OPINION
Appellants assert that the district court erred by granting summary judgment in respondents’ favor on their intentional-misrepresentation claim. We conclude that the district court erred by determining that appellants’ claim was time barred under the statute of limitations. But because appellants’ intentional-misrepresentation claim is based solely on nondisclosure, and appellants did not establish that respondents had a duty to disclose, the district court correctly determined that appellants failed to present sufficient evidence of a misrepresentation, which is an essential element of their claim. We therefore affirm the district court’s award of summary judgment for respondents.
FACTS
Appellants Jane Does 43C, 43E, 43F, and 43G allege that they were sexually abused by Father David Roney when he served as a priest at St. Francis Parish in Benson and St. Mary’s Parish in Willmar, both within the Diocese of New Ulm. Appellants allege that the sexual abuse occurred between 1965 and 1975. Father Roney was ordained in 1945. He served as the pastor at St. Francis Catholic Church in Benson from 1963 to 1967. In 1967, Father Roney was assigned to St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Willmar, where he remained until 1980.
In 1970, a parent complained to Father G., another local priest, that Father Roney had been observed engaging in what parents considered to be “inappropriate sexual contact.” That same year, two parishioners reported that a parent had complained to them that Father Roney was having inappropriate sexual contact with that parent’s daughter. Based on these reports, Father G. asked Sister M., the principal at the St. Mary’s *683 Parish school, to watch Father Roney for continued inappropriate behavior. Sister M. banned Father Roney from the school lunchroom and the “little kids’ playground,” but Father G. and Sister M. did not tell anyone about the abuse allegations.
Jane Doe 43C alleges that she was sexually abused by Father Roney between 1969 and 1972 at St. Mary’s Parish. In 1980, Jane Doe 43C told her mother and her boyfriend about the abuse. Jane Doe 43E alleges that she was sexually abused by Father Roney in 1975 at St. Mary’s Parish. Jane Doe 43F alleges that she was sexually abused by Father Roney in 1965 at the St. Francis School. And Jane Doe 43G alleges that she was sexually abused by Father Roney between 1968 and 1975 at St. Mary’s Parish. In 1993, Jane Doe 43G attended a retreat where she heard a speaker talk about clergy sexual abuse. When she returned home after the retreat, she told her husband that she had been “abused by a priest” when she “was a kid.”
Father Roney retired from active ministry in 1993 and took up residence at the Diocese of New Ulm’s mission in Guatemala in 1994. In 2003, Father Roney died, and the Diocese of New Ulm publicly acknowledged that he had sexually abused children. In 2004, appellants commenced a joint action in district court against respondents Diocese of New Ulm, St. Francis Parish, 1 and St. Mary’s Parish, asserting claims of vicarious liability, breach of fiduciary duty, negligent supervision, negligent retention, negligence, and fiduciary fraud. Appellants later amended their complaint to dismiss the fiduciary-fraud claim and add an intentional-misrepresentation claim.
In January 2008, the district court granted respondents’ motion for summary judgment, concluding that appellants’ claims were untimely under the delayed-discovery statute of limitations, Minn.Stat. § 514.073 (2008). On appeal, this court affirmed summary judgment on the non-fraud claims, but reversed summary judgment on the intentional-misrepresentation claim, concluding that the district court had applied the incorrect statute of limitations.
Jane Doe 43C v. Diocese of New Ulm,
No. A08-0729,
On remand, respondents again moved for summary judgment. The district court granted respondents’ motion on two grounds. First, the district court concluded that the intentional-misrepresentation claim was untimely under the fraud statute of limitations which is codified in Mihn. Stat. § 541.05 (2008). The court reasoned that
as each of the [appellants] attained majority, or when the evidence showed they were aware of their non-fraud claims, [they] could have filed suit against [respondents] on those claims, obtained discovery during the litigation from [respondents], and realized the facts which they allege are misrepresentations that they learned in 2003.
The district court stated that “[e]ven if the only way to obtain information about alleged fraud was through the discovery process, a timely initiation of their non-fraud *684 claims would have allowed [appellants] to obtain the information more than 6 years before 2004.”
The district court also granted summary judgment on the merits. The court reasoned that “[sjilenee does not constitute fraud when there is no duty to disclose,” and that appellants had “removed any allegation that [a] fiduciary duty applies to any of [the respondents].” The district court concluded that because appellants had not established a duty to disclose, they could not show that respondents had made a misrepresentation and could not prove their intentional-misrepresentation claim. This appeal follows.
