial Opinion also
generally), should the controlled Board endeavor to discharge their fiduciary duties
in the future. While these benefits were not quantified, they should52 create
51Steffens Objection 36; see also id. (acknowledging the “therapeutic benefit of improved
procedures”).
52Sadly, it is not clear that the Board—a majority of which the Court found conflicted
regarding the Grant, but which still voted to approve “ratification”—and particularly its
Chair, received the message. See, e.g., Tabby Kinder and Stephen Morris, I Might Wake
Up to a Tweet. I Don’t Wake Up to a Strategy Shift, Financial Times (May 17, 2024)
(Ex. 1) (Denholm quoted as referring to aspects of the Court’s Opinion as “crap” and
“absolute BS”).
17
III. TESLA’S FIXATION ON GDFV MISPRICES THE BENEFIT
CONFERRED
accounting benefit.53 But basing the fee award solely on that benefit improperly
ignores the substantially more significant benefits discussed supra at Section II.
Doing so is also improper because (i) GDFV does not reflect economic reality; and
(ii) Tesla’s $2.3B GDFV calculation is compromised by the inherent limitations and
relevant accounting measure at…the grant date of January 21, 2018.”54 Tesla
previously denigrated that same estimate as “not even a probabilistic estimate of the
compensation expense Tesla is likely to incur under the [Grant], much less a
probabilistic estimate of the value Musk is likely to realize under the [Grant].”55
calculation as the sole basis56 for his “accounting perspective only” analysis of the
18
Rescission’s “possible impact to Tesla”57—distinguished his “accounting
analysis.”60
does not accurately reflect actual economic reality; it is the product of an extremely
GDFVs are rough estimates that exclusively focus on the grant date, ignoring
all subsequent events. As Skinner acknowledged, “ASC 718 is not designed to and
does not reflect the economic substance of ESOs at any time subsequent to the grant
19
date of those ESOs.”62 Indeed, the Grant’s $2.3B GDFV cannot possibly reflect
present economic reality because, as Tesla concedes, granting Musk the same plan
assumptions and estimates,64 and “there’s a lot of…judgment involved” such that
that Skinner testified: “I would not say there is a correct number…we’re making
Committee actively sought “‘creative options’ they could employ to ‘solve for
20
unsound68 “10.52% illiquidity discount based on the Five-Year Hold Period,”69
which reduced the GDFV by ~$300M. That concerted effort to minimize the Grant’s
Skinner conceded that the SEC mandates upward adjustment of GDFV calculations
to account for positive internal projections and other MNPI.70 Thus, to the extent a
GDFV ever approximates economic reality, it does so only when all required
But as the Court recognized, Tesla’s $2.3B GDFV calculation “did not
account for the probability of hitting the operational milestones, nor did it
incorporate Tesla’s internal projections.”71 Thus, the GDFV ignored the Board’s
determination that three milestones were “70% likely to be achieved soon after the
Grant was approved,”72 “the S-curve’s exponential growth phase was imminent,”73
68 Among other things, as Skinner conceded, the Grant allowed Musk to immediately sell
post-exercise shares to pay both the exercise price and his tax obligations from exercising
all the options (Skinner Tr. 150:18-153:10, 412:2-19), which together could entail
immediately selling 50+% of the post-exercise shares.
69 Opinion 79.
70 Skinner Tr. 378:18-379:1, 380:9-381:2.
71 Opinion 79.
72 Id. at 186.
73 Id. at 84.
21
2020.”74 Critically, Skinner acknowledged that (i) to the extent Tesla’s internal
calculation was required;75 and (ii) any such adjustment would have increased the
Grant’s GDFV.76
unsurprising that Glass Lewis and ISS—despite not knowing about the above-
* * *
are thus inherently limited and unreliable as the (sole) basis for determining an
appropriate fee award. But here, Tesla intentionally skewed its $2.3B calculation
away from any semblance of reality. The Court should reject Tesla’s hubris in
arguing for a measure that Tesla’s own actions skewed and which Tesla previously
rejected.
