Los Angeles Times

Lawsuit against Uber’s ex- CEO to be arbitrated

- By Tracey Lien

SAN FRANCISCO — It must have been a bitterswee­t day for Travis Kalanick, the co- founder and former chief executive of Uber.

Hours after watching his replacemen­t, incoming CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi, address employees for the first time at an all- hands meeting, Kalanick, who was pressured to resign from the company in June, was handed a win: A fraud lawsuit filed against him by Uber investor Benchmark was sent to arbitratio­n.

“Mr. Kalanick is pleased that the court has ruled in his favor today and remains confident that he will prevail in the arbitratio­n process,” a spokesman for Kalanick said in a statement. “Benchmark’s false allegation­s are wholly without merit and have unnecessar­ily harmed Uber and its shareholde­rs.”

A Benchmark representa­tive said the f irm is looking forward to “presenting the facts” as the case proceeds. “This case is fundamenta­lly a question of integrity and values, and the facts will fully support Benchmark’s position,” the representa­tive said in a statement.

Benchmark, an early Uber investor and major shareholde­r that controls a board seat, f iled the suit against Kalanick in mid- August alleging that the former CEO defrauded the firm into approving three additional board seats and giving Kalanick appointmen­t powers.

The lawsuit sought to void the three board seats

created last year, one of which Kalanick occupies, which would remove Kalanick as a company director.

Benchmark filed the lawsuit in Delaware Chancery Court. In his own court f iling, Kalanick had sought to have the case moved to arbitratio­n. When cases go to arbitratio­n, an independen­t arbitrator settles the dispute and both parties avoid public deposition­s. Details uncovered during arbitratio­n often remain private, whereas court proceeding­s typically go on the public record.

The lawsuit alleges that Kalanick withheld informatio­n from Benchmark in 2016 when the three new board seats were being approved. Had Benchmark known about certain events — such as the mishandlin­g by Uber executives of a rape victim’s medical f iles, a forthcomin­g lawsuit from Waymo alleging theft and use of trade secrets, and accusation­s of sexism and discrimina­tion inside the company — it would not have approved of those seats, the lawsuit said.

Kalanick hit back days later, calling the lawsuit a “smear campaign,” alleging that Benchmark knew of those events and that the lawsuit was petty political maneuverin­g.

The contentiou­s lawsuit has divided Uber investors, some of whom believe the move is extreme but necessary, while others have vocally criticized Benchmark for adding to the strain on a company already in crisis.

In an impassione­d note that was shared with reporters Wednesday, Uber investor Shervin Pishevar described Benchmark’s litigation as callous and opportunis­tic, noting that the firm pressured Kalanick to resign from Uber mere weeks after Kalanick’s mother was killed in a boating accident.

“We write with the spirit of Bonnie Kalanick, who raised her son with deep unconditio­nal love and unfading faith in his ability to do good for the world. Whose tragic and untimely death was used against her son at his most vulnerable, unspeakabl­e time of pain,” Pishevar wrote. “They chose to strike at a moment of a devoted son’s retreat and leave of absence to mourn the absence of the inviolable love of his mother. In doing so, they join the very corruption her son had devoted such a fervent passion to fight.”

Pishevar went on to describe Benchmark’s actions as an “unholy alliance of perfidious greed devolving rapidly into the audacity of vituperati­ve unparallel­ed predatory rapacity.”

Investors who support the lawsuit but didn’t want to be quoted commenting on active litigation said the legal action was probably a last resort to create a clean slate for Khosrowsha­hi, who will be tasked with cleaning up the company’s culture and guiding it toward profitabil­ity and a much- anticipate­d initial public offering.

Khosrowsha­hi starts Tuesday, according to a tweet from Uber board member Arianna Huffington. Despite reports that Kalanick cried during the company all- hands meeting, he was all smiles by the end of it, a photo posted by Huffington with the exiting and incoming CEOs shows.

‘ Mr. Kalanick is pleased that the court has ruled in his favor today and remains confident that he will prevail in the arbitratio­n process.’ — A spokesman for Travis Kalanick, Uber’s former CEO

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