This is а products liability case in which the plaintiff claimed that upon using a toilet bowl cleanser called “Vanish” she suffered severe and permanent respiratory injuries from the inhalation of harmful fumes. The complaint alleges negligencе and breach of warranty. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $100,000.
On December 12, 1961, plaintiff, a reasonably healthy 56-year-old woman, prompted by advertising, purchased a can of Vanish from a local store. At approximately 11 o’clock that night she decided to clean the toilet bowl in her apartment. In accordance with the directions on the can she sprinkled Vanish into the bowl and vigorously scrubbed the interior of the bowl with a short-handled brush. In doing so, her face was about 12 inches from the top of the bowl. She started choking and coughing and couldn’t catch her breath. She then left the bathroom and went outside on the porch to breathe some fresh air. Her son, who had been upstаirs in his room, came down and found his mother coughing, choking and quite weak. The son took his mother to the hospital where she was placed in oxygen and treated with adrenalin and ACTH. Dr. Wood, who treated her, testified that her breathing was rapid and labored, with wheezing which was audible several feet away. His diagnosis was that she was suffering from a combination of acute bronchitis and bronchial asthma. Plaintiff claims that she has been and will continue to be permanently disabled as a result of this inсident. The medical testimony tends to support this contention.
*648 On appeal defendant seeks reversal alleging eight errors which can be summarized as follows: (1.) the complaint is against the wrong corporate entity; (2.) the trial court cоmmitted error in denying motions for a directed verdict and a judgment notwithstanding the verdict; (3.) the verdict is against the great weight of the evidence; (4.) the plaintiff’s medical witness did not qualify as an expert and hypothetical questions to him were impropеr and his answers to those questions were inadmissible; (5.) the plaintiff’s attempt to introduce a letter regarding an unrelated claim was prejudicial; (6.) there was jury misconduct; (7.) the verdict was excessive; and (8.) the court failed to give requested instructions and gave other instructions that were misleading and confusing.
The first question raised by this appeal is whether or not the trial court erred in holding as a matter of law that defendant, as the distributor, was chargeable with the manufacturer’s negligence, thе two being separate corporate entities. As a general rule, a vendor who distributes a product acquired in the open market is not liable for its negligent manufacture.
Clement
v.
Rommeck
(1907),
Vanish is manufactured by The Drackett Company. The defendant bore the corporate name “The Drackett Products Company” and was a wholly-owned subsidiary and the exclusive distributor of all of the manufacturer’s products. The parent and subsidiary had their principal offices at the same address in Cincinnati, Ohio. There were interlocking officers and directors and there was some inter *649 change of employees. The subsidiary (the defendant) existed solely as the distributing аrm of the manufacturer and the manufacturer’s only source of revenue was from the sales of its subsidiary. Where a corporation is so organized and so controlled as to make it a mere instrumentality or an agent of another corporation, its separate existence as a distinct corporate entity will be ignored and the two corporations will be regarded in legal contemplation as one unit. These facts must be held to deny this defendant the insulation frоm liability that ordinarily protects a retailer or distributor. Bathory v. Procter & Gamble Distributing Company (CA 6, 1962), 306 F2d 22. The trial court’s ruling that the facts warranted piercing the corporate veil was sustained by the evidence. Swearngin v. Sears Roebuck & Company (CA 10, 1967), 376 F2d 637.
Defendant’s principal contention at the trial and on appeal is that there was no competent evidence from which the jury could find, or reasonably infer, that the product Vanish was the cause of the respiratory condition complained of and because of this lack of competent evidence the trial court erred in denying defendant’s motions for a directed verdict and for entry of a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. In this connection, the defendant further argues that the verdict of the jury was against the great weight of the evidencе and warrants a new trial. Generally, the mere occurrence of an injury is not alone evidence of negligence. But, of course, negligence may be established by circumstantial evidence and where the circumstances arе such as to take the case out of the realm of conjecture and to bring the case within the field of legitimate inference from established facts, at least a
prima facie
*650
case is made.
Gadde
v.
