OP ALA, Vice Chief Justice.
The issues to be resolved are: 1) Was the appeal in Cause No. 65,360 timely brought? 2) If so, did the trial court err when it dismissed the defendants from the lawsuit? and 3) Was summary judgment on appeal in Cause No. 67,294 incorrectly given to another defendant in the case? We consolidate the two appeals and answer all three questions in the affirmative.
I.
THE CRITICAL FACTS IN LITIGATION
The appellants in both appeals [collectively called Frazier] sued all the appellees in a
single action for wrongful death. The ap-pellees in Cause No. 65,360 are
collectively
called Hospital.
One of them, Bryan Memorial Hospital Authority d/b/a Bryan Memorial Hospital, is
individually
called Authority. The sole appellee in Cause No. 67,294, Hospital Corporation of America, is referred to as HCA.
Frazier alleged below that the harm sought to be redressed was caused by the negligence of Hospital and HCA when they created and implemented various employment and administrative policies and performed certain health care-related tasks. A wholly-owned subsidiary of HCA, HCA Management Company, Inc. [Company]— an entity
not included as a party-defendant below
— had a management agreement with Authority for the operation of Bryan Memorial Hospital, where the harm allegedly occurred. Frazier’s claim against HCA rests on its alleged control of Company during the operations within that contract’s term.
Hospital moved for dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted on the grounds that 1) Authority should be treated as a political subdivision of the state and 2) the action against all the defendants collectively called Hospital is barred because, contrary to the mandatory provisions of 51 O.S.1981 § 156
of the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act [Act],
Frazier had failed to give timely notice of his claim before filing the suit. With its dismissal motion, Hospital tendered eviden-tiary materials which
were not excluded
from the trial court’s consideration.
On May 22, 1985 the trial judge dismissed the claim against Hospital but later gave Frazier leave to replead by his second amended petition. In the latter pleading Frazier alleged, in essence, that the Act posed no obstacle to his recovery.
This was the only significant change
from Frazier’s last petition. In an effort to have itself excluded from the case, Hospital then addressed to the second amended petition a “motion to strike.” This procedural device is generally viewed as designed for judicial exclusion of insufficient defenses
and un
signed “pleadings, motions and other papers.”
Since that was not the object sought to be achieved here, and Hospital’s motion is but a request to be let out of the lawsuit based on the May 22 dismissal, we treat its motion to strike as if it were one
to
dismiss.
The trial court granted this relief on October 1, 1985. Within thirty days of that disposition, Frazier brought an appeal in Cause No. 65,360.
In the meantime, HCA had moved for summary judgment, arguing it was
erroneously joined in lieu of its subsidiary, Company.
In the alternative, HCA argued that should the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act apply to Frazier’s demand against Hospital, and Company were to be treated as
both
an “employee” of Authority within the meaning of the Act
as well as HCA’s agent or instrumentality, then HCA would be entitled to the same immunity as that enjoyed by Authority. Frazier opposed HCA’s motion for summary judgment, arguing, among other things, that HCA and Company both held,
vis-a-vis
Authority, the status of an independent contractor. The trial court gave judgment to HCA. Frazier seeks corrective relief by appeal in Cause No. 67,294.
II.
THE MAY 22 DECISION WAS A NONAP-PEALABLE INTERLOCUTORY ORDER, AND CAUSE NO. 65,360 IS A TIMELY-BROUGHT APPEAL
Hospital contends that the first appeal in this action, Cause No. 65,360, which was filed October 29, 1985, should be dismissed for untimeliness, because Frazier seeks review of the May 22, 1985 dismissal rather than of the one that occurred on October 1, 1985.
Since the petition-in-error was filed here within 30 days of the October 1 disposition, but
after
the 30-day period following the May 22 dismissal, the first question to be answered is whether the latter judicial act amounted to summary judgment that a)
terminated
the lawsuit as to Hospital, b)
at once became appeal-able
and hence c) caused
all
post-May 22 proceedings against Hospital to be unauthorized. We answer in the negative and hold that, for reasons to be stated, our
reviewing cognizance over the October 1 dismissal was timely invoked.
The May 22 order addressed Hospital’s first dismissal quest which was rested on 1) failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and 2) absence of statutorily required notice of the claim. The journal entry of that ruling contains findings based on the evidentiary materials Hospital tendered “without objection” from Frazier. The trial court expressly found that 1) ap-pellee, Bryan Memorial Hospital Authority [Authority],
qualifies as a political subdivision according to the terms of 51 O.S. 1981 § 152(6)(d),
2) before filing his lawsuit against Authority, Frazier failed to give timely notice of his claim, which is required by § 156 of the Act
and 3) the remaining appellees, who may qualify as Authority’s employees, are also entitled to assert the lack-of-notice defense.
