The first female chief judge on Delaware's nationally known business court will oversee Twitter Inc's lawsuit that seeks to hold Elon Musk to his agreement to buy the social media platform for $44 billion, according to court records.
Kathaleen McCormick took over the role of chancellor, or
chief judge, last year after the retirement of Andre Bouchard on the Court of
Chancery, a favoured venue for large corporate disputes.
Among McCormick's first decisions will be a request by
Twitter to hold a four-day trial in September, an incredibly tight time frame
for such a complicated case.
McCormick's final ruling on the merger can be appealed to
the Delaware Supreme Court.
Twitter accused Musk of a long list of violations of the
merger agreement in the lawsuit it filed on Tuesday. It said the world's
richest man wanted to back out in part because of a downturn in the stock of
Tesla Inc, the electric vehicle maker where he is chief executive.
Musk accused Twitter of breaching the merger agreement
because it refused to share information on spam accounts, made misrepresentations
and strayed from its normal course of business by firing executives.
McCormick is also overseeing a case by shareholders of Tesla
who are seeking to void Musk's $56 billion compensation package from the
automaker.
She scheduled an October trial in that case. Delaware is
also a popular incorporation destination for most US public companies,
including Tesla and other Musk companies such as tunneling venture The Boring
Company and Space Exploration Technologies, known as SpaceX.
That gives the court jurisdiction over a vast amount of Musk
assets to coerce compliance if needed. Lawyers said the court would begin by
holding Musk in contempt and issuing fines until he did as ordered.
"The court has capacious powers to enforce its
orders," said Francis Pileggi, an attorney with Lewis Brisbois in
Wilmington, Delaware.
If Musk continued to ignore a judgment, the court could
order Tesla and other Delaware-incorporated companies in which Musk owns a
stake to freeze his assets or turn over shares.
"He'd be treated like a deadbeat dad not paying child
support," said Minor Myers, a professor of UConn School of Law. "It
would not be that hard." © Reuters
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