IN RE TESLA, INC. DIRECTOR COMPENSATION STOCKHOLDER LITIGATION

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 30, 2026
Docket52, 2025 & 53, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of IN RE TESLA, INC. DIRECTOR COMPENSATION STOCKHOLDER LITIGATION (IN RE TESLA, INC. DIRECTOR COMPENSATION STOCKHOLDER LITIGATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
IN RE TESLA, INC. DIRECTOR COMPENSATION STOCKHOLDER LITIGATION, (Del. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

IN RE TESLA, INC. § DIRECTOR COMPENSATION § CONSOLIDATED STOCKHOLDER LITIGATION § No. 52, 2025 & No. 53, 2025 § § Court Below: Court of Chancery § of the State of Delaware § § C.A. No. 2020-0477

Submitted: October 29, 2025 Decided: January 30, 2026

Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, TRAYNOR, LEGROW, and GRIFFITHS, Justices, constituting the Court en Banc.

Upon appeal from the Court of Chancery. AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART.

John L. Reed, Esquire, Ronald N. Brown, III, Esquire, DLA PIPER LLP (US), Wilmington, Delaware; Jason C. Jowers, Esquire, Brett M. McCartney, Esquire, Sarah T. Andrade, Esquire, BAYARD, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Brian T. Frawley, Esquire, Matthew A. Schwartz, Esquire, SULLIVAN & CROMWELL LLP, New York, New York; Jeffrey B. Wall, Esquire, Morgan L. Ratner, Esquire (argued), SULLIVAN & CROMWELL LLP, Washington, D.C. for Nominal Defendant-Below/Appellant, Tesla, Inc.

Andrew S. Dupre, Esquire (argued), AKERMAN LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Derrick Farrell, Esquire, BLEICHMAR FONTI & AULD LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Javier Bleichmar, Esquire, Joseph A. Fonti, Esquire, Nancy A. Kulesa, Esquire, George N. Bauer, Esquire, Thayne Stoddard, Esquire, BLEICHMAR FONTI & AULD LLP, New York, New York; William J. Fields, Esquire, Christopher J. Kupka, Esquire, Samir Shukurov, Esquire, FIELDS KUPKA & SHUKUROV LLP, Pleasantville, New York for Plaintiff-Below/Appellee, The Police and Fire Retirement System of the City of Detroit. Raymond J. DiCamillo, Esquire, Kevin M. Gallagher, Esquire, Kyle H. Lachmund, Esquire, RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Vanessa A. Lavely, Esquire, CRAVATH, SWAINE & MOORE LLP, New York, New York for Defendants-Below/Appellees, Elon Musk, Brad Buss, Robyn M. Denholm, Ira Ehrenpreis, Lawrence J. Ellison, Antonio J. Gracias, Stephen T. Jurvetson, Linda Johnson Rice, James Murdoch, Kimbal Musk, Kathleen Wilson-Thompson, and Hiromichi Mizuno.

Michael R. Levin, pro se, Chicago, Illinois.

2 SEITZ, Chief Justice:

This is an appeal from a derivative litigation settlement resolving excess

compensation claims against Tesla, Inc.’s non-employee directors. In its Court of

Chancery complaint, the plaintiff alleged that, from 2017 to 2020, the directors

received excessive stock options for their board service. After discovery and

mediation, the parties settled the dispute. The directors agreed to, among other

things, return to Tesla cash and stock as well as some of their unexercised stock

options. The Court of Chancery approved the settlement and awarded attorney’s

fees.

Tesla has appealed the Court of Chancery’s fee award. It argues that the court

awarded excessive fees by including in its financial benefit analysis the intrinsic

value of stock options returned to Tesla. Tesla argues that the court should have

considered only the value of the returned options to Tesla, not their value to the

directors. It also contends that the court applied an excessive percentage to the

financial benefit. In a separate appeal, an objector has challenged the Court of

Chancery’s settlement approval.

For the reasons explained below, we find that the court erred by including in

its financial benefit analysis the intrinsic value of the returned options. Our holding

moots Tesla’s second issue on appeal. Thus, we reverse and modify the fee award.

