OPALA, Vice Chief Justice.
On affirmance of summary judgment for the insured, the insurer urges on certiorari that the evidentiary materials in the record support but a single inference — that the harm for which recovery is sought did not “arise out of the use of an uninsured automobile.” Although we reject the insurer’s proposition, we reverse the summary judgment and remand this cause for trial.
T.
ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
A.
The facts affecting the claim
While on patrol, police officer George Ray Willard spotted a vehicle driven by [1126]*1126then-suspected armed robber, Mark Wesley Kelley. As Willard attempted to stop him, a chase ensued. After colliding with two other cars, Kelley’s automobile came to a temporary halt. The patrol car stopped behind it. Willard quickly drew his weapon as he stepped out beside his car. He then heard a gunshot and felt his left arm drop from its raised position. Although he immediately ducked behind his car door, more bullets were fired from Kelley’s automobile. Several of them, penetrating the car door, struck Willard.
B.
The case before the trial court
Willard and his wife, Carol, [collectively called insured] sued both Kelley and their personal automobile insurance carrier, Prudential Property and Casualty Insurance Co. (insurer or Prudential). From the latter they sought to recover the limits of the policy’s uninsured motorist (UM) coverage for bodily injuries sustained in the shooting incident. 'Willard alone pressed for recovery under the medical payments coverage.1 Without affecting any issue in controversy between Prudential and its insured, default judgment was taken against Kelley, and, since the latter did not appeal, that judgment now stands as final.
The remaining parties in the lawsuit (the insured and insurer) stipulated to these facts: 1) at the time of the shooting Kelley was an uninsured/underinsured motorist within the meaning of the UM statute, 36 O.S.1981 § 3636,2 2) from within an automobile, Kelley “shot ... Willard several times thus inflicting wounds [upon several parts of his body]” while the latter was beside his patrol car and 3) the damages sustained by the insured “equal or exceed” the limits of the insurance policy’s UM and medical payments coverages.
Each party sought summary judgment. The insurer argued that coverage is afforded neither by the UM statute nor by the insurance policy, which contains the following provision:
“[Insurer is obligated] [t]o pay all sums which the insured ... shall be legally entitled to recover as damages from the owner or operator of an uninsured automobile because of bodily injury ... sustained by the insured, caused by accident and arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of such uninsured automobile_” (Emphasis added.)
Prudential maintained that, as a matter of law, Kelley’s act of shooting from an automobile does not constitute a “use” which gives rise to UM liability within the meaning of the quoted policy language. The insured, on the other hand, urged that the injurious event should be viewed as an “accident” stemming from Kelley’s “continuous and uninterrupted” operation and use of an uninsured vehicle. The policy does not define the term “accident.”
Prudential’s refusal to pay Willard under the medical payments coverage appears to have been rested on the following policy provision which obligates the company
“[t]o pay all reasonable expenses incurred within one year from the date of [1127]*1127accident for necessary medical, surgical, X-ray and dental services ...
“ * * * To or for the named insured ... who sustains bodily injury ... caused by accident,
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“(b) while occupying a non-owned automobile, but only if such person has ... the permission of the owner to use the automobile and the use is within the scope of such permission....” (Emphasis added.)
The trial court gave summary judgment to the insured and found 1) the injurious episode “was an accident which arose out of the use of an uninsured automobile” and 2) the insured is entitled to recover under the UM and medical payments provisions of the policy.3
C.
The issues in the Court of Appeals
According to the insurer’s brief-in-chief, the UM protection Willard invokes in this case is neither mandated by § 3636 nor provided by the terms of the policy in suit, because his injuries did not arise out of the use of an uninsured vehicle. Prudential also argued that medical payments coverage, which is triggered only if the insured is injured while occupying an automobile, should not have been found applicable to this claim since Willard was “clearly outside” his vehicle when the shooting occurred.
The insured urged that the trial court correctly characterized the shooting incident as an accident which arose out of the gunman’s (Kelley's) use of an automobile. In support of medical payments coverage, Willard relied on the policy’s own definition of the term “occupying.” Since it expressly includes “alighting from” an automobile, which, he contended, is what he was doing when Kelley opened fire, his presence “outside” the vehicle does not preclude recovery.
