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EXCLUSIVE: Chad Hugo Has One Week To Save His Lawsuit Against Pharrell Or The Judge Kills It

Chad Hugo faced dismissal of his $1M Pharrell lawsuit after failing to serve papers over alleged missing Neptunes royalties.

Chad Hugo filed a million-dollar lawsuit against Pharrell over missing Neptunes money, but now a federal judge is ready to throw the whole thing out because Hugo never even served the papers.

Judge Andre Birotte Jr. issued an order to show cause on May 14, giving Hugo until May 22 to explain why his case should live. If he doesn’t respond, the court will take his silence as a green light to kill it.

The issue is as basic as it gets in court. Federal rules say you have 90 days to serve every person you’re suing after you file, and Hugo blew past that window on every single name in his case.

That means Pharrell, N.E.R.D. Music LLC, Neptunes LLC, CH and PW Inc., PW and CH Inc., PW Branding Inc., PW IP Holdings LLC and Talamasca Inc. have not been served with the suit Hugo filed back in January 2026. None of them got their papers, and Hugo can’t talk his way out of it without a really good reason.

This whole mess kicked off when Hugo accused Pharrell of hiding money and keeping him out of the books for their hit-making run as The Neptunes.

Hugo said Pharrell owes him over a $1 million in royalties from N.E.R.D.’s 2017 album No One Ever Really Dies alone, and he called the whole thing willful and shady.

He also said a bunch of songs were missing from label portals and SoundExchange, meaning he never got paid for work he helped make.

The two Virginia Beach producers stopped talking back in 2021, and by late 2024, Pharrell told the press they weren’t even on speaking terms anymore.

Hugo already sued Pharrell once in 2024 over the Neptunes name, saying Pharrell tried to lock down the brand without cutting him in.

That case is still sitting with no answer at a federal board.

Now with the royalties case about to get tossed, Hugo has one week to file a response or beg the judge for more time to get the papers served.

The court set May 22 as the deadline for Hugo to save his case.

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