[¶ 1] Delyle Fankhanel appeals the district court’s judgment, challenging the court’s order granting summary judgment dismissing Fankhanel’s claim for tortious interference with a contract. We affirm.
[¶ 2] In 1992, Fankhanel contracted with M & H Construction Company, Inc. (M & H), to construct the basement for a home. M & H excavated the basement and poured the floor and footings for the basement walls. Fank-hаnel was dissatisfied with the work and refused to pay M & H, asserting the construction was defective.
[¶ 3] Fankhanel is an independent trucker who had been making deliveries for Kost, Inc., for approximately twenty years, with a written contract since 1991, renewable monthly. Kost is a local company that supplied materials for area construction projects.
[¶ 4] In March 1993, the president of M & H, Mike Montplaisir, met with a corporate officer of Kost, Don Ishaug. During the meeting, Montрlaisir told Ishaug that Fank-hanel refused to pay for the construction of the basement. Montplaisir further told Ish-aug that if Fankhanel delivered any of Kost’s products to M & H Construction’s job sites, M & H might take their business elsewhere. Following their discussion, Ishaug told Fank-hanel to resolve the dispute. Fankhanel, however, still refused to pay M & H for construction of the basement. Thereafter, Kost stopped using Fankhanel to deliver its constructiоn materials.
[¶ 5] In November 1993, Fankhanel brought two actions against M & H, claiming M & H had defectively constructed the basement, and claiming it had tortiously interfered with Fankhanel’s written contract with Kost for delivering construction materials. In January 1995, the district court dismissed the tortious interference claim on a motion for summary judgment. The court held M & H’s actions did not constitute tortious interference with Fankhanel and Kost’s contract, and that M & H was justified in imposing the subject condition on its future delivery contracts with Kost. The defective construction claim was tried and the jury returned a judgment in favor of M & H Construction minus the defects. Fankhanel appeals the district court’s judgment, and on appeal challenges the district court’s dismissal of the tortious interference claim. 1
[¶ 6] “Summary judgment is a convenient procedure to expedite а lawsuit without a trial on the merits when there is no real dispute about the facts.”
Delzer v. United Bank of Bismarck,
[¶ 7] Both parties bеlow applied North Dakota’s “significant contacts approach to deciding choice-of-law questions,” and argued Minnesota has the most significant contacts in this case.
Plante v. Columbia Paints,
[¶ 8] In Minnesota, a cause of action for wrongful interference with a contractual relationship requirеs proof of five elements: (1) the existence of a contract; (2) the alleged wrongdoer’s knowledge of the contract; (3) intentional procurement of its breach or interference with the contract; (4) without justification; and (5) damages.
Kjesbo v. Ricks,
[¶ 9] According to the Minnesota Supreme Court:
“ ‘Justification is the most common affirmative defense to an action for interferencе. It is employed to denote the presence of exceptional circumstances which show that no tort was in fact committed and [a] lawful excuse [existed] which excludes actual or legal malice.’ ”
Aslakson v. Home Sav. Ass’n,
[¶ 10] Ordinarily, justification is an issue of fact.
Kjesbo,
[¶ 11] In
Glass Service Co. v. State Farm Ins. Co.,
[¶ 12] Here, M & H did not demand that Kost fire Fankhanel. M & H merely told Kost that because of Fankhanel’s unpaid debt, M & H did not want Fankhanel’s trucks making deliveries to M & H Construction’s job sites. In a deposition, Mike Mont-plaisir explained his rationale for imposing this condition:
“I told Don [Ishaug] that I didn’t feel that I should have to pay wages of somebody, trucking time, for somebody to deliver sand to my job site if he wasn’t going to pay us for the work that we had done for him.”
[¶ 13] In essence, M & H did not want to do any more business with Fankhanel, directly or indirectly, because Fankhanel had not paid his debt. There is no evidence suggesting M & H had an unlawful or malicious purpose, or any other purpose than merely trying to аvoid doing business with Fankha-nel. Because M & H had a legitimate business reason to exclude Fankhanel from delivering Kost products to its job sites, we
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believe M
&
H was justified in requesting that Kost use different trucks for its deliveries.
See Christner v. Anderson, Nietzke & Co., P.C.,
[¶ 14] We, therefore, affirm the district court’s order granting summary judgment on the claim for tortious interference with the contract.
Notes
. We note, under Minnesota law, Fankhanel could have brought a claim for "Interference with Prospective Business Relationship,” requiring Fankhanel to prove M & H Construction intentionally committed a wrongful act that improperly interfered with Fankhanel’s prospective business relationship with Kost. Because he did not raise this claim, we will not address it.