The Court of Appeals held that when considering insurance coverage, “the automobile need not be the proximate cause of the accident, but the broader requirement of causal relationship or connection is the appropriate test.” Concluding that the insured’s loss arose from the use of an uninsured car, the appellate court reasoned that Kelley’s vehicle “was the causal relationship or connection between Kelley’s actions and Willard’s injuries.” On the question of medical payments coverage, the court accepted Willard’s proposition and affirmed the decision allowing recovery.
D.
The issues on certiorari
Prudential urges on certiorari that both the Court of Appeals and the trial court erroneously concluded as a matter of law that Willard’s injuries arose from Kelley’s use of the car. The essence of Prudential’s position is that Willard’s injuries arose from the use of a firearm which is not a “natural and reasonable consequence” of a vehicle’s use; the gunman’s criminal act (of shooting Willard) “intervened” between the vehicle’s use as a means of escape and Willard’s gunshot wounds. Based on the “same arguments” against Willard’s quest for UM protection, the insurer views medical payments coverage as equally unavailable.
The insured’s response to the certiorari petition seeks to provide a cogent foundation for the Court of Appeals’ opinion and reasserts what the trial court, the Court of Appeals and the insurer all have concurred in: that the evidentiary materials tendered in the summary judgment process show that no material fact issues remain to be tried and that resolution of this claim hinges solely on a question of law. We reject [1128]*1128this notion because, based on our assessment of the record, conflicting inferences may be drawn from the material facts placed before the trial court.4
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OPALA, Vice Chief Justice.
On affirmance of summary judgment for the insured, the insurer urges on certiorari that the evidentiary materials in the record support but a single inference — that the harm for which recovery is sought did not “arise out of the use of an uninsured automobile.” Although we reject the insurer’s proposition, we reverse the summary judgment and remand this cause for trial.
T.
ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
A.
The facts affecting the claim
While on patrol, police officer George Ray Willard spotted a vehicle driven by [1126]*1126then-suspected armed robber, Mark Wesley Kelley. As Willard attempted to stop him, a chase ensued. After colliding with two other cars, Kelley’s automobile came to a temporary halt. The patrol car stopped behind it. Willard quickly drew his weapon as he stepped out beside his car. He then heard a gunshot and felt his left arm drop from its raised position. Although he immediately ducked behind his car door, more bullets were fired from Kelley’s automobile. Several of them, penetrating the car door, struck Willard.
B.
The case before the trial court
Willard and his wife, Carol, [collectively called insured] sued both Kelley and their personal automobile insurance carrier, Prudential Property and Casualty Insurance Co. (insurer or Prudential). From the latter they sought to recover the limits of the policy’s uninsured motorist (UM) coverage for bodily injuries sustained in the shooting incident. 'Willard alone pressed for recovery under the medical payments coverage.1 Without affecting any issue in controversy between Prudential and its insured, default judgment was taken against Kelley, and, since the latter did not appeal, that judgment now stands as final.
The remaining parties in the lawsuit (the insured and insurer) stipulated to these facts: 1) at the time of the shooting Kelley was an uninsured/underinsured motorist within the meaning of the UM statute, 36 O.S.1981 § 3636,2 2) from within an automobile, Kelley “shot ... Willard several times thus inflicting wounds [upon several parts of his body]” while the latter was beside his patrol car and 3) the damages sustained by the insured “equal or exceed” the limits of the insurance policy’s UM and medical payments coverages.
Each party sought summary judgment. The insurer argued that coverage is afforded neither by the UM statute nor by the insurance policy, which contains the following provision:
“[Insurer is obligated] [t]o pay all sums which the insured ... shall be legally entitled to recover as damages from the owner or operator of an uninsured automobile because of bodily injury ... sustained by the insured, caused by accident and arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of such uninsured automobile_” (Emphasis added.)
Prudential maintained that, as a matter of law, Kelley’s act of shooting from an automobile does not constitute a “use” which gives rise to UM liability within the meaning of the quoted policy language. The insured, on the other hand, urged that the injurious event should be viewed as an “accident” stemming from Kelley’s “continuous and uninterrupted” operation and use of an uninsured vehicle. The policy does not define the term “accident.”
Prudential’s refusal to pay Willard under the medical payments coverage appears to have been rested on the following policy provision which obligates the company
“[t]o pay all reasonable expenses incurred within one year from the date of [1127]*1127accident for necessary medical, surgical, X-ray and dental services ...
“ * * * To or for the named insured ... who sustains bodily injury ... caused by accident,
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“(b) while occupying a non-owned automobile, but only if such person has ... the permission of the owner to use the automobile and the use is within the scope of such permission....” (Emphasis added.)
