On July 6, 1994, plaintiff Vector-Spiing-field Properties, Ltd. (‘Vector-Springfield”) brought this action against defendant Central Illinois Light Company (“CILCO”) alleging three common law causes of action under Illinois law: trespass, nuisance and strict liability for ultrahazardous activity. Vector-Springfield maintains that it has been damaged as a result of contamination discovered on its property in Springfield, Illinois and that such damage was caused by CILCO’s predecessor.
On July 11, 1996, the district court issued an order granting CILCO’s motion for summary judgment on all three claims. The court concluded that, under the Illinois “discovery rule” applicable to this case, Vector-Springfield’s claims accrued for statute of limitations purposes on or around May 9, 1989. Because Vector-Springfield’s three claims were effectively filed on May 24,1994, the court held that the claims were time-barred under the applicable five-year statute of limitations.
Plaintiff appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of CILCO, and we affirm.
I.
The real property involved in this case, a hotel and a parking lot, is located in downtown Springfield, Illinois. Between 1855 and 1925, CILCO’s predecessors operated a coal gas manufacturing plant on property adjacent to the property in question, separated only by an alley which bisects the block. By 1962, visible evidence of the use of that property for the coal gas operations had been removed.
Vector-Springfield bought the property at issue in this case in late 1987 for the purpose of acquiring the hotel on the property, renovating the hotel and selling the property at a profit. Under the terms of the agreement by which it acquired the property, as a condition precedent to its purchase Vector-Springfield was entitled to have an environmental report done on the hotel and parking lot property. To that end, Vector-Springfield conducted an asbestos survey and identified an underground storage tank requiring removal. The reasonableness of the extent of this environmental review was disputed by the parties in the district court. CILCO asserted that Vector-Springfield should have done a more thorough environmental assessment at the time, thereby identifying the contamination from the gas plant earlier. On its part, Vector-Springfield’s environmental expert testified that such thorough environmental assessments were not common for properties of this type at that time, although they have since become the norm.
In early 1989, Vector-Springfield entered into discussions with a well known local developer, William Cellini, regarding the possible sale of either the parking lot and hotel parcels or the parking lot parcel alone. In connection with the sale discussions, Cellini’s company, New Frontier Development, engaged Hanson Engineers, Inc. (“Hanson”) to investigate the environmental status of the property.
On May 8, 1989, Hanson wrote to Cellini, reporting the location of the former gas plant. Hanson noted that “investigations at similar former gas plant sites have revealed contamination of soils and groundwater, in some cases well beyond the site boundaries.” As a result, Hanson reported that, ‘We recommend that a preliminary investigation be conducted to assess whether the area south of the gas plant site
[i.e.,
the parking lot parcel] has been impacted by gas plant
On May 18, 1989, Hanson reported field observations to Cellini and other New Frontier personnel, stating that its observations were consistent with significant site contamination, suggesting the former gas plant as the source. In a letter dated May 23,1989 to Cellini, Hanson confirmed this verbal report, noting that: “These contaminants could represent significant environmental impairment to the site. To confirm the identity of the waste products, chemical analyses are being performed at a laboratory on an expedited basis.” Unfortunately, neither of the litigants is able to specify at what point Cellini shared these observations with Vector-Springfield, although Cellini “suspected” that this information was shared with Vector-Springfield as it was received and the evidence is uneontested that it was Cellini’s practice to “share information with [Vector-Springfield] as he received it from Hanson.”
Cellini wrote to King on May 24, 1989, requesting an extension of their contract on the parking lot parcel, writing that he continued to be “very interested in purchasing the parking parcel (and possibly the Lincoln Inn parcel) when the extent and nature of any environmental problems ... have been appropriately resolved.”
In a report dated June 1989, Hanson provided to Cellini and New Frontier a recitation of its field observations and subsequent laboratory analysis, noting several facts that pointed to gas plant waste as the source of contamination. Hanson concluded that the site was significantly impaired. The litigants agree that New Frontier forwarded a copy of this report to Vector-Springfield on June 12, 1989. After receiving this Hanson report, Vector-Springfield undertook its own studies of the property, submitting the results to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (“IEPA”), which indicated that it would not then require remedial action. However, the property became essentially unmarketable as a result of the contamination and stigma associated with it despite the IEPA’s conditional “no action” letter. Vector-Springfield finally sold the property in 1994 for significantly less than it would have received absent the contamination.
II.
In the district court, both parties agreed that Veetor-Springfield’s claims were governed by Illinois law and that the five-year statute of limitations provided by 735 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. 5/13-205 (West 1996) applied to those claims. 1 The parties also agreed that Illinois’ “discovery rule,” which postpones the accrual of a plaintiffs cause of action for statute of limitations purposes, applied. The heart of the conflict in this matter is how the “discovery rule” should apply to the facts of this case.
Vector-Springfield argues on appeal that the district court erred in entering summary judgment against it and in favor of CILCO because the court incorrectly concluded that Vector-Springfield’s causes of action accrued on May 9, 1989, the date that Hanson’s May 8 report was forwarded to King. Vector-Springfield asserts instead that its causes of action accrued in June 1989 when Hanson’s field observations and subsequent laboratory analysis were finished and Hanson had concluded that the site was significantly impaired and that, therefore, its claims were filed within the applicable five-year limitations period. Vector-Springfield claims that only then did it learn that it was injured and that the injury may have been wrongfully caused within the meaning of the Illinois “discovery rule” applicable to its causes of action. 2
Under the Illinois “discovery rule,” the statute of limitations on Vector-Springfield’s claims began to run when Vector-Springfield became possessed of sufficient information concerning its injury to put a reasonable person on inquiry to determine whether actionable conduct was involved.
See Jackson Jordan, Inc. v. Leydig, Voit & Mayer,
Like the district court, we find the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in
Hermitage Corp. v. Contractors Adjustment Co.,
This Court believes that threshold has been passed here. The May 8 Hanson letter disclosed that the northern half of the block on which the parking lot parcel was located had been the site of a gas plant and that waste products from such facilities often af
Accordingly, we agree with the district court that the statute of limitations on Vector-Springfield’s claims began to run on May 9, 1989, when it received Hanson’s letter. Consequently, the filing of its complaint effective May 24, 1994, occurred subsequent to the expiration of the applicable five-year statute of limitations and its claims were properly disposed of on summary judgment.
III.
For the reasons discussed above, the decision of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. Section 13-205 provides that "actions ... to recover damages for an injury done to property, real or personal ... shall be commenced within 5 years next after the cause of action accrued.”
. Vector-Springfield also maintains that the dis- . trict court correctly concluded that genuine issues of material fact precluded summary judgment as to CILCO's second statute of limitations
. This Court disagrees with Vector-Springfield's repeated blanket assertion that under Illinois law the statute of limitations does not begin to run until the plaintiff
knows
of some injury. Rather, the test, as clearly set forth by the Illinois Supreme Court, is whether a "person knows
or reasonably should know
of his injuiy and also knows or reasonably should know that it was wrongfully caused."
Knox College,
. We agree with plaintiff’s assertion that the point in time when a reasonable person with similar information should have realized he had been injured and that the injuiy had been wrongfully caused is generally a question to be decided by the trier of fact.
See Knox College,