ISSUES
I. Did the district court err by granting respondents’ motion for summary judgment under the statute of limitations?
II. Did the district court err by granting respondents’ motion for summary judgment on the merits?
ANALYSIS
Appellants challenge the district court’s grant of summary judgment in respondents’ favor. “On an appeal from summary judgment, [an appellate court] ask[s] two questions: (1) whether there are any genuine issues of material fact and (2) whether the [district] court[ ] erred in [its] application of the law.”
State by Cooper v. French,
I.
Minnesota law provides a six-year statute of limitations “for relief on the ground of fraud, in which case the cause of action shall not be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud[.]” Minn.Stat. § 541.05, subd. 1(6). “[T]he burden is on the plaintiff to allege and prove that he [or she] did not discover the facts constituting the fraud until within six years before the commencement of the action.”
Blegen v. Monarch Life Ins. Co.,
The district court reasoned that if appellants had timely initiated their non-fraud claims, they would have acquired the facts constituting the alleged fraud through discovery related to the non-fraud claims. The court essentially concluded that, in this case, reasonable diligence required the filing of a related lawsuit.
We are aware of no legal authority supporting the proposition that “reasonable diligence” requires a party to file a lawsuit and conduct discovery. And the district court’s reasoning is at odds with caselaw. “[T]he requirement of reasonable diligence imposes an affirmative duty to investigate upon a party who is aware of facts that might constitute a possible cause of action for fraud.”
Klehr,
Appellants knew that they had been abused, who had abused them, and the associated parish and diocese. But this information alone does not resolve all genuine issues of material fact regarding whether appellants had notice of a potential cause of action for fraud against the parish or the diocese. There is a factual dispute regarding whether appellants were aware of the alleged misrepresentation— that respondents failed to disclose Father Roney’s abuse history — and thereby on notice of a potential fraud claim, before 2003, when respondents publicly disclosed that Father Roney had sexually abused children in the past.
Respondents counter that appellants should have been on notice of a potential fraud claim before 2003, citing the ac-knowledgement of appellants’ own expert that 1984 was the “high point” of public awareness regarding sexual abuse by Catholic clergy in the United States. While this information might suggest that appellants should have recognized the possibility of a fraud claim in 1984, it merely raises a factual issue as to which reasonable minds could differ. Similarly, the district court’s conclusion, that because Jane Doe 43G attended a religious conference and listened to a presentation about clergy sexual abuse in 1993, she “could” have had reason to suspect that the alleged sexual abuse by Father Roney might be associated with a greater pattern of clergy abuse within the church, does not resolve the statute-of-limitations issue as a matter of law. Whether this conference provided sufficient notice of a potential fraud claim merely raises a question of fact.
On summary judgment review, we must view the facts in the light most favorable to appellants; they claim that they did not know that the parishes or diocese knew of the abuse until the public announcement in 2003. And a plaintiffs reasonable diligence in the statute-of-limitations context is normally a question of fact. Id. at 235. Because the evidence leaves room for reasonable minds to differ on the issue of whether appellants were on notice of their potential fraud claims and whether they *686 exercised reasonable diligence to discover the facts constituting the fraud, the district court erred by granting summary judgment based on the statute of limitations. See id.
However, our conclusion regarding the district court’s resolution of the statute-of-limitations issue does not end our analysis. Because summary judgment will be affirmed if it can be sustained on any ground,
Winkler v. Magnuson,
II.
To establish intentional misrepresentation, a plaintiff must demonstrate:
[T]hat [the] defendant (1) made a representation (2) that was false (3) having to do with a past or present fact (4) that is material (5) and susceptible of knowledge (6) that the representor knows to be false or is asserted without knowing whether the fact is true or false (7) with the intent to induce the other person to act (8) and the person in fact is induced to act (9) in reliance on the representation [and] (10) that the plaintiff suffered damages (11) attributable to the misrepresentation.
M.H. v. Caritas Family Servs.,
The district court concluded that there had been no misrepresentation by the parishes or the diocese and thus, one of the essential elements of appellants’ intentional-misrepresentation claim could not be established. Respondents argue that we should affirm summary judgment on this ground, because appellants offered no evidence of a misrepresentation. “[S]ummary judgment on a claim is mandatory against a party who fails to establish an essential element of that claim, if that party has the burden of proof, because this failure renders all other facts immaterial.”
