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
value of the forgone compensation was about $184 million.11
In addition, the Plaintiff secured corporate governance reforms. Among other
things, the Defendants agreed to Compensation Committee charter amendments
focused on its oversight role, annual board review of non-employee director
compensation, annual unaffiliated stockholder approval votes for non-employee
9 Id. (“Tesla shall cause the Returned Options to be canceled on the next Business Day after Final Approval.”). 10 A521 (Aff. of Kenneth Moore in Supp. of Tesla’s Opp’n to Pl.’s Counsel’s Req. for Award of Attorney’s Fees and Expenses ¶ 15 [hereinafter Moore Aff.]). 11 A441 (Pl’s. Corr. Opening Br. in Supp. of Settlement Approval, Award of Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses, and Incentive Award at 40).
6 director compensation, and additional proxy disclosures regarding non-employee
director compensation. The Compensation Committee also agreed to an immediate
review of Tesla’s internal controls specific to non-employee director compensation.
Section 6 of the Stipulation addressed “Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses.”
Section 6.1 provided that any fee award “shall be paid by Tesla out of the Settlement
Option Amount . . . and shall reduce the settlement consideration paid to Tesla
accordingly.”12 The parties also agreed that, after paying costs and the Fee and
Expense Award, “Tesla shall retain the balance of the Settlement Option Amount.”13
The Defendants did not agree in the Stipulation that any benefit had been conferred
on Tesla by the settlement.
B.
The Plaintiff and the Defendants requested that the court approve the
settlement. The Plaintiff’s counsel also requested $229,600,687 in attorneys’ fees
and $1,023,779 in expenses. The request added up to 25% of the settlement value
as calculated by counsel or $918,402,752 ($735,266,505, the Settlement Option
Amount, plus $184,160,026, the Plaintiff’s valuation of the forgone compensation,
minus $1,023,779, counsel’s out-of-pocket litigation expenses).14
12 A286–87 (Stipulation § 6.1). 13 A287–88 (Stipulation § 7.1(c)). 14 See A404 (Pl’s. Corr. Opening Br. in Supp. of Settlement Approval, Award of Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses, and Incentive Award at 3). The Plaintiff’s counsel request for $1,023,779 in out- 7 The Defendants supported the settlement, but Tesla opposed the fee request.
In opposing the fee award, it did not dispute that the Returned Cash and the Returned
Stock represented a dollar-for-dollar benefit to Tesla. But it contested counsel’s use
of the intrinsic value of the Returned Options to determine the benefit to Tesla. First,
as Tesla argued, the parties included the intrinsic value of the Returned Options in
the Stipulation to allow the Director Defendants to calculate the number of
unexercised options to return to Tesla. Tesla did not agree that it reflected the value
of those returned options to Tesla for the fee award. Second, according to Tesla, “the
value of an option in the hands of a Director Defendant is not the same as the value
of that option in the hands of Tesla.”15 Unlike the Director Defendants who could
have exercised the Returned Options, Tesla had to cancel the Returned Options.
Therefore, only a $19.9 million grant date fair value (“GDFV”), it argued,
corresponded to the future accounting benefit Tesla would recognize when it
“reverse[d] the Black-Scholes charge that it took when [the Returned Options] were
issued.”16 Finally, Tesla argued that the court should disregard any valuation of the
of-pocket litigation expenses and $50,000 incentive fee for the Plaintiff were approved by the Court of Chancery. Neither award is challenged on appeal. 15 A485 (Nominal Def. Tesla, Inc.’s Answering Br. in Opp’n to Pl’s. Counsel’s Request for Award of Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses at 9). 16 Id.
8 forgone compensation for lack of evidence that the Director Defendants would have
ultimately awarded themselves those options.
Without the intrinsic value of the unexercised options, the Defendants valued
the monetary benefit of the settlement at $295,492,233 ($276,616,720 of Returned
Cash and/or Returned Stock, plus the $19,899,292 million future accounting benefit
from cancelling the Returned Options, minus $1,023,779, counsel’s out-of-pocket
litigation expenses).17
Shareholder Michael Levin and three others opposed the settlement. Specific
to Mr. Levin’s objections, he argued first that the Stipulation should have expressly
required the Director Defendants to contribute ratably to the settlement. And second,
he claimed that the term “approval vote” was ambiguous. He sought an assurance
that the term “approval vote” was not merely advisory, but rather, would be binding
if the stockholders were to vote against a proposed compensation arrangement.
C.
The Court of Chancery approved the Stipulation over Mr. Levin’s objection.
The court accepted the Director Defendants’ representation that each of them would
fund the Settlement in proportion to the compensation that he or she received during
the relevant period. For Mr. Levin’s second objection, the court stated, “[a]s I read
17 A503 (Nominal Def. Tesla, Inc.’s Answering Br. in Opp’n to Pl’s. Counsel’s Request for Award of Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses at 27).
