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Musk says he made some Tesla decisions without board nod, defends $56 billion pay

Published Nov 16, 2022 06:01AM ET Updated Nov 17, 2022 11:07AM ET
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© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Tesla Inc. founder Elon Musk speaks at the unveiling event by "The Boring Company" for the test tunnel of a proposed underground transportation network across Los Angeles County, in Hawthorne, California, U.S. December 18, 2018. Robyn Beck/Po
 
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By Tom Hals and Hyunjoo Jin

WILMINGTON, Del (Reuters) -Elon Musk said in court on Wednesday that he made some Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) Inc decisions without the approval of the company's directors, as he defended his $56 billion pay package against claims that he dictated its terms to a compliant board.

Tesla shareholder Richard Tornetta sued Musk and the board in 2018 and hopes to prove that Musk used his dominance over Tesla's board to obtain an outsized compensation package that did not require him to work at the electric car maker full-time.

Questioned by Tornetta's lawyer, Greg Varallo, Musk rejected claims that his pay package goals were easy to achieve.

"The amount of pain, no words can express," Musk said in a near-whisper, describing the effort required to get the company from brink of failure in 2017 to explosive growth. "It’s pain I would not wish to inflict upon anyone."

Varallo repeatedly sought to portray Tesla as a company under the grip of Musk, the world's richest person, and tried to show that Musk bypassed Tesla's board on several occasions.

For example, Musk said he made a unilateral call on ending Tesla's acceptance of Bitcoin cryptocurrency and acknowledged that the board was not informed before he told analysts in October that Tesla's board was considering buying back up to $10 billion of stock.

But the testimony did not definitely prove who developed Musk's 2018 pay package or establish whether it was a product of his demands rather than negotiations with the board.

The five-day trial comes as Musk is struggling to oversee a chaotic overhaul of Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR), which he was forced to buy for $44 billion in a separate legal battle before the same judge, Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick (NYSE:MKC), after trying to back out of that deal.

Musk tweeted this week that he was remaining at Twitter's San Francisco headquarters around the clock until he fixed that company's problems, and said on Wednesday he had come to Delaware on an overnight flight from the social media company.

Musk said his focus on restructuring Twitter would soon wind down and he would find someone else to lead it. He was dismissive of the argument that his pay deal should have obligated him to spend a set number of hours at Tesla.

"I pretty much work all the time," he said. "I don’t know what a punch clock would achieve."

While Musk has a history of combative testimony, calling lawyers "reprehensible" or "a bad human being," he was relatively restrained in Wednesday's proceedings, though at times expressed frustration with Tornetta's attorney.

At one point, Musk told the plaintiff lawyer, "your question is a complex question that is commonly used to mislead people."

Musk acknowledged that he was not a lawyer but added, "when you're in enough lawsuits you pick up a few things."

A 'PRODUCT GENIUS'

Tornetta has asked the court to rescind the 2018 package, which his attorney said was $20 billion larger than the annual gross domestic product of the state of Delaware.

The legal team for Musk and the Tesla directors have cast the pay package as a set of audacious goals that worked by driving 10-fold growth in Tesla's stock value, to more than $600 billion from around $50 billion.

They have argued the plan was developed by independent board members, advised by outside professionals and with input from large shareholders.

Tornetta's attorney tried to show Musk was involved from the start. An email from May 2017 appeared to establish that Musk was pushing for the pay plan months before the board negotiated it with him.

"I'm planning something really crazy, but also high risk," he wrote.

Antonio Gracias, a venture capital investor and longtime friend of Musk who was also a Tesla board member from 2007 to 2021, took the stand after Musk testified.

Gracias said he was prepared to push back on Musk if necessary. "I don’t pull punches with any of my CEOs," he told the court.

The disputed Tesla package allows Musk to buy 1% of Tesla's stock at a deep discount each time escalating performance and financial targets are met. Otherwise, Musk gets nothing.

Tesla has hit 11 of the 12 targets, according to court papers.

Shareholders generally cannot challenge executive compensation because courts typically defer to the judgment of directors. The Musk case survived a motion to dismiss because it was determined he might be considered a controlling shareholder, which means stricter rules apply.

Gracias described Musk as essential to the company's success in his testimony, calling him "extraordinary" and a "product genius."

Musk says he made some Tesla decisions without board nod, defends $56 billion pay
 

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Comments (10)
James Victorino
James Victorino Nov 19, 2022 11:24AM ET
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summary: Musk promised to artificially prop up Tesla's stock by repeatedly violating securities laws and making false representations to the public in exchange the company would pay him a $55 billion bonus in the form options, which would further dilute shares. The real question is whether the Court should enforce an agreement that encouraged or motivated Musk to engage in illegal activity so that he and the board members could profit. IMO, absolutely not! The agreement should be rescinded.
JJ JJ
JJ JJ Nov 18, 2022 5:30PM ET
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Hollywood actor.
Picaso Fish
Picaso_Fish Nov 17, 2022 6:43AM ET
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he has 9+ kids, he works all the time. Elon doesn't need to have minimum hourly amount of hours in his contract. He works all the time!!! 9 kids
Tre Hsi
Tre Hsi Nov 17, 2022 6:43AM ET
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if he works all the time how did he find time to father 9 kids with 6 women?
Huo Guo
Huo Guo Nov 17, 2022 6:43AM ET
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maybe he doesn't last long? everyone has a break in between and a few minutes could have been enough to get there
Trevor Roberts
LimitUp Nov 17, 2022 5:16AM ET
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The establishment and their sheep are in heat for Elon, was it the Halloween outfit that going them excited?
Larry Langley
Larry Langley Nov 17, 2022 4:49AM ET
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Like his lies to shareholders on why he sold off last year. Then all times stated no more selling. Then he does. Like a dog attention to a squirrel since Twitter.
Joel Schwartz
Joel Schwartz Nov 17, 2022 4:01AM ET
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The best thing for Tesla is to replace Musk. He’s cancerous for public image. He feeds the trolls - that’s his full time job.
Joel Schwartz
Joel Schwartz Nov 17, 2022 4:01AM ET
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Lol whoever is downvoting me is either overexposed to Tesla or simping for billionaires. Either way, you’re wrong.
Picaso Fish
Picaso_Fish Nov 17, 2022 4:01AM ET
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stock would pop probably on thr news, that musk leaves tesla
JJ JJ
JJ JJ Nov 17, 2022 4:01AM ET
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Agree.
Benjamin USA
Benjamin USA Nov 16, 2022 8:06PM ET
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Musk is losing it. He will get plowed by the SEC at some point and sued to heck by creditors.
Majahonda Sikari
Majahonda Sikari Nov 16, 2022 2:48PM ET
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The main question is "did Tornetta win or not?"
Ralph Dary
Ralph Dary Nov 16, 2022 10:05AM ET
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since he's a mental case, testimony will be quarrelsome st best.He's toast anyway.
JJ JJ
JJ JJ Nov 16, 2022 10:05AM ET
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Yup.
gab nea
gab nea Nov 16, 2022 6:47AM ET
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twitter used to be a real company before musk ruined it! now he will live there to repair it? besides a bad human being is elon not marrying any of his many babies mamas! he is losing like the orange criminal now!
Don Getty
Don Getty Nov 16, 2022 6:47AM ET
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he's going to be giving mouth to mouth to all the cute woman who will be very busy with intense hours of commitment - just like he did at tesla - 9 babies and counting
 
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