Uber Technologies Inc. and its former Chief Executive Officer Travis Kalanick defeated a lawsuit claiming the company swept illicit business practices under the rug that cost investors billions of dollars.
U.S. District Judge Haywood S. Gilliam Jr. in Oakland, California, on Friday agreed with Uber’s and Kalanick’s bid to toss the class-action claims by a Texas city’s firefighter pension fund while allowing the fund to revise and refile the complaint.
The lawsuit “does not specifically tie any particular misrepresentation by defendants to a decline in Uber’s stock price,” Gilliam wrote in his ruling. Instead it “lumps together” scandals and asserts a “vague and attenuated connection” to the devaluation of Uber’s stock, he said.
The Irving, Texas-based fund alleged in its September 2017 complaint that the startup and its ex-CEO failed to reveal at least six instances of malfeasance while “successfully soliciting billions of dollars in private investment.” Kalanick was ousted as CEO in June 2017 after a series of allegations that the ride-hailing company had engaged in misconduct.
The case is Irving Firemen’s Relief & Retirement Fund v. Uber Technologies Inc., 17-cv-05558, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California (San Francisco).
Topics Lawsuits Legislation Profit Loss Sharing Economy Ridesharing
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Premiums Will Skyrocket by 2035; Discounts Not Enough for Wind Mit, Studies Say
Damaged Manhattan Tower Owner to Reconstruct 15 Floors After Evacuation
Clash of Florida Titans Pits Powerful Tribe Against Homebuilder Lennar
NYC to Publicly Identify Buildings Testing Positive for Legionnaires’ Bacteria 