9 the stipulation, the company is committing to condition director compensation on
approval by the minority stockholders. That agreement and that term is as
enforceable as any corporate agreement.”18 The court took the Director Defendants
at their word that ‘‘approval’’ meant the vote was binding, and not merely advisory.19
Thus, the court dismissed the objection.
For the fee request, the court used the percentage of the benefit method to fix
the fee amount. First, the court observed that “neither side attempts to value the
governance benefits, so I too will ignore that category.”20 Second, the court found it
hard to quantify the value of the forgone compensation. The court also thought that
including a value for those benefits might lead to a windfall to counsel. Thus, it
assigned no value to those benefits.21
Third, the court considered whether to include the intrinsic value of the stock
options in the benefit calculation. The court started its analysis by noting that,
“[u]nlike in Tornetta [v. Musk], plaintiff does not argue that because the shares were
fully vested they were priced into Tesla’s trading price. Nor does Plaintiff advance
18 Bench Ruling at 23:17–21. 19 See id. 20 Id. at 28:3–5. 21 Id. at 31:21–32:22.
10 a reverse dilution theory.”22 Instead, the court noted that the “Plaintiff’s primary
argument for adopting this methodology is the Settlement Stipulation itself.”23 In
the Stipulation, the parties agreed that the value of each Returned Option would be
calculated by ascertaining the difference between the Settlement Stock Price and the
actual strike price for each Returned Option. According to the court, the Plaintiff’s
“approach ha[d] merit” and “conform[ed] with the language of the stipulation, as
well as the methodology recently adopted by [the Court of Chancery] in cases like
Vice Chancellor Glasscock’s decision in Wilcox v. Dolan.”24
The court was not persuaded by Tesla’s argument that the formula was
intended for a different purpose and did not reflect the benefit to the company.
According to the court, the Stipulation “speaks for itself.”25 Also, the court did “not
understand why Defendants would agree to use an intrinsic value formula for the
returned stock but not the returned options – the theoretical problems with that
approach are largely the same for both when the options are vested. And there is an
argument that they are priced into the market.”26
22 Id. at 29:9–12. 23 Id. at 29:13–14. 24 Id. at 29:15–23. 25 Id. at 30:12. 26 Id. at 30:11–18.
11 Finally, the court stated that it had already rejected a version of the “benefit to
Tesla alone” argument in its Tornetta fee decision. According to the court, it
reasoned in Tornetta that, “under Delaware law, investor-level benefits are a proper
basis for compensating plaintiff’s counsel.”27
The court also rejected Tesla’s GDFV alternative. According to the court,
“[a]lthough this approach [GDFV] tracks with the approach adopted in Tornetta,”
the court “did so to avoid awarding a windfall in fees.”28 The court also stated that
GDFV should be used as a value metric only in “exceptional cases” when “the
intrinsic value of the returned stock options at the time of litigation would have
resulted in a multibillion dollar fee award.”29 The court concluded that the
“Plaintiffs[’] proposed fee award based on intrinsic value falls within what our court
has held to be a reasonable range and therefore, does not warrant deviating from the
approach that the parties stipulated to.”30
27 Id. at 30:23–24. 28 Id. at 31:3–7. 29 Id. at 31:8–12. 30 Id. at 31:13–17.
12 Using a $458 million Returned Options value, the court awarded 24 % of the
total benefit achieved (which the Court of Chancery rounded to $734 million) or
$176,160,000.31
II.
On appeal, Mr. Levin repeats the arguments he made in the Court of Chancery.
Tesla argues that the Court of Chancery erred when it calculated the benefit
conferred by the settlement. According to Tesla, the court valued the Returned
Options based on their “in the money” or intrinsic value. But, Tesla says, in a
derivative suit, the court should consider only the financial benefit to Tesla and not
the loss to third parties by the settlement. In Tesla’s view, the GDFV represented the
financial benefit to Tesla.
Tesla also argues that the Stipulation did not require that the court use the
intrinsic value to determine the financial benefit. According to Tesla, the intrinsic
value was included only to allow the Director Defendants to calculate how many
options to return, and not to fix the value as a benefit to Tesla. Tesla claims that the
total financial benefit of the settlement to Tesla should have been $296.5 million.
And, Tesla argues, it never agreed in the Stipulation that $458.6 million represented
the value of the Returned Options to Tesla.
31 Id. at 34:5–6.
13 The Plaintiff’s counsel responds that the Stipulation expressly required the
Director Defendants to “deliver to Tesla the value of the Settlement Options, which
is equal to $735,266,505.”32 And, they argue, Tesla agreed that fees and expenses
would be paid “out of the Settlement Option Amount,” which was defined as
$735,266,505.33 As counsel sees it, Tesla benefitted by $735,266,505 when the
Director Defendants returned the options. The Stipulation therefore valued the
benefit to Tesla at that number. The GDFV of the Returned Options, they contend,
is limited to exceptional cases because it is not a valid measure of value. Further,
according to counsel, after Tornetta, the Returned Options represent an investor-
level benefit. Finally, counsel argues that, even if the Returned Options were not an
investor-level benefit, Tesla received a financial benefit from the Returned Options
because “it can use the stock underlying the Returned Options to compensate
employees or raise capital through sales at market prices.”34
We review the court’s decision to approve the settlement and the
reasonableness of the attorney’s fees award to decide whether the court exceeded its
