MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter is before the court on the defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ *624 complaint for breach of contract. Defendant seeks dismissal pursuant to 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. For the reasons set forth below, defendant’s motion is denied.
BACKGROUND
The plaintiffs are Zack Stamp, Illinois’ Director of Insurance and Liquidator of Cooperative Health Plan, Inc. (“Director”), and the Illinois Health Maintenance Organization Guaranty Association. Plaintiffs have brought a two count breach of contract action on behalf of Cooperative Health Plan, Inc. (“Cooperative”) against the defendant, Inamed Corporation (“In-amed”). In response, Inamed has moved to dismiss both counts pursuant to 12(b)(6).
On June 15, 1987, Inamed, its subsidiary CN Acquisition Corporation (“Cooperative-NowCare”), and John Hancock Health Plans, Inc. (“Hancock”) entered into an agreement (the “JHHI Agreement”) regarding Hancock’s wholly-owned subsidiary, Cooperative Health Plan, Inc. (“Cooperative”). Under the JHHI Agreement, Hancock agreed to transfer ownership and control of Cooperative to Inamed. The actual transfer of ownership was effected by means of an agreement (the “Merger Agreement”). The Merger Agreement provided for the merging of Cooperative-Now-Care (the subsidiary of Inamed) and Cooperative (then the subsidiary of Hancock). On July 24, 1987, Cooperative-NowCare was merged into Cooperative. As a result, Inamed became the sole shareholder of the surviving entity, Cooperative.
In Section 11(a) of the JHHI Agreement, Inamed agreed that:
(a) On and for two years following the Merger Date [July 24, 1987], Inamed shall make capital contributions and/or subordinated loans to Cooperative-Now-care in such amounts as are necessary (a) in order for Cooperative-Nowcare to be in compliance with all financial requirements established by Illinois statute or by the Illinois Department of Insurance and which are applicable to health maintenance organizations and....
(c) For two years following the Merger Date, Inamed shall use its best efforts to take all such other action as may be necessary to prevent Cooperative-Now-care from losing its license to operate as a health maintenance organization in Illinois.
Furthermore, the Merger Agreement provided that as of July 24, 1987, Cooperative, as the surviving corporation, was to possess “all rights, privileges, power and franchises” of the merging entities. Both agreements provide that Illinois law would govern the contractual relationship between the parties.
In August 1988, the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois found Cooperative to be insolvent, and in March, 1989 ordered Cooperative liquidated. Subsequent to this order, Director brought suit on behalf of Cooperative. Count I alleges that Inamed breached paragraph 11(a) and 11(c) of the JHHI Agreement by allowing Cooperative to become insolvent.
Count II alleges breach of contract but is based on another set of circumstances. In February 1988, prior to the Circuit Court’s actions, Cooperative agreed to purchase its subsidiary’s assets and liabilities. In February, Cooperative applied to the Illinois Department of Insurance for approval of its Purchase Agreement with its subsidiary. Cooperative’s filed application stated that Inamed “will make a loan of $500,000 to Cooperative in return for a Subordinated Promissory Note.” This subordinated note was attached to the application. Count II of plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that Inamed breached this promise to provide Cooperative a $500,000 loan.
Inamed raises two arguments in support of its dismissal motion. First, it argues that Cooperative has no standing to sue because it was neither a party nor a third party beneficiary to the JHHI or Merger agreements. Second, Inamed also contends that Cooperative’s suit must be dismissed because it is the equivalent of In-amed suing itself since Cooperative is In-amed’s wholly-owned subsidiary. Defen *625 dant relies on these two arguments in support of its 12(b)(6) motion.
DISCUSSION
1. Rule 12(b)(6) Standard
The moving party must meet a high standard to have a claim dismissed pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). The purpose of a 12(b)(6) motion is to test the sufficiency of the complaint, not to decide the merits of the case. The complaint’s allegations should be construed liberally, and it “should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
2. Cooperative Not a Party or Third Party Beneficiary
Inamed’s first contention is that Count I must be dismissed because Cooperative was neither a party nor a third party beneficiary to the JHHI or Merger agreements. Because we conclude that Cooperative was a third party beneficiary, we reject this argument.
