OP ALA, Justice.
The issues presented on certiorari are: (1) Does Robert Alan Tarr [Tarr] have standing to press his claim for loss of property by fire against Republic Underwriters Insurance Company [Republic or insurer] and Fred Holman [Holman or agent]? (2) Was the theory of bad-faith refusal to settle an insurance claim preserved for corrective relief by Ruth Gray [Gray] and Tarr’s [collectively insureds] appellate paperwork? (3) Did the case present controverted facts that are material to the insureds’ claim for (a) Republic’s bad-faith refusal to settle and (b) Holman’s negligence in failing to procure the arranged-for indemnity coverage, which make the nisi prius
summary
judgment for Republic and Holman legally unsustainable? We answer all three questions in the affirmative.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
In April 1986 Ruth Gray — Tarr’s mother— secured from Republic a standard fire insurance policy for certain premises in Ada. Gray claims that, while she did not hold legal title to this property, she paid the taxes on it, advanced money for its upgrade, had an oral agreement with her son for repayment of the funds which she had advanced for remodeling, and paid premiums upon the policy covering the premises. She considered the property to be
security for her son’s reimbursement
of the expended funds.
Gray’s fire insurance policy was purchased from Republic through its agent Holman. When Gray bought the policy, she allegedly informed Holman that the insured property’s legal title stood in her son’s name.
Holman, who — according to Gray — told her that it did not matter in whose name title was held, had the policy issued to her as the
only
insured.
On June 4, 1986 the insured property was destroyed by fire. Through Holman, Gray informed Republic of the fire loss on June 5, 1986. Her claim was denied on August 15, 1986 on the grounds that
legal title
to the insured premises
was not in her name, i.e.,
she did not have an “insurable interest” in the property.
The record does
not
disclose whether, after declaring her policy “avoidable”, Republic ever refunded any premiums Gray had paid.
In early 1987 Gray hired counsel to recover the fire loss. Upon (a) Republic’s persistence that Gray
did not have an insurable interest
in the covered property and (b) its continued denial of the claim, Gray and Tarr sued both Holman and Republic on June 2,
1988
— more
than one year,
but
less than two years,
after the fire. Gray and Tarr advanced a
contract
theory of liability against both the insurer and its agent. They also pressed a
tort
theory for Republic’s alleged bad-faith refusal to pay the claim and for Holman’s negligence in failing to procure the arranged-for indemnity policy. On December 14, 1989 the trial court summarily ruled for Holman
and Republic on the
contractual
theory of liability.
Gray’s
tort
theories were suminarily decided in favor of the insurer on February 16, 1990. The nisi prius summary disposition of Tarr’s claim [on all theories of liability] — also in favor of Republic and Holman — was effected by its March 7, 1990 order.
The insureds timely appealed. The Court of Appeals’ opinion affirmed the nisi prius summary judgment insofar as it is rested on the
contractual
theory of liability but reversed the ruling for Holman on the insureds’
negligence
claim, held the insureds’ claim for the insurer’s bad-faith refusal to settle was not preserved for appellate review, and remanded the cause for trial of the insureds’ negligence claim against Holman. The insurer and the insureds filed separate petitions for rehearing. One rehearing petition was denied on October
22,1992
and the other on September 22,
1991.
This court granted Gray and Tarr’s timely plea for cer-tiorari on December 12,1994.
II
IF GRAY IS FOUND TO HAVE BEEN TARR’S AGENT WHEN SHE PURCHASED FIRE COVERAGE FOR HIS PROPERTY, TARR — WHETHER A
DISCLOSED OR UNDISCLOSED
PRINCIPAL — CAN BRING AN ACTION IN TORT AGAINST THE INSURER TO REDRESS ANY INJURY TO
HIS
PROPERTY OR HARM TO
HIS
INTEREST FROM THE TRANSACTION BY GRAY AS
HIS
AGENT
Resolution of Tarr’s standing
to sue Republic and Holman requires a
factual inquiry
into whether Gray was Tarr’s agent
or merely an officious volunteer.
If, in fact, Tarr
was
either Gray’s
disclosed or undisclosed
principal and Gray
was
authorized to secure fire coverage for the premises on
Tarr’s behalf, any injury to the property or harm from the agent’s (Gray’s) transaction can be redressed
ex delicto.