32 Answering Br. at 5 (quoting Stipulation § 2.6). 33 Id. (quoting Stipulation § 6.1). 34 Id. at 6.
14 discretion.35 When, however, “the challenged award of fees ‘requires the
formulation of legal principles . . . that formulation is subject to de novo review.’”36
“We review the Court of Chancery’s contractual interpretation de novo.”37 All other
“[e]rrors of law are reviewed de novo.”38
We start by addressing Mr. Levin’s appeal from the Court of Chancery’s
settlement approval. The court relied on representations by counsel that addressed
each of his objections. It was within the Court of Chancery’s discretion to do so,
and we affirm the court’s approval of the settlement.39
Turning to the fee award, the common fund doctrine, an exception to the
American Rule, allows the plaintiff’s counsel “to be paid from the fund or property
which his efforts have created,” as long as those efforts “specifically and
35 In re Dell Techs. Inc. Class V S’holders Litig., 326 A.3d 686, 697 (Del. 2024); Kahn v. Sullivan, 594 A.2d 48, 62–63 (Del. 1991). 36 In re Delaware Pub. Schs. Litig., 312 A.3d 703, 715 (Del. 2024) (quoting Gannett Co., Inc. v. Bd. of Managers of the Del. Crim. Just. Info. Sys., 840 A.2d 1232, 1240 (Del. 2003)). 37 Exit Strategy, LLC v. Festival Retail Fund BH, L.P., 326 A.3d 356, 363 (Del. 2024) (citing Sunline Commercial Carriers, Inc. v. CITGO Petroleum Corp., 206 A.3d 836, 845 (Del. 2019)). 38 Dell, 326 A.3d at 697 (citing Dover Historical Soc’y, Inc. v. City of Dover Planning Comm’n, 902 A.2d 1084, 1089 (Del. 2006)). 39 See Kahn, 594 A.2d at 63 (holding that the Court of Chancery did not exceed its discretion to approve a settlement where its decision was “the product of an orderly and logical deductive process”).
15 substantially benefited the class which, in a derivative action, is the corporation.”40
The plaintiff’s counsel can also be compensated for non-quantifiable benefits to the
corporation.41 The court considers the factors in Sugarland Industries, Inc. v.
Thomas when determining a reasonable fee award.42 Those factors are: “1) the
results achieved; 2) the time and effort of counsel; 3) the relative complexities of the
litigation; 4) any contingency factor; and 5) the standing and ability of counsel
involved.”43 The “[p]laintiff bears the burden of establishing the value of any benefit
conferred.”44 Before approving the settlement, “the Court of Chancery must make
an independent determination of reasonableness. . . .”45
Here, we address the only contested Sugarland factor – the benefit achieved
through the litigation and settlement. It is undisputed that about $296 million was
returned to Tesla, consisting mostly of Returned Cash and/or Returned Stock, and
resulted in a common fund that directly benefitted Tesla. And counsel has not cross-
40 Chrysler Corp. v. Dann, 223 A.2d 384, 386 (Del. 1966) [hereinafter Chrysler II]. 41 See, e.g., Ryan v. Gifford, 2009 WL 18143, at *13 (Del. Ch. Jan. 2, 2009) (awarding fees for the cancellation, re-pricing, and surrender of stock options, which the court referred to as a “non- monetary recovery”). 42 420 A.2d 142, 149–50 (Del. 1980). 43 Ams. Mining Corp. v. Theriault, 51 A.3d 1213, 1254 (Del. 2012) (citing Sugarland Indus., Inc., 420 A.2d at 149). 44 Garfield v. Boxed, Inc., 2022 WL 17959766, at *10 (Del. Ch. Dec. 27, 2022). 45 Dell, 326 A.3d at 697 (citing Goodrich v. E.F. Hutton Grp., Inc., 681 A.2d 1039, 1045–46 (Del. 1996)).
16 appealed the court’s ruling addressing other non-quantifiable benefits. Thus, the
dispute centers on the $458 million intrinsic value of the returned, unexercised
options that Tesla cancelled.
We reverse the Court of Chancery’s decision to include $458 million in the
benefit calculation because, as explained below: (1) Tesla did not agree in the
Stipulation that the intrinsic value of the Returned Options benefitted Tesla; (2)
regardless, the court had an independent duty to evaluate the benefit to Tesla; and
(3) the court should not have included the $458 million in Returned Options as an
investor-level benefit in its fee calculation.
1.
