In 1988, Crow Chicago Industrial, Inc. and McWane, Inc. entered into a limited partnership agreement to redevelop property located in Carol Stream, Illinois. The agreement included a Letter of Understanding regarding a due diligence investigation of the property. Crow hired Halff Associates, Inc., an environmental consulting firm, to conduct an environmental audit. On January 7, 1998, McWane filed suit against Crow and Halff to recover the
First, McWane argues that the district court improperly dismissed his complaint for breach of the Letter of Understanding. He contends that the Letter of Understanding imposed a duty on Crow to conduct an environmental investigation and a duty to remediate contamination. McWane contends that Crow breached the Letter of Understanding by creating “new and additional contamination by contaminating previously uncontaminated soils.” The district court found that the Letter of Understanding did not impose a duty on Crow to remediate and found that no breach occurred.
We review 12(b)(6) dismissals
de novo. Looper Maintenance Service Inc. v. City of Indianapolis,
. The Letter of Understanding provided that Crow shall have the right to conduct a due diligence investigation of the property involving any matters, “which in the sole discretion of Crow affect the development of the Land, including removal of underground storage tanks.” The Letter further provided:
If the environmental investigation/audit reveals that any one or more of the Tanks has been or is leaking, or reveals any other environmental contamination of the land, McWane shall have the option to remediate the contamination at its cost to the satisfaction of Crow, which remediation shall include any additional engineering expense which results from the contamination, but not the expense for removal of the Tanks, which shall be the Partnership’s expense; or McWane may elect not to remediate such contamination, in which event it shall reimburse Crow for costs and expenses incurred by Crow in the environmental portion of the investigation.
The duty to remediate the contamination is clearly and unambiguously allocated to McWane, not Crow. The only option afforded McWane is how to handle the responsibility of the remediation, not whether McWane has the responsibility. At no point, does the Letter of Understanding impose a duty on Crow to conduct a due diligence investigation; it is only provided with the right to conduct such an investigation. Crow owes no duty under the contract regarding the due diligence investigation. The district court stated that while tortious conduct might have occurred, such conduct does not constitute a breach of the Letter of Understanding. We agree; the Letter of Understanding is unambiguous and the district court correctly dismissed the claim.
McWane next argues that the district court erred in granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the remaining claims because the statute
We review
de novo
the district courts order granting summary judgment.
Vector-Springfield Properties, Ltd. v. Central Illinois Light Co.,
Inc.,
As part of its due diligence investigation, Crow hired Halff to conduct an environmental audit of the property and to remove four underground storage tanks, which had been used to store gasoline. Ruth Stear was HalfPs representative on site. Bob Phelps’, McWane’s vice president, was present as the tanks were removed on May 26, 1989. His notes establish that he was aware at that time of a small amount of soil contamination. It was to be tested and Stear was to notify the IEPA. In a June 27, 1989, letter from Stear to the IEPA, which was also sent to Phelps, Stear states that the gasoline contaminated soil was removed from the excavation and moved to an on-site location for aerating. Further, the June 1989, Environmental Audit — Phase II Report indicated that the UST No. 2 contained lead.
In 1990, the agreement between McWane and Crow ended and Crow no longer had any involvement in the property. In 1991, the IEPA sent a letter to Phelps stating that the analytical data was incomplete. Phelps apprized Barry Robi-son, an environmental expert hired by McWane, of the contaminated soil and forwarded the letter from the IEPA to him. Phelps stated the need to resample the contaminated soil because the IEPA found the sampling detection level used unacceptable. On October 7, 1991, Halff advised Phelps and Robison of the cost to resample and presented them with three alternatives: resample the soil, write the IEPA to “try to get it do something,” or wait until the IEPA did something. Phelps notes reflect these three possibilities. McWane did nothing. Not until 1994 did McWane hire another environmental consultant and discover that extensive remedial work was needed.
While the district court’s oral ruling contains a few factual errors, its analysis is nonetheless correct. From the facts above, it is clear that McWane possessed sufficient information to put it on notice of a possible injury. In 1989, McWane knew the soil had been contaminated and moved
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of district court is Affirmed.