74 Id. at 186.
75 Skinner Tr. 389:5-21, 392:18-393:16.
76 Id. at 381:4-382:2.
22
IV. DEFENDANTS’ AND OBJECTORS’ EVENT STUDIES PROVE
NOTHING ABOUT THE VALUE OF THE BENEFITS CONFERRED
BY THE ACTION
benefit achieved by Plaintiff. Given the clear valuation of the benefit conferred as
described supra, the Court need not consider any event study. Vice Chancellor
constrained to follow the market’s lead, and our law accords value to benefits other
than the present value of projected future cash flows as reflected in market prices.”77
But even if the Court considered the proffered event studies, they are useless
here because the benefit conferred is known and discretely quantifiable. As Bebchuk
explained, if a bank lost $50B because a deposit account went under, no event study
would be necessary to assess the value of the loss—the $50B loss is the direct result
of the event.78 Thus, no event study is necessary where the parties agree that the
rescinded options have an intrinsic value of ~$51B, and that “$50[B] by itself is the
antidilution effect.”79
Moreover, event studies are valuable only for addressing market reactions to
23
confounding news.”80 In complex fact patterns with confounding information, they
Indeed, Delaware law is clear that in fee contests (like in other situations),82
event studies are “unreliable” if potentially confounding factors are not fully
through settlement could be valued through an event study showing positive market
reaction to the settlement’s public announcement. The Court rejected the study,
citing “too many influencing factors in the market that the study does not adequately
24
take into account.”84 Despite the plaintiff’s expert’s claim that the news was already
priced into the market, the Court found the event study “unreliable for purposes of
Here, within minutes of the Opinion—which was issued after trading hours—
Musk made public statements reflecting his rejection of the Court’s rulings, and
stock price.
Indeed, Tesla’s experts Grenadier and Fischel both cite a Wedbush report
published the day after the Opinion’s issuance, stating it “now creates a tornado
84 Id. at 20.
85 Id. at 21.
86 See, e.g., Elon Musk, Twitter (Jan. 30, 2024, 5:14 p.m.), https://x.com/elonmusk/
status/1752455348106166598; Elon Musk, Twitter (Jan. 30, 2024 7:40 p.m.),
https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1752491924848820595; Elon Musk, Twitter (Feb. 1,
2024 12:09 a.m.), https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1752922071229722990.
87 See, e.g., Ex. 4 at 2 (“There are two pieces of negative information accompanying the
issuance of the Tornetta opinion that could have offset a positive benefit from the rescission
that both Fischel and Grenadier chose to ignore: (i) Increase in potential costs from Musk’s
AI threat….(ii) Negative information about Tesla governance….”); Bebchuk Tr. 206:9-
210:3 (same); Grenadier Tr. 108:24-109:8 (conceding failure to consider these events);
Fischel Tr. 235:6-20, 238:24-239:13, 241:22-242:5 (same).
25
situation for Tesla’s Board in the next move with the Street closely watching this
poker move.”88 That report, along with another issued two days later, delineates
three actions the Board might pursue: (i) appeal the Opinion, (ii) create a new 2018
Tesla’s Board might seek to replace the rescinded Grant “with a substantial
affect the share price, and that Musk’s threat to shift his AI and robotics focus
elsewhere absent a 25% Tesla stake—which carried particular force given Musk’s
cause the market to reduce Tesla’s value.”92 That report and Tesla’s own experts’
In a Shocker Delaware Judge Voids Musk Comp Package; Next Move in Board’s Hand,
88
Wedbush (Jan. 31, 2024) (Dkt. 354, Rickey Aff., Ex. A).
89Id.; Delaware Judge Likely Pushes TSLA to Incorporate in Texas-Musk Could Get to
25%, Wedbush (Feb. 2, 2024) (Ex. 5); see Grenadier Report ¶42.
90 Steffens Objection, Larcker Aff. ¶27.
91 See, e.g., Elon Musk (@elonmusk), X (Jan. 3, 2024 12:51am), https://x.com
/elonmusk/status/1742423298217033776 (“Tesla is an AI/robotics company that appears
to many to be a car company”); Elon Musk (@elonmusk), X (Apr. 27, 2024 8:13pm),
https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1784375472887066653 (“Tesla is the biggest AI
project on earth”).
92The Stock Price That Didn’t React: Tesla Reaction to Court’s Ruling, CRA Insights
Finance (Feb. 2024).