The trial court gave summary judgment to the insured and found 1) the injurious episode “was an accident which arose out of the use of an uninsured automobile” and 2) the insured is entitled to recover under the UM and medical payments provisions of the policy.3
C.
The issues in the Court of Appeals
According to the insurer’s brief-in-chief, the UM protection Willard invokes in this case is neither mandated by § 3636 nor provided by the terms of the policy in suit, because his injuries did not arise out of the use of an uninsured vehicle. Prudential also argued that medical payments coverage, which is triggered only if the insured is injured while occupying an automobile, should not have been found applicable to this claim since Willard was “clearly outside” his vehicle when the shooting occurred.
The insured urged that the trial court correctly characterized the shooting incident as an accident which arose out of the gunman’s (Kelley's) use of an automobile. In support of medical payments coverage, Willard relied on the policy’s own definition of the term “occupying.” Since it expressly includes “alighting from” an automobile, which, he contended, is what he was doing when Kelley opened fire, his presence “outside” the vehicle does not preclude recovery.
The Court of Appeals held that when considering insurance coverage, “the automobile need not be the proximate cause of the accident, but the broader requirement of causal relationship or connection is the appropriate test.” Concluding that the insured’s loss arose from the use of an uninsured car, the appellate court reasoned that Kelley’s vehicle “was the causal relationship or connection between Kelley’s actions and Willard’s injuries.” On the question of medical payments coverage, the court accepted Willard’s proposition and affirmed the decision allowing recovery.
D.
The issues on certiorari
Prudential urges on certiorari that both the Court of Appeals and the trial court erroneously concluded as a matter of law that Willard’s injuries arose from Kelley’s use of the car. The essence of Prudential’s position is that Willard’s injuries arose from the use of a firearm which is not a “natural and reasonable consequence” of a vehicle’s use; the gunman’s criminal act (of shooting Willard) “intervened” between the vehicle’s use as a means of escape and Willard’s gunshot wounds. Based on the “same arguments” against Willard’s quest for UM protection, the insurer views medical payments coverage as equally unavailable.
The insured’s response to the certiorari petition seeks to provide a cogent foundation for the Court of Appeals’ opinion and reasserts what the trial court, the Court of Appeals and the insurer all have concurred in: that the evidentiary materials tendered in the summary judgment process show that no material fact issues remain to be tried and that resolution of this claim hinges solely on a question of law. We reject [1128]*1128this notion because, based on our assessment of the record, conflicting inferences may be drawn from the material facts placed before the trial court.4 Summary judgment for the insured was hence improvidently rendered. We grant Prudential’s petition for certiorari to provide guidance upon remand.
II.
THE INSURED’S QUEST FOR UM RECOVERY
It is not contested that the insured's injuries, to be redressible, must have been 1) caused by an accident and 2) arisen out of the use of an automobile. These elements are the sine qua non of the UM claim at bar, and, for reasons to be explained, both are inextricably intertwined. We must hence address each of them as they relate to the instant case.5
The automobile policy requirement that the harm to be indemnified be one caused by an accident
The insured had argued that the question whether an accident has occurred should be answered by assessing the harm-dealing event from his standpoint. Although the trial court specifically found that Willard’s injuries were caused by an accident, the record is silent as to how the fact finding process was shaped.
The judicial approach of gauging the character of an injurious event from the insured’s standpoint is not new to American jurisprudence. In cases where recovery was sought on a policy insuring against accidental death or injury, the terms “accident” or “accidental” have long been held to describe an occurrence which [1129]*1129is unexpected, unintended and unforeseen in the eyes of the insured,6 This is to say, even if an insured becomes the victim of an intentional act, the nature of the injury is nonetheless viewed as accidental, so long as the harm was not the reasonably foreseeable result of the insured’s own wilful act or misconduct.7 In the context of life and accident insurance this principle is also well established in Oklahoma.8
While public liability insurance generally does not protect the insured who intentionally inflicts harm upon another,9 UM and medical payments coverages afford indemnity to the insured for harm caused by another. We therefore hold that, in the absence of a contrary provision, an automobile insurance policy which includes uninsured motorist and medical payments coverage as well as insures against injuries “caused by accident,” does afford protection for harm that is unprovoked, unforeseen, and unintended on the part of the insured.10 The objective “reasonable person” standard is to be applied in appraising the injurious event’s character from the insured’s perspective.11 In light [1130]*1130of this applicable principle, the question for us to answer now is: Do the evidentiary materials in this record demonstrate the absence of a factual dispute over whether — from Willard’s standpoint — his injuries were occasioned by accident? We hold that they do not.
