OPINION
This cause involves piercing the corporate veil and the application of limitations. Matthews Construction Company sued Houston Pipe & Supply Company for breach of contract and secured a judgment against Houston Pipe in July 1982. Because Matthews was unable to collect on that judgment, it filed suit in February 1984 against Harvey Rosen, the president and sole shareholder of Houston Pipe. Matthews contended that Rosen had stripped Houston Pipe of its assets in order to avoid paying the judgment. A jury found that Houston Pipe was the alter ego of Rosen and that Rosen had operated the company as a sham to perpetrate a fraud
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on Matthews; the jury awarded Matthews $500,000 in actual damages and $60,000 in punitive damages. The trial court disregarded the punitive damages award and rendered judgment for Matthews for $470,-562, the amount owing on the prior judgment. The court of appeals effectively reversed the trial court’s judgment and rendered a take-nothing judgment against Matthews.
At issue is whether Matthews’ suit against Rosen is barred by limitations. In
Gentry v. Credit Plan Corp.,
Based on this footnote, the court of appeals concluded that Gentry would not allow for a second suit against an alter ego after limitations had run. The court then reasoned that Matthews’ suit against Ro-sen, filed in February 1984, was barred by limitations because the underlying breach of contract had occurred in 1979.
There is no great mystery surrounding the
Gentry
footnote. When read in context, its meaning is apparent. The footnote is linked in text to a citation to
Mirabito v. San Francisco Dairy Co.,
In order to decide this question, we consider the policies underlying the decision to toll limitations in Gentry. What we said was this:
The purpose of the court in cases of this nature is to prevent use of the corporate entity as a cloak for fraud or illegality or to work an injustice, and that purpose should not be thwarted by adherence to any particular theory of liability.
A statute of limitations serves primarily to compel the assertion of a cause of action within a reasonable time so that the opposing party has a fair opportunity to defend while witnesses are available.
Moreno v. Sterling Drug, Inc.,
At the same time, if we were to apply limitations under these circumstances, it would effectively permit the corporate form to be used as a “cloak for fraud.”
See Gentry,
Having disposed of this cause on the ground that limitations was tolled, we need not address Matthews’ points of error directed at other aspects of the court of appeals’ opinion. We have, however, considered Rosen’s cross-point and conclude that it is without merit. Rosen has asserted that, because he and the corporate entity are one, res judicata bars the second suit against him. However, the doctrine of res judicata serves as a bar to subsequent collateral
attacks
on a final judgment.
Segrest v. Segrest,
We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and affirm that of the trial court.
Notes
. For purposes of discussion, we refer to Matthews’ suit as an "alter ego" suit; however the mere fact that a corporation operates as an alter ego does not give rise to a separate and independent cause of action and this opinion should not be so construed.
. In holding otherwise, the court of appeals relied on
Gallagher v. Bintliff,
. In some jurisdictions, the limitations period for such an alter ego suit would be the same as for a suit to enforce a judgment.
E.g., Wm. Passalacqua Builders, Inc. v. Resnick Developers South, Inc.,