26
corporate opportunities—first made approximately two weeks before this Court’s
ordered Rescission.94
Rescission’s effect on the stock price from the impact of any of the confounding
information above—e.g., the likelihood Tesla would evade the Rescission and the
risk of Musk moving AI away from Tesla.95 That failure alone dooms their event
studies.96
compensation package for Musk could move the market for Tesla stock by $50B,97
and acknowledged the possibility that Musk losing focus linked to AI could move
27
the market by $50B.98 Yet Grenadier did not disaggregate those or other factors.99
Likewise, Fischel testified he did not analyze in isolation the stock price reaction to
effect.103 Thus, according to Grenadier, the lack of market reaction to the Opinion
most likely resulted from the market assuming the supine Board would again violate
98 Id. at 181:16-182:1.
99 Id. at 125:13-21, 129:17-24.
100 Fischel Tr. 238:24-240:1.
101 Grenadier Tr. 141:14-21.
102 Id. at 84:20-85:1; see also Fischel Tr. 240:2-13.
103 Grenadier Tr. at 83:13-18.
104Grenadier’s attempts to meaningfully distinguish between “confounding factors” and
“ramifications” (see, e.g., Grenadier Tr. 125:13-127:25) fails. He admits—as he must—
that the Opinion’s purported “ramifications”—such as Musk’s threats to move to Texas or
the likelihood that Tesla would defy the Court—could impact the stock price, thus
28
Additionally, the Opinion introduced significant other confounding
were exacerbated by Musk’s threats to take his focus—and Tesla’s assets and
immediate response to the Opinion. The proffered event studies fail to recognize or
The event studies also present myriad other issues. As Bebchuk and Jackson
noted, “Tesla[’s] stock price is very volatile, which makes it difficult even for effects
Fischel could not articulate the criteria used in selecting the events analyzed in his
study and why he omitted certain events related to this Action, such as the Court’s
denial of Defendants’ motion to dismiss or the stock price reaction on each trial
necessitating disaggregation from the Recission’s anti-dilution effect. See, e.g., id. at
129:2-130:20.
105 Opinion 123-58.
106 Ex. 4 at 3.
107 Fischel Tr. 177:7-24.
29
Fischel failed to use an industry benchmark for his event study that includes AI and
Tesla does not dispute the general proposition that under well-settled Delaware law,
First, Tesla’s argument that the requested fee constitutes a windfall because
Musk “worked for free” ignores that (i) the dispositive input for determining the
(ii) Musk was the biggest beneficiary of Tesla’s post-Grant stock price increase,
$100B;111 and (iii) through mid-August 2022, Musk was still being compensated
30
Second, Tesla claims it is unfair to credit Plaintiff’s Counsel for the $50B+
Rescission-based benefit because they did not drive the underlying increase in
Tesla’s stock price.113 That argument ignores the nature of the rescission remedy
and that, under Sugarland,114 the fee is dictated by—and directly proportional to—
benefit is conferred and (ii) the fee is a mere fraction of the conferred benefit.117
fee,118 yet completely ignores the perverse incentives engendered by their unserious
proposal to award “a fee equal to the $13.6[M] claimed lodestar.”119 Under Tesla’s
113 AB 43-44.
114 Id. at 18.
115 Dell, 300 A.3d at 687.
116 AB 44-45.
117 The CoC’s arguments about “abusive stockholder litigation” and “frivolous lawsuits
against corporations” (CoC Amicus 1-2, 5) are absurd in a case resulting in post-trial
findings of fiduciary breaches and elimination of a $55B compensation plan. The CoC’s
call for “greater transparency” in plaintiff’s counsel’s fee arrangements and “additional
safeguards” to reduce agency costs in derivative actions is grandstanding. Id. at 19-26.
Delaware fee requests are (i) made strictly under Delaware law; (ii) made in a fully public
and adversarial context; and (iii) adjudicated by the Court, which exercises its discretion
in a fiduciary capacity.
118AB 43-45; see also CoC Amicus 14-19 (urging Court to “consider the incentives it is
creating for other lawyers in bringing future cases”).
