Jane Doe-1 v. Corporation of the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints , 239 W. Va. 428 ( 2017 )


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  •          IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
    January 2017 Term
    FILED
    June 14, 2017
    released at 3:00 p.m.
    RORY L. PERRY, II CLERK
    No. 16-0008                       SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    OF WEST VIRGINIA
    JANE DOE-1, Individually and as Parent, Guardian, and Next Friend of J.T.,
    a Minor, and W.T., a Minor; JOHN DOE-1, Individually; JANE DOE-2, Individually
    and as Parent, Guardian, and Next Friend of Z.W., a Minor, and A.W., a Minor;
    JANE DOE-3, Individually and as Parent, Guardian, and Next Friend of C.H., a Minor;
    JOHN DOE-3, Individually; JANE DOE-4, Individually and as Parent, Guardian, and
    Next Friend of A.B., a Minor; JANE DOE-5, Individually and as Parent, Guardian,
    and Next Friend of T.S., a Minor, and M.S., a Minor; JOHN DOE-5, Individually;
    JANE DOE-6, Individually and as Parent, Guardian, and Next Friend
    of P.C., a Minor; and JOHN DOE-6, Individually,
    Plaintiffs Below, Petitioners
    v.
    CORPORATION OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE CHURCH OF
    JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS, CORPORATION OF
    THE PRESIDING BISHOP OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF
    LATTER-DAY SAINTS, STEVEN GROW, DON FISHEL,
    CHRISTOPHER MICHAEL JENSEN, CHRISTOPHER JENSEN,
    SANDRALEE JENSEN, and UNNAMED DEFENDANT-1,
    Defendants Below, Respondents
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Berkeley County
    Honorable John C. Yoder, Judge
    Civil Action No. 13-C-656
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    Submitted: May 16, 2017
    Filed: June 14, 2017
    Robert P. Fitzsimmons, Esq.              Thomas V. Flaherty, Esq.
    Fitzsimmons Law Firm PLLC                Flaherty Sensabaugh Bonasso PLLC
    Wheeling, West Virginia                  Charleston, West Virginia
    Counsel for the Respondent UD-1
    Carl S. Kravitz, Esq.
    Zuckerman Spaeder LLP                    Mark A. Atkinson, Esq.
    Washington, DC                           John J. Polak, Esq.
    Counsel for the Petitioners              Atkinson & Polak, PLLC
    Charleston, West Virginia
    Counsel for the Respondents Christopher
    Jensen and Sandralee Jensen
    Thomas J. Hurney, Jr., Esq.
    Jackson Kelly PLLC
    Charleston, West Virginia
    William J. Powell, Esq.
    Jackson Kelly PLLC
    Martinsburg, West Virginia
    Counsel for the Respondents Corporation
    of the President of the Church of Jesus
    Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Corporation
    of the Presiding Bishop of the Church of
    Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Steven
    Grow, and Donald Fishel
    CHIEF JUSTICE LOUGHRY delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1. “In reviewing a circuit court’s certification under Rule 54(b) of the West
    Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure, this Court applies a two-prong test. First, we scrutinize
    de novo the circuit court’s evaluation of the interrelationship of the claims, in order to decide
    whether the circuit court completely disposed of one or more claims, which is a prerequisite
    for an appeal under this rule. As to the second prong of the inquiry under the rule–whether
    there is any just reason for delay–this Court accords the circuit court’s determination
    considerably more deference than its first-prong determination.             The circuit court’s
    assessment that there is ‘no just reason for delay’ will not be disturbed unless the circuit
    court’s conclusion was clearly unreasonable, because the task of balancing the contending
    factors is peculiarly one for the trial judge, who can explore all the facets of a case.” Syl. Pt.
    1, Province v. Province, 196 W.Va. 473, 
    473 S.E.2d 894
    (1996).
    2. “‘“Where an appeal is properly obtained from an appealable decree either
    final or interlocutory, such appeal will bring with it for review all preceding non-appealable
    decrees or orders, from which have arisen any of the errors complained of in the decree
    appealed from, no matter how long they may have been rendered before the appeal was
    taken.” Point 2, syllabus, Lloyd v. Kyle, 26 W.Va. 534 [1885].’ Syllabus point 5, State ex rel.
    Davis v. Iman Mining Co., 144 W.Va. 46, 
    106 S.E.2d 97
    (1958).” Syl. Pt. 6, Riffe v.
    Armstrong, 197 W.Va. 626, 
    477 S.E.2d 535
    (1996).
    i
    3. “A civil conspiracy is a combination of two or more persons by concerted
    action to accomplish an unlawful purpose or to accomplish some purpose, not in itself
    unlawful, by unlawful means. The cause of action is not created by the conspiracy but by the
    wrongful acts done by the defendants to the injury of the plaintiff.” Syl. Pt. 8, Dunn v.
    Rockwell, 225 W.Va. 43, 
    689 S.E.2d 255
    (2009).
    4. “ A civil conspiracy is . . . a legal doctrine under which liability for a tort
    may be imposed on people who did not actually commit a tort themselves but who shared a
    common plan for its commission with the actual perpetrator(s).” Syl. Pt. 9, in part, Dunn v.
    Rockwell, 225 W.Va. 43, 
    689 S.E.2d 255
    (2009).
    ii
    LOUGHRY, Chief Justice:
    The petitioners (plaintiffs below) are nine minors and their parents, individually
    and as parents, guardians, and next friends,1 in this action alleging various negligence claims,
    fraud, intentional infliction of emotional distress, assault, battery, and civil conspiracy related
    to, arising from, and resulting in defendant Michael Jensen’s known and alleged sexual abuse
    of the minor plaintiffs.2 Following extensive discovery, the circuit court entered an order on
    December 4, 2015, through which it granted summary judgment in favor of the respondent
    (defendant below), Unidentified Defendant-1 (“UD-1”), against whom conspiracy was the
    only claim asserted. On December 30, 2015, the circuit court entered an order granting
    several of the defendants’ motions in limine which eliminated a large portion of the
    1
    Currently, the plaintiffs are Jane Doe-1, individually and as parent, guardian, and next
    friend of J.T., a minor, and W.T., a minor; John Doe-1, individually; Jane Doe-2, individually
    and as parent, guardian, and next friend of Z.W., a minor, and A.W., a minor; Jane Doe-3,
    individually and as parent, guardian, and next friend of C.H., a minor; John Doe-3,
    individually; Jane Doe-4, individually and as parent, guardian, and next friend of A.B., a
    minor; Jane Doe-5, individually and as parent, guardian, and next friend of T.S., a minor,
    and M.S., a minor; John Doe-5, individually; Jane Doe-6, individually and as parent,
    guardian, and next friend of P.C., a minor; and John Doe-6, individually. During the course
    of this litigation, certain of the original minor plaintiffs were dismissed without prejudice;
    John Doe-2 was dismissed with prejudice by stipulation.
    2
    Michael Jensen is currently incarcerated on convictions for his sexual abuse of two
    of the minor plaintiffs, J.T. and W.T., as discussed more fully infra, section I. He did not
    participate in this appeal.
    1
    plaintiffs’ circumstantial evidence in support of their conspiracy claim.3 The following day,
    December 31, 2015, the circuit court entered an order granting summary judgment on the
    plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim in favor of the respondents (defendants below), Corporation of
    the President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Corporation of the
    Presiding Bishop of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Steven Grow, and Don
    Fishel (collectively the “Church defendants”), and in favor of the respondents (defendants
    below), Christopher Jensen4 and Sandralee Jensen.5
    On January 11, 2016, the circuit court entered an order certifying its
    interlocutory summary judgment rulings as final judgments pursuant to West Virginia Rule
    of Civil Procedure Rule 54(b).6 In addition to seeking a reversal of the summary judgment
    3
    The order granting summary judgment in favor of UD-1 was entered prior to these
    in limine rulings.
    4
    Consistent with the parties’ briefs, Christopher Jensen will be referred to as “Chris”
    Jensen.
    5
    At times, the Church defendants and the Jensen parents are jointly referred to as the
    “defendants.”
    6
    Rule 54(b) provides, in part, as follows:
    Judgment Upon Multiple Claims or Involving Multiple Parties.
    — When more than one claim for relief is presented in an
    action, whether as a claim, counterclaim, cross-claim, or
    third-party claim, or when multiple parties are involved, the
    court may direct the entry of a final judgment as to one or more
    but fewer than all of the claims or parties only upon an express
    (continued...)
    2
    orders, the plaintiffs ask this Court to reverse those in limine rulings. They assert these
    rulings facilitated the circuit court’s issuance of summary judgment rulings without first
    evaluating the evidence offered in support of their conspiracy claims under the strictures
    applicable to summary judgment.
    Upon our careful review of the parties’ briefs, the arguments of counsel, the
    appendix record submitted, and the applicable law, we reverse the summary judgments and
    in limine rulings and remand this action for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    I. Facts and Procedural Background7
    In late 2004, Chris and Sandralee Jensen (collectively the “Jensen parents”) and
    their children were residing in or near Provo, Utah. Their son Michael Jensen, who was then
    thirteen years old, was arrested at his middle school and charged with two felony counts of
    sexual abuse of a child. The incidents occurred in November and December of 2004, and his
    female victims were twelve and thirteen years old, respectively. On both occasions, Michael
    waited for his victim to exit a classroom before pinning her against a wall and grabbing her
    buttocks and breasts without her consent. One of the victims indicated in her statement to
    6
    (...continued)
    determination that there is no just reason for delay and upon an
    express direction for the entry of judgment.
    7
    With a couple of exceptions, the majority of the testimony referenced herein was
    taken during depositions.
    3
    the police that during Michael’s attack upon her person, he told her that they needed to have
    sex; that she was “really scared”; and that she had kneed Michael in the groin to get away.
    The defendants minimize the severity of the incidents describing them instead as brief
    groping of two female classmates over their clothes while at school.
    The plaintiffs allege that a conspiracy began in Provo when The Church of
    Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (“Church”) influenced Michael’s criminal proceeding,
    which resulted in the two felonies charges being reduced to misdemeanor sexual offenses.
    Among other assertions, the plaintiffs state that Michael’s paternal grandfather, Blaine P.
    Jensen, who has held very high positions within the Church,8 attended a meeting between
    Michael and Michael’s attorneys, and was present for Michael’s dispositional hearing in
    January 2015. Dale Swensen, Michael’s Church bishop9 in Provo, also attended the
    dispositional hearing. During this hearing, the juvenile petition was read and reports were
    8
    Blaine Jensen’s positions have included Director of International Affairs for the
    Church and worldwide Director of Physical Facilities for the Church. There is a
    representation in the record that Mr. Jensen currently serves as the Stake Patriarch in Provo,
    a life-long position. During his deposition, Mr. Jensen acknowledged both professional and
    personal relationships with two former Church Presidents and the current President of the
    Church, which the plaintiffs rely upon to support their theory of the Church’s influence in
    Michael’s case.
    9
    The Church is divided into “wards,” which encompass defined geographic territories.
    Church members belong to the ward associated with his or her residence. Several wards in
    a geographical area form a “stake.” The clergyman of each ward is a bishop, and the
    clergyman of each stake is a president. These positions are held by volunteers for a number
    of years.
    4
    submitted, including a Sexual Behavior Risk Assessment (“SBRA”),10 which indicated that
    Michael’s offenses are based primarily on opportunity” and that he “will offend if given the
    opportunity.” The juvenile court then accepted Michael’s admission to reduced charges of
    two misdemeanor counts of lewdness involving a child; placed him on probation; ordered
    10
    The SBRA reflects that the first appointment for the assessment was not completed.
    Once the psychologist explained the testing process to Michael and his father, Chris, “Mr.
    [Chris] Jensen appeared somewhat angry” and was “visibly upset” when told that he would
    “not be allowed to be present” during the evaluation because it “would compromise the
    integrity and validity of the assessment.” The SBRA further reflects that Mr. Jensen became
    “more assertive and tenacious” and eventually stated that he and Michael “would pass” on
    the evaluation. A second appointment was scheduled and Michael was brought to that
    appointment by his mother, Sandralee. According to the SBRA, Michael reported to the
    evaluating psychologist that his attorney had told him not to discuss what had happened, but
    he proceeded to do so anyway. He also told the evaluating psychologist that he stopped
    babysitting his younger siblings, including two sisters, ages seven and five, after the charges
    were filed against him. The psychologist stated in the SBRA that Michael “denied knowing
    the meaning of consent and denied knowing how age makes a difference in giving consent
    for sexual activity.” When asked about the impact his actions had on his victim, Michael
    replied: “They could probably damage her for life, she might be scared of boys now[.]”
    The SBRA contains the psychologist’s observation that Michael “displays significant
    thinking errors regarding sexuality and children” and that his “attitude about the alleged
    abuse is of significant concern given that he blames the victim and much anger appeared to
    exist regarding his reported resistance by the victim towards his alleged demonstrations of
    affection.” The psychologist recommended that the court order sex offender specific
    treatment due to Michael’s “low motivation for treatment” and his father’s “defensiveness.”
    As the psychologist cautioned: “the issues that exist . . . could again arise at a later date
    when Michael would be at risk for more severe consequences . . . . It would be best to be
    less defensive in Michael’s interest and confront the issues that exist in a productive
    manner.” The psychologist concluded that Michael was a “low to moderate” risk to offend
    with peer-aged females, but that he also needed “to be supervised with any female, including
    his sisters . . . until his therapist considers that his risk is reduced.” The plaintiffs state that
    there is no evidence that any therapist ever concluded that Michael’s risk was reduced and
    that their expert is expected to testify that the SBRA was “a flashing red warning light” of
    likely future abuse by Michael Jensen if he did not receive treatment.
    5
    his parents to comply with the terms of probation; and ordered him to complete fifty hours
    of community service and a Sexual Appropriateness Class with the family component with
    proof of completion to be provided to the court. The defendants allege the plaintiffs have
    no evidence the Church influenced Michael’s proceeding in any manner and that affidavits
    and declarations from the prosecutors involved in Michael’s juvenile proceeding refute the
    existence of any such influence. Although the defendants allege Blaine Jensen’s involvement
    was simply that of a grandfather assisting his grandson, the plaintiffs point to evidence that
    Michael told his friend, J.C., he had been in legal trouble in Utah and that his grandfather
    “was in a leadership position for the church . . . [and] helped take care of whatever needed
    to be taken care of.”11
    The plaintiffs further allege that although the Church knew that Michael had
    pled guilty to two sex offenses in Utah, it did nothing to warn or protect, despite the existence
    of an abuse “prevention and response” procedure, referred to as an “annotation system.” The
    defendants allege that their evidence demonstrates that the Church “rarely” annotates its
    records for children, and “even less so where the misconduct does not indicate a danger to
    much younger children.”12
    11
    In its in limine ruling that excluded any allegations of the Church’s influence over
    these Utah court proceedings, the circuit court found “Michael’s cryptic boast to a friend”
    to have “limited probative value.”
    12
    The entirety of the plaintiffs’ evidence concerning Michael’s juvenile criminal
    (continued...)
    6
    During the summer of 2005, the Jensen family moved to Martinsburg, West
    Virginia. Soon thereafter, Sandralee Jensen was asked to serve as the Church’s Relief
    Society President for her new ward,13 which she accepted. In that role, Mrs. Jensen reported
    directly to her ward bishop, who was at that time Matthew Whitcomb. She also oversaw the
    Sunday class for the women and was responsible for “compassionate service” for all ward
    members. Shortly thereafter, Chris Jensen was placed on the Stake High Council,14 which
    is an advisory body to the Stake President, who at all relevant times was defendant Stephen
    Grow.
    In their effort to further demonstrate the defendants’ knowledge and awareness
    of Michael’s history as an abuser, the plaintiffs allege there was a Stake High Council
    meeting in 2006 or 2007,15 during which leaders of the Martinsburg Stake discussed Michael
    12
    (...continued)
    proceeding in Utah, including the SBRA, was excluded in the circuit court’s in limine ruling.
    13
    A document in the appendix record describes this position as “[t]he second most
    important job in the ward.”
    14
    The Church defendants state that the Stake High Council is an advisory group that
    delivers the stake president’s messages to wards and assists in certain ecclesiastical
    disciplinary hearings.
    15
    All evidence concerning this 2006 or 2007 Stake High Council meeting was
    excluded by the circuit court in its in limine ruling.
    7
    Jensen’s abuse of a younger sister16 and possibly another girl, and Chris Jensen’s possible
    abuse of his son Michael. They further allege that at this same time, Stake President Grow
    asked UD-1 to “keep an eye” on Chris Jensen, who was UD-1’s close friend, and to report
    back to him. UD-1 indicated during a recorded interview that through his position on Church
    councils, he was aware that Church leaders had been working hard with Michael Jensen to
    get him the help that he needed in the 2007-2008 time frame.17 The defendants deny that this
    16
    The plaintiffs allege that shortly after the Jensens moved to West Virginia, Michael’s
    youngest sister, R.J., who was six or seven years old at the time, removed her clothing at a
    Church function and displayed her genitals to same-aged boys. The plaintiffs rely upon this
    incident to show that by 2006, the defendants knew that Michael had committed two sexual
    offenses in Utah and that his youngest sister was exhibiting signs of sexual abuse, as opined
    by the plaintiffs’ expert. Conversely, the defendants state that there is no evidence that R.J.
    was abused by anyone; that the plaintiffs’ expert could not definitively say that R.J. had been
    abused; that the plaintiffs’ “signs” are explained by R.J.’s “developmental disability” and
    limited I.Q.; and that the plaintiffs have made this “scurrilous and offensive speculation”
    concerning R.J. to try to correct a problem in their evidence. This purported problem related
    to the plaintiffs’ allegation that Michael Jensen’s sexual abuse of a younger sibling was
    discussed at the alleged Stake High Council meeting in 2006 or 2007, when the only certain
    abuse of a younger sibling by Michael involved his sister K.J. in 2010. The plaintiffs’
    evidence concerning this incident involving R.J. was excluded through the circuit court’s in
    limine ruling.
    17
    UD-1 was interviewed by plaintiffs’ counsel in January of 2014. At that time, he
    referenced discussions years earlier at the Church’s Stake High Council level concerning the
    Jensens; the charges that had been brought against Michael when he was twelve or thirteen
    years old in Utah; and how he knew the prosecutor “really worked hard with the Jensens to
    try to get Mich[a]el the help that he needed, and I know that the ecclesiastical leaders had
    worked hard with the Jensens and with Michael to get him the help that he needed.” UD-1
    remarked on the manner in which Chris Jensen reacted after being “given sweetheart deals
    to get his son the help that his son needs, for him to violently react the way he did, to storm
    out of the room and that type of thing . . ..” See supra note 10. When UD-1 was deposed
    several months later, he testified quite differently concerning these matters, which he
    attributes to plaintiffs’ counsel’s “imprecise, vague, and leading questions” when he was
    (continued...)
    8
    2006-2007 Stake High Council meeting ever took place or that Stake President Grow ever
    made such a monitoring arrangement with UD-1.
    The plaintiffs allege that by April 2007, through her role as Relief Society
    President, Sandralee Jensen was arranging for Michael to babysit the children of ward
    families. They further allege that because there had been no disclosures concerning
    Michael’s prior sex offenses in Utah by the Jensens or the Church defendants, the plaintiff
    Doe-6 parents allowed their four-year-old daughter P.C. to be babysat by Michael, who
    sexually and physically abused her by repeatedly laying down in bed with her and making
    her touch his penis. The plaintiffs further allege that when the Doe-6 parents returned home,
    P.C. was extremely upset; had a handprint-shaped bruise on her bottom; and was terrified of
    Michael. When Jane Doe-6 confronted the Jensens parents, who were both Church officers
    at the time, they explained that P.C. was upset because Michael had not fed the Doe-6
    children properly. Sandralee Jensen assumed that Michael had spanked P.C., and Chris
    Jensen believed that Michael needed more “tutelage from his mother” to become a better
    babysitter.18
    17
    (...continued)
    interviewed. Whereas UD-1 referenced the earlier Stake High Council meetings during
    which abuse by Michael was discussed and remarked as to Chris Jensen’s “violent[]
    react[ion] . . . storm[ing] of the room” when his son Michael was “given sweetheart deals”
    to get the help he needed, UD-1 backed away from these statements when deposed.
    18
    Although the physical abuse was evident, P.C. did not report the sexual abuse until
    (continued...)
    9
    Moving forward to June 2007, the plaintiffs allege that Michael Jensen
    assaulted J.M., a fourteen-year-old girl. J.M. testified that Michael invited her to go to the
    movies, telling her there was a “huge group of people” from the church going. According
    to J.M., after her mother dropped her off at the movie theater, Michael purchased her ticket
    and, as they walked through the door of the theater, he grabbed her, pulled her close, and
    started touching her breasts. She testified that he then pulled her outside the theater, pushed
    her up against a wall, and continued touching, kissing, and “doing all this other stuff” as she
    tried to press him back. Explaining further, she testified that Michael’s older brother, Blaine,
    came out of the theater, yelled Michael’s name, “dr[agged] him [Michael] inside the theater,”
    and thereafter kept Michael away from her. She testified that she was upset; that Michael
    had made her feel as if she “owed him something just because he paid for [her] ticket”; and
    that she did not report the incident to the police because she was humiliated. She further
    recounted subsequent contact with Mrs. Jensen, who approached her and asked whether she
    was okay and “do we have a problem?” The plaintiffs allege that Mrs. Jensen “linked in her
    mind” the incident with J.M. to Michael’s Provo sex offenses, which prompted her to confer
    with Bishop Whitcomb about the matters. Mrs. Jensen testified that the only “link” in her
    18
    (...continued)
    2012. The appendix record contains a police report that discusses an interview of P.C. at the
    Child Advocacy Center regarding Michael’s alleged abuse of her. As reflected in this report,
    P.C. alleged that when Michael put her down for a nap, he would lock the door to her
    bedroom because her brothers were also in the house; that Michael was afraid that her
    brothers would discover that he was making her touch his penis; that this happened several
    times in her bed; and that she described the feeling as being “hairy down there.”
    10
    mind was her concern, as a religious woman, with Michael’s “pre-marital displays of
    sexuality[,]” and that her conversation with Bishop Whitcomb was along those lines with
    only a passing reference to Michael’s offenses in Utah.19
    During the fall of 2007, the plaintiffs allege that Church leaders discussed Jane
    and John Doe-1’s marital difficulties and that Sandralee Jensen, as Relief Society President,
    offered Michael as a babysitter if the Doe-1 parents needed some time alone. Mrs. Jensen
    testified that she did not disclose Michael’s sex offenses in Utah or the injury he had inflicted
    on P.C. to Jane Doe-1. The plaintiffs allege Mrs. Jensen also failed to mention that Michael
    was no longer allowed to babysit his siblings, Michael’s assault of J.M., or her conclusion
    that he should not babysit unsupervised. Jane Doe-1 accepted Mrs. Jensen’s offer of child
    care, and Michael babysat J.T., then aged three, and W.T., then aged four. These children
    would later disclose to their parents that the evening Michael babysat them, he blindfolded
    them, put ketchup on his penis, and forced them to perform oral sex on him. Criminal
    charges for these offenses were brought against Michael in 2012. He was tried, convicted,
    and sentenced to thirty-five to seventy-five years in the penitentiary, and he has been
    designated a “violent sexual predator.”20
    19
    Through its in limine rulings, the circuit court excluded all evidence concerning the
    J.M. incident.
    20
    See W.Va. Code § 15-12-2a (2014).
    11
    In early 2008, UD-1’s two-year-old son, C.P., was cared for in the Jensen home
    and came home with a swollen penis and abrasions on the inner part of his upper thighs.
    Neither UD-1 nor his wife, S.P., who was at that time a neonatal intensive care nurse, sought
    medical treatment for C.P., which the plaintiffs allege was because they knew it would result
    in mandatory reporting to state authorities.21 UD-1 and his wife knew C.P.’s injuries could
    not have been self-inflicted because of his physical disabilities. When interviewed by the
    plaintiffs’ counsel, UD-1 stated that Sandralee suggested to his wife that C.P.’s injuries might
    be diaper rash, which his wife, who was a nurse, knew it was not.22 UD-1 also stated during
    this interview, as did S.P. during her deposition, that C.P., who had been potty-trained,
    thereafter began wetting the bed again.
    21
    The plaintiffs state S.P. responded affirmatively during her deposition when asked
    whether she and UD-1 did not seek medical treatment for C.P. because they knew any health
    care provider would have to report to state authorities if a child presented with these injuries.
    S.P. submitted an errata sheet and the court reporter signed a declaration, both indicating S.P.
    had given a negative response to this question. Our review of this portion of the videotape
    of S.P.’s deposition confirms her negative response. Our review further revealed S.P.’s
    testimony that had her son come to the hospital with those abrasions and a swollen penis, she,
    as a nurse, would have been required to take such physical evidence at “face value” and
    further would have reported it to authorities.
    22
    S.P. testified she could not recall any discussion about diaper rash. She further
    testified she did not suspect Michael of having been involved in any fashion and thought, at
    the time, her son and a younger Jensen child had engaged in exploration that resulted in
    C.P.’s injuries. She also testified that from that point forward, if they used the Jensens as
    babysitters, it was one of two Jensen children, neither of whom was Michael.
    12
    The plaintiffs allege that sometime between February through April of 2008,
    Jane Doe-2 approached Sandralee Jensen, who was still serving as Relief Society President,
    about her need for after-school child care for her sons, four-year-old Z.W. and six-year-old
    A.W. According to Mrs. Jensen’s testimony, she proposed Michael to babysit the children
    in the Jensen home, indicating she would be there, as well. She did not disclose any
    information to Jane Doe-2 about Michael’s prior offenses, as discussed above, or his fitness
    as a babysitter. Over the following weeks, the plaintiffs allege that Michael forced Z.W. to
    perform oral sex on him and forced A.W. to watch. Z.W. testified that on one occasion when
    he told Sandralee that Michael was abusing him, she said, “okay and just ignored it.”23 In
    April 2008, Z.W. told his mother about the abuse. Jane Doe-2 testified that she saw the fear
    in her son’s eyes and never doubted his truthfulness about what had happened. She told
    Sandralee what Michael had done and, a day or two later, Michael and his father Chris
    appeared at her home, denying the abuse ever happened in an aggressive manner that caused
    her to feel intimidated.
    23
    This testimony was given during a pretrial hearing held in the criminal prosecution
    of Michael Jensen for his sex crimes against victims J.T. and W.T. In Z.W.’s deposition
    taken in the instant matter, he described the ways that Michael would abuse him, including
    placing Z.W. in a cabinet in the basement of the Jensen home and refusing to let him out until
    Z.W. performed oral sex on Michael, who would insert his penis in a hole in the cabinet.
    Z.W. further testified that when he told Mrs. Jensen on one occasion that “Michael was doing
    stuff down in the basement,” and more specifically that “Michael is making me suck his
    weiner[,]” he thinks she said,“I don’t really care about that or something like that.”
    13
    Jane Doe-2 further testified that she and her husband arranged a meeting with
    defendant Bishop Fishel during which they disclosed Michael’s sexual abuse of Z.W., and
    Bishop Fishel indicated he would look into the matter. According to Jane Doe-2, when she
    saw Bishop Fishel at church approximately one week later, he told her that he had spoken to
    Michael; that he did not believe that Michael had abused Z.W.;24 and that Z.W. might have
