HYBE v. Min Hee-jin: Lawsuit to Confirm Termination of Shareholders’ Agreement & Lawsuit for Stock Purchase Payment – First Trial Ruling
On February 12, 2026, Civil Division 31 of the Seoul Central District Court (Presiding Judge Nam In-soo) issued a ruling in the lawsuit to confirm the termination of the shareholders’ agreement and the lawsuit for stock purchase payment (put option) between HYBE and Min Hee-jin, dismissing HYBE’s claims and ordering them to pay 25.5 billion won to Min Hee-jin’s side. Both cases resulted in a victory for Min Hee-jin’s side, and HYBE’s arguments were entirely rejected.
The grounds for termination under the shareholders’ agreement are defined as ‘cases of material breach to the extent that the contract’s purpose cannot be achieved’ (contractual termination) and ‘cases where mutual trust has been destroyed’ (statutory termination). Specific reasons for dismissal or resignation include: ① Causing damages of over 1 billion won to ADOR due to intentional or gross negligence; ② Breach of trust, embezzlement, or other illegal acts; ③ Serious disqualification in performing the duties of the CEO.
The court explained that although HYBE holds an 80% stake in ADOR and can dismiss Min Hee-jin at any time, the above reasons were stipulated to restrict ‘indiscriminate dismissal.’ It determined that because this contract is structured so that “not only the trust of the parties but also financial interests are strongly tied together and become stronger over time,” the reasons for dismissal and resignation appear to be limited to material causes.
HYBE argued that the messages are admissible as evidence because they contain work-related content and were secured through voluntary submission, while Min Hee-jin’s side argued they cannot be used as evidence as they were obtained during an illegal audit in violation of the Protection of Communications Secrets Act.
The court recognized their admissibility as evidence because they were obtained through the voluntary submission of the person in charge during the work audit process, used a keyword search method with the consent of one party to the conversation, and mostly consisted of work-related information.
The court stated, “It can be acknowledged that Defendant Min Hee-jin explored methods to weaken the Plaintiff’s control over ADOR and independently control ADOR herself (‘ADOR independence plans’).” The court also recognized plans to purchase HYBE’s shares cheaply by estimating ADOR’s purchase price at 0.8 trillion to 1.5 trillion won, the picture of ‘exercising the put option in 2025 and leaving ADOR to make it an empty shell if shareholders’ agreement negotiations break down,’ and the attempt to increase the multiple from 13x to 30x.
Specific details of discussions with the Vice President (VP) were also mentioned.
Looking at the KakaoTalk messages, the court determined that the VP kept talking about ideas with the post-tenure period in mind, and Min Hee-jin showed a skeptical reaction to this. (Courtroom account)
Context of the ’empty shell’ expression: The expressions ‘ADOR’s value is zero if Min Hee-jin leaves’ and ‘it becomes a shell if Min Hee-jin leaves’ were first used by HYBE’s Park Ji-won, and the term was derived from this. In response, Min Hee-jin countered to the effect of, ‘So amend the shareholders’ agreement to make me feel loyal to the company and want to work well, then I will make a boy group and raise ADOR’s value.’ (Courtroom account)
At the same time, the court stated, “The mere fact of exploring ADOR independence plans cannot be seen as a material breach of the shareholders’ agreement in this case.” The grounds are as follows:
Regarding the part where Min Hee-jin told the VP after meeting with an external investor, ‘The general consensus is to take them out if there is progress, so let’s look at the contract details more closely,’ the court stated, “‘Take them out’ seems to mean ‘take NewJeans out’ in context.” During this process, the remaining period of NewJeans’ exclusive contract and the scale of the penalty for breach of contract (450 billion to 620 billion won) appear.
While the VP expressed concern that ‘the members’ withdrawal would cause too much damage, as they would have to leave all past albums behind and brand contracts are tied to ADOR,’ they gave an opinion that the approximately 700 billion won in held shares would become something to ‘threaten’ HYBE with. When Min Hee-jin asked, ‘Does this even count as something to threaten with?’, the VP replied, ‘I think it could be a negotiation card.’
In other words, the VP first concluded that the withdrawal of NewJeans members would be disadvantageous to them, and it does not constitute tampering. (Courtroom account)
The Court’s Judgment:
Conclusion: “It is difficult to view these KakaoTalk messages alone as planning the termination of the exclusive contract.”
Min Hee-jin’s position was to the effect that ‘ILLIT’s overall impression is similar to NewJeans,’ and the court determined that “it appears to be a simple opinion or value judgment and is difficult to see as a statement of fact.” Therefore, it does not constitute ‘spreading false information.’
Grounds Presented by the Court:
Regarding the petitions from NewJeans’ parents, the court determined that as long as the parents handwrote or signed them, they must be seen as the opinions of those parents, and since the copy issue is an opinion on similarity, it is difficult to establish the concept of ‘mistake.’
The court determined that if NewJeans’ activities are hindered, ADOR (Min Hee-jin) must take necessary measures, and Min Hee-jin’s whistleblower email, etc., were appropriate measures under the exclusive contract. (Courtroom account)
Conclusion: Raising the copy issue is “within the scope of managerial judgment discretion allowed to protect ADOR’s interests,” and Min Hee-jin’s raising of the copy issue was determined to be legitimate.
Judging from the appearance of specific conditions and the word ‘pushing’ in Slack conversations, the court determined that “there are clues to suspect album pushing.” Through the claims of Min Hee-jin’s side, it appears HYBE recommended album pushing for NewJeans’ ‘Get Up’ to Defendant Shin Dong-hoon (VP), and HYBE’s explanation that it was ‘content discussed informally’ seems to acknowledge that the remark related to pushing itself existed. (Courtroom account)
The court stated, “Inflating first-week sales volumes to promote chart rankings is an act that harms fair distribution and deserves to be criticized.” HYBE explained that it was an arbitrary judgment by an internal employee, but the court added that they cannot be free from ‘management responsibility.’ Since Min Hee-jin intended to correct such behavior and strengthen public interest, there is no purpose of defamation. (Courtroom account)
Furthermore, this issue was reported via internal email and was not known to the outside, and HYBE’s audit initiation and dismissal procedures began afterward. (Courtroom account)
Conclusion: “Raising the album pushing issue corresponds to a matter of public interest and concern of a public figure, and its content can be considered true,” and it cannot be considered a material breach worthy of terminating the shareholders’ agreement.
HYBE claimed that ‘800 billion won in market capitalization evaporated due to Min Hee-jin spreading false information,’ but it was not accepted.
Min Hee-jin had laid out business plans, such as a world tour and album releases, up to the end of the contract period, and there were actions like ‘let’s stop fighting and reconcile.’ (Courtroom account)