Types and Requirements of Injunctions Related to Shareholders’ Meetings in South Korea
Table of Contents
- 1. Significance and Importance of Shareholder Meeting Injunctions
- 2. Injunctions to Prohibit Shareholders’ Meeting and Resolution
- 3. Injunctions to Suspend Effects of Shareholders’ Resolution
- 4. Injunctions for Shareholders’ Agenda Setting
- 5. Effects of Actions Violating Injunctions
- 6. Practical Considerations
- 7. Conclusion
- 8. Relevant Case Law
1. Significance and Importance of Shareholder Meeting Injunctions
Injunctions related to shareholders’ meetings refer to temporary measures that provisionally determine the legal relationship between parties when disputes arise regarding the convening, resolutions, or effects of shareholders’ meetings. These injunctions fall under the category of “provisional dispositions to determine temporary status” as stipulated in Article 300(2) of the Civil Execution Act of South Korea.
The particular importance of shareholder meeting injunctions stems from the phenomenon of “injunctions replacing main proceedings.” Since shareholders’ meetings must be held at specific times and have an urgent nature, practical dispute resolution often occurs through injunction decisions alone. In many instances, disputes are concluded after an injunction decision without proceeding to a main lawsuit.
As corporations make crucial decisions at shareholders’ meetings regarding director appointments/dismissals, mergers, business transfers, etc., prolonged disputes over defects in such resolutions can severely impact corporate stability. Therefore, injunctions are utilized for swift and effective dispute resolution.
2. Injunctions to Prohibit Shareholders’ Meeting and Resolution
Purpose and Definition
An injunction to prohibit a shareholders’ meeting prevents the meeting itself from being held, while an injunction to prohibit resolutions prevents only specific agenda items from being voted on. These serve as preventive remedies when the convening procedures or resolution matters violate laws or articles of incorporation, preventing the formation of legal relationships through illegal shareholders’ meetings before main decisions.
Rights under Protection
The rights under protection for injunctions to prohibit shareholders’ meetings and resolutions vary depending on the specific dispute situation:
- Unauthorized Convening: Rights to exclude interference by legitimate convening authority
- Violation of Corporate Agreements: Rights to claim non-performance under agreements (e.g., Hana Bank-Korea Exchange Bank merger case)
- Legal Violations in Procedures or Content: Legal rights to challenge defects in shareholders’ resolutions or rights to seek injunction against directors’ illegal acts
In practice, the mainstream position regards “legal rights to challenge defects in shareholders’ resolutions” as the protected rights.
Necessity of Preservation
Injunctions to prohibit shareholders’ meetings or resolutions are often filed shortly before meeting dates, leaving debtors with virtually no time to seek cancellation once granted. Therefore, these should be exceptionally granted only in the following circumstances:
- When illegal shareholders’ meetings may lead to additional legal disputes
- When the illegality of shareholders’ meetings is relatively clear
- When damages irreversible through subsequent remedies are anticipated
Practical Considerations
Due to the strict review of injunctions to prohibit shareholders’ meetings, courts often encourage applicants to change their petitions to suspension of shareholder resolution effects, or may issue injunctions to suspend future resolution effects without changing the petition itself.
3. Injunctions to Suspend Effects of Shareholders’ Resolution
Definition
When shareholders’ meetings have been held and resolutions made, but there are defects in the method, content, or convening procedures, this injunction temporarily suspends the effects of such resolutions.
Rights under Protection
As this challenges the effects of existing resolutions, the rights under protection are resolution cancellation claims or resolution nullity/non-existence confirmation claims based on defects in shareholders’ resolutions under the Commercial Act of South Korea.
Special Considerations
Lower courts tend to dismiss injunctions to suspend effects of director or auditor appointment resolutions for lack of preservation necessity. Reasons include:
- Essentially equivalent to seeking suspension of directors’/auditors’ duties
- Creates operational confusion without provisions for acting replacements
- Lacks disclosure methods in corporate registries, potentially harming third-party transaction safety
Filing Deadlines to Note
Shareholders’ resolution cancellation lawsuits must be filed within two months from the resolution date. If two months have passed from the application date, nullity or non-existence grounds must be claimed. Filing an injunction application alone does not satisfy the two-month filing deadline.
4. Injunctions for Shareholders’ Agenda Setting
Definition and Legal Basis
When minority shareholders exercise their proposal rights but the board unfairly rejects them, such shareholders may seek an injunction to include their proposals in convening notices and agenda items. This system ensures practical exercise of proposal rights under Article 363-2 of the Commercial Act of South Korea.