In their briefs Republic and Holman assure us they knew nothing of Tarr or of his interest in the insured property until the present action was brought. Gray represents that Tarr
authorized
her to procure the insurance policy. Whether Gray and Tarr did, at the time she purchased the fire-loss coverage, stand vis-á-vis each other as agent and principal presents a
factual dispute
which is unfit for summary disposition and hence remains unresolved by the trilogy of the trial court’s critical summary rulings of December 14, February 16 or March 7. Tarr’s standing to sue cannot be denied
anterior
to determining Gray’s status
qua
Tarr’s agent.
Ill
BAD-FAITH REFUSAL TO SETTLE A CLAIM IS
FAIRLY COMPRISED
IN THE ERRORS ASSIGNED FOR APPELLATE REVIEW BY GRAY AND TARR’S PETITION IN ERROR
Without specifically referencing
bad-faith refusal to settle a
claim
in section “D”
of their joint petition in error, Gray and Tarr challenge as erroneous the nisi prius conclusion that Gray did
not
have an
insurable interest
in the property destroyed by fire. The insureds’ omission is not fatal to preserving for appellate review
bad-faith refusal to pay a claim.
That issue is
fairly comprised
within the appellants’ assignment of errors.
Republic’s refusal to settle Gray’s claim is actionable if it can be established that, when the insurer’s actions are measured by the facts then
known
and
knowable
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OP ALA, Justice.
The issues presented on certiorari are: (1) Does Robert Alan Tarr [Tarr] have standing to press his claim for loss of property by fire against Republic Underwriters Insurance Company [Republic or insurer] and Fred Holman [Holman or agent]? (2) Was the theory of bad-faith refusal to settle an insurance claim preserved for corrective relief by Ruth Gray [Gray] and Tarr’s [collectively insureds] appellate paperwork? (3) Did the case present controverted facts that are material to the insureds’ claim for (a) Republic’s bad-faith refusal to settle and (b) Holman’s negligence in failing to procure the arranged-for indemnity coverage, which make the nisi prius
summary
judgment for Republic and Holman legally unsustainable? We answer all three questions in the affirmative.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
In April 1986 Ruth Gray — Tarr’s mother— secured from Republic a standard fire insurance policy for certain premises in Ada. Gray claims that, while she did not hold legal title to this property, she paid the taxes on it, advanced money for its upgrade, had an oral agreement with her son for repayment of the funds which she had advanced for remodeling, and paid premiums upon the policy covering the premises. She considered the property to be
security for her son’s reimbursement
of the expended funds.
Gray’s fire insurance policy was purchased from Republic through its agent Holman. When Gray bought the policy, she allegedly informed Holman that the insured property’s legal title stood in her son’s name.
Holman, who — according to Gray — told her that it did not matter in whose name title was held, had the policy issued to her as the
only
insured.
On June 4, 1986 the insured property was destroyed by fire. Through Holman, Gray informed Republic of the fire loss on June 5, 1986. Her claim was denied on August 15, 1986 on the grounds that
legal title
to the insured premises
was not in her name, i.e.,
she did not have an “insurable interest” in the property.
The record does
not
disclose whether, after declaring her policy “avoidable”, Republic ever refunded any premiums Gray had paid.
In early 1987 Gray hired counsel to recover the fire loss. Upon (a) Republic’s persistence that Gray
did not have an insurable interest
in the covered property and (b) its continued denial of the claim, Gray and Tarr sued both Holman and Republic on June 2,
1988
— more
than one year,
but
less than two years,
after the fire. Gray and Tarr advanced a
contract
theory of liability against both the insurer and its agent. They also pressed a
tort
theory for Republic’s alleged bad-faith refusal to pay the claim and for Holman’s negligence in failing to procure the arranged-for indemnity policy. On December 14, 1989 the trial court summarily ruled for Holman
and Republic on the
contractual
theory of liability.
Gray’s
tort
theories were suminarily decided in favor of the insurer on February 16, 1990. The nisi prius summary disposition of Tarr’s claim [on all theories of liability] — also in favor of Republic and Holman — was effected by its March 7, 1990 order.
The insureds timely appealed. The Court of Appeals’ opinion affirmed the nisi prius summary judgment insofar as it is rested on the
contractual
theory of liability but reversed the ruling for Holman on the insureds’
negligence
claim, held the insureds’ claim for the insurer’s bad-faith refusal to settle was not preserved for appellate review, and remanded the cause for trial of the insureds’ negligence claim against Holman. The insurer and the insureds filed separate petitions for rehearing. One rehearing petition was denied on October
22,1992
and the other on September 22,
1991.
This court granted Gray and Tarr’s timely plea for cer-tiorari on December 12,1994.