While, up to this point, the May 22 order may in spots bear the earmarks of a terminal summary adjudication,
its text
concludes with a contrary recitation.
It explicitly provides that Hospital’s
motion to dismiss
is
“sustained
for want of subject matter jurisdiction and for failure of plaintiffs to state a claim
...; and said action is thereby ordered
dismissed
as against each and all of said Defendants.”
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OP ALA, Vice Chief Justice.
The issues to be resolved are: 1) Was the appeal in Cause No. 65,360 timely brought? 2) If so, did the trial court err when it dismissed the defendants from the lawsuit? and 3) Was summary judgment on appeal in Cause No. 67,294 incorrectly given to another defendant in the case? We consolidate the two appeals and answer all three questions in the affirmative.
I.
THE CRITICAL FACTS IN LITIGATION
The appellants in both appeals [collectively called Frazier] sued all the appellees in a
single action for wrongful death. The ap-pellees in Cause No. 65,360 are
collectively
called Hospital.
One of them, Bryan Memorial Hospital Authority d/b/a Bryan Memorial Hospital, is
individually
called Authority. The sole appellee in Cause No. 67,294, Hospital Corporation of America, is referred to as HCA.
Frazier alleged below that the harm sought to be redressed was caused by the negligence of Hospital and HCA when they created and implemented various employment and administrative policies and performed certain health care-related tasks. A wholly-owned subsidiary of HCA, HCA Management Company, Inc. [Company]— an entity
not included as a party-defendant below
— had a management agreement with Authority for the operation of Bryan Memorial Hospital, where the harm allegedly occurred. Frazier’s claim against HCA rests on its alleged control of Company during the operations within that contract’s term.
Hospital moved for dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted on the grounds that 1) Authority should be treated as a political subdivision of the state and 2) the action against all the defendants collectively called Hospital is barred because, contrary to the mandatory provisions of 51 O.S.1981 § 156
of the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act [Act],
Frazier had failed to give timely notice of his claim before filing the suit. With its dismissal motion, Hospital tendered eviden-tiary materials which
were not excluded
from the trial court’s consideration.
On May 22, 1985 the trial judge dismissed the claim against Hospital but later gave Frazier leave to replead by his second amended petition. In the latter pleading Frazier alleged, in essence, that the Act posed no obstacle to his recovery.
This was the only significant change
from Frazier’s last petition. In an effort to have itself excluded from the case, Hospital then addressed to the second amended petition a “motion to strike.” This procedural device is generally viewed as designed for judicial exclusion of insufficient defenses
and un
signed “pleadings, motions and other papers.”
Since that was not the object sought to be achieved here, and Hospital’s motion is but a request to be let out of the lawsuit based on the May 22 dismissal, we treat its motion to strike as if it were one
to
dismiss.
The trial court granted this relief on October 1, 1985. Within thirty days of that disposition, Frazier brought an appeal in Cause No. 65,360.
In the meantime, HCA had moved for summary judgment, arguing it was
erroneously joined in lieu of its subsidiary, Company.
In the alternative, HCA argued that should the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act apply to Frazier’s demand against Hospital, and Company were to be treated as
both
an “employee” of Authority within the meaning of the Act
as well as HCA’s agent or instrumentality, then HCA would be entitled to the same immunity as that enjoyed by Authority. Frazier opposed HCA’s motion for summary judgment, arguing, among other things, that HCA and Company both held,
vis-a-vis
Authority, the status of an independent contractor. The trial court gave judgment to HCA. Frazier seeks corrective relief by appeal in Cause No. 67,294.
II.
THE MAY 22 DECISION WAS A NONAP-PEALABLE INTERLOCUTORY ORDER, AND CAUSE NO. 65,360 IS A TIMELY-BROUGHT APPEAL
Hospital contends that the first appeal in this action, Cause No. 65,360, which was filed October 29, 1985, should be dismissed for untimeliness, because Frazier seeks review of the May 22, 1985 dismissal rather than of the one that occurred on October 1, 1985.
Since the petition-in-error was filed here within 30 days of the October 1 disposition, but
after
the 30-day period following the May 22 dismissal, the first question to be answered is whether the latter judicial act amounted to summary judgment that a)
terminated
the lawsuit as to Hospital, b)
at once became appeal-able
and hence c) caused
all
post-May 22 proceedings against Hospital to be unauthorized. We answer in the negative and hold that, for reasons to be stated, our
reviewing cognizance over the October 1 dismissal was timely invoked.