Generally, only a party to a contract or one in privity with a party may sue to enforce the contract.
Wilde v. First Fed’l Sav. & Loan,
The JHHI agreement clearly manifests an intention to directly benefit Cooperative. In the agreement, Inamed promised to maintain Cooperative’s solvency and viability for two years. § 11(a), (c). Furthermore, in the agreement, Hancock agreed to discharge or provide Cooperative “with such funds as may be necessary to effect discharge of all liabilities and obligations of Cooperative existing” on or before the merger date. § 2(a). This promise directly benefited Cooperative by relieving its predecessor corporation of all pre-merger debts. Therefore, Cooperative was clearly a direct third party beneficiary of the JHHI agreement in support of dismissal.
Cooperative is also a direct third party beneficiary under the Merger Agreement. This contract expressly provided that Cooperative, as the surviving corporation, was to possess “all rights, privileges, power and franchises” of the merging entities. Furthermore, the Merger Agreement’s sole purpose was to create Cooperative as the surviving entity. Accordingly, Cooperative was a third party beneficiary under this agreement. Therefore, we reject Inamed’s first standing argument.
3.Cooperative Cannot Sue its Parent
Inamed, however, makes a second argument in support of its 12(b)(6) motion. In-amed contends that neither Cooperative nor Director has standing to sue. 1 In support of this argument, Inamed contends that a parent corporation and its wholly-owned subsidiary should be viewed as a single economic unit, and “a single economic unit cannot sue itself.” This particular issue of whether a wholly-owned subsidiary can sue *626 its parent for breach of contract appears to be one of first impression. Nevertheless, well established principles of corporations law and analogous case law lead us to reject Inamed’s position.
One of the most important and pervasive principles underlying corporations law is the “entity theory.” Fletcher Cyc. Corp. § 25, at 512-15 (1990); Henn & Alexander, Laws of Corporations § 146, at 345 (1983). This theory provides that a corporation is a separate entity, distinct from its corporate and non-corporate shareholders.
Beatrice Foods Co. v. Illinois Insur. Guaranty Fund,
A corporation is an entity irrespective of, and entirely distinct from, the persons who own its stock, and it is well settled that all the shares in a corporation may be held by a single person and yet the corporation continue to exist; nor does the fact that one person owns all the stock, make him and the corporation one and the same person_ It is also immaterial whether the sole owner of stock is a man or another corporation, and the corporation owning such stock is as distinct from the corporation whose stock is owned as the man is from the corporation of which he is the sole member.
Joyce on Actions By and Against Corporations, § 224 (1910). This entity theory is important in that it provides the necessary foundation for many well-entrenched corporate law principles. 2
Because of its importance, courts have rigidly recognized the independent existence of the corporate entity distinct from its shareholders.
See, e.g., Beatrice Foods Co.,
The entity theory, however, is not impenetrable. Courts will disregard the corporate entity if necessary to further the interests of “public convenience, fairness and equity.”
Brookline v. Gorsuch,
Inamed’s suit, however, is not the typical piercing suit. Rather, it is a much less commonly known suit referred to as a “reverse piercing” case. Fletcher Cyc. Corp. § 43.50, at 780. In these cases, the shareholder-parent corporation, not a creditor, seeks to disregard its subsidiary’s corporate existence. Id. Similar to the creditor piercing suits, notions of equity and justice control; however, beyond this, courts have not established specific factors to help guide their decision-making in these cases. See Comment, Corporations: Disregard of the Corporate Entity for the Benefit of Shareholders, 1963 Duke L.J. 722, 722 (1963) (“Unlike the corporate creditor,” the shareholder who seeks to disregard its corporation’s existence “will find few black-letter rules” regarding his case).
