delivered the opinion of the court:
The Board of Education of Township High School District No. 211, Cook County, Illinois (the Board), appeals from an order of the circuit court of Cook County granting summary judgment to TIG Insurance Company, as successor by merger to International Insurance Company (TIG), on the Board’s claim for coverage of its asbestos-related damages. The trial court held that the Board had breached its notice obligations to TIG under the applicable policies. However, in the event that we found as a matter of law that notice was sufficient, the trial court ruled in the alternative that it would grant summary judgment for the Board, an order from which TIG has filed a cross-appeal. We do not reach the findings upon which the trial court based that alternative ruling, for we determine that the trial court correctly granted summary judgment for TIG on the basis of the Board’s breach of its notice obligations. We also deny TIG’s motion, taken with the case, to strike certain portions of the Board’s amended opening brief.
BACKGROUND
The two insurance policies issued to the Board by TIG covered the periods from April 1, 1981, through April 1, 1984, and April 1, 1984, through April 1, 1986. The pertinent provisions of both policies required that the Board “immediately” give notice “of any occurrence the cost of which is likely to result in payment” by TIG pursuant to its insurance policies relating to the Board. In this instance the damages arose from friable asbestos, which is asbestos subject to crumbling from hand pressure, thus releasing carcinogenic asbestos fibers and dust into the air. It is undisputed that the Board first learned that asbestos in some of its high school buildings had become friable in June 1983, as reported to it by ARGON Associates, an architectural firm hired by the Board to inspect the buildings at all five of its high schools. At the Board’s request, ARGON then prepared an asbestos remediation program, which it submitted to the Board in August 1983. In that report, ARGON recommended that the Board remove all asbestos from all five of its high schools, and in January 1984, the Board adopted that recommendation. The Board began these remedial efforts in June 1985. The cost of these removal efforts between June 1984 and July 1986 was more than $2.6 million. When removal was finally completed in 1994, the total cost was over $17.5 million. No formal written notice of an “occurrence” was given to TIG by the Board until July 17, 1991, more than eight years after the Board first learned that it had friable asbestos in some of its school buildings.
The record establishes that the Board undertook numerous asbestos-related actions between the summer of 1983 and January 1984. The Board sent its business manager, Michael Hyde, to a seminar on asbestos issues at Georgia Tech. The Board hired the former Mid-Atlantic coordinator for the Environmental Protection Agency to tour the Board’s buildings as an asbestos consultant. During the spring of 1984, the Board consulted with ARGON and others regarding safety issues, including air quality levels arising from asbestos. In compliance with regulations issued by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the Board posted signs in its buildings
The Board first sued various asbestos manufacturers, distributors, and sellers on May 15, 1985, seeking damages for expenses incurred in connection with the removal of asbestos from its buildings. Some of those defendants, including Carey-Canada, Inc., WR. Grace, and U.S. Mineral Products, were insured by TIG. Counsel for those defendants also appeared of record in this cause. TIG received no formal notice of any “occurrence” or claim by the Board until it received the Board’s letter dated July 17, 1991, stating “this is the notice of claim on behalf of [the Board] for asbestos property damage caused at Schaumburg, Fremd and Conant High Schools of the [Board].” A loss report attached to the letter stated that the Board had spent nearly $15 million on asbestos removal projects to date. TIG rejected the Board’s claim and the Board filed an action in the circuit court of Cook County seeking a declaratory judgment against TIG to recover over $20 million. After the filing of cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court found for TIG on the ground that the Board had failed to “immediately” give TIG notice of an occurrence causing costs which would “likely result in payment” by TIG.
ANALYSIS
Summary judgment should only be granted if a strict construction against the movant of all the pleadings, depositions, admissions, and affidavits on file establishes no genuine issue of material fact and the entitlement of the moving party to judgment as a matter of law. Purtill v. Hess,
We agree with the trial court that the pertinent words of the two policies are clear and unambiguous, requiring no construction. Rohe v. CNA Insurance Co.,
In this cause there can be no dispute that the language of the policies required immediate notice to TIG by the Board when the Board knew of an occurrence which would cause it to incur costs likely to be paid by TIG. The Board attempts to argue, as it did in the trial court, that the notice requirement was not a condition precedent to coverage by TIG. We disagree. Such provisions have been held to be conditions precedent to coverage and cannot be ignored by the insured. Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Home Insurance Co.,
The Board also asserts that we are dealing with numerous occurrences, each
It is also clear from the record that we are not dealing with an unsophisticated insured. Within two months of the discovery of the occurrence, the Board had commissioned and received the analysis of a consulting firm and by January of 1984 it had decided to remove all the asbestos from all of its buildings. In or around 1984 it retained an attorney to represent it in matters relating to asbestos. It sought the advice of experts in the field and ensured that certain staff received training related to asbestos abatement. This sophistication on the part of the Board belies its assertion that notice was given within a reasonable time to TIG.
The Board’s knowledge of the occurrence came eight years before it gave formal notice to TIG. There is no satisfactory explanation for the delay. We also note that the Board was already represented by counsel with asbestos experience, yet it did not examine its policies with TIG to determine whether TIG was liable under the policies in question.
The facts establish ample support for TIG’s claim that it was prejudiced by
On the final factor of actual knowledge of the occurrence by TIG, the Board argues that such notice can be attributed to TIG as early as September 1984 when TIG’s agent toured some of the Board’s buildings, which bore signs warning of the presence of asbestos. First, there is nothing in the record establishing that the agent actually saw those signs. And even if he did, as the trial court noted, the mere presence of asbestos in some of the Board’s buildings would not have sufficed to give the agent notice that a claim for damages from friable asbestos was forthcoming.
For the reasons discussed, we find that the trial court correctly ruled that the Board failed to satisfy the condition precedent of notice to TIG as required by both of the insurance policies which formed the basis of this action. Our determination eliminates any need for us to review the validity of the trial court’s alternative holding, that barring any failure of notice, it would have granted summary judgment for the Board.
The judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
THEIS and KARNEZIS, 1 JJ., concur.
Notes
Justice Karnezis participated in the oral argument in this case before transferring to the Second Division.
