The Guardian (USA)

Elon Musk’s unlikely foe in $56bn pay defeat: US thrash metal drummer

- Reuters in Wilmington

Elon Musk suffered one of the biggest legal losses in US history this week when the Tesla chief executive was stripped of his $56bn pay package in a case brought by an unlikely opponent: a former heavy metal drummer.

Richard Tornetta sued Musk in 2018, when Tornetta, a Pennsylvan­ia resident, held just nine shares of Tesla. The case eventually made its way to trial in late 2022 and on Tuesday a judge sided with Tornetta, voiding the enormous pay deal for being unfair to him and all his fellow Tesla shareholde­rs.

Tornetta could not be reached for a comment and his attorney declined to comment.

Until Tornetta’s case, Musk prevailed in a string of trials accusing him of defamation, of breaching his duty to shareholde­rs and of violating securities laws.

Based on his online presence, Tornetta seems to have more of an interest in creating audio gear for car-customizin­g enthusiast­s than going after corporate excess and malfeasanc­e.

He has posted light-hearted videos about gadgets he has created or mishaps, including describing how he torched his eyebrows.

Tornetta also turned up in videos drumming at the legendary former

New York club CBGB with his now-defunct metal band Dawn of Correction, which described its sound as “a swift kick to the face with a steel-toed work boot”.

On social media, fans of Tesla and Musk seemed to find the case a travesty of justice and speculated about Tornetta’s intentions and political affiliatio­ns, asking how an investor with such minuscule holdings could wield such power.

Delaware corporate case law is full of cases bearing the names of individual investors with tiny shareholdi­ngs who wound up shaping America’s corporate law.

Many law firms that represent shareholde­rs keep a stable of investors they can work with to bring cases, says

Eric Talley, who teaches corporate law at Columbia Law School. They might be pension funds with a broad range of stock holdings but they are also often individual­s like Tornetta.

The plaintiff signs paperwork to file the lawsuit and then generally gets out of the way, says Talley. The investors do not pay the law firm, which takes the case on contingenc­y, as the lawyers did in the Musk case.

Tornetta benefits from winning the case the same way other Tesla shareholde­rs benefit: saving the company billions of dollars that a subservien­t board of directors paid to Musk.

Business groups have long criticized cases brought by individual­s as an indication of potentiall­y abusive litigation. Delaware 10 years ago was plagued with lawsuits led by retail investors owning a few shares challengin­g merger deals. The cases were often quickly resolved with meaningles­s settlement­s that always included payments to the attorneys bringing the cases. Delaware judges and lawmakers eventually reined in the practice.

Experts said people like Tornetta are vital for policing boardrooms. Lawmakers and judges have long wanted large investment firms to lead such corporate litigation since they are better equipped to keep an eye on their lawyers’ tactics. But experts said fund managers do not want to jeopardize relationsh­ips on Wall Street.

So it was up to Tornetta to take on Musk.

“His name is now etched in the annals of corporate law,” Talley said. “My students will be reading Tornetta v Musk for the next 10 years.”

 ?? Sergei Gapon/AFP/Getty Images ?? The judge in Delaware voided Elon Musk’s enormous pay deal for being unfair to him and all his fellow Tesla shareholde­rs. Photograph:
Sergei Gapon/AFP/Getty Images The judge in Delaware voided Elon Musk’s enormous pay deal for being unfair to him and all his fellow Tesla shareholde­rs. Photograph:

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