119 AB 2; see also Steffens Objection 27-29 (discussing contingent counsel incentives).
31
approach, a fee exceeding Tesla’s proposed $13.6M fee could have been achieved
in this Action by agreeing to a settlement shortly before the Opinion whereby Musk
would disgorge just 271,405120 of the 303,960,630 options Plaintiff rescinded via the
Rescission, or pay $45.7M121 in cash. Under either construct, Tesla and its
stockholders would have received less than 0.1%122 of the benefit achieved by
Plaintiff’s Counsel by shouldering full contingent risk and achieving total victory
Director Compensation Action: “As this Court has made clear, ‘The wealth
32
proposition for plaintiffs’ counsel is simple: If you want more for yourself, get more
investors”125 ignores that, as in all Delaware cases, the Sugarland doctrine dictates
that the benefit conferred drives the appropriate award, and that Plaintiff did not
control the timing of his request. Thus, the fee request is not “opportunistic[.]”126
Those arguments also misunderstand the nature of the rescission remedy—it is not
“compensatory” in nature and does not contemplate the reversal of changes that
unavailing.129 In Dann, after settling their claims, the plaintiffs sought fees for
124 Director Compensation Action, C.A. No. 2020-0477-KSJM, Dkt. 166 at 2 (Del. Ch.
Sept. 29, 2023) (Tesla’s Answering Brief) (quoting In re Orchard Enters., Inc. S’holder
Litig., 2014 WL 4181912, at *8 (Del. Ch. Aug. 22, 2014)).
125 AB 44.
126 Steffens Objection 21.
127 See supra Section I.
128 Dann v. Chrysler Corp., 215 A.2d 709 (Del. Ch. 1965).
129 See Steffens Objection 18-19.
130 Dann, 215 A.2d at 715.
33
• “[P]laintiffs’ counsel failed to prove that they filed meritorious
claims[.]”131
plaintiffs’ counsel full credit (i.e., 20%) for a $3.2M increased real estate sale price136
and partial credit (i.e., 5%) for a subsequent price increase arising from a bidding
Here, where the benefit conferred is entirely co-extensive with the Rescission
itself—i.e., is untethered to any event post-dating the Rescission and does not rely
on monetizing any pre-existing company asset (e.g., the real estate in Sugarland)—
131 Id.
132 Id. at 716.
133 Id.
134 Id.
135 Tesla’s citation to Medley’s paraphrasing of Dann is thus also unavailing. AB 44.
Seinfeld v. Coker is also clearly inapposite. 847 A.2d 330, 338 (Del. Ch. 2000) (“Nor was
this lawsuit a particularly hard fought, cost-intensive suit….No motion practice
occurred.”).
136 Sugarland Indus., Inc. v. Thomas, 420 A.2d 142, 150-51 (Del. 1980).
137 Id.
34
full credit is warranted. Sugarland thus strongly supports Plaintiff’s fee request and
underscores that, like in Dell and Americas Mining, the benefit conferred here is
Fifth, as further discussed infra at Section VI.A, any suggestion that the Court
including the Court’s recent Dell decision, which juxtaposed the pitfalls of a
“percentage-of-benefit method.”139
Counsel achieved complete post-trial victory and quantifiable economic benefits, the
138See, e.g., CoC Amicus 11 (acknowledging that “the Supreme Court did not impose a
declining percentage rule or cap in Americas Mining”).
139 Dell, 300 A.3d at 687, 703-15. Indeed, even in the federal securities context—which
entails significantly lower fee percentages than Delaware for several reasons, including
lower contingency risk given the higher likelihood of pre-trial settlement—“when
awarding fees for settlements of $1[B] or more, federal courts award approximately 10%”
(id. at 704 (emphasis added)), closely aligning with the 11.0145% requested here.
140AB 45 (quoting In re Cox Radio, Inc. S’holders Litig., 2010 WL 1806616, at *23
(Del. Ch. May 6, 2010) (emphasis added); see also, e.g., CoC Amicus 10 (acknowledging
“the Supreme Court has rejected a mechanical use of the lodestar method”).
141 See OB 33-34.
35
Supreme Court awarded a percentage-of-the-benefit fee without calculating or
therefore the requested fee’s value—had fallen nearly 26% relative to the January
any fee is final, which compounds the risk and uncertainty associated with Plaintiff’s
Delaware has wisely chosen not to institute a lodestar-based fee system, which
Delaware Supreme Court has “explicitly disapproved the Third Circuit’s lodestar
36
method” in favor of the Sugarland factors.145 This Court should not “deploy[] the
matures.”148 “If sophisticated clients do not care about lodestar multipliers when
percentages are available, judges should not care about them either.”149
in Dell, such actions often benefit from criminal or regulatory investigations, and
“securities class actions almost never go to trial,” with “many settl[ing] prior to
145Ams. Mining, Corp. v. Theriault, 51 A.3d 1213, 1254 (Del. 2012); see also Dell, 300
A.3d at 693.