First, we disagree with the court that the Stipulation required the court to
include the intrinsic value of the Returned Options in the benefit calculation. In our
view, the Stipulation is unambiguous on this point.46 The Director Defendants did
not agree to return all their unexercised options. Instead, the Stipulation required
the Director Defendants to “deliver to Tesla the value of the Settlement Options,
which is equal to $735,266,505.”47 The $458 million Returned Options value
included in the total was needed to calculate how many options to return. Neither
46 Weinberg v. Waystar, Inc., 294 A.3d 1039, 1044 (Del. 2023) (“Where language is unambiguous, we ‘will give effect to the plain meaning of the contract’s terms and provisions.’”) (quoting Manti Hldgs, LLC v. Authentix Acquisition Co., Inc., 261 A.3d 1199, 1208 (Del. 2021)). 47 A277 (Stipulation § 2.6).
17 the Defendants nor Tesla agreed in the Stipulation that the $458 million Returned
Options’ intrinsic value should be included in the financial benefit for purposes of
awarding fees.
The Court of Chancery dealt with a similar situation in Dann v. Chrysler
Corporation.48 The settlement stipulation in Dann provided that “the individual
defendants hereto and Chrysler acknowledge[d] that the aforesaid modification of
the authorization for incentive compensation awards by Chrysler is the result of the
bringing of the litigation and the specific suggestion of plaintiffs’ counsel.”49 Dann’s
attorneys claimed that, by the settlement stipulation language, the defendants agreed
that the plaintiffs’ attorneys had conferred a benefit on Chrysler.
But as the court “construe[d] the terms of settlement,” Chrysler had not
conceded the point without express language in the settlement stipulation agreeing
to it. As the court held, “Chrysler did not explicitly agree that, for purposes of fee
allowances, plaintiffs conferred any benefit upon Chrysler.”50 Nor did Tesla do so
here.
Our reading fits with other Stipulation provisions. By accepting and
cancelling the Returned Options, Tesla did not receive $458 million in value that
48 215 A.2d 709 (Del. Ch. 1965), aff’d, Chrysler II, 223 A.2d 384. 49 Id. at 712. 50 Id.
18 contributed to a common fund. This is because Section 2.3 required Tesla to
“cancel[]” the Returned Options upon settlement approval and return the underlying
shares to the 2019 Equity Incentive Plan.51 Tesla could not, for example, accept the
returned options, exercise the options, and sell the underlying shares for their then-
current market value.52
Further, Section 6.1 stated that “any” fee award “shall be paid by Tesla out of
the Settlement Option Amount . . . and shall reduce the settlement consideration paid
to Tesla accordingly.”53 Although the Settlement Option Amount included the
intrinsic value of the Returned Options, the Returned Options did not contribute
liquid assets that could be “paid by Tesla” to the Plaintiff’s attorneys. In the same
manner, the Returned Options could not reduce the consideration “paid to Tesla.”
51 A276 (Stipulation § 2.3). 52 The Plaintiff’s counsel argues that although the Stipulation requires the shares underlying the Returned Options to be returned to the 2019 Equity Incentive Plan (“EIP”), the company could nevertheless “use the underlying shares for any proper corporate purpose.” Answering Br. at 53. According to counsel, the 2019 EIP “only requires Tesla to ‘reserve and keep available such number of [s]hares as will be sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the Plan.’” Id. at 54 (citing App. to Answering Br. at B13 [hereinafter “B__”] (2019 Equity Incentive Plan, Ex. 4.2 to Form S-8, Registration Statement, Tesla, Inc. (June 12, 2019)) [hereinafter 2019 EIP]). Counsel argues that this “suggests that if the returned shares result in a total that exceeds what needs to be reserved,” the company “could” use the underlying shares for any corporate purpose. Id. This argument is highly speculative and conflicts with other 2019 EIP provisions. See B13 (2019 EIP) (“If an [a]ward expires or becomes unexercisable without having been exercised in full . . . [the underlying shares] subject thereto will become available for future grant under the Plan.”) (emphasis added). 53 A286–87 (Stipulation § 6.1) (emphasis added).
19 Finally, even if the Stipulation provided otherwise, the court must make an
independent inquiry into the value of the benefit conferred on the corporation.54
2.
The court relied primarily on the Stipulation to include the Returned Options’
intrinsic value in its benefit analysis. It was not, however, the only basis. The court
also noted that, in Tornetta,55 it considered a “priced into Tesla’s trading price”
valuation or “reverse dilution” valuation as a path to quantifiable investor-level
benefits for a derivative fee award. Even though the court recognized that counsel
in this case did not pursue those valuations, it found nonetheless that Tornetta
applied. According to the court, the Returned Options’ $458 million intrinsic value
resulted in a quantifiable investor-level benefit, which was “a proper basis for
compensating plaintiff’s counsel” in a derivative case.56
As explained below, derivative litigation is brought on behalf of the
corporation. Thus, the court typically should look to the benefit to the corporation
54 See Sciabacucchi v. Howley, 2023 WL 4345406, at *2, *4–6 (Del. Ch. July 3, 2023) (despite the company agreeing in derivative settlement stipulation that the actual “benefit” of a term prohibiting cash dividend equivalent payments was $23.8 million, the court found that the valuation rested on a series of “assumptions and unknowns” making a percentage of the benefit approach to fees inappropriate and awarding counsel $1 million for the “therapeutic benefits”); Goodrich, 681 A.2d at 1045–46 (Del. 1996). 55 Tornetta v. Musk, 326 A.3d 1203 (Del. Ch. 2024), rev’d on other grounds, In re Tesla, Inc. Deriv. Litig., 2025 WL 3689114 (Del. Dec. 19, 2025). 56 Bench Ruling at 30:23–24.
