Elon Musk & Twitter's Legal Battle Will Go To Trial By October, Judge Rules

BYHayley Hynes1000 Views
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Elon Musk

Musk's lawyers previously pushed for a court date in early 2023, while Twitter was hoping for a September agreement.

Twitter's legal battle with Elon Musk is off to a strong start in the social media company's favour, CBC reports. Earlier today (July 19) the Delaware Court of Chancery declared that the impending trial will take place by October, despite the billionaire and his legal team's attempt to have it pushed until 2023.

Presiding Judge Kathaleen St. Jude McCormick shared the ruling, noting that the 10th month of this year would be "the latest" we'll see things unfold.

Elon Musk & Twitter's Legal Battle Will Go To Trial By October, Judge Rules
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Initially, Twitter requested that the trial begin as soon as September with no more than four days to argue. Musk's lawyers, on the other hand,  pushed for February or even later, also asking for the court to grant each side a number of weeks to present their cases; it was argued that an expedited trial wouldn't allow for the truth of the "spam bot issue" on Twitter to truly be discussed.

Ultimately, though, Judge McCormick decided that only five days will be needed for arguments – a timeframe much closer to the one that the app asked for.

As you likely already know, Twitter and Musk are going to court over their $44B deal in which the Tesla CEO was set to become the new owner of the platform, though he eventually lost interest.


The father of 10 shared that he walked away due to the seller's failure to provide accurate information about fake account statistics, also claiming that they "breached obligations under the deal by firing top managers and laying off a significant number of employees."

For their part, Twitter believes that Musk has acted insincerely from the start, and may have even only shown interest in the massive purchase as part of a publicity stunt. "It's attempted sabotage. He's doing his best to run Twitter down," attorney William Savitt informed the judge.

The 51-year-old's lawyer, Andrew Rossman, says these claims are "preposterous" as his client is the second largest shareholder, meaning he owns even more than the company's board does. "He has no interest in damaging the company," Rossman confirmed.

When forming their original deal, both Musk and Twitter agreed to pay a $1B breaker fee to the other should anyone decide to pull out, but that seems irrelevant now as they're suing one another for far more than that.

As CBC notes, Twitter's request for a quick trial has to do with the company's stock price, which is being impacted by the uncertainty and messiness of the deal.

"The reality is, delay threatens irreparable harm to the sellers," the judge said; tap back in with HNHH later for any updates.

[Via]


About The Author
Hayley Hynes is the former Weekend Managing Editor of HotNewHipHop, she stepped down after two years in 2024 to pursue other creative opportunities but remains on staff part-time to cover music, gossip, and pop culture news. Currently, she contributes similar content on Blavity and 21Ninety, as well as on her personal blog where she also offers tarot/astrology services. Hayley resides on the western side of Canada, previously spending a year in Vancouver to study Fashion Marketing at Blanche Macdonald Centre and Journalism at Mount Royal University in Calgary before that. She's passionate about helping others heal through storytelling, and shares much more about her life on Instagram @hayleyhynes.