146 Dell, 300 A.3d at 693.
147 Id.; see also, e.g., Eric Helland & Seth A. Seabury, Contingent-Fee Contracts in
Litigation: A Survey and Assessment, in RESEARCH HANDBOOK ON THE ECONOMICS OF
TORTS 383, 387-88 (Jenniffer Arlen ed., 2013) (identifying contingency fee agreements in
other contexts awarding 33% after surviving motion to dismiss and 40% in the event of an
appeal).
Dell, 300 A.3d at 706 (citing Brian T. Fitzpatrick, A Fiduciary Judge’s Guide to
148
(Amicus Brief).
37
discovery.”150 “In Chancery [] litigation, the calculus is quite different. Cases are
tried. The risk of a post-trial loss is real, and the risk of reversal is high.”151
Confirming that stark difference, Plaintiff and Plaintiff’s Counsel—the only litigant
investigation before filing suit, surviv[ed] [a] motion to dismiss, buil[t] a strong case
through [fact and expert] discovery,” “litigat[ed the] case through trial,” and
obtained an eleven-figure judgment, which they must now defend through appeal.152
inappropriate.
calculate the fee award, contending the benefits conferred are speculative and
nonquantifiable.154 They are neither. As explained supra at Section II, the benefits
150Dell, 300 A.3d at 709; see also id. at 707-08 (“These figures suggest that per case filed,
plaintiff’s lawyers in Chancery [] litigation face far higher rates of dismissal, far lower
prospects of settlement, and far smaller potential recoveries.”); accord id. at 710 (“Cases
are not tried, so there is no risk of a post-trial loss or a reversal of a victory on appeal.”).
151 Id. at 710.
152 Id. at 709.
153 Id. at 707.
154 Sciabacucchi v. Howley, 2023 WL 4345406, at *4 (Del. Ch. July 3, 2023).
38
to Tesla and its stockholders—restoring 303,960,630 shares and reversing ~8%
dilution—are known, and each side’s experts agree on the value of both. None of
plaintiff sued to invalidate a stock plan amendment that the defendants subsequently
withdrew, mooting the claim.156 The Court struggled to value the withdrawn plan
and its attendant incentives because, unlike here, “the Company never issued any of
these additional options.”157 Here, the intrinsic value of the issued, fully vested, and
Defendants’ experts, and no incentive offset is needed. Given that, unlike here, the
options in Citrix were never issued, had no determinate intrinsic value, created no
dilution effect, were never adjudged entirely unfair post-trial, and therefore required
an offset for future replacement awards, the Court resorted to quantum meruit to
155La. State. Emps.’ Ret. Sys. v. Citrix Sys., Inc., 2001 WL 1131364 (Del. Ch. Sept. 19,
2001).
156 Id. at *1, *3.
157 Id. at *7 (emphasis added).
158See id. at *7-9. The Citrix Court also considered an event study by Grenadier
which—contrary to Tesla’s mischaracterization—the Court found had “clear
shortcomings.” Id. at *8.
39
Tesla’s other authorities are similarly unavailing. To the extent relevant,
Cheniere fully supports the requested Fee Award. There, as part of a settlement, the
issuances for three years. Vice Chancellor Laster struggled to value the benefit
because neither party valued an anticipated alternative plan and its attendant
incentives.159 Here, the Court placed that failure singularly and squarely on
Defendants, and unlike in Cheniere, the benefits of the judgment rescinding the
post-trial: “If the plaintiffs had obtained a decision from the court on the merits that
invalidated the Original Award, then the facts would be different. In that case, the
comparison would be between a situation before the litigation where Simon had
received the Original Award, and a situation after the litigation where Simon did not
hold any award. The plaintiffs therefore would be entitled to have the benefits
In re Cheniere Energy, Inc. S’holders Litig., C.A. Nos. 9710-VCL & 9766-VCL, at 103-
159
04 (Del. Ch. Mar. 16, 2015) (TRANSCRIPT) (“I’ve considered whether to essentially
make the defendants lie in the bed they’ve made by not allowing them to make any
deduction for the unknown plan.”).