20 when awarding fees. There are situations in which the court has endorsed investor-
level relief in cases involving derivative claims. The Court of Chancery has
recognized, however, that those cases are limited to situations in which entity-level
relief would be economically inefficient, would not redress the wrong suffered, or
would allow the wrongdoer to benefit from the wrongdoing. Returning unexercised
stock options for cancellation does not fit within these exceptions.
i.
In Brookfield Asset Management, Inc. v. Rosson,57 we reaffirmed the
distinction between direct and derivative claims explained in Tooley v. Donaldson,
Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc.58 – in a derivative action, “the recovery, if any, flows only to
the corporation.”59 It follows that, in assessing the benefit in a derivative suit
recovery, the court should, in general, focus on the benefit to the corporation.60
In Tornetta, the Court of Chancery decided that “Brookfield does not demand
that this court ignore investor-level benefits when valuing benefits of derivative
lawsuits for the purpose of awarding attorney’s fees.”61 According to the court,
57 261 A.3d 1251 (Del. 2021). 58 845 A.2d 1031 (Del. 2004). 59 Id. at 1036. 60 Chrysler II, 223 A.2d at 386 (observing that in a derivative action the benefited class is the corporation). 61 Tornetta, 326 A.3d at 1245.
21 “The transitive property of entity litigation recognizes that a derivative action that asserts claims for breaches of fiduciary duty . . . and an investor class action that asserts similar theories . . . can be functionally equivalent and, therefore, substitutes.” In other words, “an entity-level recovery can be the equivalent of an investor-level recovery and vice versa” and one can be “reframed” as the other. Indeed, under these principles, derivative actions are routinely resolved “using investor- level relief.”62
The Court of Chancery has recognized that, when fashioning a remedy in
cases involving derivative claims, the court can, in certain situations, exercise its
equitable authority or approve derivative settlements that benefit the stockholders
directly or prevent wrongdoers from profiting from their wrongs. For instance, in
Goldstein v. Denner, relied upon by the court in Tornetta, the court thoroughly
explored when investor-level benefits are appropriate.63 The Court of Chancery
concluded that an investor-level remedy could be ordered in a derivative case, but in
certain recurring circumstances.
Specifically the court in Goldstein observed that, commentators have
“generalize[d] from the various precedents” that there are “recurring scenarios” for
“investor-level recovery on an entity-level claim:”64
• Cases where the defendants are insiders who misappropriated corporate property such that an entity-level recovery would return the property to the wrongdoers’ control.
62 Id. at 1245–46 (citations omitted). 63 Goldstein v. Denner, 2022 WL 1797224, at *17–20 (Del. Ch. June 2, 2022). 64 Id. at *17.
22 • Cases where an entity-level recovery would benefit “guilty” stockholders, but an investor-level recovery could be more narrowly tailored to benefit only “innocent” stockholders.
• Cases where the entity is no longer an independent going concern, such that channeling the recovery through the corporation is no longer feasible or a pro rata recovery is more efficient.65
The court noted that, at times, courts have “granted pro rata recoveries in
derivative actions at the request of the defendants” to allow the defendants to “pay
less in terms of the aggregate amount of damages.”66 The court also pointed to
Delaware decisions where the court approved derivative action settlements with
“some form of stockholder-level consideration, such as either a dividend to
stockholders or a buyout to the minority.”67 In Goldstein, the court concluded that,
65 Id. (citations omitted). 66 Id. at *18 (citing Brown v. DeYoung, 47 N.E. 863, 865 (Ill. 1897); Matthews v. Headley Chocolate Co., 100 A. 645, 651 (Md. 1917); Shanik v. Empire Power Corp., 58 N.Y.S.2d 176, 181–82 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1945); Joyce v. Congdon, 195 P. 29, 30 (Wash. 1921); Note, Personal Recovery By Shareholders For Injury To Corporation, 2 U. CHI. L. REV. 317, 321 (1935)). 67 Id. at *18–19 (summarizing Baker v. Sadiq, 2016 WL 4375250, at *4–5 (Del. Ch. Aug. 16, 2016) (derivative settlement structured as cash payment to buy out the minority stockholders); In re Clear Channel Outdoor Hldgs, Inc. Deriv. Litig., C.A. No. 7315, Dkt. No. 97 at 35, 38 (Del. Ch. Sep. 9, 2013) (TRANSCRIPT) (settlement included special dividend to minority stockholders); Davis v. Holmes, C.A. No. 638, Dkt. No. 161 at 4, 23 (Del. Ch. June 21, 2006) (TRANSCRIPT) (approving settlement for what “really [was] a derivative claim,” where the settlement included the creation of a $3.2 million fund distributed as dividend to common stockholders); In re Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. Deriv. Litig., C.A. No. 8145, Dkt. No. 265 at 70 (Del. Ch. Apr. 7, 2015) (TRANSCRIPT) (settlement included $137.5 million special dividend for the minority stockholders); Franklin Balance Sheet Invs. Fund v. Crowley, 2007 WL 2495018, at *1-2 (Del. Ch. Aug. 30, 2007) (settlement required defendants taking nominal defendant private via a short form merger, therefore, investor-level benefit was the pro rata value of stock); Gerber v. EPE 23 in a derivative case, “the functional and equitable equivalent of an entity-level
recovery can be an investor-level recovery” such that “the injured investors receive
their pro rata share of the amount that otherwise would go to the entity.”68
The court in Tornetta also relied on Baker v. Sadiq.69 There, the plaintiffs
brought a derivative suit against Navseeker, Inc. and its controlling stockholder,
seeking $25 million in damages for misappropriating technology from NavSeeker.70
At the time, NavSeeker’s value was between $20-25 million. The minority
stockholders not affiliated with the defendants owned 10.75% of Navseeker’s equity.
