LG Group Chairman Koo Kwang-mo attends a state banquet for Chinese President Xi Jinping in Gyeongju, North Gyeongsang Province, Nov. 1, 2025. Korea Times photo by Wang Tae-seog

A district court ruled in favor of LG Group Chairman Koo Kwang-mo on Thursday in a legal dispute with his adoptive mother and her daughters over their stakes in the group’s holding company, LG Corp., temporarily easing concerns over a potential challenge to his management control.

The Seoul Western District Court rejected a lawsuit filed by his adoptive mother her daughters, saying it found no legal grounds to support the plaintiffs’ claims that his LG Corp. shares, which he inherited from former LG Chairman Koo Bon-moo, should be reallocated to them.

The decision came three years after the late chairman’s widow, Kim Young-sik, and two daughters — Koo Yeon-kyung, head of the LG Welfare Foundation, and Koo Yeon-soo — filed the suit over the reallocation of inherited assets.

The former chairman left assets worth about 2 trillion won ($1.39 billion), including an 11.28 percent stake in LG Corp. The current chairman inherited 8.76 percentage points of that stake, while Kim and the two daughters received assets worth 500 billion won, including 2.01 percent of LG Corp. for Koo Yeon-kyung and 0.51 percent for Koo Yeon-soo.

The plaintiffs filed the suit in February 2023, four years after the chairman’s death, claiming that they had agreed to the inheritance under the belief that there was a will stating that Koo Kwang-mo would receive all the shares. They argued the inheritance should be divided again according to a law stating that spouses and children inherit assets in a 1.5-to-1 ratio.

LG Group's owner family members attend the 88th birthday ceremony of Koo Cha-kyung, front row third from left, the second chairman of LG Group, at Coex in southern Seoul, in this April 2012 file photo. Front row left is Koo's son Koo Bon-moo, the third chairman of LG Group, front row right is the second chairman's daughter Koo Yeon-kyeong, and back row center is current LG Group Chairman Koo Kwang-mo. Courtesy of LG Group

However, the current chairman’s side refuted the claim, citing a family agreement and testimony from group officials that the late chairman handpicked the current chairman as his successor and expressed intent to give all management assets to him.

LG Corp. Chief Financial Officer Ha Beom-jong, one of the late chairman’s closest aides, testified in court in October 2023 that the late chairman had left “a memo” stating that “all LG Corp. shares should go to Koo Kwang-mo” and all heirs had signed the document. However, he said the memo was not a formal will and had been destroyed after the inheritance procedures were completed.

The district court said in the ruling that even if the plaintiffs had been misled, the inheritance agreement is still valid.

Source: Korea Times News