40
measured by the value of the full amount of the Original Award.”160 For that reason,
75% of contested equity awards even though, as the Court observed, “defendants
might have prevailed on the fair price component of the entire fairness review.”162
The Court struggled to value the canceled awards “based on different inputs to a
settlement, the company authorized and approved replacement equity awards to two
executives.165 The Investors Bancorp Court noted that “[r]educing the settlement
fund by the value of the replacement awards would seem to punish plaintiffs for
(TRANSCRIPT).
163 Id. at 16.
164 Grenadier Tr. 88:16-20; Skinner Tr. 446:15-22.
165 Invs. Bancorp., Consol. C.A. No. 12327-VCS, Tr. at 9-10.
166 Id. at 19-20 (emphasis added).
41
post-trial—as Simon Properties expressly held—the Court does not consider any
offset. Given those complexities, absent here, the Court awarded a fee representing
over 19% of what plaintiffs identified as a $39M common fund.167 Here, the ~11%
Bancorp award.
167 Id. at 10, 27. Nor are any other of Tesla’s other authorities on-point. See In re Anderson
Clayton S’holders Litig., 1988 WL 97480, at *4 (Del. Ch. Sept. 19, 1988) (finding litigation
“bears too attenuated a causal relationship” to purported benefit “to justify a fee calculated
by a formula or approach that incorporates…the value of that [purported benefit]”);
Friedman v. Baxter Travenol Laby’s, Inc., 1986 WL 2254, at *5 (Del. Ch. Feb. 18, 1986)
(finding plaintiff “made no effort to establish any discount to reflect [certain] possibilities
in attempting to value the benefit” despite “conced[ing]…at the hearing[] that [the $25-
$29M purported benefit] would have to be discounted”); In re Loral Space & Commc’ns
Inc. Consol. Litig., C.A. No. 2808-VCS, at 75 (Del. Ch. Dec. 22, 2008) (TRANSCRIPT)
(finding, but for certain non-contingent plaintiffs, the requested fee based on a percentage-
of-the-benefit would have been “easily justifiable”); In re Xencor, Inc., C.A. No. 10742-
CB, at 51 (Del. Ch. Dec. 10, 2015) (TRANSCRIPT) (granting fees requested for partial
settlement “clearing up a cloud in the capital structure of a corporation”); Off v. Ross, 2009
WL 4725978, at *7 (Del. Ch. Dec. 10, 2009) (granting mootness fee for
“negotiat[ing]…the proposed settlement that caused Defendants to extend the Rights
Offering on the terms they did,” which the Court rejected but Defendants nonetheless
implemented); In re Energy Transfer Equity, L.P. Unitholder Litig., 2019 WL 994045, at
*5 (Del. Ch. Feb. 28, 2019) (“I cannot tie [the $35.8M distribution increases] to the
litigation with sufficient certainty to shift fees.”); Knight v. Miller, 2023 WL 3750376, at
*8, *5 (Del. Ch. June 1, 2023) (providing no fee analysis after rejecting proposed
settlement which “does nothing of consequence” and finding the “categories of
enhancements [which] might arguably have provided some tangible (albeit modest)
benefits…were implemented well before the settlement was reached”); Krinsky v. Helfand,
156 A.2d 90, 94 (Del. Ch. 1959) (estimating total settlement value at $500,000, where
$200,000 represented “the difference between the option and market prices” when the
options were cancelled); Rovner v. Health-Chem Corp., 1998 WL 227908, at *4 (Del. Ch.
Apr. 27, 1998) (finding unpersuasive defendant’s argument that the “lawsuit did not
produce any tangible benefit for the class”); In re Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. S’holders Litig.,
C.A. No. 20507-VCS, at 74 (Del. Ch. Jan. 27, 2004) (TRANSCRIPT) (characterizing
valuation of the benefit as difference between deal price and closing price on day the deal
was abandoned as “a modest way of quantifying the benefit here”).