We also affirm the court’s judgment approving the settlement.

3 I.

A.

We limit our review of the background facts and procedural history to the two

issues raised on appeal – the objections to the settlement and the Court of Chancery’s

use of the intrinsic value of the returned stock options in its benefit analysis. In June

2020, The Police and Fire Retirement System of the City of Detroit (the “Plaintiff”)

filed a derivative suit against current and former non-employee Tesla board members

(the “Director Defendants”) and Elon Musk (together, the “Defendants”).1 As its

primary claim, the Plaintiff alleged that the Director Defendants breached their

fiduciary duty of loyalty by granting themselves “excessive and unfair”

compensation packages. The Plaintiff also alleged that Musk’s approval of the

packages breached his fiduciary duty of loyalty.

After discovery and mediation, the parties settled the litigation and entered

into a July 14, 2023 Stipulation and Agreement of Compromise and Settlement

(“Stipulation”).2 In the Stipulation, the Directors agreed that, in exchange for

1 The Director Defendants are Brad Buss, Robyn M. Denholm, Ira Ehrenpreis, Antonio J. Gracias, Stephen T. Jurvetson, Kimbal Musk, James Murdoch, Linda Johnson Rice, Lawrence J. Ellison, Kathleen Wilson-Thompson, and Hiromichi Mizuno. App. to Opening Br. at A66–67 [hereinafter “A__”] (Verified S’holder Deriv. Compl. [hereinafter Compl.]). 2 A260–97 (Stipulation). In this opinion we use the capitalized terms as defined in the Stipulation.

4 releases, they would “provide to Tesla the value of 3,130,406 options,”3 which the

parties agreed equaled $735,266,505 (“Settlement Option Amount”).4 The

Settlement Option Amount represented the “in the money” returned options valued

at $458,649,785 (“Returned Options”) and “$276,616,720 in Returned Cash and/or

Returned Stock.”5 “The value of each Returned Option [was the] difference between

[the closing price of Tesla stock on June 16, 2023] and the actual strike price of each

Returned Option,”6 that is, the “intrinsic value” of the Returned Options.7

According to the Stipulation, “[t]he number of authorized shares under Tesla’s

2019 Equity Incentive Plan (as described in Tesla’s SEC’s filings) [would be]

increased by the total number of Returned Options upon cancelation of the Returned

Options.”8 In other words, once the Director Defendants returned the options to

3 A275 (Stipulation § 2.1). 4 A277 (Stipulation § 2.6). 5 Id. The Stipulation defined Returned Options, Returned Cash and Returned Stock in Section 2.2. “Director Defendants shall return the Settlement Options in the form of (i) cash (‘Returned Cash’), (ii) unrestricted common shares of Tesla stock (‘Returned Stock’), and/or (iii) unexercised Tesla options awarded as compensation to the Director Defendants [between June 17, 2017, and July 14, 2023] (‘Returned Options’).” A275 (Stipulation § 2.2). 6 A276 (Stipulation § 2.3). 7 See Opening Br. Ex. B (Telephonic Rulings of the Ct. on Settlement, Award of Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses, and Incentive Award at 29:3–8 [hereinafter Bench Ruling]) (“Plaintiff’s counsel argues that the returned options should be valued in the same way as the returned stock – using the value of the canceled shares at the time of the settlement. This is, as I understand it, a way of measuring the intrinsic value of the underlying shares.”). 8 A276 (Stipulation § 2.3).

5 Tesla, the company cancelled the options.9 Tesla could then use the reserved shares

for employee compensation. Kenneth Moore, Tesla’s director of finance, stated that

the addition of the Returned Options “represent[ed] approximately 1.4% of the

[s]hares available for issuance under the 2019 [Equity Incentive Plan] as of August

31, 2023.”10

The Stipulation also provided that the Director Defendants would forgo any

compensation, equity-based or otherwise, for 2021 and 2022. The then-serving

Directors also agreed to forgo all compensation for 2023. The Stipulation did not

value the forgone compensation. The Plaintiff argued, however, that “using the same

valuation methodology” to calculate the Settlement Option Amount, the estimated

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