Well, an awful lot, naturally, but Imma return to two of my favorite Musk subjects, namely, the pay package that was rescinded by Chancellor McCormick in Tornetta v. Musk, and the Twitter takeover.

So, Tornetta! Where we last left things, Chancellor McCormick had rejected Musk’s attempt to restore the pay package through shareholder ratification (Me and Mike Levin devoted a whole podcast to that decision, here). With that decision, and her award with attorneys’ fees, the case was finally over, and the defendants were able to appeal.

Which they did earlier this week.

Now, notices of appeal are usually sparse and rather dry reading, but not this time. To wit:

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that Defendants-Below/Appellants Elon Musk, Robyn M. Denholm, Antonio J. Gracias, James Murdoch, Linda Johnson Rice, Brad W. Buss, and Ira Ehrenpreis, hereby appeal to the Supreme Court of the State of Delaware from (i) the December 13, 2024 Order and Final Judgment entered by the Honorable Kathaleen St. J. McCormick (the “Judgment”), (ii) the December 2, 2024 Opinion Awarding Attorney’s Fees and Denying Motion to Revise the Post-Trial Opinion (the “Ratification Opinion”), (iii) the January 30, 2024 Post-Trial Opinion (the “Post-Trial Opinion”), (iv) the September 20, 2019 Opinion on Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Complaint (the “Motion to Dismiss Opinion”), and (v) all other rulings and interlocutory orders made appealable through the Judgment in and for New Castle County, by the Delaware Court of Chancery in C.A. No. 2018-0408-KSJM. A copy of the Judgment is attached hereto as Exhibit A. A copy of the Ratification Opinion is attached hereto as Exhibit B. A copy of the Post-Trial Opinion is attached hereto as Exhibit C. A copy of the Motion to Dismiss Opinion is attached hereto as Exhibit D.

The defendants can always change their minds about it, and maybe they’re just keeping their options open, but what this suggests is they plan to make an issue not just of the trial verdict, and not just of the ratification decision, but of the original denial of the motion to dismiss (which was when the case belonged to Vice Chancellor Slights, and I blogged about it here).

The thinking, I assume, is that if they prevail on the argument that the case should have been dismissed on the pleadings, then everything else is erased – the whole trial, the whole decision on ratification, and everything else.

That is an … aggressive argument, and also one that smacks a little bit of desperation. After all, it’s far easier to reverse a dismissal ruling (which is reviewed de novo) than it is to reverse trial findings (which are reviewed for clear error). Does this suggest Musk’s attorneys aren’t confident they get a reversal of the trial verdict? Or are they just hedging their bets? I suppose we have to wait for the briefing to get a better sense.

But that’s not all –

A while back, when Brazil ordered the seizure of Starlink’s assets to force Twitter to comply with court orders, I blogged about corporate separateness as applied to Elon Musk.

That was intended more as a hypothetical than anything else, but of course, since Elon Musk finds it necessary to hit every unit in the BizOrgs (and Sec Reg and M&A) syllabus, it’s now come to life.

Namely, in the wake of the Twitter takeover, Musk ordered that, well, a lot of Twitter’s contracts be broken, which led to a lot of litigation. One of those cases, Arnold v. X Corp., alleges that pre-Musk Twitter made promises about employee severance that post-Musk Twitter is obligated to honor. And the employees argue that Elon Musk, along with Twitter, is personally responsible for the debt on – you guessed it – a veil-piercing theory. The plaintiffs say:

Plaintiffs alleged that Musk, through X Holdings I and its successors, owns more than 50% of Twitter (and its successors) and dominates Twitter’s decisionmaking and operations. Plaintiffs also alleged Musk intermingled his companies’ assets, treating them as one and the same – and as extensions of himself – despite their ostensibly separate corporate existences.

Plaintiffs have also sufficiently alleged it would be inequitable to allow Musk to use the corporate form to escape liability. By intermingling his corporate assets in the alleged conduct without formally having Twitter contract with the employees of his other companies, Musk has created a situation where – absent claims against Musk himself – the corporate defendants could argue the discriminatory or other wrongful activity was engaged in by Tesla, Space X, or Boring Company employees working as Musk’s agents, not Twitter’s. Indeed, Defendants would have every incentive to do so. The only way to avoid such a shell-game is to recognize that Musk’s decision to treat his various corporations as interchangeable personal playthings opens him to personal liability for their actions. Moreover, as Plaintiffs alleged, Musk has repeatedly asserted that the debt load created by his acquisition of Twitter has driven Twitter to the edge of bankruptcy. Musk chose to saddle Twitter with crushing debt despite having more than enough money to pay Twitter’s purchase price with no debt. That is sufficient to allege that Twitter was undercapitalized, and that allowing him to use that (perhaps deliberate) undercapitalization to avoid liability for obligations taken on in that very acquisition would be inequitable and unjust. No more is necessary at the pleading stage.

Now, the standard for pleading veil piercing is very high, and one could reasonably question whether this was sufficient except, well … from the magistrate decision recommending the claims be sustained:

It is clear from Musk’s opening brief that he knew that Plaintiffs’ justification for keeping claims like Count III and IV alive as to him related to Plaintiffs’ assertions in the FAC about veil piercing/alter ego liability. … Yet for some reason, Musk only made arguments about this veil piercing/alter ego issue in a footnote in that opening brief. And even there, in that two-sentence footnote, Musk made only one brief merits-based assertion as to why the veil piercing allegations in the FAC would be insufficient to plausibly allege alter ego liability: i.e., that “Plaintiffs fail to explain [in the FAC] how respecting the corporate form would lead to an ‘injustice’ or ‘inequitable’ result’ as is necessary to pierce the corporate veil[.]”

Arguments raised solely in footnotes are considered waived or forfeited. This policy is understandable, in part because when a party makes arguments like these only in a footnote, such arguments tend to be sparse and unhelpful—and they end up leading to insufficient and unhelpful briefing on important legal matters. Indeed, that exactly is what happened here, due to the fact that Musk did not sufficiently address the veil piercing/alter ego issue in his opening brief.

Therefore, since Musk waived or forfeited any argument that Counts III and IV should be dismissed due to Plaintiffs’ failure to plausibly assert that Twitter’s corporate veil should be pierced, his motion to dismiss these counts should be denied. The Court thus recommends denial of Musk’s motion to dismiss with respect to Plaintiffs’ breach of contract and promissory estoppel claims in Counts III and IV.

Arnold v. X Corp., No. 23-528-JLH-CJB (D. Del. Jan. 08, 2025).

So. There it is.

And another thing: Mike Levin and I open 2025 with a Shareholder Primacy podcast about aiding and abetting fiduciary breaches, and the empty voting saga at Masimo. Available here on Spotify, here on Apple, and here on YouTube.

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Photo of Ann Lipton Ann Lipton

Ann M. Lipton is Tulane Law School’s Michael M. Fleishman Professor in Business Law and Entrepreneurship and an affiliate of Tulane’s Murphy Institute.  An experienced securities and corporate litigator who has handled class actions involving some of the world’s largest companies, she joined …

Ann M. Lipton is Tulane Law School’s Michael M. Fleishman Professor in Business Law and Entrepreneurship and an affiliate of Tulane’s Murphy Institute.  An experienced securities and corporate litigator who has handled class actions involving some of the world’s largest companies, she joined the Tulane Law faculty in 2015 after two years as a visiting assistant professor at Duke University School of Law.

As a scholar, Lipton explores corporate governance, the relationships between corporations and investors, and the role of corporations in society. Read More