    been exposed to pornography. John Doe-2 testified to a separate but similar conversation
    with Bishop Fishel. When Bishop Fishel was deposed, he denied ever speaking to Jane
    Doe-2 about Michael’s alleged sexual abuse of her son, and asserted any conversation he had
    with John Doe-2 did not involve sexual abuse. Bishop Fishel’s testimony reflects that a few
    weeks later, he selected Michael Jensen and his brother Blaine Jensen to be First and Second
    Assistant to the Bishop, an honor within the Church.
    24
    During her deposition, Jane Doe-2 was questioned regarding whether Bishop Fishel
    had said that the abuse had not happened or that he did not believe that it had happened and
    what her husband took from his response. Mrs. Doe-2 explained that her husband believes
    that church leaders
    are called of God and that they can have knowledge from God
    whether something is true or not. So [her husband’s] belief that
    his bishop can say I know this didn’t happen . . . meant [to her
    husband] that he [Bishop Fishel] had prayed about it and the
    Lord had told him it hadn’t happened. And so in that sense, [her
    husband] could’ve felt like, yes, he [Bishop Fishel] would’ve
    known it [Michael’s abuse of Z.W.] didn’t happen[].
    14
    The defendants allege that neither of Z.W.’s parents “believed Z.W.’s account
    enough to report the abuse to the authorities” and John Doe-2 never disclosed any abuse of
    his son “by anybody.” Conversely, Jane Doe-2 testified she and her husband considered
    reporting the abuse to authorities but after speaking to Bishop Fishel, they decided that Z.W.
    had been through enough; that his allegation would be questioned; that there would be
    persons who would not believe him because it would have been Z.W.’s word against Michael
    Jensen’s denial; and that she did not want Z.W. to be ostracized.
    By early 2009, Sandralee Jensen was no longer the Relief Society President but
    had assumed oversight of the Church’s Cub Scout program. When Jane and John Doe-3
    indicated their inability to attend her Cub Scout training one evening because someone would
    need to watch their young children, Sandralee offered to have her children babysit the Doe-3
    children. Jane Doe-3 testified that Michael and a Jensen daughter babysat her children in the
    Jensen home, including her three-year-old son, C.H., who later disclosed Michael followed
    him into the bathroom, shut the door, and when he pulled down his pants to use the toilet,
    Michael touched his penis. Although the defendants state C.H. denied Michael had ever
    abused him, the plaintiffs point to contrary evidence in the appendix record and to the circuit
    court’s denial of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the claims of C.H. and
    his parents.
    15
    The record reflects that around this same time in 2009, Sandralee emailed her
    former bishop, Matt Whitcomb, expressing her concern that Michael posed a risk to her other
    children. She advised Mr. Whitcomb that she and her husband were “trying to think[] of
    different options to help protect [Michael] from himself” and asking whether there were any
    farmers in his area who would be willing to take in Michael. She also expressed to Mr.
    Whitcomb her comfort in seeking his help because he “knew some of the history.”
    In early 2010, Chris Jensen found eighteen-year-old Michael in the bedroom
    of his twelve-year-old sister K.J., who was lying on her bed. Mr. Jensen testified that he had
    Michael leave the room after which his daughter told him that Michael had lain on top of her
    and tried to kiss her. During her deposition, K.J. described this incident as Michael first
    lying down beside her on her bed, then “climb[ing] on top” of her after which he kissed her
    for what seemed like ten to twenty minutes, and also “possibly” moving his pelvis against
    her. She stated that she was terrified. From that point forward, the Jensens banned Michael
    from their home, although he stayed in a tent in their backyard at various times.
    The Jensens met with Bishop Chris Vincent, who was a bishop in their Stake
    but was not their ward bishop, and reported Michael’s abuse of K.J. Bishop Vincent testified
    that during this meeting, K.J. told him about a court case in another state where Michael was
    tried for hitting a girl. Bishop Vincent testified that he told no one else within the Church
    16
    about his meeting with the Jensens; that he agreed to counsel Michael; that he did not ask
    Michael about his abuse of K.J. or his earlier case that she had referenced; and that he gave
    Michael keys to the church building so he would have a safe place to sleep.
    Between 2010 and June of 2011, Michael sometimes lived with Church
    families, including the Doe-4 family, who took him on a family trip to South Carolina. Jane
    Doe-4’s son, J.C., who was Michael’s friend, testified the only concern he was aware of Mrs.
    Jensen expressing was her worry that Michael would “mess[] up or hook[]up” with a girl at
    the beach. Michael went on that trip during which he allegedly abused the Doe-4s’ eight­
    year-old daughter, A.B., touching her genitals over her clothing.25 Sandralee Jensen testified
    that she knew Michael was living with the Doe-4 family, but she did not disclose anything
    to them about Michael’s history of abuse, including his recent abuse of his sister K.J. As
    Sandralee explained, she did not feel any need to warn the Doe-4 parents because K.J. was
    more “developed” than the Doe-4s’ daughter who was about the same age.
    During this same time, the plaintiffs allege that the Church continued to hold
    Michael out as a trustworthy member of the community and, in early 2011, he was asked to
    serve as a substitute teacher in the Church’s primary program and taught a class of four-year­
    25
    The plaintiffs place A.B.’s age at five. During her deposition, A.B. testified that she
    was eight years old at the time.
    17
    old children. In June 2011, Michael was approved for a Church mission, which UD-1
    indicated had been delayed while Bishop Fishel worked with Michael on his various issues.
    In January of 2012, while Michael was on his mission, J.T. and W.T. disclosed
    to their parents, John and Jane Doe-1, that Michael had abused them five years earlier. Jane
    Doe-1 reported the abuse to the West Virginia State Police. Bishop Vincent informed
    President Grow about these allegations against Michael involving the Doe-1 children,
    including that he had called the Church’s Helpline to advise Church officials in Utah of the
    West Virginia State Police investigation and that the State Police wanted to interview
    Michael. Although the Church brought Michael back to West Virginia early from his
    mission in Arizona, the plaintiffs allege that the Jensens and Church leaders met and agreed
    to not disclose his return to the police. The plaintiffs further allege Michael fabricated a
    story that he returned early from his mission due to a bicycle accident, and that Stake
    President Grow did nothing to correct the fabrication.
    The Jensens state that Chris Jensen was deployed when Michael returned early
    from his mission, and because Mrs. Jensen did not want Michael living at home without his
    father there, Mr. Whitcomb, who was then a Stake High Councilor, agreed to let Michael live
    with him and his wife. Mr. Whitcomb testified that when his daughter and grandchildren
    planned a visit, he told Michael to find another place to live because there was not enough
    18
    room in his home for everyone.26 Mr. Whitcomb asked John Doe-5 if Michael could live
    with his family. Although the Doe-5s had young children, the plaintiffs allege that neither
    Mr. Whitcomb, nor any Church official or defendant, told the Doe-5s the reason for
    Michael’s early return from his mission, or about Michael’s history of sexual abuse. Mr.
    Whitcomb testified that he believed John Doe-5 was aware of the allegations against Michael
    based on conversations he had with John Doe-5, but he could not specifically recall the dates
    of those conversations.
    John Doe-5 testified that both Stake President Grow and Bishop Fishel
    encouraged him to allow Michael to live in his home. Michael Jensen lived with the Doe-5s
    from May 2012 until August 2012.27 John and Jane Doe-5’s son M.S. testified Stake
    President Grow told him it was good that Michael was living with the Doe-5 family; that
    Michael was a “good guy;” and that he would be a “good role model” for M.S. The plaintiffs
    allege that during this same time, Stake President Grow was “counseling” Michael on a
    regular basis.
    26
    The plaintiffs contend the reasonable inference to be drawn is that Mr. Whitcomb
    did not want to risk Michael having access to his grandchildren.
    27
    In August of 2012, the Doe-5s learned that Michael had been criminally charged
    with child sexual abuse.
    19
    The plaintiffs further allege that while Michael lived with the Doe-5 family,
    he touched the genitals of the Doe-5 boys, six-year-old T.S. and ten-year-old M.S., on several
    occasions. During therapy with a psychologist, T.S. described looking into the living room
    at his home on one occasion and seeing Michael holding his brother’s head down to Jensen’s
    crotch and “humping” his brother M.S.’s face; he drew a picture of what he had observed.
    The defendants allege the Doe-5 boys thought Michael’s touching of them was accidental,
    while they were “wrestling,” until their father suggested it was not. They add it was the Doe­
    5’s oldest son, M.S.-2, who originally suggested that Michael live with their family.
    In February of 2013, Michael Jensen was tried and convicted of the sexual
    abuse of the Doe-1 children, J.T. and W.T. During Michael’s criminal trial, the Doe-2’s son,
    Z.W., testified under Rule 404(b) about his own sexual abuse by Michael.28
    After additional children came forward, alleging they had been sexually abused
    by Michael, the Church organized a support group meeting for their families in March 2013
    in which some of the plaintiff families participated. UD-1 attended this support meeting,
    after which he reported on the meeting to Stake President Grow. The plaintiffs allege UD-1
    28
    In August of 2013, Michael Jensen was ex-communicated from the Church based
    upon his alleged abuse of at least three Church families’ trust. Stake President Grow testified
    during his deposition in the instant matter that when he visited Michael in jail, Michael
    admitted the victims’ testimony at his criminal trial was true.
    20
    continued to keep President Grow informed of what he learned from the plaintiff families
    and of the conversations he had with John Doe-5’s lawyer. The appendix record contains an
    email from UD-1 to Grow that begins, “As promised here is what we [he and John Doe-5]
    talked about last night.”29
    On September 16, 2013, the plaintiffs filed their complaint in the circuit court
    against the Church defendants and the Jensens (Chris, Sandralee, and Michael) alleging civil
    conspiracy, fraud, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and various negligence claims;
    they also asserted an assault and a battery claim solely against Michael Jensen. On February
    3, 2014, the plaintiffs filed an amended complaint naming UD-1 as a defendant on their
    claim of civil conspiracy.
    Following extensive discovery, multiple motions for summary judgment were
    filed, as well as numerous motions in limine. During a status conference held on August 31,
    2015, the circuit judge, expressing his concern regarding the impact that a six-week trial
    would have on his docket, identified a need to find ways to shorten the trial’s duration.
    On December 4, 2015, prior to its in limine rulings, the circuit court entered
    an order granting UD-1’s motion for summary judgment, finding the plaintiffs could not
    29
    In that digital exchange, UD-1 counseled John Doe-5 against pursuing a legal claim
    against the Church, citing the eternal consequences of doing so.
    21
    prove the elements of conspiracy against him. Through its order entered on December 30,
    2015, the circuit court granted several of the defendants’ motions in limine, effectively
    eliminating much of the plaintiffs’ evidence offered in opposition to the defendants’ motions
    for summary judgment on the conspiracy claim.30 Although the circuit court had previously
    indicated its intent to allow the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim against the remaining defendants
    to go to trial, the following day, December 31, 2015, the court entered an order granting
    summary judgment in favor of the remaining defendants on that claim. After observing in
    this order that it had “eliminated much of the circumstantial evidence that Plaintiffs intended
    to use in support of their conspiracy claim,” the circuit court found the plaintiffs had no
    direct evidence of a conspiracy and no evidence of a “concerted action by the alleged
    conspirators,” a “common plan or mutual agreement by the alleged conspirators,” or any
    evidence that “the alleged conspirators combined and agreed to violate a duty owed to the
    Plaintiffs.”
    On January 11, 2016, the circuit court entered an order of final judgment
    pursuant to West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b) concerning its summary judgment
    orders. The circuit court ruled these orders were final because they entirely disposed of all
    claims against UD-1 and all conspiracy claims against all defendants. No party objected to
    the entry of this order. This appeal followed.
    30
    The circuit court’s in limine rulings are addressed more fully in section III.B., infra.
    22
    II. Standard of Review
    The plaintiffs have appealed two summary judgment orders. Our review is
    plenary. Syl. Pt. 1, Painter v. Peavy, 192 W.Va. 189, 
    451 S.E.2d 755
    (1994) (“A circuit
    court’s entry of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.”). To the extent other standards
    apply to our review of the circuit court’s Rule 54(b) certification and its evidentiary rulings,
    those standards are set forth below.
    III. Discussion
    The circuit court certified its summary judgment orders under West Virginia
    Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b). Following our consideration of the Rule 54(b) certification,
    we will then address the circuit court’s in limine rulings and conclude with our review of the
    summary judgment decisions.
    A. Rule 54(b) certification
    In its Rule 54(b)31 order, the circuit court found that its summary judgment
    orders had disposed of the only claim (conspiracy) asserted against UD-1, as well as the
    conspiracy claim against all other defendants, and that there was no just reason for delaying
    entry of final judgment with respect to those claims. As the circuit court explained:
    (a) appellate review of those orders and any necessary
    evidentiary rulings will promote judicial efficiency by
    31
    See supra note 6.
    23
    maximizing the chance that this lengthy and complex case is
    tried only once, with the benefit of definitive rulings on the
    admissibility of certain evidence and the viability of certain
    claims; and (b) the special nature of this case, where sexually
    abused children will be called upon to testify, strongly supports
    appellate review of these matters before trial. Testifying, and
    reliving their abuse, is re-traumatizing, and whatever appropriate
    steps are available should be taken to ensure that this happens
    only once.
    All parties assented to the circuit court’s Rule 54(b) ruling as being proper and
    meeting the criteria of Rule 54(b) at the time it was made. Notwithstanding the defendants’
    agreement to entry of the Rule 54(b) order below, and the fact they did not file a motion to
    dismiss this appeal or cross-assign as error the circuit court’s Rule 54(b) certification, they
    now argue that this interlocutory appeal under Rule 54(b) is improper because civil
    conspiracy merely extends liability for an underlying tort, which makes it inseparable from
    the merits of the underlying torts that remain pending below.32 For the reasons set forth
    below, we disagree.
    Our review of the circuit court’s Rule 54(b) certification is guided by the
    following test:
    In reviewing a circuit court’s certification under Rule
    54(b) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure, this Court
    applies a two-prong test. First, we scrutinize de novo the circuit
    court’s evaluation of the interrelationship of the claims, in order
    32
    UD-1 does not challenge the Rule 54(b) certification.
    24
    to decide whether the circuit court completely disposed of one
    or more claims, which is a prerequisite for an appeal under this
    rule. As to the second prong of the inquiry under the
    rule–whether there is any just reason for delay–this Court
    accords the circuit court’s determination considerably more
    deference than its first-prong determination. The circuit court’s
    assessment that there is “no just reason for delay” will not be
    disturbed unless the circuit court’s conclusion was clearly
    unreasonable, because the task of balancing the contending
    factors is peculiarly one for the trial judge, who can explore all
    the facets of a case.
    Syl. Pt. 1, Province v. Province, 196 W.Va. 473, 
    473 S.E.2d 894
    (1996).
    Regarding the first Province prong, the circuit court found that its summary
    judgment rulings had disposed of the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim against UD-1, which was
    the only cause of action asserted against him, and their conspiracy claim against all other
    defendants. We have previously recognized conspiracy as a separate claim. As we stated
    in Dunn v. Rockwell, 225 W.Va. 43, 
    689 S.E.2d 255
    (2009), “‘[t[he law of this State
    recognizes a cause of action sounding in civil conspiracy.’” 
    Id. at 56,
    689 S.E.2d at 268
    (quoting Kessel v. Leavitt, 204 W.Va. 95, 128, 
    511 S.E.2d 720
    , 753 (1998)). The fact that
    a civil conspiracy claim requires an underlying tort or harm resulting from the conspiracy
    does not make it any less a claim that can be disposed of separately from the remaining
    causes of action.
    25
    The defendants assert that civil conspiracy is inseparable from the merits of the
    underlying torts, is based on the same facts, and seeks the same recovery. While the same
    facts might be relevant to the conspiracy claim, as well as the negligent and intentional tort
    claims that remain pending below, this does not preclude the circuit court’s Rule 54(b)
    certification of its final ruling on the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim. Indeed,
    “[w]hen the mischief is accomplished, the conspiracy
    becomes important, as it affects that means and measure of
    redress; for the party wronged may look beyond the actual
    participants in committing the injury, and join with them as
    defendants all who conspired to accomplish it. The significance
    of the conspiracy consists, therefore, in this: That it gives the
    person injured a remedy against parties not otherwise connected
    with the wrong. It is also significant as constituting [a] matter
    of aggravation, and as such tending to increase the plaintiff’s
    recovery.”
    Gosden v. Louis, 
    687 N.E.2d 481
    , 497 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996) (citation omitted). Further, a
    conspiracy claim “enlarge[s] the pool of potential defendants from whom a plaintiff may
    recover damages and, possibly, an increase in the amount of those damages[.]” Id.at 498; see
    also Premier Therapy, L.L.C. v. Childs, Nos. 14 CO 0048, 15 CO 0028, __ N.E.3d __, 
    2016 WL 6966387
    (Ohio Ct. App. Nov. 18, 2016) (observing that where additional damages are
    awarded on conspiracy claim there must be evidence to support damages award). In the case
    at bar, the plaintiffs argue that “conduct that establishes conspiracy liability, but not separate
    tort liability, could cause harms not recoverable on the separate tort claims.”
    26
    We have previously recognized the possibility of separate damages for
    conspiracy. In Slack v. Kanawha County Housing and Redevelopment Authority, 188 W.Va.
    144, 
    423 S.E.2d 547
    (1992), after ordering the reinstatement of the verdict for the plaintiff’s
    emotional injuries awarded on her invasion of privacy claim, we addressed the errors the
    plaintiff asserted concerning her conspiracy claim. In Slack, “the only damages the plaintiff
    proved . . . were damages for emotional distress and mental anguish.” 
    Id. at 155,
    423 S.E.2d
    at 558. We recognized the “identicality of the damage claim asserted under the civil
    conspiracy theory,” but declined to address “whether, from a substantive standpoint, there
    was sufficient evidence to prove such a theory.” 
    Id. at 156,
    423 S.E.2d at 559. On remand,
    we instructed that “the plaintiff is free to develop the claim for civil conspiracy, but unless
    the damages are separate and distinct from those already obtained on the invasion of privacy
    verdict, there can be no recovery under Harless.”33 Slack, 188 W.Va. at 
    156, 423 S.E.2d at 559
    ; see also Wells v. Smith, 171 W.Va. 97, 105-06, 
    297 S.E.2d 872
    , 880 (1982) (overruled
    on other grounds in Garnes v. Fleming Landfill, Inc., 186 W.Va. 656, 
    413 S.E.2d 897
    (1991)
    (finding that had “jury been properly instructed on the appellants’ conspiracy theory they may
    well have returned a verdict for compensatory damages against Settimio by virtue of the
    evidence of his participation in the conspiracy”).
    33
    See Syl. Pt. 7, Harless v. First Nat’l Bank in Fairmont, 169 W.Va. 673, 
    289 S.E.2d 692
    (1982) (“It is generally recognized that there can be only one recovery of damages for
    one wrong or injury. Double recovery of damages is not permitted; the law does not permit
    a double satisfaction for a single injury. A plaintiff may not recover damages twice for the
    same injury simply because he has two legal theories.”).
    27
    While the deference this Court affords to a circuit court’s Rule 54(b)
    certification under the first prong of Province is clear,34 we afford even greater deference to
    the circuit court’s decision under the second prong of Province. As indicated above, the
    circuit court found no just reason for delay because appellate review of its orders would
    “promote judicial efficiency by maximizing the chance that this lengthy and complex case
    is tried only once, with the benefit of definitive rulings on the admissibility of certain
    evidence and the viability of certain claims[.]” These findings “will not be disturbed unless
    the circuit court’s conclusion was clearly unreasonable[.]” Province, 196 W.Va. at 
    475, 473 S.E.2d at 896
    , syl. pt. 1, in part.
    Under the authority set forth above, and upon giving the requisite deference
    to the circuit court’s Rule 54(b) ruling, we conclude there was no abuse of discretion in its
    determination that the summary judgment rulings completely disposed of the plaintiffs’
    conspiracy claims. Further, we give substantial deference to and concur in the circuit court’s
    conclusion that “the special nature of this case, where sexually abused children will be called
    upon to testify, strongly supports appellate review of these matters before trial.”35
    34
    See State ex rel. Consolidation Coal Co. v. Clawges, 206 W.Va. 222, 228, 
    523 S.E.2d 282
    , 288 (1999) (citing Province and stating “[t]hat this Court affords great deference
    to the intent of the circuit court in its determination of whether an order is final for purposes
    of Rule 54(b) certification is indisputable.”).
    35
    Although the defendants assert there is no indication that it would be traumatizing
    if the minor plaintiffs had to testify more than once, citing the multiples times each has
    (continued...)
    28
    Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion in the circuit court’s Rule 54(b) certification, and
    we will exercise our appellate jurisdiction in this matter.
    B. In limine rulings
    Having upheld the circuit court’s Rule 54(b) certification, we observe that
    “‘[w]here an appeal is properly obtained from an appealable decree
    either final or interlocutory, such appeal will bring with it for review all
    preceding non-appealable decrees or orders, from which have arisen
    any of the errors complained of in the decree appealed from, no matter
    how long they may have been rendered before the appeal was taken.’
    Point 2, syllabus, Lloyd v. Kyle, 26 W.Va. 534 [1885].” Syllabus point
    5, State ex rel. Davis v. Iman Mining Co., 144 W.Va. 46, 
    106 S.E.2d 97
                  (1958).
    Syl. Pt. 6, Riffe v. Armstrong, 197 W.Va. 626, 
    477 S.E.2d 535
    (1996). Necessarily
    intertwined with the circuit court’s summary judgment rulings entered in favor of the Church
    defendants and the Jensen parents are its antecedent in limine rulings.36
    Notwithstanding our holding in Riffe, the Church defendants strongly urge this
    Court to refuse consideration of the circuit court’s in limine rulings. Citing our “finality
    35
    (...continued)
    already related what happened, we agree with the circuit court’s concern. As we recently
    recognized, “each new publication [of child pornography] would cause new injury to the
    child’s . . . emotional well-being.” State v. Riggleman, __ W.Va. __, __, 
    798 S.E.2d 846
    , 852
    (2017) (citation omitted). Similarly, a child’s emotional well-being could be harmed each
    time the child is required to recount his or her abuse.
    36
    As indicated previously, the circuit court entered summary judgment in favor of UD­
    1 prior to issuing the subject in limine rulings.
    29
    rule,” they argue that the plaintiffs cannot demonstrate that the in limine rulings “were so
    integral to the conspiracy order as to ‘give rise’ to the purported errors contained therein”;
    that “[n]othing in the circuit court’s expressed reasons for granting summary judgment
    suggests that the outcome would have been different if some or all of the excluded evidence
    had not been excluded”; and that “[t]here is no meaningful way for this Court to determine
    that any excluded evidence, much less which evidence, resulted in the alleged error in the
    conspiracy ruling.” The Jensen parents take a somewhat different stance. They first argue
    that this Court should not review the in limine rulings, but then acknowledge that the instant
    appeal is “tied up with the evidentiary rulings that have been decided,” adding that any
    review of those rulings should be limited “to the extent they impact the outcome of the
    summary judgment ruling on the conspiracy cause of action.”
    Rejecting the notion that the in limine rulings are distinct from the summary
    judgment rulings, the plaintiffs maintain that this Court can properly review these evidentiary
    rulings under Riffe. They highlight the circuit court’s statement in its summary judgment
    order that it had “eliminated much of the circumstantial evidence that Plaintiffs intended to
    use in support of their conspiracy claim” through its in limine rulings. Although the
    defendants argue that any alleged error in the summary judgment ruling did not arise from
    the prior in limine rulings, we find that the circuit judge’s comments made during the Rule
    54(b) hearing indicate otherwise: “I don’t know how you get around the motions in limine
    30
    . . . . aren’t you going to have to look at those as part of the appeal? . . . I don’t know how
    you cut that out of it.”37 It is clear to this Court, as well, that the in limine rulings and the
    summary judgment rulings are inextricably entwined.
    Typically, a motion in limine is “a pre-trial request . . . that the court not permit
    certain anticipated evidence to be admitted in the trial and not be seen or heard by the jury.”38
    While the circuit court’s in limine rulings may have been made, in part, for such purposes,
    it is equally clear that these in limine rulings allowed the circuit court to evade review of that
    evidence and the attendant duty to draw all reasonable inferences therefrom, in the light most
    favorable to the nonmoving party, as is required of a court in ruling upon a motion for
    summary judgment.39 Other courts have cautioned against proceeding in such a manner.
    In C & E Services, Inc. v. Ashland Inc., 
    539 F. Supp. 2d 316
    (D. D.C. 2008),
    the court found that “a motion in limine should not be used to resolve factual disputes or
    weigh evidence[;]” rather, such should be accomplished through “a motion for summary
    judgment, with its accompanying and crucial procedural safeguards.” 
    Id. at 323.
    Similarly,
    37
    We note that defense counsels’ comments at this same hearing reflect contemplation
    of the necessity of this Court’s review of the in limine rulings.
    38
    State v. Poling, 207 W.Va. 299, 307 n.1, 
    531 S.E.2d 678
    , 686 n.1 (2000).
    39
    The standards and guidelines applicable to a circuit court’s consideration and ruling
    upon a motion for summary judgment are discussed infra, section III.C.
    31
    in Mid-America Tablewares, Inc. v. Mogi Trading Co., 
    100 F.3d 1353
    (7th Cir. 1996), the
    court determined that the sufficiency of evidence concerning lost profits was for summary
    judgment or judgment as matter of law, not a motion in limine. 
    Id. at 1363;
    see also Meyer
    Intellectual Prop.’s. Ltd. v. Bodum, Inc., 
    690 F.3d 1354
    , 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (observing
    that “motion in limine is not the appropriate vehicle for weighing the sufficiency of the
    evidence”); Williams v. Johnson, 
    747 F. Supp. 2d 10
    , 14 (D. D.C. 2010) (“Motions in limine
    are designed to narrow the evidentiary issues at trial. *** In light of their limited purpose,
    motions in limine ‘should not be used to resolve factual disputes,’ which remain the ‘function
    of a motion for summary judgment’”) (citation omitted); Ferguson v. Marshall Contractors,
    Inc., 
    745 A.2d 147
    , 150-51 (R.I. 2000) (finding trial judge had improperly used motion in
    limine to effectively make summary judgment ruling).
    While not expressly considering the propriety of utilizing in limine rulings to
    resolve factual disputes, this Court has addressed the effects of a circuit court’s elimination
    of evidence through an in limine ruling to facilitate summary judgment. In San Francisco
    v. Wendy’s International, Inc., 221 W.Va. 734, 
    656 S.E.2d 485
    (2007), the circuit court
    excluded the testimony of the plaintiffs’ causation experts through an in limine ruling after
    which it “went on to grant summary judgment to the defendant, on the basis that the plaintiffs
    did not have sufficient evidence to support their claim.” 
    Id. at 738,
    656 S.E.2d at 489. This
    Court concluded that
    32
    [h]aving found that the circuit court erred in excluding both of
    the appellants’ causation experts, we now find that the
    appellants made a sufficient showing on an essential element of
    the case that they had the burden to prove. Accordingly,
    because it now appears from the record that genuine issues of
    fact exist to be tried, we find that the circuit court erred in
    granting summary judgment.
    