Requirements for Exercising Proposal Rights
1. Subject Requirements:
- Non-listed companies: Shareholders holding 3% or more of issued shares
- Listed companies: Shareholders holding 1% (0.5% for companies with capital exceeding 100 billion won) for 6 months or more
2. Content Requirements:
- Matters not violating laws or articles of incorporation
- No resubmission of proposals rejected with less than 10% approval within 3 years
- Exclusion of individual shareholder grievances
- Exclusion of defamatory or clearly false content
Recognition of Preservation Necessity
While rejected shareholders may exercise their right to request extraordinary shareholders’ meetings, considering that the Commercial Act separately recognizes proposal rights and the cost/time required for direct meeting convening, the mere possibility of extraordinary meeting convening cannot negate preservation necessity without special circumstances.
5. Effects of Actions Violating Injunctions
When shareholders’ meetings are held despite injunction decisions and resolutions are made, the theory of “provisional invalidity” is appropriate regarding such resolution effects.
Basis for Provisional Invalidity Theory
- Injunctions have formative power, temporarily suspending debtors’ authority to convene/resolve shareholders’ meetings
- Injunctions have provisional and subordinate nature regarding main proceedings
- When main proceedings conclude in failure for debtors, injunction effects retroactively cease, allowing debtors to claim validity of violating actions
The Supreme Court’s Decision 2009Da3920 also held that when main proceedings confirm absence of protected rights, violations of injunctions become valid as they no longer infringe protected rights.
6. Practical Considerations
Key Practical Points
- Party Standing: Shareholders’ meeting injunctions must name corporations as debtors; representative directors cannot be defendants (except for rights to seek injunction against illegal acts)
- Swift Processing: Due to impending shareholders’ meetings, special service and urgent hearing date setting are necessary
- Filing Deadline Compliance: Two-month filing deadlines must be strictly observed for resolution cancellation grounds
- Specific Injunctions: Time, location, and resolution matters must be specifically identified
7. Conclusion
Shareholder meeting injunctions serve as effective means for swiftly resolving disputes regarding important corporate decisions. However, as satisfactory injunctions often serve as final dispute resolution mechanisms, careful hearings and strict requirement reviews are necessary.
Strategic use of injunction applications requires sufficient consideration of practical matters including clear proof of protected rights and preservation necessity, swift procedural progress, and filing deadline compliance.
8. Relevant Case Law
Major Supreme Court Decisions
Supreme Court Decision 2005Da4284 (May 10, 2007) – Adoption of Expansion Theory for Shareholders’ Meeting Authority
Even matters explicitly designated as board authority under the Commercial Act become non-board matters when articles of incorporation designate them as shareholders’ meeting matters, unless special circumstances such as unanimous shareholder consent exist.
Supreme Court Decision 2009Da92883 (March 29, 2012) – Remedies for Non-Performance Agreement Violations
When parties agree on non-performance obligations and debtors violate such agreements, creditors may seek performance enforcement and obtain alternative execution or indirect compulsion decisions to cease violations.
Supreme Court Decision 2009Da3920 (January 28, 2010) – Effects of Injunction Violations
When main proceedings confirm absence of protected rights, revealing substantial invalidity of injunctions, actions violating such injunctions become valid as they no longer infringe protected rights.
Supreme Court Decision 2005Da11626 (January 25, 2007) – Standards for Determining Preservation Necessity
Preservation necessity should be determined at court discretion considering parties’ interests based on injunction grant/denial, anticipated outcomes in main proceedings, and other relevant circumstances.
Major Lower Court Decisions
Seoul Central District Court Decision 2015KaHap80051 (February 4, 2015) – Shareholders’ Meeting Prohibition for Merger Prevention
Court granted injunction when Korea Exchange Bank’s labor union applied for prohibition based on non-performance rights under five-year merger suspension agreement despite bank’s preceding merger procedures.
Seoul Central District Court Decision 2018KaHap21610 (January 23, 2019) – Resolution Cancellation Filing Deadlines
Mere filing of injunction applications does not satisfy two-month filing deadlines; resolution cancellation rights expire after two months unless nullity or non-existence grounds are claimed.
Ulsan District Court Decision 2021KaHap10105 (March 23, 2021) – Preservation Necessity for Shareholders’ Agenda Setting
When agenda setting injunctions are filed with less than two weeks before shareholders’ meetings, preservation necessity should not be denied based solely on deadline proximity if proposed items maintain identity with notified agenda.
Kim&Park Law Firm has successfully handled recent shareholders’ meeting injunction cases related to corporate control disputes, particularly achieving positive outcomes in complex matters involving shareholders’ proposal rights exercise in public companies.