Michigan Consolidated Gas Company
(1966),
Dr. Wood, the plaintiff’s attending physician, testified that in his opinion the plаintiff’s physical condition was not dne to infection but was caused by an irritant and that one must assume that there was a direct relationship between the plaintiff’s symptoms that were produced when she used the cleanser and the use of the cleanser. Approximately two years after the incident, Dr. Filson, a professor of chemistry at Central Michigan University, chemically analyzed the contents of the actual can of Vanish used by the plaintiff. He testified that both hydrogen chloride gas and chlorine gas could be released when Vanish is used because Vanish contains sodium bisulfate and a chloride ion which would react together and with iron oxide (in the rust of the toilet bowl) since iron oxide is both an oxidizing agent and a cаtalyst. This witness further testified that these gases are irritants and would produce harmful effects.
To be sure, the defendant offered testimony contradicting the testimony offered by the plaintiff’s witnesses but as the trial court noted: “It is not for the court to tell thе jury whose testimony is reliable or which testimony is more reliable”. Conflicting evidence is, of course, a matter for the jury to determine. The record in the instant case contained sufficient evidence, both direct and circumstantial, to support the plaintiff’s position. As the court said in Bathory, supra:
“We think that the total of this evidence and the justifiable inferences that could be drawn therefrom were adequate to permit a finding that Pin-It was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s trouble. We beliеve that the facts in this case lead with equal facility and logical sequence to a justified conclu *651 sion that the injury was proximately caused by the product as did the facts found sufficient for such purpose in the case of Gerkin v. Brown & Sehler Co. (1913),177 Mich 45 , 53, 54,143 NW 48 , 48 LRA NS 224.”
Decision in this case finds ample support in
Bronson
v.
J. L. Hudson Company
(1965),
“Upon such proofs, the reasonable mind could legitimately infer that the one new element in Mrs. Berke’s life at that time, the new slip, was directly linked with her injury.”
The same can bе said of the plaintiff’s use of Vanish in the present case.
Defendant’s contention that the plaintiff’s physician, Dr. Wood, was not qualified to answer a hypothetical question is unimpressive. Certainly his educational credentials were sufficient. Hе diagnosed the plaintiff’s condition as not being caused by infection but by an irritant. He testified that the plaintiff had acute bronchitis and bronchial asthma. Based on the history of the events of the evening in question, the doctor could only reasonably assume and testify in answer to the hypothet *652 ical question that it was his opinion that the irritant came from the product used in the toilet bowl, since the plaintiff’s health previous to the incident had been good. The defendant apparently believes that to be qualified as an expert the doctor should be an expert on the ingredients of a can of Vanish, the exact irritant, and the reactions of chlorine gas. The doctor is an expert on health and in this capaсity was competent to draw conclusions concerning plaintiff’s physical condition. The fact that he could not identify the precise irritant in Vanish is not important. Bronson v. J. L. Hudson Company, supra. There the medical testimony was that a garment containing an irritant, unidentified, сould cause dermatitis.
The defendant’s objections to the form of the questions asked of the plaintiff’s expert witnesses on direct examination are, likewise, without merit. On the whole the questions propounded were fair and the jury was adequаtely instructed concerning hypothetical questions. Moreover, under GCR 1963, 605, the expert witness “may state his opinion and reasons therefor without first specifying data on which it is based.” As pointed out in 3 Honigman & Hawkins, Michigan Court Rules Annotated (2d ed), p 386, the burden of attacking the basis of an expert witness’s opinion shifts to the counsel who cross-examines.
Lake Oakland Heights Park Association
v.
Township of Waterford
(1967),
After the jury’s verdict, the defendant complains that some of the jurors shook hands with the plaintiff and one embraced her. It is contended that this is jury misconduct and a ground for setting aside the verdict. The defendant cites
Cooper
v.
Carr
(1910),
The next issue concerns the $100,000 verdict. The defendant contends it is excessive in the context of the trial due to passion, bias, аnd prejudice. We agree that the verdict is high but we cannot say that it shocks the judicial conscience.
Watrous
v.
Conor
(1934),
Finally, defendant objects to the trial court’s instructions to the jury. The instructions indicate reliance upon Bronson v. J. L. Hudson Company, supra, but in view of existing precedent they adequately and reasonably stated the law and the theories of the parties. No sufficient ground is found concerning instructions to compel this Court’s intervention or reversal.
Affirmed. Costs to plaintiff.
