A US judge has ordered that Twitter's lawsuit against Elon Musk go to trial in October, a blow to the world's richest man who had asked for a delay.
Musk walked away from his US$44b (NZ$70b) bid to buy Twitter earlier in July, prompting the company to sue him.
Twitter hopes that the court will order Mr Musk to complete the takeover at the agreed price of US$54.20 (NZ$86.85) per share.
The tech billionaire has accused Twitter of withholding information about fake accounts.
His legal team has called for the trial to be held early next year due to its complexities, but Twitter asked for a September date.
On Tuesday, a judge in the state of Delaware agreed with the company and said a delay to the trial would cast a "cloud of uncertainty".
"Delay threatens irreparable harm," Chancellor Kathaleen St Jude McCormick said. "The longer the delay, the greater the risk."
The lawsuit accused Musk of a "long list" of violations ahead of the potential merger and argued that he had "cast a pall" over the company.
At the hearing on Tuesday, Twitter's lead counsel William Savitt said the ongoing uncertainty about whether the takeover would go forward or not "inflicts harm on Twitter everyday".
"Musk has been and remains contractually obligated to use his best efforts to close the deal," Savitt said. "What he's doing is exactly the opposite. It's sabotage."
A lawyer for Musk, Andrew Rossman, argued that he remains one of Twitter's most significant shareholders. He said the case should go to trial next year on a "sensible" schedule that would give both sides time to prepare.
Since Musk began questioning the number of fake and spam accounts on Twitter's platform in May, the company has seen its share prices fall from highs of $50 per share.
The company's shares currently stand at about $39.45 - well below the $54.20 per share at which it hopes to close the merger.
A self-described "free speech absolutist", Musk has vowed to ease restrictions on content if the company were under his ownership.
He has also called for the company to be more open about how it presents tweets to users and how tweets are promoted to larger audiences.
- BBC