Wе accepted two certified questions from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina. In this case, the plaintiff seeks to pierce the corporate veil in order to hold a liquidated corрoration’s parents and shareholders liable for the corporation’s obligations. The first question asks whether a judgment against the corporation is a prerequisite to an alter ego claim. In the event wе answer the first question “yes,” the second question asks whether a plaintiff is precluded from bringing an alter ego claim against shareholders and officers of a corporation if it fails to either obtain a judgment agаinst the corporation prior to its liquidation or present its claim to the liquidator as a creditor of the corporation subject to liquidation pursuant to the South Carolina Insurers Rehabilitation and Liquidation Act, S.C.Code Ann. § 38-27-10, et seq. (2002) (“the Act”). We answer the first question “no,” and therefore do not reach the second.
Plaintiff Drury Development Corporation (“Plaintiff’) entered into a risk-sharing agreement with Foundation Insurance Company (“Foundatiоn”). The agreement conditioned the parties’ obligation to pay on whether or not the loss was “favorable” to Plaintiff at the end of the agreement’s term. Plaintiff alleges that Foundation owed it $86,023.00 under the agreеment when the agreement’s term ended on April 20, 2005.
Soon after conclusion of the agreement’s term, Foundation entered rehabilitation without having paid the alleged obligation. Rehabilitation was unsuccessful, and Fоundation was declared insolvent and liquidated under the supervision of the South Carolina Department of Insurance (“DOI”) in accordance with the terms of the Act. During liquidation, the liquidator for the DOI determined that Foundation’s assets should be distributed in satisfaction of a single secured creditor’s claims. The liquidator did not recognize any other general creditors, and Plaintiff did not present its creditor claim to the liquidator.
On April 28, 2006, Plaintiff filed this action in state court. The case was timely removed to federal court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. Plaintiff asserts claims against Foundation, its corporate parent Tarheel Group (“Tarheel”), Tarheel subsidiary Tarhеel Insurance Management Company (“TIM-CO”), and Tarheel shareholders Steven Mariano and Lucia Tomkins (together “Defendants”) for breach of contract, fraudulent inducement of contract, negligence, сonversion, and unjust enrichment. Plaintiff seeks to pierce the corporate veil in order to hold Tarheel, TIMCO, Mariano, and Tomkins liable for Foundation’s alleged obligation.
Defendants filed a motion to dismiss pursuant tо Rule 12(b)(6), FRCP, based on the theory that Plaintiff may not allege an alter ego claim without first obtaining a judgment against Foundation. On November 21, 2007, the Honorable Joseph F. Anderson, Jr., United States District Judge for the District of South Carolina, dеtermined that Defendants’ motion to dismiss raised unresolved questions of South Carolina law and certified the following questions to this Court:
(1) Is a judgment against the corporation a prerequisite to an alter ego claim?
(2) If yes to (1), then is a plaintiff precluded from bringing an alter ego claim against shareholders and officers of a corporation if it fails to either obtain a judgment against the corporation prior to its liquidation, or present its claim to the liquidator as a creditor of the corporation subject to liquidation pursuant to the Act?
Standard of Review
In answering a certified question raising a novel question of law, this Court is free to decide the question based on its assessment of which answer and reasoning would best comport with the law and public policies of the state as well as the Court’s sense of law, justice, and right.
Peagler v. USAA Ins. Co.,
Law/Analysis
The first certified question asks whether a judgment agаinst a corporation is a prerequisite to an alter ego claim under South Carolina law. 1 We answer “no.”
In general, equitable principles govern the veil-piercing remedy, and “[i]t is settled authority that the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil is not to be applied without substantial reflection.”
Sturkie v. Sifly,
Defendants contend that a veil-piercing action is de-' pendent upon first obtaining a judgment against the corporation. We disagree. In applying South Carolina’s veil-piercing doctrine, as all forms of equitable relief, “the equities of both sides are to be considered, and each case must be decided on its own particular facts.”
Carroll v. Page,
Were we to adopt the rule urged by Defendants, creditors seeking to pierce the corporate veil of an insоlvent or unresponsive corporate defendant would be required to file a
pro forma
action against the corporation before seeking to pierce the corporate veil in a subsequent action. While it is undoubtedly true that the corporate veil is often pierced post-judgment, it is also true that South Carolina courts frequently consider these issues in one bifurcated action.
See, e.g., Carolina Marine Handling v. Lasch et al.,
Much of the authority relied upon by Defendants suggests that Defendants have erroneously conflated the concept of a claim with that of a judgment.
See, e.g., Hardy v. Brock,
Accordingly, we hold that so long as the plaintiff has pled facts sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss as to the corporatе liability claims and the alter ego claim, the trial court should move forward to determination of both matters. In so holding, we observe that our disposition as to the first certified question should not be construed to undermine thе legislature’s determination that “no action at law or equity may be brought against the insurer or liquidator” once an order of liquidation has been issued. S.C.Code Ann. § 38-27-430(a). Rather, we set forth the general rule that a judgment against а corporation is not a prerequisite to an alter ego claim.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we answer “no” to the first certified question, and therefore do not reach the second certified questiоn.
CERTIFÍED QUESTION ANSWERED.
Notes
. Although often used interchangeably, the terms "alter ego" and "piercing the corporate veil” are not one and the same. Whereas “alter ego" describes a theory of procedural relief, "piercing the corporate veil” refers to the relief itself. See 1 William Meade Fletcher et al„ Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations § 41.10 (per. ed., rev. vol. 2006). In other words, "[t]he alter ego doctrine is merely a means of piercing the corporate veil.” 18 C.J.S. Corporations § 23 (2008).
. Although we adopt a more limited holding, we note that at least one other court has gone so far as to hold that a judgmеnt against an unresponsive corporate defendant must be set aside in a subsequent action to pierce the corporate veil if the shareholder defendant was not a party to the determinatiоn of corporate liability. In
Minton et al. v. Cavaney,