Courts also have expressed an unwillingness to disregard the corporate entity in reverse piercing suits. Fletcher Cyc. Corp. § 43.50, at 780. Such reluctance is based on “reciprocity principles.”
Boggs v. Blue Diamond Coal Co.,
One illustrative case in which the Sixth Circuit refused to disregard the corporate existence of a wholly-owned subsidiary at the insistence of its parent is
Boggs v. Blue Diamond Coal Co.,
The Sixth Circuit refused to ignore the subsidiary’s independent corporate existence. Id. at 662. In so holding, the court reasoned that Kentucky adhered to “customary principles of corporation law” which recognized a “general aversion” for disregarding the corporate entity. Id. at 661-62. Moreover, the court reasoned that:
[A] business enterprise has a range of choice in controlling its own corporate structure. But reciprocal obligations arise as a result of the choice it makes. The owners may take advantage of the benefits of dividing the business into separate corporate parts, but principles of reciprocity require that courts also recognize the separate identities of the enterprises when sued....
Id. at 662. Therefore, the court refused to integrate Blue Diamond’s corporate existence with that of its wholly-owned subsidiary.
Like the
Boggs
court, we will not disregard the corporate separateness of a wholly-owned subsidiary. Illinois law clearly recognizes the importance of a corporation’s independent legal existence.
Superior Coal Co.,
We find further support for our decision in a number of federal circuit bankruptcy cases. These cases hold that a number of states’ laws permit a wholly-owned subsidiary to sue its parent under an alter-ego theory.
See Koch Refining v. Farmers Union Central Exchange, Inc.,
Our decision is consistent with this line of cases. If a wholly-owned subsidiary can sue its parent in an attempt to pierce its own corporate existence, a subsidiary surely can sue its parent for breach of contract. This is particularly true where the contract action is brought by a trustee or liquidator on behalf of a judicially recognized insolvent subsidiary. Additionally, our reasoning is not inconsistent with the decisions of those circuit courts that have held that a subsidiary cannot sue its parent under an alterego theory.
See Williams v. California 1st Bank,
Inamed’s reliance on
Copperweld Corp. v. Independent Tube Corp.,
Inamed’s reliance on cases that have applied Copperweld’s reasoning and expanded it to civil conspiracy cases also must fail.
See Pizza Management, Inc. v. Pizza Hut, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint is denied.
Notes
. Director has sued on behalf of Cooperative pursuant to Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 73, § 803 (1987). This statute provides Director with "title to all ... rights of action of the [insolvent] company” as of the liquidation date. Inamed argues that since Cooperative had no standing to sue prior to the liquidation order neither does Director.
. These principles include: (1) the concept of limited liability, (2) the notion that corporations retain capacity to hold property, (3) the recognition that corporations can “contract not only with outsiders but also with its own shareholders," (4) the notion that corporations can sue and be sued, and finally (5) the recognition that corporations enjoy continued existence notwithstanding changes in its membership. Henn, § 146, at 345.
. For instance, as the parties stand right now, Inamed is not responsible for Cooperative’s corporate debts. This is one of the primary benefits provided by the entity theory.
See McCracken v. Olson Companies, Inc.,
. For instance, Inamed argues that a wholly-owned subsidiary cannot sue its parent for breach of contract because they are a single corporation, and a single entity cannot sue itself. However, if we accepted such a position, it would be equally true that a parent and wholly-owned subsidiary could never contract with each other, since a person cannot contract with itself. Inamed, however, correctly refuses to accept such an extreme position. Reply Brief, p. 7-8. We likewise cannot sanction a rule that would promote such logical inconsistencies.
. The reason why the issue we address today is one of first impression and why a scenario where a subsidiary would seek to pierce its own veil is uncommon is readily apparent. In a non-bankruptcy context, no one will bring a piercing suit against the parent on behalf of the subsidiary since the parent controls the subsidiary’s actions.
See In re Western World Funding, Inc.,
. The other decisions cited by Inamed in support of its motion are equally unhelpful.
See Deauville Corp. v. Federated Dept. Stores,
