The respective plaintiffs purchased very simple new houses and lots, each for a consideration in the neighborhood of $4,600, in one of the “Stephenson” subdivisions, Oakland county, Michigan, not far from the city of Detroit. Very shortly thereafter each house showed serious defects due to inferior materials or workmanship, or both. In some, if not all, the roofs leaked, paint peeled off, cellar floors cracked and separated, plumbing appeared defective, et cetera. On appeal, there is no claim that the defects were not proven or that the damages were excessive. Respective plaintiffs each brought a separate suit against the Currier Lumber Company, and its subsidiaries, the Inter Urban Land Company and the Mobile Homes Corporation. The cases were consolidated, tried without a jury and judgment rendered against all the defendants in sums amounting to $635 each in four cases and $795 in the fifth case. The cases have been appealed on one record. They involve substantially similar questions of fact and law.
In the declarations the plaintiffs alleged representations made to them that the houses were built in good workmanlike manner and according to the Federal housing administration’s requirements, and that these representations were untrue; that while *236the actions sounded in tort, plaintiffs waived.it, and brought suit in assumpsit. They added the common counts.
The trial judge found that while plaintiffs failed to prove fraud, they did establish a breach of contract on the part of the different subsidiaries; that the latter were so completely controlled and dominated by defendant Currier Lumber Company as to make each of them the mere instrumentality, agent or adjunct of the lumber company; that the subsidiaries had no independent existence but were mere instrumentalities through which the lumber company acted.
The Currier Lumber Company, a Michigan corporation, the parent corporation, was organized in 1927 for the purpose of buying and selling lumber and building supplies. It is referred to herein as the Currier Company. Two subsidiaries were created in 1941: the Inter Urban Land Company, which was incorporated for the purpose of dealing in real estate, and the Mobile Homes Corporation, which was incorporated for the purpose of engaging in a general building business. The president and controlling stockholder of the Currier Company is Patrick J. Currier. The directors of the parent corporation are: Patrick J. Currier, president, Theodore G-. Navarre, secretary, and John W. Olsen, auditor. The stock of Inter Urban Land Company was held by Donald F. Currier, son of the president of the parent company, who subsequently transferred it to Currier Company but was given a proxy to vote all of the 2,000 shares outstanding. The directors of that subsidiary corporation were: Donald F. Currier, Vincent J. Currier, another son of Patrick Currier, William D. Block, an employee of the parent company, and Theodore Navarre, secretary of the parent corporation. All of the stock
*237of Mobile Homes Corporation was held, by Vincent J. Currier, although the money therefor was advanced by Currier Company. The directors of that subsidiary were: Vincent Currier, Donald Currier, William Block and Theodore Navarre. All three corporations conducted their business at the same address; vis., 17507 Van Dyke avenue, Detroit, Michigan.
It is undisputed that all of the capital, financing and credit required by the two subsidiaries was provided exclusively by the parent corporation. The-original issue of capital stock in the Mobile Homes Corporation, 50 shares at $100 per share, was subscribed for in its entirety by Currier Company. During the comparatively short period of its existence, from August 5,1941, when it was incorporated “until its dissolution on May 8, 1943, the Mobile Homes Corporation received from Currier Company a credit of approximately $1,000,000 for lumber and building materials all of which were purchased from the parent company, and approximately $100,000 in -cash, advanced to Mobile Corporation to meet its payroll. As this subsidiary sold houses, it applied the purchase price money received therefor upon its obligations to the parent company. When it was dissolved in May, 1943, Mobile Corporation owed Currier Company approximately $90,000, which debt was written oft by Currier Company.
In 1941 Mobile Corporation entered into a land contract with the Stephenson Land Company, not a party to this litigation, to purchase a subdivision known as the “Stephenson Subdivision,” heretofore referred ,to, and made a down payment thereon. Subsequently, Mobile Corporation sold and assigned its equity in the land contract to Inter Urban Land Company with an option back which would permit *238Mobile Corporation to repurchase any of the lots in the subdivision at cost within one year’s time. The explanation is offered that this device was utilized to enable Inter Urban to carry the contract and thus reduce the need of Mobile Corporation for additional capital. Inter Urban acquired title to the subdivision, presumably with the $88,000 advanced to it by Currier Company, which accepted the notes of Inter Urban for that amount. Thereupon Mobile Corporation began to exercise its option and paid Inter Urban the cost price for each lot it repurchased. When Mobile Corporation sold a house and lot, however, a deed was executed by Inter Urban running directly to the purchaser without the intervention of Mobile Corporation, notwithstanding that the purchase agreements were usually with Mobile Corporation or with Defense Housing Company,, real estate brokers for the Stephenson project.
