delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 John P. Stokes, Skyline Broadcaster, Inc., and Z-600, Inc. (collectively Stokes) appeal from the order of the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, granting the State of Montana’s (State) cross-motion for summary judgment on Stokes’s claim for tortious interference with his easement. We affirm.
¶2 We review whether the District Court correctly granted the State’s motion for summary judgment based on its determination that Stokes had failed to present a prima facie case of tortious interference with his easement?
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶3 Stokes owns and operates a small radio station just off U.S. Highway 93, south of Kalispell. Stokes holds an easement across a part of Douglas Anderson’s (Anderson) adjoining property. A portion of Stokes’s radio facility sits on Anderson’s land. Anderson’s predecessor in interest granted the easement for the radio facility to the Stokes’s predecessor in interest in 1949. Neither Stokes nor any of his predecessors in interest have expanded the radio facility beyond its original location on Anderson’s land. The present dispute relates to a
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separate dispute between Stokes and Anderson regarding the scope of Stokes’s easement. Its resolution in Anderson’s favor was the subject of our decision in
Anderson v. Stokes,
¶4 The State determined that it needed to obtain a right-of-way over a portion of Anderson’s property near U.S. Highway 93 as part of a highway improvement project. Susan J. Rebeck (Rebeck), acting on behalf of the State, contacted Anderson to inform him that some ambiguity existed regarding whether Stokes’s easement encumbered the property sought by the State. This ambiguity gave rise to two separate appraisals of the State’s proposed right-of-way over Anderson’s property. Rebeck explained that the State would pay Anderson $2,056.00 for the right-of-way if Stokes’s easement encumbered it based on its value for agricultural purposes. On the other hand, Rebeck explained that the State would pay Anderson $78,800.00 if Stokes’s easement did not encumber it based on its value for potential commercial development. Rebeck advised Anderson to consult a lawyer in order to determine whether Stokes’s easement encumbered the State’s proposed right-of-way.
¶5 Anderson retained a lawyer and filed an action on January 12, 2001, in the Eleventh Judicial District Court, Flathead County, asking the court either to extinguish Stokes’s easement or, alternatively, to declare that the scope of the easement always had been limited to its historic location. Anderson and the State entered an agreement on January 23, 2001, where the State stipulated that it would pay Anderson $2,056.00 for the right-of-way, but would pay Anderson an additional sum of $76,744.00 if he could show that Stokes’s easement did not encumber the right-of-way. The court in the Flathead County action entered an order on October 29, 2002, declaring that the scope of Stokes’s easement always had been limited to its historic location. We affirmed. Anderson, ¶ 60.
¶6 Stokes filed a complaint in the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, on April, 22 2004, claiming that Rebeck tortiously had interfered with his easement rights. Stokes alleged that Rebeck unlawfully had induced Anderson to file a complaint that had resulted in a court order limiting the scope of Stokes’s easement and causing him damages. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The District Court denied Stokes’s motion for summary judgment and granted the State’s motion for cross-summary judgment as to Stokes’s claim for tortious interference with his easement rights. Stokes appeals.
*168 STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶7 We review a district court’s decision to grant summary judgment
de novo,
using the same criteria applied by the district court under M. R. Civ. P. 56.
GRB Farm v. Christman Ranch, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
¶8 Did the District Court correctly grant the State’s motion for summary judgment based on its determination that Stokes had failed to present a prima facie case of tortious interference with his easement?
¶9 Stokes alleges that Rebeck interfered with his easement when Rebeck induced Anderson to file a lawsuit seeking either to extinguish Stokes’s easement or, alternatively, to limit Stokes’s easement to its historic location. Stokes claims first that the court’s order limiting his easement to its historic location destroyed his “plans for future expansion.” Stokes admits that Rebeck has not interfered with Stokes’s historic use of his easement. He argues, however, that his easement would have permitted him to expand his radio facility beyond its historic location to anywhere on Anderson’s property.
¶10 Stokes must establish that Rebeck’s alleged acts actually caused some interference with his existing easement rights.
Grenfell v. Anderson,
¶11 Stokes similarly alleges that Rebeck tortiously interfered with a *169 property right that did not exist. This Court determined that Stokes had no easement rights-and never had any easement rights-beyond the historic location of his radio facility. Anderson, ¶ 60. Stokes offers no evidence to the contrary. Stokes thus presents an illusory claim of tortious interference with his right to expand his radio facility as Stokes’s easement never permitted such an expansion in the first place.
¶12 Stokes claims alternatively that Rebeck induced Anderson’s failed attempt to extinguish Stokes’s easement. He claims damages from emotional distress and attorneys fees in defending the extinguishment suit. The State responds that Stokes has failed to offer any facts suggesting that Rebeck’s acts were “improper” as required by our decision in
Bolz v. Myers,
¶13 We held in
Bolz
that a plaintiff must show that the defendant’s acts were “improper” in order to establish a claim for tortious interference with contractual relations.
Bolz,
¶14 The record shows that the State, acting through Rebeck, agreed to pay Anderson more money for the right of way if he could show that Stokes’s easement did not encumber the State’s proposed right-of-way. Stokes points to nothing that the State had to gain from paying more to Anderson for the right-of-way. Rebeck advised Anderson to consult an attorney regarding whether Stokes’s easement encumbered the State’s proposed right-of-way. Rebeck’s suggestion to Anderson that he should consult a lawyer, however, relates only remotely to Anderson’s ultimate decision to file an action to extinguish the easement. The record does not indicate that Rebeck encouraged Anderson to file a lawsuit.
¶15 We agree with the District Court that it “certainly would not be improper, let alone unlawful, for an attorney in Rebeck’s position to tell a landowner whose property is subject to being acquired by condemnation that he should consult with an attorney ....” Rebeck’s actions comported with a lawyer’s ethical duty to advise a third party
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to “secure counsel, if the lawyer knows or reasonably should know that the interests of such a person are or have a reasonable possibility of being in conflict with the interests of the client.” Montana Rule of Professional Conduct 4.3. Likewise, Rebeck did not act improperly when she offered, on behalf of the State, to pay Anderson more money for a right-of-way that he could show was free and clear of any easements. Stokes has failed to allege any facts establishing that Rebeck acted improperly, thus, we need not address the remaining elements of his claim for tortious interference with his easement.
Bolz,
¶16 We conclude that the State is entitled to summary judgment as no genuine issue of material fact exists with regard to whether the State tortiously interfered with Stokes’s easement. GRB Farm, ¶ 7. The District Court correctly determined as a matter of law that Stokes has failed to establish a prima facie case of tortious interference with his easement.
¶17 Affirmed.
