Affirmed by published opinion. Judge WYNN wrote the opinion, in which Judge MOTZ and Judge BERGER concurred.
OPINION
In this appeal, accounting firm Bryan Brothers, Incorporated, seeks coverage under a professional liability insurance policy issued by Continental Casualty Company for liability arising from illegal acts of a former Bryan Brothers’s employee. Under the policy, it is a condition precedent to coverage that no insured has knowledge, prior to the inception of the policy, of an act that is reasonably likely to become the basis for a claim. Because Bryan Brothers had such knowledge, we conclude that the claims at issue are not covered. Therefore, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Continental Casualty Company.
I.
The parties stipulated all material facts. Continental Casualty Company issued a professional liability insurance policy effective from July 1, 2008 to July 1, 2009 to cover certain liabilities arising from Bryan Brothers’s accounting services. In pertinent part, the “Coverage Agreements” provide:
A. In accordance with all the terms and conditions of this policy, we will pay on your behalf all sums in excess of the deductible, up to our limits of liability, that you become legally obligated to pay as damages and claim expenses because of a claim that is both first made against you and reported in writing to us during the policy period by reason of an act or omission in the performance of professional services by you or by any person for whom you are legally liable provided that:
2. prior to the effective date of this policy, none of you had a basis to believe that any such act or omission, or interrelated act or omission, might reasonably be expected to be the basis of a claim....
(“prior knowledge provision”).
The policy also contains the following “Exclusion”:
This Policy does not apply to:
D. any claim based on or arising out of a dishonest, illegal, fraudulent, criminal or malicious act by any of you. We shall provide you with a defense of such claim unless or until the dishonest, illegal, fraudulent, criminal or malicious act has been determined by any trial verdict, court ruling, regulatory ruling or legal admission, whether appealed or not....
(“bad acts exclusion”). Finally, the following appears under the “Policy Conditions” heading:
L. Innocent Insureds
*829 If coverage under this Policy would be excluded as a result of any criminal, dishonest, illegal, fraudulent, or malicious acts of any of you, we agree that the insurance coverage that would otherwise be afforded under this Policy will continue to apply to any of you who did not personally commit, have knowledge of, or participate in such criminal, dishonest, illegal, fraudulent or malicious acts or in the concealment thereof from us.
(“innocent insureds provision”). The policy defines “you” as the named insured (Bryan Brothers) and “any person who is or becomes a partner, officer, director, associate, or employee of the named insured, but only for professional services performed on behalf of the named insured.”
In February 2009, Bryan Brothers discovered that Deborah Whitworth, the firm’s account clerk from 1999 to 2009, had stolen funds from eight clients’ accounts. Whitworth’s thefts began in 2002 and the last theft occurred sometime after July 1, 2008, during the policy period. The victims asserted tort claims against Bryan Brothers.
In turn, Bryan Brothers filed for insurance coverage of the victims’ claims but Continental Casualty Company denied Bryan Brothers’s claim for coverage by letter dated March 16, 2009. Continental Casualty Company indicated that Whit-worth fit within the policy’s definition of “you” because she committed the thefts as an employee performing professional services for Bryan Brothers. Because Whit-worth “had reason to believe as early as 2002, before the inception of the policy on [7)1 — 1—08, that her acts might be the basis of a claim, the terms of the coverage agreements are not met and coverage is precluded on that basis.” In other words, Continental Casualty Company denied coverage under the prior knowledge provision because Whitworth had reason to believe, before the effective date of the policy, that her thefts might become the basis for claims. Bryan Brothers later settled with its affected clients and brought this suit for coverage under the policy.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Bryan Brothers argued that the prior knowledge provision was an exclusion from, as opposed to a condition precedent to, coverage.
Bryan Bros. Inc. v. Cont’l Cas. Co.,
The district court granted summary judgment to Continental Casualty Company based on Whitworth’s prior knowledge. The bad acts exclusion and the innocent insureds provision were therefore not applicable. 1 The court also found these provisions to be unambiguous, rejecting Bryan Brothers’s argument that they were ambiguous and must be construed in favor of *830 coverage. Id. at 542. Bryan Brothers appeals.
II.
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing all facts and inferences in favor of the nonmoving party.
Providence Square Assocs., L.L.C. v. G.D.F., Inc.,
Virginia law governs this insurance dispute. Virginia courts “ ‘interpret insurance policies, like other contracts, in accordance -with the intention of the parties gleaned from the words they have used in the document.’ ”
Transcon. Ins. Co. v. RBMW, Inc.,
Virginia has long followed the rule that if the insured fails to fulfill a condition of an insurance policy, the insurer’s coverage obligation is not triggered.
