In January 2018, Tesla granted a “moonshot” award to Elon Musk, its founder, chair, and CEO. The award represented the largest equity award ever granted to a public company executive, anticipated to have an approximate value of $55.8 billion if the applicable performance criteria were achieved (which would have resulted in, among other things, an increase in Tesla’s market capitalization by $600 billion) and covering up to 12% of the total outstanding shares. The award was subject to 12 equal performance-based vesting tranches, each requiring an increase of the company’s market capitalization by $50 billion and the satisfaction of certain revenue or EBITDA targets.
In June 2018, a stockholder sued the board and Musk for, among other things, breaches of fiduciary duty, unjust enrichment, and waste. The case went to trial in November 2022, and, in January 2024, the Delaware Court of Chancery ordered that the moonshot award be rescinded in full after finding that it was tainted by improper board and stockholder approval processes and did not satisfy the entire fairness test.
After the rescission decision, a new special committee of the board recommended, and Tesla’s stockholders later approved, “ratification” of the 2018 grant in June 2024. However, the Court of Chancery refused to revise its opinion in light of that vote (rejecting the ratification), concluding the defense was waived post-trial and the proxy statement disclosures for the ratification were materially misleading.
Many aspects of the Court of Chancery decisions were controversial among corporate law practitioners and the founders, executives, board members, and others that they advise, fueling the recent perception that Delaware corporate law is becoming less predictable and its courts may be potentially hostile to the interests and expectations of Silicon Valley founders and investors.
Although the opinion noted that the justices held varying views on the underlying liability findings, the Supreme Court took the “narrower path” of reversing solely on remedy grounds, declining to address the underlying issues and holding that equitable rescission was improper because the parties could not be restored to the status quo ante and the trial court misallocated the burden of proposing alternative remedies to full rescission. The opinion was issued per curium (i.e., not authored by or attributed to a specific judge).
The Supreme Court held rescission requires a “mutual return to the status quo,” which was not possible after Musk’s six years of performance under the 2018 grant that led to full vesting of all tranches and substantial corporate value creation. The inability to “unscramble” Musk’s years of labor and Tesla’s realized benefits made rescission inequitable notwithstanding that the options remained unexercised.
The Supreme Court emphasized that equitable rescission aims to “unmake” a transaction and restore all parties substantially to their pre-transaction positions, a remedy to be ordered only when clearly warranted and feasible under current circumstances.
The Supreme Court rejected the Court of Chancery’s reliance on Musk’s preexisting equity stake and earlier compensation grants to justify rescission, holding while it was “powerful incentive” and relevant to his engagement with the company, it could not restore Musk to the status quo ante because it was not consideration for the additional services and labor he provided under the 2018 grant. Furthermore, the benefits from his preexisting equity stake were not the compensation he was promised if he achieved the 2018 grant milestones.
The Supreme Court held that the Court of Chancery erred in requiring defendants to propose a “viable alternative” to total rescission. The Supreme Court held that the plaintiff, having sought only equitable rescission, bore the burden to establish entitlement to that remedy and to propose and support entitlement to any alternative remedial framework if it was not entitled to full rescission.
Because the plaintiff sought only equitable rescission and failed to establish entitlement to any alternative remedy or evidentiary basis for damages, the Supreme Court awarded nominal damages to the plaintiff of $1.
The Supreme Court adopted Tesla’s proposed quantum meruit approach to the plaintiff’s counsel fees, awarding cash equal to “lodestar” (reasonable hours worked at a reasonable rate) with a 4x multiplier as well as expenses, plus post-judgment interest from December 2, 2024. The court reasoned that, while complete rescission was denied, the litigation conferred benefits on Tesla and its stockholders, meriting the counsel fee award.
The Delaware Supreme Court resolved the appeal on the narrow ground of remedy and expressly declined to reach the Court of Chancery’s liability determinations and related threshold questions. Accordingly, numerous questions raised by the Court of Chancery remain unanswered, including:
In addition to the unanswered questions described above, the opinion does not discuss the text or operation of amended DGCL § 144 (adopted after the Court of Chancery’s decision in this case). Amended DGCL § 144 provides safe harbors for certain conflicted transactions involving officers, directors, and controlling stockholders, but by its terms does not apply to suits commenced prior to its adoption. Accordingly, any interaction between this strictly remedies-based holding and the amended statute will have to be developed in future decisions, assuming DGCL § 144 survives the litigation currently challenging its constitutionality.
Because the Supreme Court’s decision does not address any of the procedural and other issues raised by the Court of Chancery, companies should continue to structure conflicted executive compensation transactions (and other conflicted transactions, including controller transactions) with rigorous process and fulsome disclosure, and avail themselves of the safe harbors provided by DGCL § 144, when possible.
The Delaware Supreme Court’s approach to its ruling in this case could also have larger implications in the great “DExit” debate and Delaware’s status as the preferred jurisdiction for corporations. Delaware courts have been under the spotlight in recent years for how they balance stockholder rights with managerial discretion, as well as their consistency with the settled expectations of practitioners, among other reasons. In response to the earlier Court of Chancery ruling rescinding the 2018 award, Tesla reincorporated from Delaware to Texas, citing concerns about legal unpredictability. A number of other companies have followed, citing similar concerns and reincorporating primarily to Nevada or Texas. While the Supreme Court’s ruling in this case and recent statutory changes may ease some of these concerns, it leaves in place other uncertainties for corporations considering whether or not to remain incorporated in Delaware.