    Id. at 751,
    656 S.E.2d at 502. Similarly, in Buckhannon Sales Co., Inc. v. Appalantic Corp.,
    175 W.Va. 742, 
    338 S.E.2d 222
    (1985), the circuit court first granted the defendant’s motion
    in limine “to prevent the introduction of parol testimony concerning the various documents,
    contending that the court should not admit parol evidence and that the terms of the various
    contracts were unambiguous.” 
    Id. at 744,
    338 S.E.2d at 224. The court later granted
    summary judgment in favor of the defendant. After analyzing the parol evidence rule, this
    Court reversed the award of summary judgment after determining that “the motion in limine
    was erroneously sustained” and that “the parties should have the opportunity to explain the
    agreements.” 
    Id. at 745,
    338 S.E.2d at 224.
    Although the defendants contend there is nothing in the circuit court’s
    reasoning for granting summary judgment that would suggest a different outcome had some
    or all of the excluded evidence not been eliminated, we disagree. The fact that the circuit
    court first eliminated a large portion of the plaintiffs’ circumstantial evidence offered in
    support of their conspiracy claim before it granted the Church defendants’ and the Jensen
    parents’ summary judgment motions on that claim strongly suggests otherwise. While the
    33
    defendants afford little significance to the circuit court’s pronouncement that it had
    eliminated much of the plaintiffs’ evidence through its prior in limine rulings, we find the
    statement reveals precisely what the circuit court hoped to accomplish.
    Turning to the circuit court’s in limine rulings, we first observe that “[a] trial
    court’s ruling on a motion in limine is reviewed on appeal for an abuse of discretion.”40 Syl.
    Pt. 1, McKenzie v. Carroll Intern. Corp., 216 W.Va. 686, 
    610 S.E.2d 341
    (2004). Our
    consideration necessarily begins with a review of the evidentiary rules applicable to the
    circuit court’s rulings. Although the circuit court’s in limine rulings are sparse in terms of
    any factual or legal analysis, the order does reflect a cursory application of Rules 401 and
    403 of the West Virginia Rules of Evidence.
    Under West Virginia Rule of Evidence 401, “[e]vidence is relevant if: (a) it
    has any tendency to make a fact more or less probable than it would be without the evidence;
    and (b) the fact is of consequence in determining the action.” 
    Id. Relevant evidence
    may be
    40
    We reject the plaintiffs’ request that we apply a de novo review to these evidentiary
    rulings. The issues before us do not involve an interpretation of the rules of evidence, which
    would require a de novo review; rather, we review the circuit court’s application of those
    rules to exclude evidence through its in limine rulings. See Lacy v. CSX Transp. Inc., 205
    W.Va. 630, 646, 
    520 S.E.2d 418
    , 434 (1999) (“‘[A] trial court’s ruling on the admissibility
    of testimony is reviewed for an abuse of discretion, “but to the extent the [circuit] court’s
    ruling turns on an interpretation of a [West Virginia] Rule of Evidence our review is
    plenary.”’ State v. Sutphin, 195 W.Va. 551, 560, 
    466 S.E.2d 402
    , 411 (1995) (citations
    omitted)[.]”).
    34
    excluded, however, “if its probative value is substantially outweighed by a danger of one or
    more of the following: unfair prejudice, confusing the issues, misleading the jury, undue
    delay, wasting time, or needlessly presenting cumulative evidence.” W.Va. R. Evid. 403, in
    part.
    In all but one of the in limine rulings being challenged, the circuit court found,
    inter alia, that the evidence would be “wasting time” and would cause “undue delay,” which
    are Rule 403 considerations. The circuit court did not explain in its order why this evidence
    would be a waste of time or cause undue delay, nor did it offer any analysis as to why this
    evidence is unfairly prejudicial or how that unfair prejudice substantially outweighs its
    probative value. Importantly, however, “wasting time” and “undue delay” should not be
    employed to exclude relevant evidence whose probative value substantially outweighs the
    risk presented by these concerns. Indeed, notwithstanding the circuit court’s stated desire to
    find ways to shorten what will clearly be a lengthy trial in this matter, care must be taken to
    ensure that efficiency considerations do not lead to the exclusion of highly probative
    evidence. See U.S. v. Siegel, 
    536 F.3d 306
    , 320 (4th Cir. 2008) (“sympathiz[ing] with the
    district court’s concern about the length and complexity of the trial”; agreeing that “the
    district court excluded the Other Crime Evidence without sufficiently considering the
    importance of the evidence to the government’s case”; and finding that the district court had
    “other tools available to it to ensure that the trial proceeds as expeditiously as possible”);
    35
    Johnson v. Ashby, 
    808 F.2d 676
    , 678 (8th Cir. 1987) (recognizing trial court’s need to control
    length of trial but also observing that “it may be an abuse of the trial court’s discretion to
    exclude probative, non-cumulative evidence simply because its introduction will cause
    delay”). We bear these cautions in mind as we consider the circuit court’s in limine rulings41
    that have been challenged in this appeal.
    1. Exclusion of Utah Sex Offense Evidence
    The circuit court ruled that the allegations of the Church’s influence in the
    juvenile criminal proceedings in Utah were based on “Michael’s cryptic boast to a friend”42
    and other circumstantial evidence of similarly “limited probative value,” which was
    substantially outweighed by a danger of unfair prejudice to the defendants, as well as
    concerns rooted in confusing the issues, wasting time, and undue delay. The circuit court
    found a dissimilarity in conduct between Michael’s criminal offenses in Utah and the instant
    abuse allegations, adding that the Utah court records contained more information than either
    the Jensen parents, Michael’s paternal grandfather, or Bishop Swenson would have
    41
    Confining our decision to the bases cited in the circuit court’s December 30, 2015,
    in limine order, we recognize that other evidentiary challenges may arise concerning this
    same evidence, as the evidence unfolds at trial.
    42
    As indicated previously, Michael told his friend J.C. (Jane Doe-4’s son), that he had
    been in legal trouble with a girl in Utah before moving to West Virginia, and that his
    grandfather “was in a leadership position for the church . . . [and] helped take care of
    whatever needed to be taken care of.”
    36
    contemporaneously been aware of. Regarding the SBRA,43 which was part of the Utah
    proceeding, the circuit court found there was no evidence that the Jensen parents or Church
    leaders ever saw the SBRA;44 therefore, it had low probative value that was substantially
    outweighed by its potential for confusing the issues, undue delay, and wasting time.45
    The plaintiffs assert that these rulings are in error because the events in Utah
    marked the inception of the concerted action they have alleged. They insist that the direct
    evidence concerning Michael’s early history of sex offenses in Utah is intrinsic to their
    claims, particularly where “disputes abound” regarding when the defendants had notice that
    Michael was a risk to children,46 whether they concealed both the abuse and the risk, and
    whether Michael should have been sponsored as a fit babysitter for Church families in West
    43
    See supra note 10.
    44
    The plaintiffs contend the reasonable inferences to be drawn from their
    circumstantial evidence in this regard demonstrate that the Jensen parents are not being
    truthful when they claim they did not see the SBRA.
    45
    The circuit court also found that the records from the Utah proceeding should remain
    “confidential and inadmissible absent an order from the appropriate Utah court authorizing
    its release.” Even assuming, arguendo, that a Utah court could control the admission of
    evidence at trial in West Virginia, the fact remains that these records were previously
    released in numerous ways without a Utah court order, but in accordance with Utah court
    rules, including to the West Virginia State Police. They were also produced in response to
    the Church’s subpoena to the West Virginia State Police and by the Jensen parents in
    discovery; they have been used in multiple ways in this litigation, including by experts in
    rendering opinions.
    46
    The defendants discount Michael’s sex offenses in Utah in many ways, including
    that there was no evidence that he had abused any child before 2007. However, Michael’s
    victims in Utah were minors.
    37
    Virginia or as a boarder in their homes. Regarding the circuit court’s finding that this
    evidence would be a “waste of time” because the Utah offenses were too “dissimilar” to
    Michael’s later abuse of children, the plaintiffs posit the question: What parent would not
    want to know that the person being proffered to babysit his or her child or board in his or her
    home had prior sexual offenses, and what parent would not think that persons with
    knowledge of those offenses had a duty to disclose that knowledge before urging
    unsuspecting parents to allow that person into their home and/or to babysit their children?47
    Regarding the circuit court’s acceptance of the Jensens’ denial they never saw
    the SBRA or knew of its contents, the plaintiffs assert this was a credibility determination
    made by the circuit court in the face of contrary circumstantial evidence that calls into
    question the veracity of the Jensens’ denial. The plaintiffs further argue that it should be for
    a jury, not the circuit court, to decide whether there is a connection between Michael’s Utah
    sex offenses and his later abuse of the minor plaintiffs and whether the Church influenced
    the outcome of the proceeding in Utah through the involvement of Michael’s paternal
    grandfather, who held powerful positions within the Church. Maintaining that the contested
    47
    Although the defendants argue that no “Church leader” placed Michael in
    babysitting positions, the plaintiffs look to the following allegations to disprove this
    contention: that Sandralee Jensen in her role as Relief Society President arranged for
    Michael to babysit several of the minor plaintiffs; that in her later role as a scout leader for
    the Church she arranged for Michael to babysit for another plaintiff family; and, later, after
    Michael was banned from the Jensen home for sexually abusing his twelve-year-old sister,
    Church leaders assisted and recommended Michael’s placement as a boarder with yet another
    family.
    38
    facts concerning what happened in Utah, whether the conduct was serious, and whether it
    was predictive of Michael being a threat to re-offend were all disputed, the plaintiffs assert
    the circuit court erred in resolving these disputed facts in favor of the defendants before also
    finding that this evidence had limited probative value and would be a waste of time.
    Rejecting the plaintiffs’ arguments, the defendants contend the circuit court did
    not abuse its discretion because the plaintiffs have no evidence that Michael, his parents, or
    any Church leaders ever saw the SBRA or knew of its contents and that the plaintiffs have
    distorted the record when they claim the Jensen parents knew Michael was a danger to
    children because they no longer allowed him to babysit his younger siblings.48 Arguing
    further, the defendants state that the circuit court properly excluded the SBRA, which has
    low probative value given the dissimilarities49 between Michael’s Utah conduct and the
    instant abuse allegations, and which value was substantially outweighed by its potential for
    48
    Serving to further highlight the innumerable factual disputes in this matter, the
    defendants contend that the SBRA evaluator concluded that Michael posed a low to moderate
    risk to act out again with girls his age and that he was not a risk to his prepubescent sisters.
    However, the defendants omit that the SBRA evaluator also concluded that Michael needed
    “to be supervised with any female, including his sisters . . . until his therapist considers that
    his risk is reduced.” (emphasis added). While the defendants contend that proof of the
    therapy’s completion was provided to the Utah court, the plaintiffs allege there is no “proof”
    of completion in Michael’s Utah court file, which was confirmed during the testimony of
    defense expert Frank Yannelli. Mr. Yannelli is an assistant prosecutor in the county where
    Michael was prosecuted in Utah. With the permission of his supervisor, who is the elected
    Utah County Attorney, Mr. Yannelli is a paid expert for the Church in the case at bar.
    49
    This Court is confident that the parties will marshal their experts and other evidence
    in support of their respective positions on this issue for purposes of trial.
    39
    issue confusion, undue delay, and wasting time. The defendants contend that the plaintiffs
    have no evidence of Church influence in Michael’s Utah proceedings; that those persons
    involved in that proceeding, including the prosecutors, have testified they were not
    influenced in their handling of Michael’s prosecution; and that Michael’s parents and
    grandfather participated in the proceeding as any parent or grandparent would in such
    circumstances.
    Based on our review of this evidence, we conclude that the circuit court abused
    its discretion in excluding evidence of Michael Jensen’s juvenile criminal proceeding in
    Utah. Evidence of the Utah offenses, including the SBRA, are clearly relevant and probative
    of who knew what and when, which is at the heart of the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim, and is
    probative of notice of Michael’s risk to re-offend sexually.50 Moreover, it is neither
    speculative nor unreasonable to conclude that a jury might infer that Michael’s parents had
    access to information associated with their minor son’s criminal proceeding, including the
    SBRA,51 which cautioned that Michael should be supervised with any female, including his
    young sisters, until his therapy was completed and the risk reduced. What purpose would
    50
    The plaintiffs allege that the Church’s expert admitted that Michael’s sex offenses
    in Utah “portended an increased risk of re-offending with a range of victims, including young
    children.”
    51
    We are persuaded by the plaintiffs’ argument that the Jensens, as his parents, could
    obtain the SBRA as Michael’s power of attorney under Utah judicial rules. We further
    observe that parents may have access to private court records if the subject of that record is
    their unemancipated minor child. Ut. Jud. Admn. R. 4-202.03(4)(B).
    40
    such a warning serve if it were not shared with the very persons intended to implement the
    protections addressed by the caution? Moreover, the parties’ experts have relied, in part, on
    the SBRA in rendering their opinions. Further, regarding the Church’s alleged influence in
    that proceeding, it is difficult to ignore Michael’s friend J.C., who testified that Michael said
    he had been in legal trouble with a girl in Utah before moving to West Virginia, but his
    grandfather “was in a leadership position for the church . . . [and] helped take care of
    whatever needed to be taken care of.” While the circuit court found this statement to be
    merely a “boast,” Michael has declined to testify in this matter; thus, there is no basis for
    such conclusion.
    Just because highly probative evidence may prejudice the opposing party, that
    basis alone does not warrant the exclusion of such evidence which is the case here.
    Moreover, concerns about the length of trial do not warrant the exclusion of this evidence
    based on waste of time, undue delay or confusion for a jury. It will be for a jury to resolve
    any factual disputes associated with this evidence, draw reasonable inferences from this
    evidence, as it may, and determine whether this evidence supports the plaintiffs’ conspiracy
    claim.
    41
    2.	 Exclusion of evidence of Michael Jensen’s
    alleged assault of J.M. in 2007
    The circuit court found the evidence of Michael Jensen’s alleged assault upon
    J.M. in 2007 to be of limited probative value for purposes of establishing notice that Michael
    was a danger to young children, and that any probative value of this evidence was
    substantially outweighed by its potential for issue confusion, undue delay, and “wasting time
    during what is expected to be a long trial.” The plaintiffs argue the circuit court erred by
    rejecting their argument that whether this evidence provides notice that Michael was a risk
    to a range of potential victims is a jury question. Arguing further, the plaintiffs maintain that
    Sandralee Jensen, who was a Church officer at the time, connected the J.M. assault with
    Michael’s offenses in Utah, bringing both matters to the attention of Bishop Whitcomb—all
    of which occurred before Michael was “placed as a babysitter for the Doe-1 family in
    November 2007, the Doe-2 family in February/March, 2008, and into the homes of the other
    plaintiffs thereafter.”
    The defendants respond that no local Church leader knew anything about the
    J.M. incident and that, at most, Sandralee Jensen may have mentioned this incident in a
    “passing comment” to Bishop Whitcomb. They further argue it was not until J.M.’s
    deposition in May of 2014 that either the Jensens or anyone else learned that the incident had
    been anything but consensual. Finally, they contend that regardless of what they knew about
    this incident, it “would not act as a predictor that Michael might abuse young children.”
    42
    We find the relevancy and probity of this evidence outweighs any concern for
    issue confusion, undue delay, or wasting time. This is simply another piece of evidence from
    which a jury could infer a conspiracy to conceal incidents of Michael’s sexual abuse of
    others, including J.M., and to suppress information of the ongoing danger and threat that he
    posed. Certainly, Sandralee Jensen, who is alleged to be part of the conspiracy and who was
    then serving as Relief Society President, had concerns at the time, prompting her to ask J.M.
    whether she was okay and “do we have a problem?” Mrs. Jensen also reported the incident
    to Bishop Whitcomb during a conversation in which she raised the topic of Michael’s
    offenses in Utah. Accordingly, we find that the circuit court abused its discretion in
    excluding this evidence.
    3. Exclusion of any reference to an alleged
    2006-2007 Stake High Council meeting
    The plaintiffs have circumstantial evidence that a Stake High Council meeting
    occurred in either 2006 or 2007 during which, inter alia, Michael Jensen’s abuse of a
    younger sister was allegedly discussed, and Stake President Grow asked UD-1 to monitor
    Chris Jensen and report back to him, which UD-1 agreed to do. The circuit court excluded
    this evidence, finding the plaintiffs had no “firsthand evidence of such a meeting” and the
    probative value of the plaintiffs’ hearsay evidence, even if the court were to find it
    admissible, was substantially outweighed by a danger of undue delay and a waste of time.
    43
    In making this particular in limine ruling, the circuit court referenced, without
    discussion, its earlier order granting summary judgment in favor of UD-1. The circuit court
    found in its prior order that UD-1 was indisputably not a member of the Stake High Council
    until 2008; that the transcript of plaintiffs’ counsel’s interview of UD-1 reflected that UD-1
    did not specify a date for this Stake High Council meeting; that everyone who was
    indisputably a member of the Stake High Council at that time had denied that any such
    meeting took place; that the plaintiffs’ assertion that the meeting was prompted by Michael’s
    abuse of a younger sister was not supported by the record; and that the only record evidence
    of a sexual incident between Michael and a younger sister was the subsequent incident that
    occurred in 2010 with his then twelve-year-old sister, K.J.
    The plaintiffs argue there is extensive evidence that this meeting took place
    within the time frame they allege, including separate conversations that John Doe-5 had with
    Stake President Grow; President Grow’s executive secretary at the time, Tony Naegle; and
    UD-1. They allege UD-1 told multiple plaintiffs about these Stake discussions during a
    parent support group meeting in 2013, referencing the 2007 time frame both then and when
    he was interviewed by plaintiffs’ counsel. Rejecting these arguments, the defendants
    essentially echo the circuit court’s findings, including that persons who served on the Stake
    High Council during that time frame have all denied that such discussion regarding the
    Jensens ever took place.
    44
    We find the circuit court abused its discretion by crediting the defendants’
    denials that this meeting took place when the record contains circumstantial evidence to the
    contrary. While the evidence is clearly conflicting, it will be for the jury to assess the
    credibility of witnesses, to determine whether this Stake High Council meeting took place
    and, if so, whether concerns regarding Michael’s abuse of others was discussed.52 A jury’s
    resolution of this conflicting, but relevant and probative evidence, will necessarily bear on
    who knew what and when, whether Church leaders were on notice of the risk that Michael
    posed, and whether the evidence supports the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim.
    4.	 Exclusion of any reference to Michael Jensen’s
    sister, R.J., allegedly exhibiting signs of sexual abuse
    The circuit court found there is no direct evidence that abuse of R.J.53 was
    “discussed at a high council meeting” or that Michael was the abuser, even if R.J. had been
    abused. It then concluded that the “very low probative value of Plaintiffs’ circumstantial
    evidence of the alleged abuse of R.J. is substantially outweighed by its potential for
    confusing the issues, undue delay, and wasting time.” The plaintiffs contend the circuit court
    misunderstood their intended use for this evidence, which is not to argue that R.J. was
    abused; rather, they contend that she “exhibited well-accepted signs of abuse” at a time when
    52
    The circuit court also mentioned that the plaintiffs’ evidence was hearsay. Any
    hearsay objections can be addressed at trial.
    53
    See supra note 16.
    45
    both Jensen parents held high positions within the Church; were aware of their son’s history
    of sexual offenses; and when Sandralee Jensen, who was aware of this incident, was offering
    Michael’s babysitting services to Church families in her role as Relief Society President. The
    defendants counter that even if R.J.’s behavior were suggestive of prior sexual abuse, this
    evidence has limited, if any, probative value because the plaintiffs do not allege that any
    Church leader was aware of the incident;54 there was no attempt to conceal the event; and the
    Jensen parents never interpreted R.J.’s behavior as being indicative of sexual abuse by
    anyone, including Michael.
    We find the probative value of this evidence outweighs any concern for issue
    confusion, undue delay, or wasting time. Having previously found that the plaintiffs’
    circumstantial evidence concerning the Stake High Council meeting in the 2006-2007 time
    frame was improperly excluded by the circuit court, the relevancy and probative value of the
    evidence concerning R.J. becomes more clear. Although the defendants argue the plaintiffs
    have concocted this theory of sexual abuse of R.J.,55 if a jury finds there was a 2006-2007
    54
    These arguments are inconsistent with evidence that the Jensen parents held
    leadership positions in the Church during this time frame. Further, if no effort was made to
    conceal the incident, then a jury could reasonably infer that other Church leaders would have
    learned of this incident, which was arguably further evidence of notice as to Michael’s
    improper sexual propensities.
    55
    The defendants state that once the plaintiffs realized their original theory that
    Michael’s abuse of his sister, K.J., could not have been the subject of Stake discussions in
    2006-2007 because the abuse of K.J. occurred in 2010, the plaintiffs created this theory that
    (continued...)
    46
    Stake High Council meeting during which the abuse of a Jensen daughter was discussed , the
    jury could conclude that R.J. was that daughter, and that related concerns prompted Stake
    President Grow to ask UD-1 to monitor Chris Jensen.56 Accordingly, we find the circuit
    court abused its discretion by excluding this evidence.
    5. Exclusion of 1999 purported Helpline form document
    As part of the evidence supporting their conspiracy claim, the plaintiffs planned
    to offer at trial a Helpline form document to show how the Church’s abuse prevention and
    response systems are intended to protect the Church from liability rather than to prevent
    abuse, as the Church proclaims. The plaintiffs state this document was provided to their
    counsel by Unnamed Witness-1, who has averred that she telephoned the Church’s Helpline
    in 1999 concerning an abusive situation and that when the documents she had forwarded
    were later returned to her, this particular form document was included.57 Although the form
    55
    (...continued)
    R.J. showed signs of sexual abuse. See supra note 16.
    56
    Again, Stake President Grow has denied tasking UD-1 to monitor Chris Jensen and
    report back on his observations. This is a disputed issue of fact that a jury will necessarily
    decide through its credibility determinations.
    57
    The appendix record reflects that this form document was completed by Allen
    Gundry in 1999, when he received a call to the Helpline from Unnamed Witness-1.
    According to the deposition testimony given in 2000 in an unrelated matter by Harold Brown,
    who was then the managing director of the Welfare Services Department of the Church, Mr.
    Gundry was the person primarily responsible for the Helpline at that time. Mr. Brown
    testified that the form would have been developed by the Church’s Family Services with help
    (continued...)
    47
    appears on its face to be an instruction sheet for Helpline workers taking calls, the circuit
    court excluded the form, observing that the only Helpline call made in the instant matter was
    made by Bishop Vincent more than twelve years after the date on the form. The lower court
    further found the document to be unauthenticated hearsay and irrelevant.
    While this form is very much in dispute, the Church defendants assert “[e]ven
    the purported Helpline form produced by Plaintiffs” supports their position that the purpose
    of the Church’s Helpline is “to assist [Church] bishops and stake presidents in ministering
