Twitter gets a win over Musk with trial fast-tracked for October

Twitter gets a win over Musk with trial fast-tracked for October

Ruling marks first victory for Twitter in a case which many legal experts say Musk will be the underdog.

A lawyer for Twitter argued that Elon Musk was “engaging in sabotage” despite being contractually bound to close the deal. (AP pic)
NEW YORK:
Twitter Inc scored an early win against Elon Musk in its fight to make him complete his US$44 billion buyout, as a Delaware judge agreed to fast-track the case with an October trial date.

Chancery Court chief judge Kathaleen St. J. McCormick on Tuesday scheduled the trial for five days in the fall, instead of two weeks in February as the billionaire requested. Twitter argued it was suffering under the Tesla Inc founder’s withdrawal from the deal and disparagement of the social media company.

The ruling marks the first victory for Twitter in a case in which many legal experts say Musk will be the underdog.

In a hearing in Wilmington, the judge made clear she saw little merit in Musk’s scheduling arguments, saying his lawyers “underestimate the ability of this court to quickly process” complex disputes in merger-and-acquisition cases.

McCormick found that the battle over the teetering transaction was “creating a cloud of uncertainty” over Twitter. “The reality is, continued delays threaten imminent harm” to the company, she said.

The judge had no questions for Twitter’s lawyer after his argument but did stop Musk’s attorney when he called the Sept 19 trial start Twitter proposed “preposterous”. She cited a past case that moved to trial within three months and rejected the Musk lawyer’s argument that she herself took a year to get another case to trial, noting the constraints of the pandemic at the time.

McCormick told the parties to propose specific October dates for the non-jury trial and wrapped up the hearing – held remotely to accommodate her own case of Covid – in just over an hour and a half.

Twitter Jumps

Twitter shares jumped as much as 5.4% after the ruling. They were trading at US$39.32, up 2.4%, at 3:16 p.m. in New York. From the day Musk tweeted that the deal was “on hold” in mid-May, the stock had fallen as much as 22%. It hasn’t traded near the deal price of US$54.20 a share since the first two weeks after the acquisition was announced.

Lawyers for San Francisco-based Twitter had said they needed only four days to prove the world’s richest person must honour his agreement. Twitter filed suit last week to force Musk to consummate the transaction.

In Tuesday’s hearing, a lawyer for Twitter argued that Musk was “contractually obligated to use his best efforts to close deal.” Instead, he is “doing the exact opposite,” attorney William Savitt told the judge. “He’s engaging in sabotage.”

Under the buyout agreement, Musk is obligated to finalise the deal within two days of all the closing conditions being met, Savitt said. Those conditions will be met in early September, he said.

“Mr. Musk has no intention of keeping any of his promises,” the lawyer said.

‘Warp Speed’

Musk’s legal team has said Twitter was unfairly pushing for a “warp speed” trial. Musk said Twitter violated the terms of the buy-out deal by not turning over detailed information about so-called spam bot accounts within its system. The case requires a “forensic review and analysis of large swaths of data” about the bots along with other legal issues, Musk’s lawyers said in the filing.

Andrew Rossman, a lawyer for Musk, argued at the hearing that there was no need to rush a trial to meet an October deadline specified in the deal. The important date is when the financing commitments for the purchase expire, near the end of April of next year, he told the judge. A February trial would give the court enough time to decide the case and leave room for an appeal, Rossman said.

“The idea of running this case in 60 days” was “extraordinary,” he said of Twitter’s proposed schedule. “It’s a preposterous time frame.”

Rossman dismissed Twitter’s assertion that Musk is trying to run out the clock so the financing commitments lapse. His client “continued to use his best efforts to do the deal” by lining up financing and having his lawyers stay in communication with Twitter on the details right up to the day the company filed suit, he said.

“Mr. Musk has no motivation to harm Twitter,” given that he’s its second-largest shareholder, Rossman said.

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