A labor organization known as the Oil Burner Mechanics Association filed charges with the National Labor Relations Board to the effect that The Timken Silent Automatic Company had engaged in unfair labor practices at its place of business in Long Island City, N. Y., contrary to Sec. 8(1) (3) and (5) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq. On November 13, 1935, the Board issued its complaint based on said charges. The complaint was duly served and the respondent filed an answer and moved to dismiss. Hearings were had and there were various proceedings in connection *450with the issues raised until on March 17, 1936 the Board made an order requiring the respondent to take designated action. The respondent took exceptions to the Board’s decision and moved to amend the order. The motion was denied on April 6, 1936. Following that, and on August 13, 1937, the Board, pursuant to Sec. 10(e) of the National Labor Relations Act filed its petition for the enforcement of its order. On November 22, 1937, the Board was informed that the respondent corporation had been dissolved and moved to remand the cause for further proceedings. This motion was granted. Thereupon, pursuant to notice to the respondent, to the Timken-Detroit Axle Company, a Michigan- corporation; and to the labor organization which had filed the charges; further hearings were had in May and July 1938. The respondent moved to dismiss on the ground that the Board had lost jurisdiction over it because of its dissolution before any decision and order had been made and the Timken-Detroit Axle Company, appearing specially , by the same counsel, moved to dismiss on the ground that no charges had been filed against it and no employees of it were concerned in the proceeding. These motions were both denied and, after the usual proceedings were had, the Board made its decision and entered the order which it now is seeking to enforce against both the .respondent and the Timken-Detroit Axle Company. The respondent and the Timken-Detroit Axle Company have both here moved to dismiss the petition to enforce for the same reasons.
The respondent, the wholly owned subsidiary of the Detroit-Timken Company, was organized under the laws of Michigan long before the passage of the National Labor Relations Act. It was in the oil, burner business until its charter expired on January 31, 1936. Since then it has had no corporate existence except such as was continued by the Michigan statute relating to the winding up of dissolved corporations. Sec. 75 of the General Corporation Law of Michigan, as amended, Comp.Laws Supp.Mich.1940, § 10135-75.
■ This statute provides that corporations whose charters have expired shall be continued as bodies corporate for three years with certain extensions “for the purpose of prosecuting and defending suits for or against them and of enabling them gradually to settle and close their affairs and to dispose of and convey their property and to divide their assets; but not for the purpose of continuing the business for which such corporations were organized * *
Proceedings before the National Labor Relations Board are not of such a nature that they can be said strictly to be suits against those who are made respondents and in that respect to fall clearly within the Michigan statute. They are, however, the initial stages leading up to the right to file petitions such as this for the enforcement of orders made in them, or for the modification or reversal of such orders. Such petitions are analogous to suits and the prior proceedings before the-Board are essential to the fulfillment of the statutory conditions precedent to invoking such judicial action. The Michigan statute is remedial and should, we think, be construed with sufficient liberality to prevent the loss of jurisdiction, already duly obtained by the Labor Board, by the dissolution of a corporate respondent. It may be that though the Board’s jurisdiction is not wholly lost that the scope of its order may be somewhat curtailed in view of the fact that even under the Michigan statute the corporation ceases to exist for the purpose of continuing the business for which it was organized. An order which required for'its compliance the continuation of such a respondent’s business as, for instance, the re-employment of unlawfully discharged employees might well be beyond the power of the Board but that issue is not now before us. For the present we merely hold that the motion to dismiss this petition as to the original respondent is not well taken and should be denied.
The motion by the Timken-Detroit Axle Company rests on wholly different grounds. Although the original respondent was its wholly owned subsidiary there is no showing here made which gives sufficient ground for disregarding the separate corporate existence of the two. No control by the parent may be said to have wronged or defrauded anyone with whom these proceedings are concerned and without proof of that sort of dominance the parent stockholder is not to be treated as one with the subsidiary corporation. Finley v. Union Joint Stock Land Bank, 281 Mich. 214, 274 N.W. 768; Gledhill v. Fisher & Co., 272 Mich. 353, 262 N.W. 371, 102 A.L.R. 1042; Kingston *451Dry Dock Co. v. Lake Champlain Transportation Co., 2 Cir., 31 F.2d 265. Nor does an agreement to assume and discharge the obligations of the subsidiary operate as a merger of the two. Whatever rights and obligations may arise from that fall short of making the two corporations one entity in law and that alone is of present importance.
As the Detroit-Timken Axle Company is to be treated as a corporation apart from the original respondent, the motion to dismiss as to it must be granted for the reason, at least, that the only employees involved in the proceedings and the order sought to be enforced are those of the original respondent and not those of the Timken-Detroit Axle Company. National Labor Relations Board v. National Casket Co., 2 Cir., 107 F.2d 992; Phelps-Dodge Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board, 113 F.2d 202, 2 Cir., decided July 11, 1940.
The motion of the Timken Silent Automatic Company is denied; that of the Timken-Detroit Axle Company is granted.