42
C. Tesla’s Quantum Meruit Approach is Deeply Flawed
the unprecedented outcome achieved by Plaintiff Counsel’s total trial victory, the
substantial contingency risk borne for over six years of litigation, the substantial time
including appeal.169
Moreover, awarding quantum meruit (i.e., less than 0.01% of the benefit
conferred) for rescinding the largest compensation plan in history (by multiples)
judgment that “ordered rescission of the [Grant].”170 It fails for several reasons.
43
A. The Purported “Ratification” is an Extrajudicial Scheme That
Has No Effect on the Court’s Merits Judgment
Following trial, the Court “enter[ed] judgment for the [P]laintiff”171 and
was a “‘final judgment on the merits’” rescinding the Grant.173 Tesla can only
challenge that judgment at this juncture through appeal or motion under Rules 59 or
60.174 Thus, the purported “ratification” cannot reinstate the Grant, has no effect on
the Court’s judgment and is irrelevant to the July 8 fee hearing—any other result
stockholders that: (i) “[w]e do not agree with what the Delaware Court
decided…[s]o we are coming to [stockholders] now so you can help fix the issue”176
and (ii) Tesla would apparently defy the Court’s Rescission order and “restore[] to
171Opinion 1; see also id. at 200 (“For the foregoing reasons, judgment is entered in
Plaintiff’s favor.”).
172 Id. at 192.
Dkt. 324 at 13 (citation omitted); see also id. at 14-15 (deeming order implementing the
173
44
Mr. Musk” all the rescinded options if “ratification” passed.177 Tesla’s counsel then
Court’s judgment, Plaintiff filed motions to preserve that judgment and the Court’s
jurisdiction.179 In response, Tesla acknowledged that the July 8 hearing relates only
to Plaintiff’s fee petition,180 and represented that Tesla will “obey the Court’s final
judgment on the merits”181 regardless of ratification and that the ratification “would
[not] ‘interfere with this Court’s jurisdiction over the...[f]ee [p]etition or this Court’s
ability to enter a final judgment so that the case may be appealed.’”182 The Court
mistaken.183
177 Id. at 85 (“If the [Grant] is ratified...[it] will be restored to Mr. Musk….”).
178 Dkt. 306 at 2.
179 See Dkts. 308-11.
180 Dkt. 313 at 8-9.
181 Dkt. 324 at 13.
182 Dkt. 340 at 6 (citing Dkt. 324 at 5-6).
183 Id. at 7.
45
Now, seemingly in defiance of those representations (and after using them to
claims the ratification “significantly impacts the claims and issues in this action,
including the Court’s final judgment” and claims that the July 8 hearing is not only
“on the Fee Petition [but also the] judgment.”185 That about-face has no bearing on
pending fee petition. And Defendants are estopped from arguing otherwise.186
and “Section 204 of the DGCL”187 fails for several additional reasons.
Preliminarily, the self-dealing Grant does not meet Section 204’s threshold
46
authorization.” Additionally, Section 204’s synopsis expressly states that it “is not
ratified under this section, are subject to traditional fiduciary and equitable
statutory ratification ploy—two law firms representing Tesla in this Action have
acknowledged: “Sections 204 and 205 only address the technical validity of prior
defectively-authorized acts, and do not affect fiduciary duties or any equitable claims
rejected Defendants’ initial ratification defense at the pleading stage nearly five
years ago.192 Citing the inherent coercion present when any conflicted controller
seeks to assert ratification, the Court ruled: “[W]hen conflicted controllers are
involved, our courts will not allow the controller to rely upon stockholder approval
190 Delaware General Assembly, House Bill 127, Original Synopsis (2013),
https://legis.delaware.gov/BillDetail/22641
191 Jeffrey R. Wolters & James D. Honaker (Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP),
Analysis of the 2013 Amendments to the Delaware General Corporation Law,
https://www.law.upenn.edu/live/files/6893-analysis-of-2013-dgcl-amendmentspdf; see
also C. Stephen Bigler & John Mark Zeberkiewicz (Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A.),
Restoring Equity: Delaware’s Legislative Cure for Defects in Stock Issuances and Other
Corporate Acts, 69 BUS. LAWYER 393, 414 (2014) (“An act that is properly ratified under
section 204…would not be insulated from an equitable challenge.”).