    to victims and affected families in abuse situations, and to ensure that they comply with all
    applicable reporting laws.” Although the defendants champion the exclusion of this form
    at trial as being irrelevant and unauthenticated,58 they also claim it reflects the Church’s
    vigorous policy of protecting and helping abuse victims. Conversely, the plaintiffs contend
    they can authenticate this form, which is relevant and supportive of their conspiracy claim.
    57
    (...continued)
    from legal counsel; that the form contains various topics to discuss and handle when a call
    comes into the Helpline; and that once a particular situation is resolved, the form would be
    destroyed. For unknown reasons, this particular document was among the documents
    returned by the Church to Unnamed Witness-1.
    58
    In the plaintiffs’ opposition to the motion in limine filed below, they stated that the
    defendants have refused to produce Mr. Gundry for deposition, representing that he could
    not recall the particular Helpline call from Unnamed Witness-1, and that their motion to
    compel his deposition had not been ruled upon by the discovery commissioner.
    48
    This alleged Helpline form warns that Helpline “PERSONNEL SHOULD
    NEVER ADVISE A PRIESTHOOD LEADER TO REPORT ABUSE. COUNSEL OF THIS
    NATURE SHOULD COME ONLY FROM LEGAL COUNSEL[.]” The plaintiffs argue
    their intent is not to show that this form was used when Bishop Vincent telephoned the
    Helpline in 2012, but to support their claim of institutional concealment59 and their position
    that the Helpline was implemented to protect the Church from civil liability rather than
    simply to protect victims from sexual abuse. They add the form is indicative of a “general
    strategy in responding to assertions of sexual abuse in the Mormon community,” which is as
    true today as it was when the Helpline was first implemented in the 1990s. The Church
    defendants refute this assertion, arguing that any notion that its Helpline procedure has not
    changed since 1995 is “flatly contradicted by the record” and that “[w]itnesses familiar with
    the Helpline procedure testified that no such form is used today; [and that] they have no
    knowledge of the purported Helpline form or any written protocol.”
    While this particular evidence, as well as other evidence in the appendix
    record, would support the inference urged by the plaintiffs, it also arguably supports the
    Church defendants’ position that this form is indicative of the Church’s purported laudatory
    policy and goal of preventing and protecting abuse victims. Although the defendants contend
    this form document has no bearing on the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim, we find a jury could
    59
    It appears that the Church’s documents related to a call to the Helpline are destroyed
    after the call is resolved.
    49
    reasonably infer that the defendants’ silence in the face of repeated reports of alleged abuse
    by Michael Jensen, while simultaneously holding him out as a suitable babysitter and boarder
    to Church families, was consistent with this form document’s warning to “never advise a
    priesthood leader to report abuse.” Accordingly, we find this document to be relevant and
    probative of the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim. With that said, this Court does not know by
    what means the plaintiffs will seek to admit this evidence at trial. In other words, the circuit
    court must determine at trial whether the plaintiffs can authenticate the document, as they
    aver they can, and whether they can overcome the defendants’ evidentiary objections in that
    regard.
    6. Church’s Annotation System
    In essentially two sentences, the circuit court excluded evidence relating to the
    Church’s annotation system, finding that “using an internal recordkeeping mechanism . . .
    against the Church . . . would create First Amendment concerns,” without offering any
    further explanation or analysis as to what that concern might be. The annotation system is
    part of the Church’s abuse “prevention and response” procedure for annotating records of
    members who commit child abuse or might otherwise pose a threat. The circuit court
    concluded that because the Church did not use its annotation system to annotate Michael
    Jensen’s Church membership record, any probative value was substantially outweighed by
    “the potential for confusing the issues, undue delay, and wasting time.” The plaintiffs assert
    50
    the circuit court erred in this regard, notwithstanding its further ruling that the Church
    defendants could not use the annotation system in their defense.
    The plaintiffs argue the Church has “touted its abuse response and prevention
    procedures as the gold standard,” which in the opinion of the Church defendants’ expert,
    exceeds the secular standard of care for youth-serving institutions. A part of these
    procedures is the Church’s Helpline, as discussed above, as well as its annotation system.
    The plaintiffs planned to offer evidence at trial that Bishop Swenson did not annotate
    Michael Jensen’s Church membership record following his admission to sex offenses in Utah
    and, had he done so, Church leaders in West Virginia would have received earlier notice of
    Michael’s sex offenses, which could possibly have prevented the abuse of the minor
    plaintiffs through the Church’s secular duty to warn. Arguing further, the plaintiffs state this
    evidence is relevant and is not a “waste of time” when they have alleged the Church’s failure
    to warn is part of the alleged conspiracy. Rather than substantively challenging the Church’s
    failure to annotate Michael’s record following his Utah offenses as a matter of Church
    doctrine, the plaintiffs assert their intent to simply show that the Church did not use its
    system to warn and protect.60 Although the defendants argue the annotation system is
    60
    Other than a vague reference to “First Amendment concerns[,]” the circuit court’s
    December 30, 2015, in limine order contains no analysis of this particular concern. The
    defendants argue that allowing a jury to assess whether the Church’s annotation system was
    properly applied to Michael “would necessarily involve excessive entanglement by the
    government with the Church in violation of the Establishment Clause.” Turner v. Church
    (continued...)
    51
    irrelevant to Michael Jensen because it only restricts the types of church callings a
    congregant can have, and Michael’s abusive conduct was “out-of-church” conduct, the
    plaintiffs counter that Church leaders placed him as a babysitter in several homes,61 as a
    boarder in others, and as an unsupervised substitute teacher in the Church’s primary class of
    four-year-old children.
    Regarding the defendants’ argument that their evidence demonstrates that only
    adult records are annotated, the plaintiffs point to contrary evidence in the appendix record.
    In response to the defendant’s assertion that annotating Michael’s record would have made
    60
    (...continued)
    of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 
    18 S.W.3d 877
    , 897 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000). The
    defendants also rely upon Presbyterian Church v. Mary Elizabeth Blue Hull Memorial
    Presbyterian Church, 
    393 U.S. 440
    (1969), wherein the Court cautioned against civil courts
    “engag[ing] in the forbidden process of interpreting and weighting church doctrine.” 
    Id. at 451.
    Conversely, the plaintiffs assert they do not challenge substantively the Church’s failure
    to annotate Michael Jensen’s record following the Utah offenses “as a matter of Church
    doctrine.” They cite Martinelli v. Bridgeport Roman Catholic Diocesan Corp., 
    196 F.3d 409
    ,
    431 (2d Cir. 1999), for the proposition that a church’s actions are “facts” that can be
    considered if a party does not challenge that action as “true or false.” Here, the plaintiffs
    plan to show, “as a matter of fact,” that the Church had a system to warn and protect, thereby
    making it feasible to warn and protect, but failed to use that system. We do not see this
    purpose as raising a First Amendment concern. If the plaintiffs veer from their stated
    purpose for this evidence at trial such that a constitutional concern arises, the circuit court
    can address any such concern at that time.
    61
    The plaintiffs are referring to the babysitting arrangements that Sandralee Jensen
    made for Michael in her leadership position as the Church’s Relief Society President and
    later offering Michael as a babysitter for the Doe-3 children so that Jane and John Doe-3
    could attend her scout training meeting when she had oversight of the Church’s Cub Scout
    program.
    52
    no difference because it would only have been seen by his bishop and Stake president, the
    plaintiffs point to the Church’s Rule 30(b)(7) witness who testified that the purpose of
    notifying the bishop and Stake president is so that they can, in theory, take steps to protect
    potential victims.
    We find the circuit court abused its discretion in excluding evidence of the
    existence of a system that the defendants have described as meeting, if not exceeding, the
    Church’s secular duty as a youth-serving organization. This evidence is not only relevant and
    probative of the Church defendants’ defense, it is equally relevant and probative to the
    plaintiffs’ claims, particularly when notice and the Church’s failure to warn is part of the
    conspiracy claim. Any factual disputes presented by the evidence at trial may be resolved
    by a jury. Accordingly, we conclude that the probative value of this evidence is not
    outweighed by any potential for issue confusion the issues, undue delay, and wasting time,
    and it was error for the circuit court to have excluded this evidence.
    C. Partial Summary Judgment in Favor of Church Defendants
    and the Jensen Parents on Conspiracy Claim
    In its order entered on December 31, 2015, the circuit court awarded partial
    summary judgment in favor of these defendants pursuant to Rule 56 of the West Virginia
    Rules of Civil Procedure. Under this rule, a party is entitled to summary judgment if it can
    show “that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is
    53
    entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id., in part.
    Specifically, the circuit court granted
    summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim after observing that it had “eliminated
    much of the circumstantial evidence that Plaintiffs intended to use in support of their
    conspiracy claim[,]” and that the plaintiffs had no direct evidence of a conspiracy. In its
    rather cursory five-page order, the circuit court found that the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim
    was based on speculation, conjecture, cumulative inferences, and was so implausible that no
    reasonable juror could conclude that local Church leaders in two different states conspired
    with Michael Jensen and his parents over a number of years to conceal his abuse, or to
    “actively facilitate his pedophilia by trumpeting his moral worthiness to the congregation and
    obstructing a criminal investigation.” The circuit court concluded it was “insufficient for
    Plaintiffs to show that multiple people happened to do the same thing, or refrained from
    doing the same thing, particularly when they all deny knowing that Michael Jensen was an
    abuser, and when the Church condemns child sexual abuse.”
    In seeking a reversal of the circuit court’s ruling, the plaintiffs assert the lower
    court engaged in impermissible fact-finding by weighing conflicting evidence, resolving
    credibility disputes, dismissing and resolving doubts and drawing inferences in favor of
    defendants, when those inferences should have been drawn in their favor, as the nonmoving
    party. Arguing further, the plaintiffs assert that the lower court substituted its judgment for
    that of a jury on the weight, existence, and sufficiency of plaintiffs’ evidence through its in
    54
    limine rulings. Maintaining that whether there was sufficient evidence for trial should have
    been evaluated under the procedural requirements and guidelines for deciding a Rule 56
    motion–not as a motion in limine–the plaintiffs state that their conspiracy claim is based on
    intentional acts and intentional torts and that the defendants conspired with Michael Jensen
    to:
    promote and create opportunities for Michael Jensen to babysit
    and live in homes with small children; cover up incidents of
    sexual abuse of minors by Michael Jensen; prevent disclosure of
    Michael Jensen’s sexual abuse of young children; thwart and/or
    hinder enforcement actions by civil and criminal authorities to
    prevent further abuse and protect minor children; and to engage
    in the other conduct alleged herein. Based on these actions, the
    Defendants conspired for the unlawful purpose of facilitating
    Michael Jensen’s criminal and tortious acts against the minor
    Plaintiffs, and for the further unlawful purpose of concealing
    and suppressing information on the danger and threat that
    Michael Jensen posed to unsuspecting children.
    The plaintiffs assert that when a conspiracy produces a tort, “‘every conspirator
    is liable for that tort, including a conspirator who promoted but did not commit the tort[.]’”
    Dunn, 225 W.Va. at 
    57, 689 S.E.2d at 269
    (citations omitted). They further argue that “once
    the conspiracy is formed, all of its members are liable for injuries caused by any unlawful
    acts performed pursuant to and in furtherance of the conspiracy.” 
    Id. Although a
    principal
    cannot conspire with its agent,62 the plaintiffs assert “a corporation can act only through its
    62
    Cook v. Heck’s Inc., 176 W.Va. 368, 375, 
    342 S.E.2d 453
    , 460 (1986) (“‘Agents and
    employees of a corporation cannot conspire with their corporate principal or employer where
    they act in their official capacities on behalf of the corporation and not as individuals for their
    (continued...)
    55
    agents or employees”; therefore, when the Jensen parents “were not acting as Church agents
    . . . they were members of the conspiracy in their own right, and . . . could conspire with the
    Church[,]” and when they were “acting as agents of the Church, then their acts were on
    behalf of the Church and [the Church’s] participation in the conspiracy.”63 The plaintiffs add
    that even if the Jensens are considered to have been agents of the Church at all times, which
    no one claims, a civil conspiracy requires only two members, and Michael Jensen was always
    a member of the conspiracy. Dunn, 225 W.Va. at 
    56, 689 S.E.2d at 268
    (“[A] civil
    conspiracy is a combination of two or more persons[.]”) (citation omitted).
    Discounting the plaintiffs’ arguments, the defendants contend that the plaintiffs
    have built their conspiracy claim on “layers of unreasonable inferences[,]” which are so
    implausible that no reasonable jury could conclude otherwise. They maintain there is no
    evidence from which a jury could reasonably infer a preconceived common agreement to
    cover up or minimize any abuse or identify any concerted action in furtherance of a
    conspiracy. Arguing further, they state that, “[a]t worst, there were unrelated incidents of
    ordinary negligence by individual actors” which, if proven, would allow the plaintiffs to
    recover on their remaining negligence and fraud claims. The Church defendants insist, with
    62
    (...continued)
    individual advantage.’”) (citations omitted).
    63
    Heck’s Inc., 176 W.Va. at 
    375, 342 S.E.2d at 460
    (commenting that corporation “can
    act only through its agents or employees”).
    56
    the possibility of a single exception,64 they were not involved with the babysitting and living
    arrangements that resulted in the abuse. They contend the plaintiffs’ theory that the
    conspirators “facilitated” and “created opportunities” for Michael to have access to children
    that he could then sexually abuse65 lacks any evidentiary support and is “utterly unreasonable
    and unbelievable on its face.”
    In addition to echoing many of the Church defendants’ arguments, the Jensen
    parents add that there was no conspiracy of silence because their alleged co-conspirators had
    no reason to believe Michael had sexually abused any children, and they were unaware of
    Michael’s babysitting activities. They further argue that R.J. was never abused by anyone;
    that Bishop Whitcomb assigned Sandralee Jensen as the Relief Society President and
    advanced Michael in the Church’s Aaronic Priesthood at a time when he had no knowledge
    of Michael’s offenses in Utah; and that even if the alleged 2006-2007 Stake High Council
    meeting occurred, such event does not prove they were part of a conspiracy. In addition, they
    assert there is no evidence that the alleged co-conspirators were aware of any sexual abuse
    64
    Presumably, the defendants are referring to Bishop Vincent approaching a Church
    family, the Keogans, about taking Michael Jensen into their home to live and asking Mrs.
    Keogan if there were any “young women” in her house. Bishop Vincent’s inquiry was made
    after he learned that Michael had been banished from his family’s home for abusing his then
    twelve-year-old sister, K.J.
    65
    Contrary to the defendants, we view the plaintiffs’ theory as alleging that the
    defendants’ actions to conceal Michael’s abuse while simultaneously holding him out as a
    fit babysitter and boarder resulted in unsuspecting Church families allowing him to do both.
    57
    committed by Michael, except the possible abuse of Z.W. that was allegedly disclosed to
    them and to Bishop Fishel in 2008. They add that there is no evidence of a conspiracy of
    silence related to Michael’s abuse of his younger sister, K.J., when they “immediately
    kick[ed] Michael out of the house, which would have raised questions,”66 and given that they
    also spoke to Bishop Vincent about the incident, asking him to help Michael. The Jensens
    state that, at worst, the evidence shows that different people conceivably knew “bits and
    pieces of alleged misconduct by Michael, but there is no evidence of some grand scheme to
    conceal this misconduct—no evidence of any agreement to cover up, not to report, or to
    prevent disclosure.”
    It is axiomatic that “[s]ummary judgment is appropriate if, from the totality of
    the evidence presented, the record could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the
    nonmoving party[.]” Syl. Pt. 2, in part, Williams v. Precision Coil, Inc., 194 W.Va. 52, 
    459 S.E.2d 329
    (1995). Further, as we held long ago, “summary judgment . . . must be denied
    if there is a genuine issue as to a material fact[,]” and that “[t]he question to be decided on
    a motion for summary judgment is whether there is a genuine issue of fact and not how that
    issue should be determined.” Syl. Pt. 4, in part, Syl. Pt. 5, Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Fed. Ins.
    Co. of New York, 148 W.Va. 160, 
    133 S.E.2d 770
    (1963).
    66
    The Jensens impute knowledge to their church leaders and church family for certain
    things, such as kicking Michael out of their home, but not for other things, such as R.J.
    disrobing and exposing her body at a church function.
    58
    We previously articulated guidelines for evaluating a motion for summary
    judgment, as follows:
    The circuit court’s function at the summary judgment
    stage is not “to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of
    the matter but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for
    trial.” Consequently, we must draw any permissible inference
    from the underlying facts in the most favorable light to the party
    opposing the motion. In assessing the factual record, we must
    grant the nonmoving party the benefit of inferences, as
    “[c]redibility determinations, the weighing of the evidence, and
    the drawing of legitimate inferences from the facts are jury
    functions, not those of a judge[.]”
    Williams, 194 W.Va. at 
    59, 459 S.E.2d at 336
    (internal citations omitted). Applying these
    guidelines and precepts to a review of the circumstantial evidence previously excluded by
    the circuit court, as well as all other evidence, readily demonstrates the existence of a myriad
    of genuine issues of material fact that should have precluded entry of summary judgment.
    Indeed, other than the parties’ identities and Michael Jensen’s convictions in West Virginia,
    there appear to be very few facts upon which the parties agree. Nearly every factual
    allegation is contested in some fashion, whether by inconsistencies between interviews,
    depositions, and affidavits, often from the same individuals, or interpretations of the
    evidence, or the inferences to be drawn from that evidence.
    For instance, the plaintiffs contend the conspiracy to protect Michael Jensen
    and to conceal his offenses began after he was charged with felony sex offenses in Provo,
    Utah, as a teenager. They discuss various facts in support of their theory, including the
    59
    involvement in that proceeding by Michael’s paternal grandfather, who held a powerful
    position within the Church in Provo. They also cite the testimony of defense expert Frank
    Yannelli who testified that the charges against Michael in Utah were reduced more than
    commonly done; that there were numerous other atypical factors in the proceeding;67 and that
    Michael received a lenient punishment without follow up consequences. Conversely, the
    defendants point to Mr. Yannelli’s April 3, 2015, witness statement in which he stated that
    the outcome of Michael’s case in Utah “was typical for such a case.”68
    Another disputed issue of material fact involves the parties’ basic disagreement
    regarding the precise nature of Michael’s offenses in Utah and whether they provided notice
    of his risk to re-offend sexually. The plaintiffs describe Michael’s offenses, which resulted
    in his arrest at his middle school and being charged with two felony sex offenses, as him
    waiting for each victim, pinning her against a wall, and grabbing her breasts and buttocks
    against her will, a description that is consistent with victim statements in the appendix record.
    Conversely, the defendants describe the incident as Michael briefly groping two peer-aged
    67
    During his deposition, Mr. Yannelli testified there was a departure from the SBRA
    recommendation that Michael receive more substantive sex offender treatment; the SBRA’s
    recommendation that he be supervised with any female was ignored; and there was no order
    entered prohibiting contact with the victims.
    68
    Although Mr. Yannelli indicated in his witness statement that the reduction in the
    two felony charges to class A misdemeanors “would be considered a significant reduction
    of the charges, but one that was clearly justified by the facts of the case[,]” he testified during
    his deposition that other prosecutors might disagree.
    60
    girls over their clothes, which the Jensen parents contend were “offenses that were not
    atypical for a male of his age.”69
    Additional disputed facts in the alleged conspiracy time line include Sandralee
    Jensen’s report of the J.M. incident to Bishop Whitcomb, whether there was a “linkup” in her
    mind between that incident and Michael’s offenses in Utah and whether she conveyed the
    same to Bishop Whitcomb, and the concern she expressed to J.M. asking if she was all right
    and whether they had a problem. Michael’s alleged assault of J.M. is described above and
    will not be repeated here. It will be for a jury to make credibility determinations in this
    regard.
    There are also disputed issues of material fact concerning the alleged Stake
    High Council meeting during which the plaintiffs contend that Church leaders discussed the
    issue of sexual abuse and the Jensens in the 2006-2007 time frame. The defendants assert
    that all those who would have participated in such a meeting have denied it ever occurred;
    that UD-1 could not have participated because he was not placed on the Stake High Council
    until 2008; that John Doe-5’s testimony that Stake President Grow told him that such a
    meeting took place is self-serving hearsay; and that no such discussion could have happened
    because no Church leader learned of Michael’s abuse until after his arrest in 2012. The
    69
    Given the victims’ accounts of what happened, this pronouncement by the Jensens
    and the defendants’ description of the Utah offenses as “briefly groping” are troubling.
    61
    plaintiffs counter that John Doe-5 testified during his deposition that Stake President Grow
    confirmed to him such discussions about the Jensens had taken place in the time frame in
    question and that he had asked UD-1 to keep an eye on Chris Jensen and report back to him;
    and that President Grow’s executive secretary also confirmed that these Stake discussions
    concerning the Jensens took place. The plaintiffs also point to UD-1’s interview by their
    counsel during which he stated, “I was on councils,” referring to Stake High Councils, where
    the issue of sexual abuse by Michael was discussed during the relevant time frame, as
    contrasted with the conflicting statements made by UD-1 during his subsequent deposition.
    They also point to the depositions of those adult plaintiffs who testified to having similar
    disclosures made to them by UD-1.
    These and many other genuine issues of material fact arise out of the plaintiffs’
    circumstantial evidence. Although the circuit court stated the plaintiffs’ have no direct
    evidence, none is required to prove their conspiracy claim. As we previously explained:
    “Circumstantial evidence is information that tends
    directly to prove or disprove not a fact in issue but a fact or
    circumstance from which, either alone or in connection with
    other facts and circumstances, one may, according to the
    common experience of mankind, reasonably infer the existence
    or nonexistence of a fact that is in issue. . . . In West Virginia
    and in federal courts, civil and criminal verdicts may be based
    entirely upon circumstantial evidence.”
    Cmty. Antenna Serv., Inc. v. Charter Commc’ns VI, LLC, 227 W.Va. 595, 607, 
    712 S.E.2d 504
    , 516 (2011) (citation omitted). Further, “[c]ircumstantial evidence, especially evidence
    62
    of concerted activity directed toward achievement of a common goal, is as probative as direct
    evidence” of conspiracy. United States v. Amer. Grain, 
    763 F.2d 312
    , 315 (8th Cir. 1985);
    see also Xie v. City of Chicago, No. 14-cv-6082, 
    2016 WL 6193981
    , at *10 (N.D. Ill. Oct.
    24, 2016) (“[D]irect proof of such an agreement is rarely available, since conspiracies are by
    their very nature secretive; thus, the existence of a conspiracy may be inferred through the
    combination of common sense and circumstantial evidence.”); Maersk, Inc. v. Neewra, Inc.,
    
