Plaintiff sued for damages resulting from physical injuries to his minor son allegedly occasioned by the latter’s consumption of intoxicating liquors unlawfully furnished and sold to him as a minor and while he wаs intoxicated in violation of CLS 1956, § 436.22 (Stat Ann 1957 Rev § 18.993), under which liability is urged, and of CL 1948, §§ 436.29, 436.33 (Stat Ann 1957 Rev § 18.1000, *3 Stat Ann 1953 Cum Supp § 18.1004) and CL 1948, § 750.141a (Stat Ann 1955 Cum Supp § 28.336[1]). Plaintiff’s appeal is from an order granting defendants’ motion to dismiss, before triаl, as to 2 of the 3 corporate defendants. The motion was granted on the ground that plaintiff’s declaration failed to state a cause of action as to them. It is еvident from the trial court’s opinion that it considered controlling, with respect to the 2 dismissed corporations, the doctrine that “the corporate fiction insulates the stockholders, directors and corporate defendants from any liability here.” The court interposed the corporate shield as to them because plaintiff’s dеclaration alleged that the liquor license under which the unlawful sale was made had been issued in the name of the third corporation, with no allegation to show the connection of the other 2 except that title to the real estate on which the liquor business was being conducted was held in the name of one of them.
Plaintiff’s declaration, after stating that the 3 corporate defendants were owned by the same stockholders, had identical officers and conducted their businesses at the same locаtion, contained the following pertinent allegations:
“That * * * defendants owned and operated a tavern known and advertised to the public as The Dock, located on lots 170, 180, 218, 219 of the Kalamazoo Plat of the village of Saugatuck, Allegan county, Michigan; that at The Dock defendants were in the business of selling and furnishing to the public spirituous intoxiсants, malt liquors and beverages under the authority of a class C liquor license issued by the Michigan liquor control commission authorizing The Dock to sell at retail beer, wine and spirits fоr consumption on the premises of The Dock; that said liquor license was issued in the name of defendant Pavilion Restaurant Company; * * *
*4 “That said defendant corporations are so organized, controlled and managed that they are instru-mentalities, agents or adjuncts of one another, and of the other defendants, and are in fact 1 unit; that the aforesaid lots 170, 180, 218, 219 and the aforesaid building located thereon known as the pavilion are held in the name of defendant Amusement Enterprises Company; that virtually all of thе business of defendants is conducted in the building located on said lots; that the business affairs of defendant are managed, controlled and conducted by same persons; * * * that defendant Pavilion Restaurant Company has no assets and that it operates within the and upon the premises of the pavilion as an instrumentality, agent, sham corporation or adjunct of defendant Amusement Enterprises Company and of defendant West Michigan Amusement Company; that the stockholders of defendant corporation are virtuаlly identical; that all of said defendant corporations are operated by the aforesaid officers and by the stocld.iold.ers of defendant corporatiоn as 1 unit, instrumentality, agency, adjunct, and shams of each other”
and that “said defendants did violate the aforesaid duties by selling * * * intoxicating liquor” to said minor.
In
Johnson
v.
Borland,
“In determining whether the declaration sets forth a cause of action, all material allegations properly pleaded therein must be accepted as true and construed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, mere conclusions of the pleader not being given force and effect.”
The allegations in plaintiff’s declaration that the defendants (which includеs the 2 corporate defendants dismissed) owned and operated a tavern, were in the business, under license, of selling intoxicating liquors to the public and violated their statutоry *5 duties by selling to one who was a minor and intoxicated at the time, sufficed to charge all 3 corporate defendants with the alleged wrongful acts upon which plaintiff’s cause of action was predicated. Accordingly, the declaration stated a cause of action against them all.
"Was such positive statement of a causе of action against the 3 corporate defendants, including the 2 dismissed, diluted or vitiated with respect to the latter 2 by the additional averments that the liquor license was issued in the name of the corporation which was not dismissed and that title to the real estate involved was in the name of 1 of the other 2 and failure to spell out further the respective relationship between the 3? We think not.
If, on trial, proofs fail to establish plaintiff’s allegations that the 3 corporate defendants engaged in the business of selling and did sell the intoxicants to the minor, may liability on the part of the 2 dismissed corporate defendants be based on the theory that the third corporate defendant acted as their agent in making the sale, and does plaintiff’s declaration adequately plead such agency?
Defendants cite
Gledhill
v.
Fisher & Co.,
Defendants urge that plaintiff’s averments оf agency amount to mere statements of conclusions and not of facts upon which an ultimate finding might be made. As said in
Hanselman
v.
Carstens,
“The facts required to be stated in the declaration, likе those found by a special verdict, are deduced from other facts, to be found from the testimony, and must be such as will enable the court to declare the law in the cаse; so that it will be seen that the facts upon which the rights of the plaintiff are made to depend are in a certain sense conclusions, but are nevertheless the kind of facts required in pleading in stating the plaintiff’s cause of action, while the others are the testimony furnishing the evidence of *7 those facts, and not proper to he given in the dеela-xation.”
We think the allegations that the corporations were so organized, controlled and managed that they were the instrumentalities, agents and adjuncts of еach other and were, in fact, 1 unit, coupled with thé averments of common ownership, directorship, control, management and operation at 1 location and thаt the licensed corporation was uncollectible, while involving expressions of legal conclusions, constitute, at the same time, sufficient pleading of facts to аdmit of offers of proofs of such agency, particularly when knowledge of the facts relating thereto is peculiarly within the possession of defendants rather than plaintiff. Such was the sense of what we said in
Spelman
v.
Addison,
“In recent years, at least, this Court has taken a liberal attitude in passing upon sufficiency of pleadings.”
The allegations contained in plaintiff’s declaration entitle him to an opportunity to prove his case against the defendants.
Reversed, with costs of this appeal to plaintiff.
