The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Judge delays Twitter trial, gives Musk time to seal sale

- By Matt O’brien and Barbara Ortutay

A judge has delayed a looming trial between Twitter and Elon Musk, giving the Spacex and Tesla CEO more time to close his $44 billion deal to buy the company after months spent fighting to get out of it.

Musk had asked to halt the upcoming Delaware court trial, where the billionair­e was expected to fare poorly against Twitter’s lawsuit to force him to complete his April merger agreement. Musk revived the takeover offer Monday, but said he needed time to get the financing in order.

Chancellor Kathaleen St. Jude Mccormick, head of the Delaware Chancery Court, said Thursday that Musk and Twitter now have until Oct. 28 to close the deal. A trial originally set for Oct. 17 will happen in November if they don’t, she said.

Twitter had asked Mccormick earlier Thursday to proceed with the trial, saying the billionair­e refuses to accept the “contractua­l obligation­s” of his April agreement to buy the social media company and take it private.

Twitter disputed Musk’s claim that the San Franciscob­ased company is refusing to accept his renewed bid. Musk told Twitter earlier this week he’s ready to buy the company once again after trying to back out of the deal over the summer, accusing it of refusing to give him informatio­n about “spam bot” accounts on the service.

Twitter described Musk’s move to delay the trial as “an invitation to further mischief and delay” after his arguments for terminatin­g the agreement haven’t had merit.

But after the judge’s ruling, Twitter reiterated in a statement that it was ready to close the deal on the share price agreed upon in April.

“We look forward to closing the transactio­n at $54.20 by October 28th,” referring to the price Musk originally offered for each Twitter share.

Brooklyn Law School professor Andrew Jennings said Twitter wants to be certain that the deal will get done and not allow “wiggle room for Musk to walk away again.”

Musk attorneys argued that Twitter was disagreein­g with the trial delay “based on the theoretica­l possibilit­y” of Musk not coming up with the financing, which they called “baseless speculatio­n.”

They said Musk’s financial backers “have indicated that they are prepared to honor their commitment­s” and are working to close the deal by Oct. 28.

Musk attorney Alex Spiro said in a statement Thursday that “Twitter offered Mr. Musk billions off the transactio­n price” but Musk “refused because Twitter attempted to put certain self-serving conditions on the deal.” He didn’t elaborate on what those conditions were. Twitter hasn’t described the talks beyond what its attorneys have said in court.

Twitter’s shares fell $1.91, or 3.7%, to close at $49.39 on Thursday. It was the stock’s second day of declines following a surge of more than 22% on Tuesday after Musk made his renewed offer to buy the company.

 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States