Business, Finance & Tech
California Jury Rejects Elon Musk's Multi-Billion Dollar Lawsuit Against OpenAI Over Filing Deadline
A major legal battle over the founding mission and control of artificial intelligence concluded in an Oakland, California federal courtroom on Monday. A nine-person jury unanimously determined that billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk waited too long to file his high-profile civil lawsuit against OpenAI and its top executives, effectively barring his claims under the state's legal statute of limitations.
The verdict delivers a resounding victory to OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and President Greg Brockman, clearing a major cloud of legal uncertainty as the prominent artificial intelligence firm prepares for a highly anticipated initial public offering expected later this year. Following less than two hours of deliberation, the advisory jury concluded that Musk had missed the strict three-year window required to file his claims under California law. U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers immediately accepted the jury's finding and dismissed the entire case.
Musk filed the massive lawsuit in 2024, seeking 150 billion dollars in damages, the unwinding of OpenAI's commercial structure, and the formal removal of Altman from the company's leadership board. The Tesla and SpaceX founder alleged that Altman and Brockman had fundamentally deceived him and breached a foundational charitable trust. He argued the executives essentially stole a charity that he helped co-found and finance with 38 million dollars in 2015, transforming it into a highly lucrative commercial enterprise closely partnered with Microsoft.
Throughout the three-week trial, defense attorneys for OpenAI systematically dismantled Musk's timeline, presenting internal emails showing that Musk himself had proposed converting the organization into a for-profit entity as early as 2017 before departing the company in 2018. OpenAI successfully argued that its structural pivot to a capped-profit model in 2019 was completely transparent and highly publicized. As a result, the jury found that Musk was fully aware of the commercial transition years prior to the August 2021 legal cut-off date. Defense lawyers characterized the protracted litigation as a hypocritical public relations stunt designed to sabotage OpenAI and bolster Musk's own competing artificial intelligence startup, xAI.
Musk did not attend the final reading of the verdict but quickly took to his social media platform, X, to break his silence and forcefully blast the ruling. The tech mogul argued that the judge and jury failed to rule on the actual core merits of his allegations, choosing instead to dismiss the case on a minor calendar technicality. Musk firmly reiterated his stance that OpenAI's leadership enriched themselves by betraying their original non-profit charter, vowing to immediately file a formal appeal with the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Legal and financial analysts note that while an appeal is pending, the dismissal removes a catastrophic worst-case scenario for OpenAI and its major corporate investors. By avoiding a chaotic restructuring or a massive financial penalty, the company preserves its current commercial trajectory, validating the heavy capital investments required to develop frontier artificial intelligence models in an increasingly competitive global tech market.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
May 19, 2026