Even assuming a full recovery, the minority stockholders stood to gain about $2.6
million through an “indirect increase in the value of their shares.”71
In the settlement, the parties agreed that, among other things, the controller or
other affiliated entities would pay $2.75 million to Navseeker and forgive $500,000
in debt. NavSeeker agreed to use the money to buy out the minority stockholders.
Hldgs, LLC, C.A. Nos. 5989 & 3543, Dkt. 103 at 22, 25 (Del. Ch. July 1, 2014) (TRANSCRIPT) ($12.4 million cash payment to minority stockholders who owned about 22% of the company)). 68 Id. at *19 (citing Baker, 2016 WL 4375250, at *1). 69 2016 WL 4375250, at *4–5. 70 Id. 71 Id. at *5.
24 The parties stipulated that the $2.75 million payment was a corporate benefit, but
counsel reserved the right to argue that the corporate benefit exceeded that amount.72
The Court of Chancery approved the settlement and explained how the
derivative settlement payment structure benefitted all the settling parties:
The controllers only had to come up with $2.75 million instead of $25 million. The minority investors got real cash instead of an indirect increase in the value of their shares. Plus they were able to exit from a controlled company where they contended the controllers were engaging in wholesale misappropriation. And both sides severed a troubled relationship and put an end to the burdens of litigation.73
When it came to the fee award, counsel sought $6 million, arguing for the $25
million “implied derivative recovery” value instead of the $3.25 million paid to the
minority stockholders ($2.75 million to fund the minority buyout plus the $500,000
discharge of NavSeeker debt).74 The court held that “formal structure matters,”
meaning that it could not “value the benefit conferred . . . greater than $3.25 million,”
the financial benefit conferred on Navseeker, Inc.75 In other words, the minority
stockholders received an investor-level benefit, but the court limited its benefit
analysis to the amount Navseeker actually received through the settlement.
72 See id. at *4–5. 73 Id. at *5. 74 Id. 75 Id. at *6.
25 Specific to derivative litigation involving options, other than Tornetta, the
court has not treated settlements involving options as an investor-level benefit. For
instance, in Ryan v. Gifford, the Court of Chancery likened the corporate benefit from
returned options to a “non-monetary recovery.”76 In that case, the Court of Chancery
approved a derivative settlement and awarded counsel $9.5 million. The settlement
included about $28 million from a corporate-level cash recovery, as well as the
“cancellation, re-pricing, and surrender of thousands of stock options and . . .
corporate governance reforms[.]”77 The stock option settlement component was
“properly considered . . . in determining a fee award” but not based on an investor-
level benefit.78
Similarly, in Louisiana State Employees Retirement System v. Citrix Systems,
Inc., the plaintiff contended that its lawsuit caused the company to withdraw an
option plan. 79 In its fee request, the plaintiff argued that the withdrawn option plan
resulted in a $183 million benefit, which represented an attempt to “quantify the
dilutive effect of the additional stock options authorized,” i.e., the supposed
76 2009 WL 18143, at *13. 77 Id. 78 Id. 79 2001 WL 1131364, at *1 (De. Ch. Sep. 19, 2001).
