What If Musk Is Ordered to Do Twitter Deal and He Just Says No?

Imagine: Elon Musk, known for his delight in defying authority, is ordered to move ahead with his $44 billion purchase of Twitter Inc. -- and refuses.

It’s an unusual scenario, but one in which the court would have tools to enforce its orders. It could slap an epic fine on Musk, appoint receivers to get the deal done or even enable the seizure of his assets. Twitter sued Musk on Tuesday to force him to consummate the acquisition after he pulled out.

Musk doesn’t shrink from a fight. He has tangled with everyone from the US Securities and Exchange Commission over his provocative tweets, to a British cave expert in a defamation case, to Donald Trump. In Delaware Chancery Court last summer in the SolarCity trial, the Tesla Inc. chief executive officer openly mocked the lawyer examining him, saying he had “great respect for the court” but not for the attorney, a “bad human being.”