Over the last 21 years that I have been writing this blog I have often posted about an annual corporate law seminar in New Orleans called the Tulane Corporate Law Institute, that I am attending again this year. Started by the late great Delaware Supreme Court Justice Andrew G.T. Moore over 30 years ago, it now brings lawyers from around the country to discuss recent developments in corporate law and related legal updates.
Of course, my highlights from the seminar focus in this brief blog post on developments in Delaware law over the last year. Some of the speakers on this key topic include members of the Delaware Supreme Court as well as the Court of Chancery.
A panel of Delaware practitioners and the Chief Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court provided a presentation called Delaware Developments. Among other topics, they discussed the two recent Delaware Supreme Court decisions involving Elon Musk‘s compensation as well as a separate case involving claims against Tesla directors. One panelist predicted that if SB 21 had been in place, the compensation case against Musk would have been dismissed at the trial court level.
The moderator of this panel on Delaware Developments, Bill Lafferty of the Morris Nichols firm in Delaware, graciously allowed me to link in this blog post to the exemplary PowerPoint prepared for their panel, and a link to the cases they discussed. The written materials, available to attendees in electronic format, are a treasure trove of scholarly and practical data useful to practitioners.
In addition to the Musk and the Tesla decisions, the panel discussed recent decisions involving Brophy claims, Caremark claims, as well as the recent rulings in Brola/Credit Glory–which was “limited” in some sense by the later decision in the eXp case. They also addressed problems with use of AI in court filings with something less than due care.
Other key Delaware corporate decisions were discussed, some of which were included in my 21st Annual Review of Key Delaware Corporate and Commercial Decisions. Reasonable lawyers can debate which cases should be included in the list of top cases over the last year–beyond the obvious ones. I do not recall any suggestions for inclusion to the necessarily subjective list that I prepare each year.
Other panelists, including a member of the Court of Chancery, discussed shareholder activism. Another panel presentation on tomorrow’s schedule is titled “Hot Topics in M&A Practice”.