See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Arghyris,
On the other hand, an insured may seek coverage for an event that is within the scope of the insuring clause but falls under a specific exclusion. In that scenario, the policy is not avoided and another policy provision, such as a savings clause, may preserve coverage.
See Copp v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.,
III.
Bryan Brothers argues that it is entitled to coverage under the innocent insureds provision because it did not share prior knowledge of Whitworth’s thefts. Bryan Brothers insists that the prior knowledge provision is an exclusion from coverage and that the innocent insureds provision saves coverage for the firm. Conversely, Continental Casualty Company maintains that the prior knowledge provision is a condition precedent that precludes coverage if unsatisfied.
The plain language and structure of the policy convince us that the prior knowledge provision is a condition precedent to covérage. In the first coverage agreement clause, Continental Casualty Company agrees to cover Bryan Brothers’s liability on claims made during the policy period
“provided that ...
prior to the effective date of this policy, none of you had a basis to believe that any such
*831
act or omission, or interrelated act or omission, might reasonably be expected to be the basis of a claim” (emphasis added). This language may be rephrased to say that if any defined “you” knew prior to the effective date of the policy that an act or omission might become the basis for a claim, any claims arising from such acts or omissions are not covered. Here, Bryan Brothers’s lack of prior knowledge is a condition of Continental Casualty Company’s agreement to cover Bryan Brothers’s liability from acts predating the policy. Because Whitworth had prior knowledge, “[t]here has been a failure to fulfill a condition upon which [Continental Casualty Company’s] obligation is dependent.”
Arghyris,
This interpretation melds with the concept of fortuity, a fundamental premise of insurance law. Insurers do not usually contract to cover preexisting risks and liabilities known by the insured. Thus, it is generally the insured’s duty to provide truthful and complete information so the insurer can fairly evaluate the risk it is contracting to cover.
See, e.g., Combs v. Equitable Life Ins. Co. of Iowa,
Here, the prior knowledge provision essentially makes fortuity a condition of coverage. The prior knowledge provision indicates in clear and unambiguous language Continental Casualty Company’s unwillingness to cover liability arising from prior acts or omissions that any insured might reasonably expect to result in a claim.
Because Continental Casualty Company denied Bryan Brothers’s claim for failure of a condition precedent to coverage, we are not persuaded by Bryan Brothers’s argument for coverage pursuant to the innocent insureds provision. Although the facts of this case might have supported a denial of coverage under the bad acts exclusion, there is no indication that coverage was denied on that basis. Thus, the innocent insureds provision, which appears to be an exception to the bad acts exclusion, was not implicated.
Even assuming arguendo that the innocent insureds provision could be considered an exception to the prior knowledge provision, it is elemental that exclusions and exceptions in an insurance policy cannot expand the scope of agreed coverage.
See Scott,
We reached a similar decision in
TIG Insurance Co. v. Robertson, Cecil, King &
*832
Pruitt,
Likewise, other courts have made the same interpretation of identical policy language. In
Professional Asset Strategies v. Continental Casualty Co.,
No. 2:09-cv-1238-AKK,
In other words, no coverage exists if any ‘you’ had prior knowledge of the existence of a claim. Where there is no prior knowledge and coverage exists, the policy provides various exclusions, including [the bad acts exclusion]. However, in cases where the exclusion is because of ‘criminal, dishonest, illegal, fraudulent or malicious’ acts of a ‘you,’ then the ‘innocent insured’ provision kicks in to restore coverage.
Id.
at *7;
accord Cont’l Cas. Co. v. Walker,
Finally, we decline Bryan Brothers’s request to find the pertinent language ambiguous and construe the policy in favor of coverage.
Williams,
IV.
In sum, we hold that the prior knowledge provision is a clear and unambiguous condition precedent to recovery on the policy. Because Whitworth had prior knowledge of her thefts, a condition precedent was unfulfilled, and the coverage agreement was not triggered. Additionally, exclusions and exceptions in the policy cannot provide coverage that is precluded by the prior knowledge condition. According *833 ly, we affirm the grant of summary judgment for Continental Casualty Company.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. The district court also held that Whitworth’s thefts during the policy period were "interrelated” to her pre-policy thefts. Therefore, the district court determined that claims based on thefts during the policy period were also precluded because of Whitworth's prior knowledge. Id. at 542-43. Bryan Brothers does not challenge that ruling on appeal.