The May 22 order addressed Hospital’s first dismissal quest which was rested on 1) failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and 2) absence of statutorily required notice of the claim. The journal entry of that ruling contains findings based on the evidentiary materials Hospital tendered “without objection” from Frazier. The trial court expressly found that 1) ap-pellee, Bryan Memorial Hospital Authority [Authority],
qualifies as a political subdivision according to the terms of 51 O.S. 1981 § 152(6)(d),
2) before filing his lawsuit against Authority, Frazier failed to give timely notice of his claim, which is required by § 156 of the Act
and 3) the remaining appellees, who may qualify as Authority’s employees, are also entitled to assert the lack-of-notice defense.
While, up to this point, the May 22 order may in spots bear the earmarks of a terminal summary adjudication,
its text
concludes with a contrary recitation.
It explicitly provides that Hospital’s
motion to dismiss
is
“sustained
for want of subject matter jurisdiction and for failure of plaintiffs to state a claim
...; and said action is thereby ordered
dismissed
as against each and all of said Defendants.”
[Emphasis added.]
The order does not state whether the dismissal is with or without prejudice, and
there is no facial indication that either a summary judgment or a final order was intended.
When construing the terms of an unclear, doubtful or ambiguous order this court will examine the four corners of the
record proper to interpret the trial judge’s decision.
The materials may include post-decisional pleadings.
Within 30 days after the May 22 dismissal, Frazier was given leave (on June 21, 1985) to replead by an amended petition. The latter judicial act is entirely consistent
not only
with the May 22 order’s
express terms,
but also with the provisions of 12 O.S.Supp.1984 § 2012(G),
which require that a litigant be granted leave to amend his pleading within a stated time
if
the defect in the pleading can be cured. Since Frazier’s amendment was sanctioned below, we conclude the nisi pri-us court must itself have determined the defect in the dismissed petition was curable. Hospital’s May 22 dismissal from the case clearly was not intended to be a
terminal
action against the defendants comprised within this appellation.
We will not construe an order as granting more relief than that which was demanded.
Neither the trial judge nor the parties intended the May 22 dismissal to be a
final order
within the meaning of § 2012(G).
A dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted cannot be held to have been effected with prejudice to future amendment, if leave to replead was in fact granted a short time later by the same judge.
Because the trial judge’s construction of his May 22 order offends no legal principle and is entirely consistent with the statutory pleading regime, we let it stand undisturbed.
III.
FRAZIER’S POSTDISMISSAL AMENDED PLEADING STATES A CLAIM UPON WHICH RELIEF CAN BE GRANTED AGAINST HOSPITAL
Following Frazier’s postdismissal amendment to his pleading, filed with leave
of court, Hospital moved to dismiss but this time tendered no evidentiary materials. It relied on the May 22 dismissal as though that decision precluded Frazier’s demand against it. The trial court once again dismissed Hospital from the case on October 1,1985. Within 30 days of that date, Frazier filed his petition-in-error. He now contends that the trial court should not have released Hospital from the claim a second time because, when he amended his pleading with leave of court, he cured the defect which precipitated the first dismissal.
Assuming, but not deciding,
that the earlier pleading
was
fatally deficient, the question to be answered now is whether Frazier’s most recent amended petition states a claim upon which relief can be granted. We hold that it does.
A pleading
must not
be dismissed for failure to state a legally cognizable claim
unless
the allegations indicate
beyond any doubt
that the litigant can prove
no
set of facts which would entitle him to relief.
In his postdismissal amendment Frazier averred that the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act
does not apply to his demand against Hospital and that even if it did, either he fully satisfied its notice requirements or Hospital waived them.
Considering all allegations in the postdismissal amendment of Frazier’s pleading,
we cannot say it is legally impossible
for Frazier to establish any of them to be true. He may be entitled to recovery if, for example, he can prove the Act poses no legal impediment to the maintenance of the action. The trial court’s October 1 dismissal must hence be reversed.
IV.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR HCA WAS IMPROPER AND CANNOT STAND
HCA sought summary judgment against Frazier on two grounds: 1) it is “not a proper party” because Authority’s hospital management agreement was with HCA’s subsidiary, Company, and not with HCA itself and 2) if Company is found to have been a mere agent or instrumentality of HCA, and Company is further determined to have been an employee of Authority, then HCA is entitled to assert the Act’s notice requirement as a defense. In support of its motion HCA tendered a former hospital administrator’s affidavit stating that the management agreement was “with” Authority and Company, and that HCA and Company were “separate and distinct” corporations.