    687 F. Supp. 2d 300
    , 319-20 (S.D. N.Y. 2009), aff’d Maersk, Inc. v. Sahni, 450 Fed.Appx.
    3 (2d Cir. 2011) (citation omitted) (“As is true in criminal conspiracies, agreements in civil
    conspiracies will not easily be shown by direct evidence, but may be inferred from
    circumstantial evidence.”); Adcock v. Brakegate, Ltd., 
    645 N.E.2d 888
    , 895 (Ill. 1994) (“[A]
    conspiracy is rarely susceptible of direct proof; instead, it is established from circumstantial
    evidence and inferences drawn from evidence, coupled with commonsense knowledge of the
    behavior of persons in similar circumstances.”); Brown v. Cameron-Brown Co., No.
    78-0836-A, 
    1980 WL 1856
    , at *6 (E.D. Va. June 13, 1980), rev’d on other grounds, 
    652 F.2d 375
    (1981) (internal citations omitted) (“[C]ourts long have held that conspiracies may be
    inferred from circumstantial evidence. . . . No formal or express agreement need be shown.”);
    Dickerson v. Gynecological Assoc.’s, Inc., No. 32143-9-I, 
    1996 WL 751461
    , at *4 (Wash.
    Ct. App. Oct. 21, 1996) (agreeing with defendant that “circumstantial evidence is as
    probative as direct evidence and that conspiracy can rarely be proved by direct evidence”).
    63
    Inasmuch as a conspiracy may be proven by circumstantial evidence, we
    consider the evidence the plaintiffs have offered, including the circumstantial evidence that
    had been excluded by the circuit court. In undertaking that task, we are mindful that under
    West Virginia law,
    [a] civil conspiracy is a combination of two or more
    persons by concerted action to accomplish an unlawful purpose
    or to accomplish some purpose, not in itself unlawful, by
    unlawful means. The cause of action is not created by the
    conspiracy but by the wrongful acts done by the defendants to
    the injury of the plaintiff.
    Dunn, 225 W.Va. at 
    47, 689 S.E.2d at 259
    , syl. pt. 8. Further, “[a] civil conspiracy is . . . a
    legal doctrine under which liability for a tort may be imposed on people who did not actually
    commit a tort themselves but who shared a common plan for its commission with the actual
    perpetrator(s).” Dunn, 225 W.Va. at 
    47, 689 S.E.2d at 259
    , syl. pt. 9; see also O’Dell v.
    Stegall, 226 W.Va. 590, 625, 
    703 S.E.2d 561
    , 596 (2010) (“[A] civil conspiracy must be
    based on some underlying tort or wrong.”). Moreover, “[a] conspiracy may produce one or
    more torts. If it does, then every conspirator is liable for that tort, including a conspirator
    who promoted but did not commit the tort.” Dunn, 225 W.Va. at 
    57, 689 S.E.2d at 269
    (quoting Segall v. Hurwitz, 
    339 N.W.2d 333
    , 338 (Wis. Ct. App. 1983) (citations omitted).).
    Further, we recognize that not every member of a conspiracy must be aware of every action
    taken in furtherance of it. See, e.g., Potter Press v. C.W. Potter, Inc., 
    22 N.E.2d 68
    , 72
    (Mass. 1939) (“One may be held a member of a[] . . . conspiracy and responsible for all its
    doings, although he was not aware of its entire scope, or all its details, or the identities, of
    64
    all its members, and although his own share in its activities was small, did not begin until its
    activities were well under way[.]”); Lesikar v. Rappeport, 
    33 S.W.3d 282
    , 302 (Tx. Ct. App.
    2000) (“The general rule is that conspiracy liability is sufficiently established by proof
    showing concert of action or other facts and circumstances from which the natural inference
    arises that . . . acts were committed in furtherance of . . . [the] purpose of the alleged
    conspirators *** . . . . It is not required that each and every act of a conspirator be shown to
    have been in concert with the others or that it be established by direct evidence that all
    combined at a given time prior to each transaction.”) (citations omitted)).
    Although the defendants assert the conspiracy claim fails because failure to
    warn is negligence, and persons cannot conspire to be negligent, the plaintiffs have alleged
    a conspiracy to commit intentional torts70 and to accomplish the unlawful purpose of
    concealing and harboring a “sex offender”71 that resulted in harm to them. A jury, after
    sifting through the evidence, resolving credibility disputes, and drawing all reasonable
    inferences from the evidence, could conclude, as the plaintiffs argue, that the defendants’
    conduct
    70
    In their amended complaint, the plaintiffs have alleged the intentional torts of fraud
    and intentional infliction of emotional distress; they also allege the intentional torts of assault
    and battery solely against Michael Jensen.
    71
    The Jensen parents object to the plaintiffs’ reference to their son Michael as a “sex
    offender,”arguing that Michael’s crimes in Utah did not qualify him as a sex offender under
    Utah law because he was adjudicated as a juvenile.
    65
    in ignoring, minimizing, trivializing and denying the abuse;
    actively concealing and keeping silent about the abuse;
    promoting and misrepresenting Michael Jensen as an exemplary
    and trustworthy member of the Church; promoting and
    misrepresenting him as fit to babysit for or live in a house with
    young children; and facilitating the abuse by engaging in the
    foregoing and placing him in homes with young children as a
    babysitter or boarder, were taken in furtherance of the
    conspiracy’s unlawful purposes.
    Moreover, as the plaintiffs contend, “even if some of those acts, taken independent of the
    conspiracy, would be lawful,” a jury could still find that the conspiracy was proven. See Syl.
    Pt. 1, in part, Dixon v. Am. Indus. Leasing Co., 162 W.Va. 832, 
    253 S.E.2d 150
    (1979) (“In
    order for civil conspiracy to be actionable it must be proved that the defendants have
    committed some wrongful act or have committed a lawful act in an unlawful manner to the
    injury of the plaintiff[.]”).
    Regarding the defendants’ argument that an agent cannot conspire with his or
    her principal,72 even if the Jensen parents were found to have been agents of the Church at
    all times, the conspiracy claim is not defeated because a civil conspiracy requires only two
    members. Michael Jensen is alleged to have always been a member of the conspiracy.
    The evidence discussed above serves to highlight but a few of the innumerable
    issues of material fact in this matter and the conflicting inferences being drawn by all parties
    72
    See supra notes 62 and 63.
    66
    from those disputed facts. It will be for a jury, not the circuit court or this Court, to decide
    whether there was a conspiracy after resolving the disputed facts, making the necessary
    credibility determinations, and determining what was known by whom and when, and what
    those persons did with the information they had and for what purposes. It will also be for a
    jury to determine whether the evidence proves a conspiracy that resulted in harm to the
    plaintiffs.
    Skirting its duty to allow a jury to address the multitude of disputed factual
    issues present in this case, the circuit court wrongly invade the jury’s province by resolving
    these factual disputes and making credibility determinations. And when it credited the
    defendants’ denials or their alternative facts in the face of countervailing evidence, the circuit
    court violated the long-established standard of resolving doubts in favor of the nonmoving
    party. Despite the defendants’ assertion that the plaintiffs’ “far-fetched conspiracy theory
    is utterly implausible” and that “[n]o reasonable jury would draw the outlandish inferences
    necessary to find in Plaintiffs’ favor[,]” the plaintiffs have aptly argued:
    Neither the circuit court’s presumption of good faith by a
    religious institution based on its public pronouncements, nor its
    dismissal of an eight year record of contrary conduct as multiple
    Church officials just happening to do the same thing with
    respect to Michael Jensen, should have supplanted the jury’s
    consideration of the evidence, which was more than sufficient
    to support an inference of conspiracy.
    67
    This appeal is not about whether the plaintiffs will prevail on their conspiracy
    claim at trial but whether they have alleged sufficient evidence to survive summary judgment
    on that claim. We agree that they “‘“cannot create a genuine issue of material fact through
    mere speculation or the building of one inference upon another.”’” Dellinger v. Pediatrix
    Med. Group, P.C., 232 W.Va. 115, 122, 
    750 S.E.2d 668
    , 675 (2013) (citations omitted).
    Although the circuit court found the plaintiffs’ evidence to be speculative, and the defendants
    contend the plaintiffs’ evidence is nothing more than unreasonable, cumulative inferences,
    the necessary basis for granting summary judgment is clearly not present in this case.
    Having found the circuit court erred in excluding the plaintiffs’ circumstantial
    evidence in support of their conspiracy claim, and upon our consideration of that evidence,
    as well as all other evidence relied upon, we find there are genuine issues of material fact for
    trial. Drawing all permissible inferences from the facts in the light most favorable to the
    plaintiffs and leaving all factual disputes and credibility determinations to the jury, we
    conclude that the circuit court erred. Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court’s order
    granting summary judgment in favor of the Church defendants and the Jensen parents on the
    plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim.
    68
    D. Summary Judgment in favor of UD-1
    Through its order entered on December 4, 2015, the circuit court granted
    summary judgment in favor of UD-1, finding the plaintiffs could not prove the elements of
    conspiracy against him. For the reasons set forth below, we disagree.
    The circuit court determined that to the extent UD-1 was an agent of the
    Church, he could not conspire with his principal;73 that plaintiffs had not produced any
    evidence that would create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether UD-1 joined a
    conspiracy to facilitate or conceal Michael Jensen’s abuse of children; that even if UD-1 had
    knowledge of Michael’s abuse of children and failed to disclose it, he had no duty to warn;74
    that there is no evidence his silence enabled or assisted someone who had such a duty; that
    UD-1’s attendance at the victims’ parents’ support meeting in 2013 was not evidence of
    furthering the alleged conspiracy where John Doe-5 invited UD-1 to that meeting and knew
    UD-1 would be reporting on the meeting to Stake President Grow; and that even if UD-1
    73
    See supra note 62.
    74
    The circuit court cited in its summary judgment order West Virginia Code § 49-2­
    803(a), which imposes a duty on certain persons to report the suspected abuse of a child. The
    circuit court found that the duty only extends to the child who is suspected of being abused;
    therefore, even if UD-1 had a duty to report based on knowledge he purportedly gained at the
    alleged 2006-2007 Stake High Council meeting, it would only extend to children discussed
    at that meeting, which were indisputably not the minor plaintiffs. However, regardless of
    whether UD-1 had a statutory duty to report, including the purported abuse of his own son,
    if a jury resolves the factual disputes and draws reasonable inferences in favor of the
    plaintiffs, it could find that UD-1’s action and inaction demonstrated his participation in a
    conspiracy by furthering the unlawful purposes of those who did have a duty to report.
    69
    made statements during his deposition that contradicted statements he had previously made
    when interviewed by plaintiffs’ counsel, Michael’s crimes were already known at that
    juncture; therefore, UD-1’s actions could not have been taken to keep Michael’s misconduct
    a secret. The plaintiffs assert that in making these findings, the circuit court clearly engaged
    in impermissible fact-finding to conclude as a matter of law that no reasonable juror could
    infer from UD-1’s conduct that he had agreed with other Church officials to conceal Michael
    Jensen’s conduct, which facilitated harm to the minor plaintiffs.75
    In support of their argument that UD-1was a participant in the alleged
    conspiracy beginning in 2006-2007, they contend that their evidence shows his knowledge
    of Stake discussions around that time regarding Michael’s abuse of a younger sibling and
    possibly another girl; UD-1’s monitoring of Chris Jensen during that same time period at
    Stake President Grow’s request, including making reports back to President Grow; his
    “inside knowledge” of Michael’s Utah offenses; and his decision not to seek medical care
    for his two-year-old son who came home from childcare conducted in the Jensen home in
    75
    In their Amended Complaint, the plaintiffs alleged alternative theories of conspiracy
    liability. First, they alleged that UD-1 had a special relationship with the Church’s
    congregation, as a volunteer or a Stake High Councilor appointed by Church officials and
    was “held out by the Church as its agent[] and placed in [a] position[] of responsibility and
    authority over Church members.” In the alternative, they alleged that if UD-1 was not an
    agent of the Church, then the other defendants conspired with him for the same unlawful
    purposes they had alleged. It will be for a jury to resolve the facts in terms of what UD-1
    knew and when and whether at those times he was acting individually or as an agent of the
    Church. We previously addressed the issue of whether a corporation can conspire with its
    employees or agents. See supra note 62.
    70
    2008 with a swollen penis and abrasions on his inner thighs when it was physically
    impossible for his child to have self-inflicted the injuries.76 The plaintiffs also point to UD-
    1’s placement on the Stake High Council in 2008; his email to John Doe-5 in 2013 reflecting
    that he and his wife believed in 2008 that Michael had abused their son and had confronted
    the Jensen parents, but “nothing was done”; his attendance at the parent support group
    meeting in 2013, and his report on that meeting to Stake President Grow; his forwarding of
    private emails he exchanged with John Doe-5 concerning the abuse and this lawsuit to Stake
    President Grow; and the change in his accounts of these various events77 to align himself
    with the Church’s defense.
    Notwithstanding the factual allegations recounted above, UD-1 argues that the
    circuit court correctly found that the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim against him fails, as a matter
    of law, because there is no genuine issue of fact relating to whether he entered into a
    conspiratorial agreement, whether there was concerted action, or whether he committed an
    76
    Although UD-1 and his wife have testified that their decision not to seek medical
    care for their son was not motivated by any concern there would be a mandatory report to
    State authorities, UD-1’s wife, who was a nurse, testified in her deposition that if a child
    presented to the hospital with her son’s injuries, she would have been obligated to report it.
    See also supra note 21.
    77
    This is in reference to statements made by UD-1, when interviewed by plaintiffs’
    counsel and during conversations he allegedly had with certain of the plaintiffs, as contrasted
    with his subsequent, contradictory deposition testimony.
    71
    unlawful act or pursued an unlawful purpose.78 He further argues that even if he took all of
    the actions outlined above, none were either unlawful or done for an unlawful purpose. He
    further argues that failure to warn is not unlawful unless he had a duty to warn, and he had
    no such duty.79
    We first address the circuit court’s finding, and UD-1’s argument, that because
    he did not owe a duty to plaintiffs to warn, therefore, he could not be found liable for
    conspiracy. Critically, neither UD-1 nor the circuit court have cited any authority for the
    proposition that UD-1 had to owe an independent duty to the plaintiffs before he could be
    found liable for conspiracy, which is the only claim that has been asserted against him.
    While this Court has said that “the proponent of a civil conspiracy claim must produce at
    least circumstantial evidence that each member of the alleged conspiracy shared the same
    78
    UD-1 also asserts that plaintiffs have failed to identify damages proximately caused
    by or distinctively arising from the conspiracy since the damages sought for the conspiracy
    are the same damages sought on their remaining causes of action. This issue was addressed
    in section 
    II.A, supra
    .
    79
    The circuit court found that UD-1’s failure to report the purported sexual abuse of
    his own son when he was cared for at the Jensen home does not support a finding that he
    participated in a conspiracy unless he personally had a duty to disclose or assisted another
    having such a duty. Setting aside whether a person has a duty to report the sexual abuse of
    his or her child, it will be for a jury to determine when UD-1 came to believe that his son had
    been abused, and whether that knowledge contributed to a conspiracy with Church officials
    and the Jensens that harmed the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs have circumstantial evidence that
    could cause a reasonable jury to conclude that UD-1 immediately believed his son had been
    abused by Michael.
    72
    conspiratorial objective and mutual agreement[,]”80 we have not said that each member of
    a conspiracy must independently owe a duty to the plaintiff.81
    As we have explained, “every conspirator is liable for th[e] tort, including a
    conspirator who promoted but did not commit the tort.” Dunn, 225 W.Va. at 57, 
    689 S.E.2d 80
            Ash v. Allstate Ins. Co., No. 12-1533, 
    2013 WL 5676774
    , at *5 (W.Va. Oct. 18,
    2013) (memorandum decision).
    81
    Our research reveals a split of authority in those few courts that have addressed that
    question. See, e.g., Boorman v. Nevada Mem. Cremation Soc’y, Inc., 
    772 F. Supp. 2d 1309
    ,
    1315 (D. Nev. 2011) (applying Nevada law; observing that “Nevada has not stated that it
    would require each conspirator to owe the duty that forms the predicate for the underlying
    tort”; and concluding that “Nevada does not require that each conspirator owe an
    independent duty to the plaintiff to support a civil conspiracy claim.”); Nicolet, Inc. v. Nutt,
    
