T1 This Cоurt has granted certiorari to review a certified interlocutory order. The order, a summary judgment, eliminated bad faith and negligence theories of recovery from plaintiffs suit against defendants. Plaintiff is sеeking damages from defendants for failing to pay the deficiency remaining on an auto loan after the total loss insurance settlement by plaintiff's insurer was applied to the loan. He contends the defendants deliberately disregarded the contract term for computing the deficiency and instead computed the deficiency by deducting amounts that were not disclosed at the time of thе contract. A detailed analysis of the parties' contract (variously referred to as a debt relief waiver addendum or gap protection), as well as each defendant's involvement with the contract and payment of the deficiency, is set forth in Embry v. Aftermarket Systems,
12 This is the second time the trial court has entered summary judgment in favor of defendants. The first summary judgment was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals in Embry I which held (1) the parties' contract for payment of the deficiency was insurance, and (2) issues of fact concerning defendants' bad faith and negligence in performing the contract prеcluded summary judgment on these theories of recovery.
1 4 Tort recovery for bad faith is one of the two remedies provided for breach of the implied duty to deal fairly and in good faith in the performance of a contract. First National Bank and Trust of Vinita v. Kissee,
[ 5 The trial court apparently felt that tort reсovery for bad faith or failure to deal fairly and in good faith is limited to insurance contracts and that tortious bad faith can only occur if the parties know their contract is insurance at the time they make and perform the contract. The trial court seems to say that the parties in the case at hand did not know they had an "insurance contract" until the Court of Civil Appeals, in hindsight, declared it to be such.
T6 This Court has indeed expressed reluctance to extend tort recovery for bad faith beyond the insurance field. Id. at T 25,
%7 The "special relationship" that gives rise to tort lability for bad faith is marked by (1) a disparity in bargaining power where the weaker party has no choice of terms, also called an adhesion contract, and (2) the elimination of risk. Rodgers v. Tecumseh Bank,
T8 In the case at hand, defendant Innovative Aftermarket Systems alоne chose the contract language to delineate how the deficiency or gap amount would be determined as well as every other term of the contract. The language delineating how the deficiency or gap amount is determined states the deficiency is the difference between the actual cash value settlement of the automobile insurance policy and thе net installment sale contract/loan/lease payoff as of the date of the loss.
T9 Marketing representations by Innovative Aftermarket Systems similarly describe how the amount of the deficiency is computed. The marketing brochure contains the following example of how the deficiency would be determined:
Balance You Owe: $22,000
Your Insurance Settlement (cash value): $14,000
Balance Owed: $ 8,000
GAP Protection Pays the $ 8,000
To further illustrate the importance of the deficiency or gap benefit, thе brochure also posed the question "Who pays the difference between what you owe and what your insurance company pays?" Finally, the internet web site for Innovative Aftermarket Systems advised that the deficiency or gap protection would help "Customers avoid a financial obligation during a stressful time when money is needed for a replacement vehicle."
¶10 Clearly, the contract to pay the deficiency involves the "special relationship" nee-essary to support tort recovery for bad faith.
This is not to say that defendants' subjective belief is irrelevant to determining liability. "The central issue [in a bаd faith case] is whether the [party in breach] had a good faith belief in some justifiable reason for the actions it took or omitted to take that are alleged to be violative of the duty of good faith and fair dealing." Garnett v. Government Employees Insurance Co.,
112 The trial court also ignored evidentiary material that controverted defendants' evidentiary material to show the reasonableness of their bеlief, actions, and decisions. Plaintiff offered an expert witness concerning the type of gap protection at issue. This expert explained in detail the ways in which the actions, omissions and dеcisions of the defendants violated industry standards and reflected bad faith. In general, when a party opposing a summary judgment offers an expert opinion to controvert the defendant's evidentiary material showing no wrongdoing on the part of the defendant, summary judgment is not proper. See Malson v. Palmer Broadcasting Group,
113 The opinion of plaintiff's expert, when viewed in a light most favorable to plaintiff, supports a threshold determination as a matter of law that defendants' conduct may be reasonably perceived to be tortious. A trier of fact could conclude plaintiff had a reasоnable expectation to receive payment of the deficiency as represented and promised, and defendant's conduct deprived him of that benefit. Accordingly, the issue of defendants' liability in tort for bad faith may be submitted to a jury and the trial court erred in eliminating this theory of recovery by the grant of summary judgment.
14 We reach a different conclusion, however, concerning elimination оf negligence as a theory of recovery. There is simply no general duty to use reasonable care in the performance of a contract. The duty of a party to a contract to act reasonably and diligently in the performance of a contract are encompassed within the implied covenant of fair dealing and good faith. "Fair dealing" in the implied covеnant emphasizes "reasonable action," C & E Services, Inc. v. Ashland, Inc.,
{ 15 The summary judgment under review is аffirmed insofar as it eliminates negligence as a theory of recovery from plaintiff's cause of action, but is reversed to the extent it purports to eliminate liability in tort for defendants' bad faith or breach of the implied covenant to deal fairly and in good faith.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