26 investor-level benefit. Counsel requested $2 million in attorneys’ fees.80 The Court
of Chancery, however, declined to “engage in complicated and highly speculative
intellectual exercises in attempting to quantify what is, in essence, the non-
quantifiable benefit achieved by this litigation,” and awarded $140,000 under
quantum meruit.81 Other decisions have not viewed option-related settlements as
quantifiable investor-level benefits.82
Here, the court relied on a brief transcript ruling in Wilcox v. Dolan.83 In
Wilcox, the court awarded fees as a percentage of a $31 million value it assigned to
80 Id. at *7. 81 Id. at *9. See also In re Investors Bancorp, Inc., S’holder Litig., C.A. No. 12327, Dkt. 253 at 12, 16, 23 (Del. Ch. June 17, 2019) (TRANSCRIPT) [hereinafter Investors Settlement] (settlement rescinded 75% of the contested equity awards, including options to non-employee directors; despite both parties’ experts submitting “different valuations of the canceled options and restricted stock units,” the court awarded fees under a quantum meruit approach). 82 See, e.g., Rovner v. Health-Chem Corp., 1998 WL 227908, at *4–5 (Del. Ch. April 27, 1998) (despite lawsuit enabling company to retain rights in options, finding that it was “unlikely that the [c]ompany would be in a position to exercise its [o]ptions prior to their expiration,” and awarding fees under a quantum meruit approach); Krinsky v. Helfand, 156 A.2d 90, 94–95 (Del. 1959) (affirming the Court of Chancery’s award of attorneys’ fees because $500,000 was “probably a fair estimate of value recovered for the corporation[ ],” and noting general discomfort with using returned/cancelled options’ intrinsic value; “[a]t the time of the settlement agreement the difference between the option and market prices was approximately $200,000 . . . [w]hile that value may not be measurable in dollars and cents, it certainly is a material factor in considering the terms of the settlement”); Alvarado v. Lynch, C.A. 2020-0237, Dkt. No. 42 at 9, 23, 30–34 (Del. Ch. June 21, 2021) (TRANSCRIPT) (awarding fees in case alleging excessive non-employee director compensation where, among other things, company agreed to limit future amount of option compensation; the court described the settlement as creating “some meaningful benefits for the corporation”). 83 Wilcox v. Dolan, C.A. No. 2019-0245, Dkt. 47 at 27–28, 30–31 (Del. Ch. Sep. 8, 2020) (TRANSCRIPT) [hereinafter Wilcox].
27 forfeited options and performance stock units.84 The court also ordered the company
to fund the fee award because it was “the company and its stockholders who have
benefited[.]”85 Notably, unlike the Stipulation here, the settlement stipulation in
Wilcox did not address whether the underlying options were cancelled or if the
encumbered shares were committed to a specific corporate purpose.86
We agree with the Court of Chancery’s thoughtful analysis in Goldstein v.
Denner of derivative litigation investor-level benefits in certain recurring
circumstances. But those circumstances are not present here. The Stipulation did
not result in “the functional and equitable equivalent of an entity-level recovery.”
The settling parties did not structure the Stipulation such that Tesla stockholders
received a direct benefit from the settlement “that otherwise would go to [Tesla].”87
Instead, the Director Defendants agreed to return to Tesla the Returned Options,
84 Id. Strictly speaking, the court in Wilcox did not use the “intrinsic value” of the defendant’s forfeited options. There was extensive expert testimony – which included a Black Scholes analysis – demonstrating that the fair market value of the underwater forfeited options and performance stock units was $31 million. See generally Ex. A to Pl’s. Opening Br. in Supp. of the Proposed Settlement and Application for Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses, Wilcox v. Dolan, C.A. No. 2019- 0245, Dkt. 40 (Del. Ch. July 31, 2020). 85 Wilcox at 30. 86 Compare Stipulation and Agreement of Compromise, Settlement and Release, Wilcox v. Dolan, C.A. No. 2019-0245, Dkt. 32 (Del. Ch. June 18, 2020), with A276 (Stipulation § 2.3) (requiring the Returned Options to be cancelled and underlying shares returned to the 2019 Equity Incentive Plan). We note that in Tornetta, after the court ordered equitable recission of Musk’s 303,960,630 options, the underlying shares became authorized, unissued stock. Tornetta, 326 A.3d at 1239. 87 Goldstein, 2022 WL 1797224, at *19.
28 which were cancelled. The Stipulation was not intended to avoid the “wrongdoer
benefit” problem – the Director Defendants returned options for cancellation. And
the Stipulation was not part of a larger settlement in which the corporation bought
out the minority stockholders as part of a derivative recovery, a controlling
stockholder sought to pay less damages, or the investor-level benefit arose out of
creditor or collectability issues.
We end where we started. Unless an investor-level benefit falls within a
recognized exception, in a derivative action, the court must assess the benefit to the
corporation. Here, the $458 million intrinsic value of the cancelled options – which
the court characterized as an investor-level benefit – should have been excluded from
the common fund calculation.
3.
The Plaintiff’s counsel also argues that, in addition to “investor-level
benefits,” Tesla benefitted by at least $458.6 million from the Returned Options.
They claim that Tesla is “now free to use the shares that the Returned Options
covered . . . to compensate employees with restricted stock awards[.]”88 Although
the Returned Options freed-up the shares underlying the options for Tesla to use
under the terms of its 2019 Equity Incentive Plan, Tesla counters persuasively that
88 Answering Br. at 53.
29 counsel never demonstrated that a 1.4% increase to the 138 million shares already
available under Tesla’s equity compensation plans would be of value to Tesla, which
did “not expect to come close to awarding the maximum limit of available [s]hares
during the term of the 2019 EIP.”89 Other than that, counsel did not attempt to
quantify a benefit to Tesla.