II
IF GRAY IS FOUND TO HAVE BEEN TARR’S AGENT WHEN SHE PURCHASED FIRE COVERAGE FOR HIS PROPERTY, TARR — WHETHER A
DISCLOSED OR UNDISCLOSED
PRINCIPAL — CAN BRING AN ACTION IN TORT AGAINST THE INSURER TO REDRESS ANY INJURY TO
HIS
PROPERTY OR HARM TO
HIS
INTEREST FROM THE TRANSACTION BY GRAY AS
HIS
AGENT
Resolution of Tarr’s standing
to sue Republic and Holman requires a
factual inquiry
into whether Gray was Tarr’s agent
or merely an officious volunteer.
If, in fact, Tarr
was
either Gray’s
disclosed or undisclosed
principal and Gray
was
authorized to secure fire coverage for the premises on
Tarr’s behalf, any injury to the property or harm from the agent’s (Gray’s) transaction can be redressed
ex delicto.
In their briefs Republic and Holman assure us they knew nothing of Tarr or of his interest in the insured property until the present action was brought. Gray represents that Tarr
authorized
her to procure the insurance policy. Whether Gray and Tarr did, at the time she purchased the fire-loss coverage, stand vis-á-vis each other as agent and principal presents a
factual dispute
which is unfit for summary disposition and hence remains unresolved by the trilogy of the trial court’s critical summary rulings of December 14, February 16 or March 7. Tarr’s standing to sue cannot be denied
anterior
to determining Gray’s status
qua
Tarr’s agent.
Ill
BAD-FAITH REFUSAL TO SETTLE A CLAIM IS
FAIRLY COMPRISED
IN THE ERRORS ASSIGNED FOR APPELLATE REVIEW BY GRAY AND TARR’S PETITION IN ERROR
Without specifically referencing
bad-faith refusal to settle a
claim
in section “D”
of their joint petition in error, Gray and Tarr challenge as erroneous the nisi prius conclusion that Gray did
not
have an
insurable interest
in the property destroyed by fire. The insureds’ omission is not fatal to preserving for appellate review
bad-faith refusal to pay a claim.
That issue is
fairly comprised
within the appellants’ assignment of errors.
Republic’s refusal to settle Gray’s claim is actionable if it can be established that, when the insurer’s actions are measured by the facts then
known
and
knowable
to it, its failure to recognize Gray’s [or Tarr’s, if then known as her principal] insurable interest in the covered property was in bad faith.
A petition in error should be construed as an entirety.
In summarizing the case
Gray and Tarr described their legal action as one for “bad faith refusal to settle a claim” for loss by fire to property in which they had an
insurable interest.
The statement of “issues and errors proposed to be raised on appeal,” when read in conjunction with the “summary of case,” is clearly suffi
cient to preserve for review the insureds’ claim for bad-faith refusal to settle.
IY
THE
RECORD
OF SUMMARY ADJUDICATION PROCESS
REVEALS A HOST
OF DISPUTED FACTS ON MATERIAL ISSUES
A
THE NATURE OF SUMMARY PROCESS
The focus in summary process is
not on
facts a plaintiff
might
be able to prove at trial
(i.e.,
the legal sufficiency of evidence that could be adduced) but rather on whether the
evidentiary materials
as a whole (a) show
undisputed facts
on some or all material issues and (b) will support but a
single inference
in favor of a successful movant’s quest for relief. Summary adjudication process — a special pretrial procedural track to be conducted with the aid of
acceptable probative substitutes
— is a
search for undisputed material fact issues
that may be resolved without forensic combat. It is a method for identifying and isolating non-triable fact issues, not a device for defeating the opponent’s right to trial by jury. Only that evidentiary material which entirely
eliminates from trial some or all fact issues
may afford legitimate support for nisi prius resort to summary process.
B
THE RECORD WILL NOT SUPPORT A SUMMARY RULING THAT REPUBLIC’S REFUSAL TO SETTLE GRAY’S CLAIM WAS
NOT
IN BAD FAITH
Inherent in the
summary
judgment for Republic on Gray’s (and Tarr’s) tort theory of insurer’s liability is the trial court’s determination that (a) Gray did
not
possess an
insurable interest
in the property and (b) the facts known or knowable to Republic at the time of the claims’s rejection legally support its refusal to pay the indemnity.
Before
summary disposition of this ease could be effected, the trial judge was duty-bound to ascertain — from the evidentiary material before him — that as a matter of law Gray [or Tarr, if her principal] did
not
and could
not
demonstrate she would gain some economic advantage by the insured property’s continued existence or, in the alternative,
that she [or Tarr, if her principal] did not suffer some economic detriment from its loss or destruction.
