As readers of this blog well know, a recent debate has been brewing over whether Delaware corporations should de-camp and reincorporate in another state, with Nevada and Texas often the preferred candidates. This debate gained momentum when Elon Musk called for states to redomesticate outside Delaware after the state’s courts struck down his ginormous Tesla pay package. As discussed here, in response to the DExit debate, Delaware legislators have now proposed a massive revision to Delaware’s corporate laws, among other things as a way to try to stop the perceived retreat of companies from Delaware. It now appears that opponents of the legislation are mounting an organized campaign to oppose the proposed revisions. It looks like the game is on for the proposed changes, as the bill sponsors prepare to try to move the legislation forward.Continue Reading Critics Launch Campaign Opposing Delaware SB 21

As readers undoubtedly have noted, one of the hot topics these days is the question whether corporations should change their state of incorporation from Delaware to that of another state, usually either Nevada or Texas. The dialog on this topic was already underway when Elon Musk supercharged the conversation by vowing, in reaction to the Delaware court’s disallowance of his $56 billion pay package, to have Tesla change its state of incorporation from Delaware to Texas. I suspect that the state of incorporation debate is going to be with us for some time to come, making it important for those of us who might have to participate in (or at least listen to) the conversation to get a handle on the key differences between the states.Continue Reading Delaware or Another State: What’s the Difference?

It is an idea that suddenly is all the rage – that companies should shake the Delaware dust off their feet and reincorporate elsewhere. Elon Musk has famously said, in the wake of the Delaware Chancery Court’s decision voiding his $55.8 billion pay package, that he will seek to reincorporate Tesla in Texas. (SpaceX, also a Musk company, has in fact already reincorporated in Texas.) The former Attorney General William Barr and another GOP official published a Wall Street Journal column arguing that Delaware’s courts are driving corporations away (as discussed here), and suggesting that companies increasingly will find it more attractive to be incorporated in Nevada or another state. Some companies have indeed left Delaware and reincorporated elsewhere – including not just SpaceX, but also TripAdvisor, for example. Why would a company change its state of incorporation from Delaware to another state? And with reference to the focus of  this blog, does a company’s redomestication from Delaware to another state have implications for the potential liability exposures of the company’s directors and officers?Continue Reading Does a Del. Corp.’s Reincorporation in Another State Reduce D&O Liability Exposure?