Of course, all things being equal, counsel is entitled to consideration of a fee
for the non-quantifiable benefit to Tesla from the Returned Options.90 But here, even
without the nonquantifiable benefits, counsel will receive a fee of almost $71 million
– not opposed by Tesla – for the excellent result they achieved. As we measure it,
$71 million reflects a reasonable fee for counsel’s efforts and does not result in a
windfall.
4.
Finally, in Tornetta, the court remarked that refusing to extend derivative
settlement benefits to the investor-level would be ill-advised. According to the court,
“[b]ecause the investor-level benefits are often the primary benefit in those cases,”
excluding them “would eliminate compensable recovery for this category of
89 A521 (Moore Aff. ¶¶ 14, 15). 90 See Ryan, 2009 WL 18143, at *13 (fees awarded for “non-monetary” returned options benefit); La. State Empls. Ret. Sys., 2001 WL 1131364, at *9–10 (awarding quantum meruit fee for causing “non-quantifiable” withdrawn options plan benefit); Investors Settlement at 12, 16, 23 (awarding quantum meruit fees for rescinded options compensation).
30 derivative suit[],” and “effectively eliminate any incentive for contingent-fee
attorneys to pursue these claims.”91
We have not eliminated purported investor-level benefits in derivative actions,
just cabined them. As far as discouraging litigation, we are not so sure. Counsel
continue to file and have recovered fees in derivative cases for nonquantifiable
benefits to the corporation and its stockholders.92 Counsel has in the past and can
continue to secure a fee for non-quantifiable benefits in a derivative settlement or
judgment.
III.
Tesla agreed it would not contest the percentage the court applied to the
common fund if the intrinsic value of the returned options is excluded from the
91 Tornetta, 326 A.3d at 1245. 92 See Sciabacucchi, 2023 WL 4345406, at *1, *4, *6 (awarding counsel fees in a derivative case for “therapeutic settlement of excessive non-employee director compensation claims,” where the $1 million award was “based on a review of precedent”); Howland v. Kumar, C.A. No. 2018-0804, Dkt. No. 50 at 25–27, 30–32 (Del. Ch. Oct. 1, 2019) (TRANSCRIPT) (awarding fees following settlement in a derivative case providing for corporate governance reforms and repricing of options – did not use a percentage of the benefit approach); In re Emerson Radio S’holder Deriv. Litig, 2011 WL 1135006, at *2, *5–6 (Del. Ch. Mar. 28, 2011) (in addition to awarding percentage of monetary benefits conferred on corporation, the court awarded fees for therapeutic benefits which included “enhanced corporate governance procedures for related-party transactions”); Schumacher v. Loscalzo, 2023 WL 4842103, at *4–7 (Del. Ch. July 28, 2023) (in addition to awarding fees to counsel for quantifiable benefit in a derivative case, the court awarded $50,000 in fees for “mild therapeutic” corporate governance reforms, disclosure, and other enhancements); Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. v. Pyles, 858 A.2d 927, 929–30 (Del. 2004) (affirming award of attorneys’ fees in derivative action which caused corporation to abandon going-private transaction, observing that there was a “substantial” benefit conferred, “although not one that was readily quantifiable”); McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Palley, 310 A.2d 635, 636–37 (Del. 1973) (affirming fee award in derivative suit which caused corporation to cancel preferred stock issuance).
31 benefit conferred.93 It also agreed that the Plaintiff’s attorneys were entitled to
$70,918,136 if the court excluded the intrinsic value of the returned options from the
corporate benefit received.94 The judgment of the Court of Chancery is affirmed in
part and reversed in part. Counsel are awarded $70,918,136 in fees and post-
judgment interest from January 13, 2025. Any disputes over the fee award should
be brought before the Court of Chancery. Jurisdiction is not retained.
93 Oral Argument Video at 16:03–36, https://courts.delaware.gov/supreme/oralarguments (“The Court: So, your [ ] $70 million dollars that you’re amenable to is the $276.6 in cash [and stock], which is a dollar-for-dollar benefit to Tesla . . . plus the $19.9 . . . and then multiplied by .24 . . . which you’re not contesting? Counsel: If the Court reduces the net benefit to what we think is the accurate number, then we don’t think the Court needs to go on to engage in the disputes about the declining fee percentage and the lodestar check because the reduction of the net benefit . . . has effectively solved that problem.”); see also Opening Br. at 16 (“As a result, the fee award should be reduced to at most $70.9 million, which would reflect the actual benefit conferred on Tesla by this lawsuit, even under the oversized 24% fee percentage adopted by the Court of Chancery.”). 94 Calculated as ($276,616,720 (Returned Cash and/or Returned Stock) + $19,899,292 (Reverse Black-Scholes Charge) – $1,023,779 (Out-of-Pocket Litigation Expenses)) * .24 (Percentage Awarded).