During the year 1942 each of the plaintiffs herein purchased a newly-constructed house from the subsidiaries of Currier Company. The deeds were made out to plaintiffs by the Inter Urban Land Company; the purchase agreements were with Mobile Homes Corporation, with the exception of those made with plaintiffs Bidigare and. Hoeberling* in which the Defense Housing* Company, real estate brokers, is indicated in the agreement as the seller. The purchase agreements all contained the following uniform provisions:
“All construction to have been completed to the satisfaction of the Federal Housing* Administration and in conformity with the local and State building code or requirements. * * *
“Final payment from proceeds from the mortgage upon approval of final F.H.A. inspection, or whatever other additional evidence of satisfactory completion and title may be required according to the judgment of the mortgagee.”
*239It is undisputed that the Federal housing administration made three routine inspections of each of the houses during the various stages of construction which, according to an employee of that agency, is customary. It is also undisputed that each of the plaintiffs were shown through their respective houses and had an opportunity to inspect them prior to entering into their purchase agreements. The record establishes the fact, however, that the construction of these houses was faulty; and that it was only a matter of two or three weeks in some cases to two or three months in others before the defects began to appear.
Plaintiffs initially addressed their complaints to Currier Company which did not deny its interest or liability but, on the contrary, sent out its workmen in' its own trucks to attempt to repair some of the defects. These attempts at repair having proved unsatisfactory in most cases, plaintiffs addressed their complaints to the Federal housing administration. Correspondence from the F.H.A. to Mobile Homes Corporation with regard to the necessity of repairs on these houses were answered by officers of the Currier Company on the letterhead stationery of the latter company. In its replies to the F.H.A., Currier Company did not deny its interest in the Stephenson building project or its liability for the defects in construction concerning which plaintiffs were protesting to the F.H.A. These efforts having proved unavailing, plaintiffs instituted the instant actions in January, 1944.
The following circumstances clearly establish the fact that both subsidiary corporations were completely controlled and dominated by Currier Company and had no independent existence separate and apart from the parent corporation:
1. All of the capital of the two subsidiaries was provided exclusively by the parent company;
*2402. All of the credit necessary for the operations of the subsidiaries was provided exclusively by the parent company, which in the case of Mobile Homes Corporation amounted to approximately $1,000,000;
3. Mobile Homes Corporation purchásed all of its lumber and building supplies exclusively from the parent company;
4. The capital of Mobile Homes Corporation was grossly inadequate for the nature of the undertaking. Mobile Corporation was originally capitalized for $5,000 and immediately embarked upon a project which required a credit of $1,000,000;
5. The officers and directors of the subsidiaries were the officers and directors or the employees of the parent and the sons of the president of the parent company;
6. Officers and employees on the payroll of the parent company rendered gratuitous services to the subsidiaries in the normal course of business; e.g., Olsen, who as auditor of the Currier Company also audited the books of Mobile and Inter Urban without any additional compensation;
7. The parent company handled the payroll of Mobile Corporation;
8. The policies and decisions of the subsidiaries were determined largely by Patrick J. Currier, president of Currier Company;
9. The offices and business of all three .corporations were carried on at the same business address ;
10. Inter .Urban Land Company was operated as a mere convenience and received no profit whatsoever ;
11. Upon the completion of the project, Mobile Homes Corporation, which was still indebted to the parent company to the extent of approximately $90,000, was dissolved. The debt was written off by both companies;
*24112. Correspondence on the letterhead of Carrier Company signed “Carrier Lamber Company” by its advertising manager, indicates that' Carrier Company regarded the Stephenson sabdivision project as its own:
A letter addressed to Mrs. M. M. Evans, one of the real estate brokers associated with the promotion of the bailding project, contains the following:
(1) “I am sabmitting to yoa certain information with regard to the hoases in the Stephenson project and clarifying certain matters of sales policy which ive have established. * * *
(2) “In setting áp our project with the F.H.A we have made the Defense Hoasing Company our selling agent. * * *
(3) “I am sare yoa realize that in an operation of this size in which'nearly a million dollars of the Carrier Lamber Company’s money is invested, we mast have some specific rales on which there can be no exception.”
Another letter to Mrs. Evans9stated:
(1) “We cannot promise any delivery date on hoases * * * loe have arrived at a compromise policy, whereby, we will inform the .parchaser * * * we will arrive at a delivery date for the hoase. * * *
(2) “A price increase on the hoases is dae next Monday, March 30. This increase will probably be $200 on all hoases except those having-plain roofs. We will inform yoa. definitely of the date apon which this change becomes effective.”