    525 A.2d 146
    , 150 (Del. 1987) (agreeing with, but finding irrelevant, defendant’s argument
    that it had no duty to warn customers because liability attaches “as a result of the active
    misconduct of intentionally suppressing material information” and finding that if plaintiffs
    “establish that Nicolet was a member of a conspiracy which actively suppressed and
    concealed material facts . . . Nicolet would be jointly and severally liable with its
    co-conspirators for resulting damages.”); but see, e.g., Chavers v. Gatke Corp., 
    132 Cal. Rptr. 2d 198
    , 201 (Cal. Ct. App. 2003) (citing Applied Equip. Corp. v. Litton Saudi
    Arabia Ltd., 
    869 P.2d 454
    (Cal. 1994) (observing that under California law, “before one can
    be held liable for civil conspiracy, he must be capable of being individually liable for the
    underlying wrong as a matter of substantive tort law. And that requirement, of course,
    means he must have owed a legal duty of care to the plaintiff, one that was breached to the
    latter’s injury.”); Valles v. Silverman, 
    84 P.3d 1056
    , 1064, 1065 (N.M. Ct. App. 2003)
    (rejecting Wal-Mart’s argument that plaintiffs “must be able to recover on the underlying tort
    against every coconspirator before that coconspirator can be liable for its part in the
    conspiracy” but also finding that Wal-Mart must be “legally capable” of committing
    malicious abuse of process to be held liable as a coconspirator.”). As one commentator has
    observed: “The acts of any one co-conspirator are deemed the acts of all” and “[n]either a
    co-conspirator’s culpability nor the increased risk of harm caused by his or her entering into
    a combination is related to whether the co-conspirator owes the underlying duty.” Martin H.
    Pritikin, Toward Coherence in Civil Conspiracy Law: A Proposal to Abolish the Agent’s
    Immunity Rule, 
    84 Neb. L
    . Rev. 1, at **9, 13 (2005).
    73
    at 269 (citations omitted). Further, there were times during the course of the alleged
    conspiracy when UD-1 served on the Church’s Stake High Council. In that leadership role,
    he may have possessed a duty to other Church members, including the plaintiff families,
    which the circuit court also did not address. In addition, we disagree with the circuit court’s
    finding that the plaintiffs have no evidence that UD-1 enabled or assisted someone who did
    have a such duty. A jury could reasonably infer from the plaintiffs’ circumstantial evidence,
    some of which is outlined above, that UD-1 did enable and assist those who had such a duty.
    It will be for a jury to resolve all evidentiary disputes and make credibility determinations in
    this regard.
    Moreover, one can conspire “to accomplish an unlawful purpose or to
    accomplish some purpose, not in itself unlawful, by unlawful means.” Dunn, 225 W.Va. at
    
