This case comes to us laden with a fatal postural infirmity. The relief sought by appellant cannot be granted and the appeal must be dismissed. The dispositive question before us is whether appellant is presently aggrieved by a judgment rendered between two other parties in the case. Our answer is in the negative.
I.
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
In this dispute over liability for a fire loss the homeowner’s action invoked two alternative remedies to recover a single claim. These remedies were pleaded as separate “causes of action”.
1
In the first alternative count — pressed against the alleged insurer and its policy writing agent — liability stood predicated upon an oral insurance
contract
made by the homeowner with the insurer’s agent;
2
the second count — ad
The trial court’s disposition of the ex contractu remedy came in two different stages. Initially, the court entertained the agent’s demurrer that was directed to homeowner’s ex contractu count. Its order sustaining that demurrer — without allowing leave or time to replead — was doubtless predicated on the familiar common-law principle that one who deals as agent in behalf of the disclosed principal is not liable for the latter’s breach of contract. 4 The next stage occurred when the court took under consideration the insurer’s motion for summary judgment which was submitted together with a stipulation of facts. Upon the issues so tendered the court ruled that at the time of the fire homeowner was not protected by the insurer against the risk for which recovery was sought. 5 The instant appeal by the agent is from that decision.
II.
THE PRECISE NATURE OF CORRECTIVE RELIEF CLAIMED BY THE AGENT
The agent urges the judgment absolving the insurer of the alleged ex contractu liability for the loss should be clarified to the end that he [the agent] be allowed to prove, in the proceedings to follow on the alternative claim in tort, that insurer’s coverage was in effect at the time of the fire “and thereby negate the allegation of negligence for failure to procure insurance”.
III.
THE AGENT’S CLAIM TO AN APPEALABLE INTEREST
The agent claims the judgment in favor of the insurer is “a determination that there was no coverage [which] forecloses this issue and deprives . . . [him] of an affirmative defense to the .. . [homeowner’s negligence] action [against him] . . . without even the opportunity to be heard in this matter.”
IV.
THE RELIEF SOUGHT CANNOT BE GRANTED
The agent was neither a party nor a privy to the judgment in favor of the insurer. There is
no
indication in the record that the agent was allowed to participate in the proceedings that culminated in that judgment or that he [the agent] was afforded “full and fair opportunity” to litigate the coverage issue either with the homeowner or with the insurer.
6
Nay, when the decision for the insurer was reached below, the
ex contractu
count plead against the agent already had been effectively removed from the court’s consideration by its prior order sustaining the agent’s
Standing to prosecute an appeal must be predicated on that interest in the trial court’s decision which is direct, immediate and substantial. 9 Conjecture or speculation about possible adverse consequences that may flow from the decision at some point in the future will not suffice to support a person’s “aggrieved” status. One cannot appeal from a decision, however erroneous, which does not affect one’s substantial rights. 10
The agent clearly is without standing to challenge the judgment rendered in a contest between the homeowner and the insurer. He has no appealable interest in the coverage issue that was litigated and determined solely between these parties. The terms of their judgment cannot be altered here at the instance of the agent merely to allay his fears — based not on pleadings in the case but on' pure speculation — that the judgment to be reviewed might be interposed against him for its issue preclusive (collateral estoppel) force. The record simply does not disclose any attempt by the homeowner to bar the agent from litigating the issue of effective coverage as his affirmative defense. Since the agent brought no third-party indemnity claim against the insurer — for a judgment over in the event of homeowner’s recovery against the agent — the possible defensive use of issue preclusion by the insurer is, at best, conjectural.
We do not sit to decide hypothetical issues or to give advisory opinions about issues not yet in controversy. No corrective relief may hence be granted here from anticipated interposition of the tendered judgment as a bar to relitigation of the coverage issue in the homeowner’s pending tort claim against the agent.
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
. See Fraser, One Form of Action: Pleading Alternative Facts, Theories and Remedies, 14 Okla.L.Rev. 125 [1961]; see also Fraser, Pleading in Perspective, 19 Okla.L.Rev. 241, 259-260 [1966],
. For recovery against the insurer on
contract
theory homeowner no doubt relied on the policy writing agent’s authority to bind the company by an
oral
contract of insurance. A parol agreement so made may form the basis of insurer’s liability “without the issuance and de
. See annotation in 64 A.L.R.3rd 398 on Liability of Insurance Broker or Agent to Insured for Failure to Procure Insurance.
. Glens Falls Insurance Company v. Johnson, supra note 2 at 232.
. The agent’s demurrer to the ex contractu claim was sustained April 4, 1980. The order does not show that homeowner either sought or was granted time to replead upon this theory of liability. The agent was not a party to the statement of agreed facts. Entered by and between the insurer and the homeowner, that statement was filed April 25. Judgment exonerating the insurer from its alleged contractual liability was rendered May 9.
.Generally, the concept of issue preclusion or collateral estoppel cannot apply when the party against whom the earlier decision is interposed did not have a “full and fair opportunity” to litigate the critical issue in the earlier case.
Allen v. McCurry,
. In an ordinary action, when the demurrer to a pleading stands sustained, issues tendered by it are eliminated from the court’s cognizance,
Spaulding v. Porter,
. The Restatement of Judgments now speaks of res judicata as “claim preclusion” and of collateral estoppel as “issue preclusion”. Restatement of Judgments (Second) § 74 (Tent. Draft No. 3, 1976).
Allen v. McCurry,
supra note 6,
.
Cleary Petroleum Corp. v. Harrison,
Okl.,
.
Trapp v. Board of Com’rs. of Okmulgee County,