A third letter to Mrs. Evans stated that:
(1) “We have foand it necessary - * * * to readjast slightly certain prices in the Mobile Homes Project at Stephenson Highway. # * *
*242(2) “We feel that these adjustments of price are so slight as to have no effect on sales. On the contrary, we feel that these changes give us a more logical spread of prices * * * ” et cetera;
13. Another letter also on Currier Company’s letterhead was addressed to Mrs. Evans and signed “Currier Lumber Company,” P. J. Currier, President, in which it is stated:
a. “A recent survey of our sales record in the Stephenson Highway project shows that in the past 60 days, only four purchase agreements have been turned in by your office on project houses. * * *
b. “Obviously, this sales record does not justify the use of a model. We, therefore, regret very much that we must ask you to vacate this model as quickly as possible;”
14. Correspondence addressed by the Federal housing administration to “Mobile Homes, Inc., 17507 Van Dyke avenue, Detroit, Michigan,” would be answered and signed by ‘ ‘ Currier Lumber Company, Secretary;”
15. Correspondence directed to plaintiffs relative to their complaints were signed ‘ ‘ Currier Lumber Company, T. Navarre, Secretary;”
16. An agreement was introduced between Carl Hoeberling and wife, plaintiffs, and Currier Company itself wherein Currier Company agreed to erect a garage at a cost of $460 for the Hoeberlings, who had purchased one of the Stephenson project houses. It is noted that the agreement bears the date of July 8, 1942, at which time Mobile Homes Corporation was still in being and active, that corporation not having been dissolved until May 8, 1943. It thus appears that although appellants claim Currier‘Lumber Company only bought and *243sold lumber, it also engaged in the building busi-, ness;
17. Complaints were frequently made by.plaintiffs directly to the Currier Company regarding defects in the houses, which resulted in some superficial repairs being attended to by workmen who arrived in Currier Company’s vehicles and identified themselves as Currier Company employees.
In determining whether the corporate entity should be disregarded and the parent company held liable on the contracts of its subsidiary because the latter served as a mere instrumentality or adjunct of the former, each case is s%á generis and must be decided in accordance with its own underlying facts. Fish v. East (C. C. A.), 114 Fed. (2d) 177, 191; Centmont Corp. v. Marsch (C. C. A.), 68 Fed. (2d) 460, 463; Industrial Research Corp. v. General Motors Corp. (C. C. A.), 29 Fed. (2d) 623, 626.
Appellants rely largely on Gledhill v. Fisher & Co., 272 Mich. 353, 357 (102 A. L. R. 1042), wherein this Court stated:
“Before th'e corporate entity may be properly disregarded and the parent corporation held liable for the acts of its subsidiary, * * * it must be shown not only that undue domination and control was exercised by the parent corporation over the subsidiary, but also that this control was exercised in such a manner as to defraud and wrong the complainant, and that unjust loss or injury will be suffered by the complainant as the result of such domination unless the parent corporation be held liable.”
The fact situation in Gledhill v. Fisher & Co., supra, was far different from that in the instant case. In that case, a realty company, referred to as the vendee, was organized by the New Center Development Corporation, a subsidiary of Fisher & Company. The development corporation fur*244nished the capital for the vendee, the officers of which were nominated by the development corporal tion and its parent, Fisher & Company, which was engaged in the investment business. ‘ The vendee corporation purchased a parcel of property on land contract from Gledhill. 'The purchase price was $125,000, almost $25,000 of which had been paid the vendor when the depression set in with its accompanying deflation in real estate values; whereupon the vendee corporation and Gledhill agreed to cancel the contract, Gledhill retaining the property and all sums that had already been paid on the contract. Subsequently, Gledhill learned for the first time of Fisher & Company’s interest and brought suit to have the,contract reinstated, alleging that the cancellation agreement had been procured by fraud on the part of defendants. We held there was no liability inasmuch as there was no fraud in the purchase of the property by the subsidiary without a disclosure of the ownership of its capital stock, nor did the record indicate that the vendor had placed any reliance upon the fact that Fisher &, Company had an interest in the vendee corporation. Such is not the situation in the instant case wherein the parent corporation so completely overshadowed its subsidiaries as to leave no doubt but that the latter were created as mere instrumentalities or adjuncts for the activities of the former. Notwithstanding the finding of the lower court that there was no actual fraud on the part of defendant Currier Company, there is to be found in the record a recurring element of Currier Company’s recognition and acknowledgment of its own responsibility to plaintiffs which was entirely lacking in Gledhill v. Fisher & Co., supra.