Considering all the so-called “undisputed facts,” along with the stipulations and surrounding circumstances of this case, we must conclude that reasonable minds may differ as to whether Willard expected or should have expected to be fired upon and seriously injured by the gunman. Nothing tendered in the summary judgment process sheds direct light on the foreseeability factor. Although the evidentiary materials appear to describe basically what happened, the record is inconclusive as to Willard’s state of mind when, while carrying out his duties as a police officer, he pursued Kelley and eventually met him face to face. For instance, the trier might view the facts as indicating Willard assumed the risk of a fight or confrontation without voluntarily assuming or exposing himself to the risk of serious bodily injury or death.12 The insured’s course of conduct, when measured by the evidentiary material in the record, is hence subject to different assessments; the issue remains one for the jury.13
The requisite connection between the insured’s injury and the gunman’s use of an uninsured vehicle
Willard’s UM policy covers injuries “caused by accident” and “arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use” of an uninsured automobile.14 (Emphasis added.) Since the latter element of this UM claim contemplates a factual inquiry into the causal relationship15 between the in[1131]*1131sured’s injuries and Kelley’s car use, the question next to be answered is whether the trial court correctly concluded that no fact issue exists. We hold that a question of fact does exist because conflicting inferences can be drawn from the facts in stipulation and those in the evidentiary materials.16
The record reveals 1) Kelley rested his gun on the car’s “window sill” as he opened fire; 2) Kelley remained in the car at all pertinent times; 3) during the shooting, the getaway car may not have been in motion, but it was in a transportation mode (engine running and in gear); 4) Kelley left the scene by driving away. From these facts a jury might infer that the act of shooting was designed to facilitate Kelley’s escape, impede Willard’s pursuit, either or both. Although when Kelley shot at Willard the car was not being used as a moving vehicle, the trier might nonetheless conclude that the shooting was related to Kelley’s use of the car as a means of getaway and to retard Willard’s pursuit. UM-covered use is limited neither to the car’s driving operation nor to the lawfulness of the use.
If, for instance, during the chase Kelly, instead of firing a gun, had thrown a large object out of the car and into Willard’s path, causing him to crash, there would be little doubt that whatever had been thrown from the car facilitated a getaway in the car and thus may be deemed to have arisen from the car’s use as a means to accomplish the desired escape. Similarly here, a jury may view the uninsured automobile’s use as incidental to the pursuit of a car-aided effort to prevent Willard’s apprehension of Kelley.
In sum, the purpose of the gun’s use might be viewed by the trier as identical to that for which the car was used — to impede Willard’s pursuit and to facilitate Kelley’s effective getaway. If the gun use and the car use are found to be inextricably connected in purpose, the trier could conclude that a causal connection exists between the gunshot wound and the vehicle’s use.17 For reasons to be stated the yet-to-be-determined foreseeability issue must also be included in the inquiry into the shooting’s causal nexus to Kelley’s use of the car.18
In a case of ordinary negligence a defendant may seek to avoid liability with proof that an intervening force, which directly caused the injury, is also the proximate cause. The foreseeability of the intervening force will determine whether the chain of causation between the defendant’s negligence and the injury is to be deemed broken. If the intervening force was foreseeable (or should have been anticipated), then the defendant’s original negligence remains the proximate cause of the injury. On the other hand, if an unforeseen, unexpected and independent happening directly causes the injury, then the causal link between the original negligence and the resulting harm is deemed broken and the initial actor is thus insulated from liability.19
[1132]*1132Similarly here, if the gunfire, which without question directly caused the injury, were to be found by the trier to have been unforeseeable from Willard’s standpoint, then a jury might either be less likely to link Kelley’s use of the automobile with the gunshot wounds he inflicted upon the insured or be more likely to conclude that the gunfire itself constitutes an independent intervening force which precludes the injuries from arising out of the automobile’s use.20 Indeed, Prudential argued that the causal nexus, if any, between Kelley’s use of the car and Willard’s injuries was broken by the gunman’s “intervening” act of shooting. The issue whether a causal link exists between the use of a car and the injury is hence, in this case, inextricably intertwined with the question whether an “accident” had occurred.21 Both factual issues depend in a large measure on the harm’s foreseeability viewed from the insured’s vantage point; both are nonsevera-ble22 jury questions.23
III.