192 Tornetta v. Musk, 250 A.3d 793, 797-98, 809-10 (Del. Ch. 2019).
47
duty.”193 That is not only an accurate description of Delaware law; it is also—like
Plaintiff filed suit—has long been waived.194 And, at best, timely common-law
ratification could shift burdens at trial, but has no legal effect after a post-trial
to stockholders.196 Here, the Court found half of the directors who approved the
purported ratification conflicted regarding the very Grant they voted to ratify.197
48
Moreover, even shifting the burden at trial requires a non-coercive and
fully informed vote.199 Defendants’ purported ratification fails on both counts for
* * *
199Kahn v. M & F Worldwide Corp., 88 A.3d 635, 645-46 (Del. 2014) (“A controller that
employs and/or establishes only one of these dual procedural protections [i.e., “a fully-
informed, uncoerced majority of the minority stockholder[] vote[]”] would continue to
receive burden-shifting within the entire fairness standard of review framework.”); see also
[Proposed] Amicus Brief of Professor Charles M. Elson (“Elson Amicus”) (Dkt. 329,
Ex. A).
200 Elson Amicus 10 n.35; see also Proxy 89.
201Compare Proxy 75 (“[Grant] discussions first took place among the then-members of
the Compensation Committee….”), with Opinion 31 (“Musk put forward terms of a new
compensation plan during the April 9 call.”).
49
Thus, for several independent reasons, “ratification” cannot rescue
variable, fluctuates with the market, and ties directly to the primary benefits achieved
in this Action.202 Attempting to quantify in dollars the share-based award where the
year-to-date, Tesla shares have fallen nearly 30%, as Musk has: (i) threatened
stockholders that he must own 25% of Tesla to be “comfortable” not competing with
Tesla; (ii) attacked the Court and its Opinion, including demanding reincorporation
to Texas; and (iii) most recently, purloined Nvidia chips necessary to Tesla’s
promised future in AI to benefit one of his other companies. It would thus be foolish
to isolate Tesla’s January 30 share price and apply it to Plaintiff’s Counsel’s pre-
Opinion hours as a meaningful “cross check.” That overstates the “ask” by the
market’s decline and, given Tesla’s volatility (not to mention Musk’s), perhaps even
more.
earned, and indeed conservative under Delaware law—the Action did, after all,
50
rescind an “unfathomable” $55B compensation package, the largest in history by
concerned by the requested award’s size and desirous of a different approach, there
are other alternatives available that address the expressed concerns about
“windfalls.”
was awarded by this Court and affirmed by the Supreme Court over a decade ago in
Southern Peru. Adjusted to today’s dollars, a $35,000 hourly rate would be over
Indeed, even Tesla argues that this Action created compensable value equal
to its calculation of the Grant’s $2.3B GDFV (which, as discussed supra at Section
III, is substantially understated). But even using this low-end value estimate, the
benefit Plaintiff achieved here was significantly higher than the $1.347B (pre-
interest) Southern Peru benefit.204 Thus, a low-end cash award of roughly $1.0842B
203See OB 36-37 & n.123 (Americas Mining hourly rate ($35,000) in August 2012 adjusted
for inflation in January 2024).
204 In re S. Peru Copper Corp. S’holder Deriv. Litig., 52 A.3d 761, 819 (Del. Ch. 2011).
51
could be fashioned based solely on the affirmed, inflation-adjusted Southern Peru
numbers.205
But any such award would be unfairly low for two reasons. First, as noted in
plaintiff’s counsel to seek a conservative fee given “the reality [that] their own delays
penalty for counsel taking so long to prosecute the case that rescission was
impossible.207 Second, the ~$51B benefit achieved here is approximately 38x higher
$1.44B. Adjusting further to reflect the much higher result here is a matter of the
Court’s discretion. Plaintiff’s Counsel would submit that exercising the Court’s
discretion to award a cash fee of roughly twice the inflation-adjusted Southern Peru
Mining Court reduced the fee “because of plaintiff’s delay in prosecuting the case.”).
208 $51.1B ÷ $1.347B = 37.94.
52
hourly rate after reversing for the discount appropriately reflects the substantially
* * *
confident in its initial request, particularly given the unprecedented result achieved
here through complete victory at trial. Should the Court have concerns, Plaintiff’s
53
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons and those in Plaintiff’s Opening Brief, Plaintiff
respectfully requests that the Court approve the requested Fee Award.
54