    47, 689 S.E.2d at 259
    , syl. pt. 8, in part. Contrary to UD-1’s argument, this does not imply
    that each member of the conspiracy must engage in unlawful acts.82 See Kessel v. Leavitt,
    204 W.Va. at 
    129, 511 S.E.2d at 754
    (citations omitted) (finding civil conspiracy “actionable
    . . . [if it] be proved that the defendants have committed some wrongful act or have
    82
    UD-1 cites syllabus point two of Porter v. Mack, 50 W.Va. 581, 
    40 S.E. 459
    (1901),
    holding that “[t]here can be no conspiracy to do that which is lawful in a lawful manner.”
    Here, however, the plaintiffs have alleged unlawful purposes as the object of the alleged
    conspiracy, including protecting Michael Jensen, who was known to have committed sexual
    offenses, and promoting Michael’s exposure to children he then assaulted. They have also
    offered evidence, albeit contested, that the conspiracy produced intentional torts and
    intentional acts in furtherance of the conspiracy’s unlawful purposes.
    74
    committed a lawful act in an unlawful manner to the injury of the plaintiff[.]”); see also 15A
    C.J.S. Conspiracy § 5 (2012) (footnotes omitted) (“When the purpose of a combination is
    illegal, every act in furtherance of it is illegal. Acts that are themselves legal lose that
    character when they become constituent elements of an unlawful scheme.”).
    As with the other defendants, the circuit court faults the plaintiffs for not
    having any direct evidence that UD-1 agreed to join the conspiracy or possessed personal
    knowledge of a conspiracy. The circuit court found the plaintiffs’ circumstantial evidence
    of UD-1’s participation in the alleged conspiracy to be “too conjectural and speculative to
    raise an issue of fact.” However, much of the plaintiffs’ evidence came directly from UD-1,
    as recounted in the deposition testimony of several plaintiffs and as reflected in UD-1’s email
    exchanges with certain plaintiffs and the statements he made when interviewed by plaintiffs’
    counsel.83 In addition to the circuit court’s credibility determinations being improper, an
    “agreement need not be express but may be based upon evidence of a course of conduct from
    which the agreement to act in concert may be implied.” 16 Am.Jur.2d Conspiracy § 51
    (2017) (footnotes omitted); see also First Fin. Sav. Bank, Inc. v. Am. Bankers of Florida,
    Inc., Nos. 88-33-CIV-5-H, et al., 
    1990 WL 302790
    , at *2 ( E.D. N.C. Apr. 17, 1990) (“The
    83
    Evidence concerning the alleged 2006-2007 Stake High Council meeting and
    President Grow’s assignment of UD-1 to monitor Chris Jensen was not only from UD-1.
    John Doe-5 testified that Stake President Grow told him (1) about conversations at the stake
    level in 2006 or 2007 concerning abuse and the Jensens and (2) that he had asked UD-1 to
    monitor Chris Jensen at that time.
    75
    agreement need not be express, formal, or definite; evidence establishing a ‘tacit
    understanding’ among the conspirators to further a common purpose is sufficient.”).
    The circuit court also found that neither UD-1’s participation in the parent
    support group meeting in 2013, nor his contradictory statements between when he was
    interviewed by the plaintiffs’ counsel in April of 2013 and deposed in December of 2013,
    could have been in furtherance of a conspiracy of silence or harmed the plaintiffs because
    Michael had already been convicted for sexually abusing the Doe-1 children and the
    plaintiffs had already hired counsel to pursue this action. We view this evidence quite
    differently because a purpose of the alleged conspiracy was not just to protect Michael, but
    also to also cover up the Church’s alleged role in facilitating Michael’s abuse.
    Certain statements made by UD-1when he was interviewed by the plaintiffs’
    counsel are clearly adverse to the defense in this matter in terms of what the defendants
    knew and when. When UD-1 was subsequently deposed, after meeting with the Church’s
    lawyers for twelve to thirteen hours, he contradicted his earlier statements given in the
    interview. He explains this altered tack by criticizing the “imprecise, vague, and leading
    questions” asked previously by the plaintiffs’ counsel.84 A jury could reasonably infer,
    however, that UD-1 changed “his story” in furtherance of a purpose of the conspiracy–to
    84
    See supra note 17.
    76
    conceal the Church’s involvement–regardless of whether another purpose of the
    conspiracy–to protect Michael–could no longer be served. As John Doe-5 testified during
    his deposition, UD-1 “always told [him] that he would not do anything to hurt the church.”
    Similar to the conspiracy claim against the other defendants, there are
    numerous material issues of fact and disagreement as to the inferences to be drawn from
    those disputed facts.     It is clear, however, that the circuit court improperly made
    determinations reserved to a jury and wrongly assumed the veracity of statements made by
    defense witnesses as a precursor to its conclusion that “[t]here is no evidence that UD-1
    knew about Michael Jensen’s abuse of the minor Plaintiffs until after Michael Jensen was
    arrested. . . . There is also no evidence that UD-1’s actions helped or assisted other
    Defendants in breaching a duty that harmed Plaintiffs.”
    If a jury were to resolve the disputed evidence, make credibility determinations,
    and draw reasonable inferences, all in the plaintiffs’ favor, it could find that UD-1 was part
    of a conspiracy and that his conduct furthered or promoted unlawful purposes designed to
    protect the Jensens and conceal the Church’s involvement, which resulted in intentional torts
    and the plaintiffs’ alleged harm. Accordingly, and for these reasons, we find the circuit court
    erred in granting UD-1’s motion for summary judgment. The circuit court also dismissed the
    plaintiffs’ request for punitive damages against UD-1 in light of its summary judgment
    77
    ruling. Because we reverse the award of summary judgment in favor of UD-1, we also
    reverse the circuit court’s ruling on punitive damages.
    IV. Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing, we reverse the circuit court’s December 4, 2015, order
    granting summary judgment in favor of UD-1 and dismissing the plaintiffs’ request for an
    award of punitive damages against him. We also reverse the particular in limine rulings in
    the circuit court’s December 30, 2015, order that have been addressed herein. Finally, we
    reverse the circuit court’s December 31, 2015, order granting summary judgment in favor of
    the Church defendants and Chris and Sandralee Jensen on the plaintiffs’ conspiracy claim.
    This action is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Reversed and Remanded.
    78
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-0008