In Berkey v. Third Avenue Railway Co., 244 N. Y. 84 (155 N. E. 58, 50 A. L. R. 599), the defendant *245prevailed, but Chief Justice Cardozo, writing for the court, stated the rule as follows:
“Dominion may be so complete, interference so obtrusive, that by the general rules of agency the parent will be a principal and the subsidiary an agent. Where control is less than this, we are remitted to the tests of honesty and justice (Ballantine, Parent & Subsidiary Corporations, 14 California Law Review, 12, 18, 19, 20). The logical consistency of a juridical conception will indeed be sacrificed at times when the sacrifice is essential to the end that some accepted public policy may be defended or upheld. This is so, for illustration, though agency in any proper sense is lacking, where the attempted separation between parent and subsidiary will work a fraud upon the law (Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Minneapolis Civic & Commerce Assn., 247 U. S. 490 (38 Sup. Ct. 553, 62 L. Ed. 1229); United States v. Reading Company, 253 U. S. 26, 61, 63 [40 Sup. Ct. 425, 64 L. Ed. 760]). At such times unity is ascribed to parts which, at least for many purposes, retain an independent life, for the reason that only thus can we overcome a perversion of the privilege to do business in a corporate form.”
Professor Ballantine in his article on Parent and Subsidiary Corporations, 14 California Law Review, 12, 18, states:
“It is submitted that no mechanical rule based, on objective facts of control or connection which will furnish a certain test is possible of formulation. Identity of stockholders, identity of officers, the manner of keeping books and records, the methods of conducting the corporate business as a separate concern or as a mere department of the other concern, may be evidential facts to be considered as bearing on the question of juggling of separate capacities and whether the subsidiary is being man*246aged in such a way as to make the controlling corporation justly responsible. But after all it comes down to a question of good faith and honesty in. the use of the corporate privilege for legitimate ends. If a corporation is owned and controlled by another and is manipulated by the owner for its own purposes and in its own interests to the prejudice of innocent third parties, or the public welfare, it may be necessary to limit such abuse of the corporate capacity or shield.'”
In Tennessee Consolidated Coal Co. v. Home Ice & Fuel Co., 25 Tenn. App. 316, 321 (156 S. W. [2d] 454, 458), the court observed that:
“It is not necessary for one to show that he has been misled, deceived or actually defrauded, to enable him to invoke this rule. It is enough that the parent corporation’s domination of the subsidiary was so complete as to make the subsidiary a mere tool, agency or instrumentality of the parent; and that he will suffer loss unless the parent be held. ’ ’
Applying this rule in Consolidated Rock Products Co. v. DuBois, 312 U. S. 510 (61 Sup. Ct. 675, 85 L. Ed. 982), Mr. Justice Douglas, writing for the United States Supreme Court, observed:
“All management functions of the several companies were assumed by Consolidated. The subsidiaries abdicated. Consolidated operated them as mere departments of its own business. Not even the formalities of separate corporate organizations were observed, except in minor particulars such as the maintenance of certain separate accounts. In view of these facts, Consolidated is in no position to claim that its assets are insulated from spch claims of creditors of the subsidiaries. To the contrary, it is well settled that where a holding company directly intervenes in the management of its subsidiaries so as to treat them as mere depart*247ments of its own enterprise, it is responsible for tbe obligations of those subsidiaries incurred or arising during its management. Davis v. Alexander, 269 U. S. 114, 117 (46 Sup. Ct. 34, 70 L. Ed. 186); Joseph R. Foard Co. v. Maryland, 135 C. C. A. 497, 499 (219 Fed. 827, 829); Stark Electric R. Co. v. M’Ginty Contracting Co., 151 C. C. A. 507, 511-513 (238 Fed. 657, 661-663); The Willem Van Driel, Sr., 164 C. C. A. 147, 149-151 (252 Fed. 35, 37-39); Luckenbach S. S. Co. v. W. R. Grace & Co. (C. C. A.), 267 Fed. 676, 681; Gostan v. Manila Electric Co. (C. C. A.), 24 Fed. (2d) 383; Kingston Dry Dock Co. v. Lake Champlain Transp. Co., 31 Fed. (2d) 265, 267; Dillard & Coffin Co. v. Richmond Cotton Oil Co., 140 Tenn. 290 (204 S. W. 758).”
Tbe record in tbe instant case indicates that tbe Inter Urban-Land Company and Mobile Homes Corporation were operated as “mere departments” of tbe Currier Company. Tbe trial court, notwithstanding tbe lack of actual fraud, properly found tbe parent company’s domination and control so complete as to maké tbe short-lived subsidiaries tbe mere instrumentalities and adjuncts of tbe Currier Company and correctly held-the latter responsible for their contractual obligations to plaintiffs.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to plaintiffs; costs, however, to be recovered in only one case.
Carr, C. J., and Bushnell, Sharpe, Boyles, Reid, North, and Dethmers, JJ., concurred.