MEMORANDUM OPINION
Muskogee Title Company (Customer) and United States Fidelity and Casualty Company (Insurer, or collectively with Customer, Appellants) seek review of the trial court’s order granting the motion to dismiss of First National Bank & Trust Company of Muskogee (Bank or Appellee) in Appellants’ action for breach of contract and negligence. The matter stands submitted for accelerated appellate review on the trial court record under Rule 4(m), Rules for District Courts, 12 O.S.Supp.1993, Ch. 2, App., and Rule 1.203, Rules of Appellate Procedure in Civil Cases, 12 O.S.Supp.1993, Ch. 15, App. 2.
Customer maintained one or more checking accounts at Bank where Customer regularly deposited checks and other credit items. One of Customer’s employee’s, however, converted over $25,000.00 in Customer’s funds at Bank by negotiating “split” deposits of checks made payable to Customer, i.e., deposit of a portion of the checks and receipt of the balance in cash, in spite of restrictive indorsements on the checks “for deposit only.”
Customer maintained a fidelity insurance policy issued by Insurer covering losses from embezzlement by employees. Customer made claim on Insurer for loss, and Insurer paid Customer about $10,000.00.
Oklahoma law has consistently recognized that a single tort or wrong to a single person gives rise to but a single action however numerous the items of damage resulting from the single wrong or tort may be.
See, e.g., Lowder v. Oklahoma Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company,
[A] defendant has a right to be proceeded against in a single action by any injured party for his single wrong or tort, and that he is not to be subjected to defense of multiple actions arising from his single wrong or tort upon separate or separable items of damage arising from that single wrong or tort for which he has but a single liability.
Lowder,
Oklahoma law has also consistently required that every action be prosecuted by the “real party in interest,” that is, the party legally entitled to the proceeds of a claim in litigation. 12 O.S. § 2017(A);
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Associates Transports, Inc.,
In this regard, and on the one hand, Oklahoma decisions hold that where an insured suffers a loss occasioned by the wrong of a third party and the insured stands fully compensated for the value of the loss by the insurer, the fully subrogated insurer as the real party in interest may bring an action in its own name to recover to the extent of its payment for the loss.
Great American Ins. Co. v. Watts,
In this vein, the decisions also recognize that the insured and the subrogated insurer may join as co-plaintiffs in the same action against the defendant to recover for the entire loss.
McMahan,
As applied to the instant case, then, we find no impermissible splitting of a cause of action as proscribed by
Lowder.
First, we find the cited decisions
permit
an insured and the insured’s partially subrogated insurer to join as plaintiffs in a single action to recover on the single liability of the alleged wrongdoer, although we do not suggest that a defendant in state court may
compel
join-der of a partially subrogated insurer as allowed in the federal courts.
Cf.,
Rule 17, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C. (1993);
Public Service Company of Oklahoma v. Black & Veatch,
We consequently conclude the trial court erred in granting Bank’s motion to dismiss. We therefore hold the order of the trial court dismissing Appellants’ claims should be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
The order of the trial court granting the motion to dismiss of Bank is therefore REVERSED, and the cause REMANDED for further proceedings.