Frazier opposed HCA’s quest for summary judgment, arguing that at least two material issues of fact remained to be resolved: 1) whether Company, admittedly a wholly-owned subsidiary of HCA, was but a mere instrumentality or agent of the latter' and 2) assuming the Act does apply to this claim, whether Company was Authority’s employee or an independent contractor. Although evidentiary materials were tendered to show these fact issues to
exist, the trial court gave summary judgment to HCA.
If one corporation is but an instrumentality or agent of another, corporate distinctions must be disregarded and the two separate entities must be treated as one.
Whether this theory of vicarious liability be based on the principles of agency or on the doctrine of “piercing the corporate veil,” it doubtless gives rise to a fact question.
HCA emphatically argues the issue is resolved here by the evidentiary materials tendered below. We cannot accede to its contention.
The question whether an allegedly dominant corporation may be held liable for a subservient entity’s tort hinges primarily on control.
Factors which may be considered at trial include whether 1) the parent corporation owns all or most of the subsidiary’s stock, 2) the corporations have common directors or officers, 3) the parent provides financing to its subsidiary, 4) the dominant corporation subscribes to all the other’s stock, 5) the subordinate corporation is grossly undercapitalized, 6) the parent pays the salaries, expenses or losses of the subsidiary, 7) almost all of the subsidiary’s business is with the parent or the assets of the former were conveyed from the latter, 8) the parent refers to its subsidiary as a division or department, 9) the subsidiary’s officers or directors follow directions from the parent corporation and 10) legal formalities for keeping the entities separate and independent are observed.
The materials which Frazier tendered below to oppose Hospital’s motion for summary judgment clearly show the existence of factual issues that must be left for the trier's determination, i.e., whether Company is a “dummy” corporation or mere instrumentality of HCA. The two entities have a common purpose: to own, operate and manage hospitals. Company refers to HCA when advertising, and one person responds to inquiries for both businesses. Company is a wholly-owned subsidiary of HCA, and, more significantly, Company’s cash admittedly is “commingled” with that of HCA’s other subsidiaries in an account managed by HCA.
The management agreement between Company and Hospital requires the latter to secure and maintain insurance with both Company and HCA as named insureds and prohibits amendments without HCA’s written consent. Lastly, HCA guarantees Company’s performance of all obligations assumed by the contract with Hospital.
In its answer brief HCA concedes that Frazier has established four factors which are “relevant” to the issue whether Company is its agent or instrumentality: 1) HCA owns 100% of Company’s stock, 2) in 1982-1983 Company had one director in common with HCA, 3) in 1982-1983 the two corporations had two officers in common and 4) both HCA and Company have the same corporate address. Each factor is said to be present in most parent/subsidiary relationships. HCA also listed several other alleged facts
to show that Company is
a separate and distinct entity from HCA.
The purpose of a summary judgment motion is not to try disputed fact issues by an exchange of paperwork. The question before us is whether HCA has shown the
absence
of any factual dispute over the nature of its relationship with Company. In light of
all
the evidentiary materials, we must conclude that it has not.
HCA’s alternative ground for summary judgment must also fail. It rests on the assumption that HCA can escape liability by clothing itself,
vis-a-vis
Authority, with the status of a political subdivision’s employee rather than that of an independently contracting managerial entity. According to HCA, the management agreement between Company and Authority
alone proves
that Company was the latter’s employee. This is so, HCA argues, because the contract’s terms indicate Authority “had the right to control” Company’s actions. We cannot conclude that the Authority/Company operating agreement can be treated as
conclusive
of Company’s status
vis-a-vis
Authority.
Generally,
status between juristic persons is determinable from the facts-that surround the parties’ relationship and their conduct toward each other;
an assessment of the quantum of control one entity exercised over another at some critical time in contest requires an exploration of facts.
If HCA is found to have controlled Company when the harm to Frazier occurred, then HCA’s own status
vis-a-vis
Authority will become a crucial fact issue to be resolved. Summary judgment for HCA was accordingly improper and cannot stand.
THE TRIAL COURT’S DISMISSAL ON REVIEW IN CAUSE NO. 65,360 AND ITS SUMMARY JUDGMENT IN CAUSE NO. 67,294 ARE REVERSED; THE CAUSES ARE REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS NOT INCONSISTENT WITH THIS PRONOUNCEMENT.
All Justices concur.
APPENDIX
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