Lloyd v. In Home Health, Inc.,
Appellants argue that respondents’ act of allowing Father Roney to continue to serve as pastor at St. Mary’s parish and to have unsupervised access to minor children at the parish amounted to an affirmative representation that Father Roney was safe to be around children. Respondents classify this alleged misrepresentation as a failure to disclose Father Roney’s prior sexual abuse. Appellants counter that this is an incorrect characterization of their claim and attempt to draw a distinction between respondents’ failure to disclose Father Roney’s past abuse and respondents’ conduct that “affirmatively represented to [a]ppellants that [Father] Roney was safe to work around children” when respondents knew such contact was not safe.
We agree that respondents’ act of allowing Father Roney access to children may have caused appellants and their families to believe that he was safe to be around children. But this understanding, and any resulting misrepresentation, was caused by the underlying failure to disclose his history of sexual abuse. Respondents’ conduct — allowing Father Roney to have access to children, while simultaneously failing to disclose his abuse history — created the alleged misrepresentation. Appellants’ own arguments demonstrate that the “affirmative act” of holding Father Roney out as safe is, in essence, the same thing as respondents’ nondisclosure. For example, appellants argue that “[b]ecause
*687
of [Sister M.’s]
silence,
St. Mary’s parishioners continued to believe that Roney was a holy naan, chaste and celibate, and fit to have unsupervised access to their children”; “Roney’s propensity to sexually abuse children constituted a present fact which was
hidden
from [appellants]”; and “by
choosing not to tell
anyone, [Sister M.] was making a representation about Roney that was false.” Yet, appellants urge us to ignore the nondisclosure that underlies the alleged misrepresentation, in their attempt to avoid the rule that “[nondisclosure does not constitute fraud absent a legal or equitable obligation to communicate facts to a particular person [who is] is entitled to the information.”
L & H Airco, Inc. v. Rapistan Corp.,
“Before nondisclosure may constitute fraud ... there must be a suppression of facts which one party is under a legal or equitable obligation to communicate to the other, and which the other party is entitled to have communicated to him.”
Richfield Bank & Trust Co. v. Sjogren,
In
John Doe 1,
three plaintiffs (the Doe plaintiffs) who were allegedly abused by a priest brought claims for negligent supervision and intentional misrepresentation.
On review, the Wisconsin Supreme Court explained that the case involved allegations of two types of fraud: (1) affirmative representations that the priests did not have a history of molesting children and that they were not a danger to children and (2) failures to disclose the material fact that each priest had a history of sexually abusing children. Id. at 839. The court explained that the alleged affirmative representations consisted of letters to parishioners from the archdiocese responding in a reaffirming manner to parishioners’ positive comments about the priests and “the [a]rchdiocese’s act of placing priests in parishes with unsupervised access to children [indicating] that the [a]rchdiocese did not know that the priests had a history of sexually molesting children and that the [a]rchdioeese did not know the priests were a danger to children.” Id. at 840. Thus, the court classi *688 fied the archdiocese’s failure to disclose the priests’ histories of sexual abuse as a type of fraud separate and distinct from any affirmative representation that resulted from placing the priests in parishes with unsupervised access to children. Id. at 839.
The court noted that “acts can be the equivalent of a representation,” for purposes of an intentional-misrepresentation claim, and that “[a]ny conduct capable of being turned into a statement of fact is a representation. There is no distinction between misrepresentations effected by words and misrepresentations effected by other acts.” Id. at 840-41 (quotation omitted). With regard to the alleged misrepresentation that resulted from the archdiocese’s act of placing the priests in parishes with unsupervised access to children, the court concluded that “[b]ecause acts can constitute representations of fact, based solely on the allegations in the complaint before us, we cannot conclude that such acts as are described in the complaints are not sufficient to constitute an affirmative representation.” 2 Id. at 841.