The law’s “factual expectation” standard, adopted in Snethen⅛
is today the Oklahoma test for use in ascertaining a person’s insurable interest. Equating
insurable interest
with a
legally cognizable estate
is no longer sanctioned by our jurisprudence.
The February 16 nisi prius order, here under review, rests upon the conclusions that (1) Tarr held
record title
to the insured property and (2) Gray — a stranger to title — and her son stood vis-á-vis each other in a creditor/debtor relationship. The record does not disclose that the trial court applied the “factual expectation” test. Because the
sparse evidentiary material
supplied for the trial court’s use in assaying Gray’s claimed stake in the premises supports
opposite inferences
concerning the nature or quantum of Gray’s own protectible interest in the destroyed property, the nisi prius
summary
rulings that (1) her interest was
not
insurable and (2) the insurer’s refusal to settle was
not
in bad faith cannot be sustained. These issues present disputed facts.
C
THE RECORD DOES NOT SUPPORT BUT A SINGLE INFERENCE THAT HOLMAN’S PROCUREMENT OF THE FIRE INSURANCE POLICY IN GRAY’S NAME WAS
NOT
NEGLIGENT AS A MATTER OF LAW
The record reveals a dispute between Gray and Holman concerning whether she informed him that her son — Tarr—held legal title to the property sought to be insured. The nisi prius February 16 order, resolving in favor of Republic and Holman
“all”
of Gray’s theories of liability, rests on a determination that Gray did not have an “insurable interest” in the covered property.
Regardless
of the Gray interest’s insurability, it is the trier of fact who must determine whether Gray did
in fact
apprise Holman that her son held legal title to the insured premises. This fact is
critical
to Tarr’s
(qua
principal) and to Gray’s
(qua
agent)
tort
claim for Holman’s
negligence
in procuring the arranged-for indemnity policy.
Whether Holman knew Gray did
not
hold legal title to the premises when he secured the fire insurance policy in her name presents a
controverted fact issue.
The summary adjudication process that resolves the insureds’
tort
claim for Holman’s negligence is hence flawed.
V
SUMMARY
While the insureds advanced at nisi prius both
ex contractu
and
ex delicto
theories,
only the latter stands preserved for our cer-tiorari review.
Republic and Holman challenged Tarr’s standing to press a claim for the fire loss. The record discloses that
no
inquiry was made below (a) to ascertain if
in fact
Gray was Tarr’s agent and had been authorized to secure fire-loss coverage for
his
property or (b) to probe into the nature and extent of
Gray’s own
protectible interest, if any she had, in the destroyed premises. If it be determined that at the time Gray purchased the fire insurance policy Tarr was
either her disclosed or undisclosed
principal, he can bring a tort action to redress any injury to his property or harm to any of his interest occasioned by Holman’s negligence.
A petition in error must be construed as an entirety. The issue of
bad-faith refusal to settle a claim
is clearly preserved for appellate review by the “summary of case”, when that part of Gray and Tarr’s
joint petition in error
is read in conjunction with its “Section D” assignments.
Summary adjudication process is a search for
non-triable
facts — not a technique for defeating the opponent’s right to trial by jury. The evidentiary materials as a whole reveal
disputed material
facts concerning the insurer’s
bad-faith refusal to settle
and about Holman’s
negligence.
The February 16 order, when viewed in light of the record before us, fails to disclose that the trial court applied the correct criteria — under the currently in force “factual expectation” test
— to determine if Gray, in her
individual capacity,
had an insurable interest in the covered property. Because several facts
material
to Gray and Tarr’s
ex delicto
theory of liability are controverted, summary judgment for Republic cannot be sustained. The summary ruling for Holman is equally insupportable.
The Court of Appeals’ pronouncement for Republic and Holman on the insureds’
ex contractu
theory of liability is left undisturbed by today’s opinion. After review of the errors addressed to
the tort theories
(pressed by both Gray and Tarr against the insurer and against Holman),
THE COURT OF APPEALS’ OPINION IS MODIFIED IN PART, THE NISI PRIUS SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR THE DEFENDANTS IS REVERSED IN PART, AND THE CAUSE IS REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS TO PROCEED IN A MANNER NOT INCONSISTENT WITH TODAY’S PRONOUNCEMENT.
ALMA WILSON, C.J., KAUGER, V.C.J., LAVENDER, OPALA, SUMMERS and WATT, JJ., concur.
HODGES, SIMMS and HARGRAVE, JJ., concur in part and dissent in part.