This appeal arose as the result of two actions, one brought by appellant Irene Merriman, and the other by appellant Howard Merriman. The two causes of action were consolidated for the purpose of trial.
Appellant Irene Merriman brought her action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained in a fall on the floor of a grocery store; and appellant Howard Merriman brought his action as the husband of the аppellant, Irene Merriman, to recover damages for medical expenses and loss of services caused by and arising out of his wife’s fall. The appellee, Standard Grocery Company, Inc., filed a motion for summary judment suрported by affidavit, alleging therein that the named defendant did not own or lease the store in which the accident was alleged to have occurred. The court sustained appellee’s motion for summary judgment; and did not permit the plaintiffs-appellants to amend their complaints to conform with the evidence, which revealed that Standard Grocery Company, Inc., was not the proper party defendant; and, as the evidence disclosed, to nаme National Tea Company (an Illinois corporation) as the defendant, rather than Standard Grocery Company, Inc.
Both appellants and appellee disagree as to the precise issue presented in this аppeal, but that disagreement can be resolved by a review of the proceedings that transpired prior to the court’s granting of appellee’s motion for summary judgment. The record shows the questions presented to be as follows: Did the trial court abuse its discretion in not allowing the appellants to amend their complaints to name a new party defendant and further, in granting appellee’s motion for summary judgment in light of the following?:
“50-201. Partnershiрs, persons, business and corporations — Names—Filing certificates — Records and index— Dissolution notice — Cost of recording — Copy of certificate to secretary of state. — Except as otherwise provided in section 2 [§ 50-202] of this act, every person, firm or partnership, conducting or transacting business in this state under any name, designation or title other than the real name or names of the person or persons conducting or transacting such business, whether individually or as a firm or partnership, and every corporation conducting business in this state under any name, designation or title other than the name of such corporation as shown by its articles of incorporation, or amendment thereto, on file with the secretary of state of Indiana, shall file for record, in the office of the recorder of each county in which a place of business or an office of such person, persons, firm or partnershiр, or corporation is situated, a certificate stating the assumed name or names to be used, and, in the case of a person, persons, or firm or partnership, the full name and the residence address of each pеrson engaged in or transacting such business, or, in the case of a corporation, the full name and the. address of the principal office in this state of such corporation. The recorder shall keep a record оf such certificates, and shall keep an index thereof showing, inalphabetical order, the names of such persons, the names of all the members of the firms or partnerships and the corporate names of the corрorations having such certificates on file in his office and the respective assumed names which they intend to use in carrying on their respective businesses as shown by such certificates. *****
“Any corporation subject to this act shall, in addition to filing the certificate provided for above, also forthwith file with the secretary of state of Indiana a copy of each certificate, duly certified by the proper county recorder as a true coрy of the certificate as on file in the office of such recorder. [Acts 1909, ch. 151, § 1, p. 358; 1949, ch. 61, § 1, p. 173; 1965, ch. 241, § 1, p. 618.] (Emphasis supplied).
Appellee Standard did not own or lease the store in which the accident occurred. The Standard Foоd Store where appellant fell was leased from the Wilgro Realty Co. by National.
This court will take judicial notice of the public records filed in the office of the secretary of state of Indiana, and from an examinatiоn of these records it is disclosed that, as of the date these proceedings were instituted, National had not complied with the provisions of the statute hereinabove set out.
We believe it necessary to indulge in the presumрtion that large corporations often deliberately structure the parent and wholly-owned subsidiaries of the parent corporation in such a complex and inter-related manner so as to prevent ascertainment of exactly which corporate entity shoulders the responsibility of liability to injured individuals. We have no evidence in the case at bar to sustain this presumption and do not deem it necessary that there be such evidence. Further, thе fact that appellants might have known where liability should fall is not determinative of the question now presented, because where it appears, as it does in the case at bar, that several corporations exist in an interdependent relationship being wholly owned, operated, and managed by a superior corporate entity with the goal of accomplishing one general business purpose, the par
Further, this court is of the opinion that National is estopped to deny that Standard is an entirely separate corporate entity when it advertised to the general public by signs, etc. that the store in question was a “Standard” store when National had failed to file its use of an assumed business name as required by Burns’ Ind. Stat., § 50-201, supra.
Several decisions of our courts have declared that certain factual situations require that this court disregard the fiction of distinct corporate existence. In the case of
Hart, Schaffner
&
Marx v. Campbell
(1942),
“This court has recognized that there are cases wherе, to prevent fraud or injustice, it is necessary to disregard the fiction of distinct corporate existence, and to hold as a matter of equity that such separate legal entity does not exist. Feucht v. Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Inc. (1938),105 Ind. App. 405 ,12 N. E. 2d 1019 . But in cases involving therights of third persons, this doctrine has beеn limited in its application to the prevention of fraud or injustice.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Also, in
Clarke Auto Co., Inc. v. Fyffe, etc.
(1954),
“. . . . The whole record herein indicates the business of these corporations was conducted in such a manner that innocent third parties had no way of knowing with which they were dealing. They could only rely on thе word of the officers and employees of these companies. Under such circumstances it would be an open invitation to fraud and injustice to say appellant can now escape liability because it asserts thе latter corporation made the sale. The law will not tolerate such chicanery. Under the authorities cited above, we are of the opinion the entity of these corporations for the purpose of this case was merged” (Emphasis supplied).
It is undisputed that Standard is a wholly-owned subsidiary of National and that the principal officers of both corporations are the same. It is our opinion that these facts alone provide ample incentive for disregarding the fact that Standard is a separate corporate entity. The trial court should have permitted appellants to amend their complaints to name the proper defendant, especially where the name “Standard” was openly displayed to a public that would have been unable to ascertain that National was a corporation operating under the assumed business name of “Standard”.
It is our opinion that the trial court abused its discretion in' not allowing plaintiffs to amend their complaints as respects the name of the defendant party and that, therefore, the motion for summary judgment was improperly granted. Our reasoning is based not upon a legal technicality, but rather upon the fact that the record now before us discloses that although Standard Grocery Company, Inc., and National Tea Company are in fact two corporations domiciled in differ
Judgment reversed with instructions to allow plaintiffs-appellants to amend their complaints. *
Note. — Reported in
Notes
Appellee filed a motion to dismiss this appeal or, in the alternative, affirm the judgment of the trial court, in which appellee alleged ■that appellants’ use of a direct appeal on the motion for summary judgment was improper, the proper method being a motion for new trial as stated in
Kapusta v. DePuy Mfg. Co.
(1967),