We are not persuaded by this approach. While the Wisconsin Supreme Court ostensibly recognized that “[i]n general, silence or a failure to disclose a fact is not an intentional misrepresentation unless the person has a duty to disclose,” the court’s decision to treat the act of placing priests in parishes with unsupervised access to children as an affirmative representation, separate and distinct from the underlying nondisclosure, appears to ignore this rule of law. Id. at 842. The court even seemed to acknowledge the lack of distinction between the two acts by stating: “If there is a duty to disclose a fact, failure to disclose that fact is treated in the law as equivalent to a representation of the nonexistence of the fact.” Id. (emphasis added) (quotation omitted). It was the act of holding the priests out as safe without disclosing their abuse histories that resulted in a misrepresentation by conduct. By ignoring the nondisclosure aspect of the conduct, the court appears to have significantly broadened the type of acts that may constitute a fraudulent misrepresentation.
Minnesota appellate courts have not considered or adopted this approach. To the contrary, we have consistently stated that “[a] misrepresentation may be made either (1) by an affirmative statement that is itself false or (2) by concealing or not disclosing certain facts that render the facts that are disclosed misleading.”
Caritas,
Moreover, our supreme court has rejected a claimant’s attempt to refashion a nondisclosure as an affirmative representation.
See L
&
H Airco,
During the course of the arbitration proceeding, the company sought to add additional defendants, including its president. Id. at 375. When the arbitration panel requested that the parties stipulate to the naming of additional defendants, the representative agreed, later asserting that the agreement had been predicated on an express oral condition that none of the additional defendants had any social or business contacts with the arbitrators. Id. No disclosure had been made of the fishing trip or any other prior social or business contacts. Id. The representative subsequently brought claims for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and breach of the covenants of good faith and fair dealing against several defendants, including the company’s attorney, based on their failure to disclose the existing relationships. Id. The supreme court ■ addressed the fraud claim against the company’s attorney as follows:
In their amended complaint, [the representative] alleged that [the attorney] knew that [the company] and some of its officers had business and social contacts with the arbitrator [ ] prior to the arbitration hearing, including the fishing trip which allegedly occurred one month before the hearing, and that [the attorney] “intentionally concealed” his knowledge of those contacts and “allowed the arbitration to continue without disclosing the true facts, and subsequently made a motion with the court to confirm the arbitration award.” This particular theory of fraud is too broadly stated. After a careful examination of the complaint, taking the facts alleged by [the representative] as being true, it must be concluded that the fraud alleged by the complaint is based solely on nondisclosure.
Id. at 379 (emphasis added). Absent evidence that the attorney “affirmatively misrepresented that his client had no prior contact” with the arbitrator or that the attorney “actively took steps to conceal the facts of the prior relationships,” the court concluded that “if [the attorney] is liable, it is for failing to disclose his alleged knowledge of the prior contacts.” Id. at 379-80.
The supreme court also clarified that misrepresentations based on affirmative acts and misrepresentations based solely on nondisclosure are separate and distinct:
An attorney who makes affirmative misrepresentations to an adversary, or conspires with his or her client, or takes other active steps to conceal the client’s *690 fraud from the adversary may be liable for fraud. However, merely failing to disclose a client’s fraud to the adversary will not make the attorney liable, absent a duty on the attorney to make such a disclosure.
Id. at 380 (citations omitted). In this case, there is no evidence that respondents made affirmative misrepresentations separate and distinct from their nondisclosure or took active steps to conceal the abuse. Like the claimant in L & H, appellants have too broadly stated their fraud theory.
Respondents argue that ignoring the nondisclosure that underlies the alleged misrepresentation in this case, and the associated requirement of a duty to disclose, would “greatly expand the scope of potential liability for fraud claims.” We agree. And we are mindful that “the task of extending existing law falls to the supreme court or the legislature, but it does not fall to this court.”
Tereault v. Palmer,
We therefore decline to recognize appellants’ broadly stated fraud theory and instead address the alleged misrepresentation as a nondisclosure. Because nondisclosure does not give rise to a fraud claim unless there is “a legal or equitable obligation to communicate facts to a particular person and that person is entitled to the information,”
L & H Airco,
DECISION
Because there are genuine issues of material fact regarding when appellants were put on notice of their potential fraud claim and whether they exercised reasonable diligence to discover the facts constituting fraud, the district court erred by granting summary judgment under the statute of limitations. But because appellants’ intentional-misrepresentation claim is based solely on nondisclosure and appellants failed to allege or establish that respondents had a duty to disclose, we affirm the grant of summary judgment on the merits.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellants do not appeal the grant of summary judgment as to St. Francis Parish and Jane Doe 43F.
. This conclusion is arguably dictum. The trial court dismissed the plaintiffs' claims under the statute of limitations.
John Doe,