WILLARD’S QUEST FOR MEDICAL PAYMENTS COVERAGE
The question here to be answered is whether, at the time of injury, Wiliard was occupying his patrol car within the meaning of his policy’s medical payments provisions. We hold that he was.24
While the parties agree Willard had stepped out of the driver’s seat when Kelley started shooting, the term “occupying” does include “alighting from” and “entering into" an automobile. Willard was shot immediately after he alighted from his seat and poised himself for a face to face encounter with Kelley. According to Wil[1133]*1133lard’s deposition testimony tendered by Prudential, once the gunfire had ceased, he found himself leaning on his car seat, knees on the ground. From that position, he felt the patrol car move as Kelley pushed it with his vehicle and escaped.
Under these unique facts we hold that the policy’s definition of “occupying” is broad enough to include Willard.25 When first shot, he either was in the process of alighting from his vehicle or never actually left it. Upon being hit by the subsequently fired bullets, Willard was “entering” the car. We nonetheless express no opinion on whether Willard may ultimately recover under his medical payments coverage since the fact question whether his harm was “caused by accident” remains unresolved.
IV.
THE EVIDENTIARY PROBLEM AND THE LEGAL EFFECT, IF ANY, OF KELLEY’S CONVICTION
Although the insured had conceded almost every “undisputed” fact relied on by Prudential, there is one point over which the parties differ. The insured maintains that Kelley merely shot “in the direction of Willard” and that the latter’s injuries resulted from an “accident” or Kelley’s “negligence” rather than from an intentional criminal act. Prudential had urged below that Kelley was convicted of the crime of shooting with intent to kill Willard. Inasmuch as this civil action is based on the same event for which, we are told, Kelley was held criminally accountable, the insurer urged that the issue of intent has already been resolved in its favor.
On this record it is apparent that Prudential attempted to use the criminal conviction to show that Willard’s injuries arose purely from the commission of a crime rather than from acts that are interconnected with, or reasonably related to, the use of an automobile. The insurer had tendered a copy of the appearance docket in Kelley’s criminal case to ’show he had been charged, tried and convicted of intentionally shooting to kill the insured.26 Although Kelley’s [1134]*1134intent is not per se relevant on the issue whether an “accident” had occurred (see Part 11(A) of this opinion), it may be a circumstance to be considered in assessing the foreseeability of harm as well as in appraising the purpose for which Kelley used the uninsured car and the gun with which he fired. The foreseeability.of harm to Willard and Kelley’s purpose in using both the car and the gun are relevant to the inquiry into the causal connection between Willard’s injuries and Kelley’s use of the uninsured vehicle (see Part 11(B) of this opinion). For this reason we now provide guidance for dealing, on remand, with proof of a criminal conviction.
At common law judgments of conviction were inadmissible in a civil suit as proof of the facts essential to the criminal adjudication.27 That legal norm now stands abrogated by the terms of the Evidence Code,28 12 O.S.1981 § 2803(22).29 A final judgment of conviction is conclusive evidence of the facts adjudicated by its
terms; if an appeal is pending or appeal time has not yet run, evidence of the conviction may be admitted as another circumstance for the trier’s consideration.30
A trial judge, if called upon to do so, may take judicial notice of any record in the court on which he (or she) sits. When a case, pending or concluded in that court, is called to his attention and identified by number and style, a conviction cannot be proved by an appearance docket alone. It must be established by competent evidence 31 — i.e., the judgment roll.32 Prudential may have done enough to benefit from judicial notice by tendering below a copy of the appearance docket in Kelley’s criminal case, but, on this appellate record, the conviction has not been proved by the law’s acceptable method.
CERTIORARI IS GRANTED; THE COURT OF APPEALS’ OPINION IS VACATED; THE TRIAL COURT’S SUMMARY JUDGMENT AGAINST THE INSUR[1135]*1135ER IS REVERSED; CAUSE REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS NOT INCONSISTENT WITH THIS PRONOUNCEMENT.
HARGRAVE, C.J., and HODGES, DOOLIN, ALMA WILSON and KAUGER, JJ., concur.
LAVENDER and SUMMERS, JJ., concur in part and dissent in part.
SIMMS, J., dissents.