Citation Numbers: 239 W. Va. 428, 801 S.E.2d 443

Filed Date: 6/14/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/13/2023

Authorities (37)

edward-l-brown-sr-individually-and-on-behalf-of-all-members-of-a-class , 652 F.2d 375 ( 1981 )

Frank Martinelli v. Bridgeport Roman Catholic Diocesan ... , 196 F.3d 409 ( 1999 )

No. 96-1843 , 100 F.3d 1353 ( 1996 )

Albert D. Johnson v. C.F. Ashby, M.D., and J.E. Stitcher, M.... , 808 F.2d 676 ( 1987 )

Chavers v. Gatke Corp. , 107 Cal. App. 4th 606 ( 2003 )

C & E SERVICES, INC. v. Ashland, Inc. , 539 F. Supp. 2d 316 ( 2008 )

Boorman v. Nevada Memorial Cremation Society, Inc. , 772 F. Supp. 2d 1309 ( 2011 )

Adcock v. Brakegate, Ltd. , 164 Ill. 2d 54 ( 1994 )

Valles v. Silverman , 135 N.M. 91 ( 2003 )

Ferguson v. Marshall Contractors, Inc. , 745 A.2d 147 ( 2000 )

Nicolet, Inc. v. Nutt , 525 A.2d 146 ( 1987 )

Presbyterian Church in US v. Mary Elizabeth Blue Hull ... , 89 S. Ct. 601 ( 1969 )

Williams v. Johnson , 747 F. Supp. 2d 10 ( 2010 )

Maersk, Inc. v. NEEWRA, INC. , 687 F. Supp. 2d 300 ( 2009 )

Slack v. Kanawha County Housing & Redevelopment Authority , 188 W. Va. 144 ( 1992 )

Province v. Province , 196 W. Va. 473 ( 1996 )

Painter v. Peavy , 192 W. Va. 189 ( 1994 )

San Francisco v. Wendy's International, Inc. , 221 W. Va. 734 ( 2007 )

Turner v. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints , 18 S.W.3d 877 ( 2000 )

Lesikar v. Rappeport , 33 S.W.3d 282 ( 2000 )

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