OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE KELLER.
Kentucky River Foothills Development Council, Inc.
For purposes of this appeal, the underlying facts are not in dispute. Melissa Steffen, who suffered from Bipolar Disorder, served time in prison for a drug offense. When she was paroled, Melissa was required to find some type of living arrangement before she could be released. Melissa's mother, Cathy Phirman, located Liberty Place Recovery Center for Women, LLC (Liberty Place), a peer-based substance abuse recovery program administered by Kentucky River, and Melissa put her name on the waiting list. When a bed became available, Melissa was released from prison and accepted at Liberty Place despite having a medical/psychological history that included three suicide attempts and treatment for Bipolar Disorder.
At the time of her admission to Liberty Place, Melissa was taking prescription medication for her Bipolar Disorder. However, during the course of her stay at Liberty Place, Melissa ran out of her medication. As a result, Melissa became increasingly disturbed and, approximately six weeks after her admission, she left the facility. A few hours after Melissa left the facility, one of Liberty Place's employees saw her on the side of the road. The employee took Melissa to the Salvation Army and spoke with someone to secure a bed for the night for Melissa. However, because the Salvation Army was not yet open for clients, the employee took Melissa to the public library and left her there. When Phirman tried to contact Melissa at Liberty Place, personnel there would not give her any information. Phirman ultimately discovered that Melissa was no longer at Liberty Place, and she filed a missing person's report and searched for Melissa but could not find her.
In October 2010, approximately five months after Melissa left Liberty Place, a person who was taking copper pipe from an abandoned building discovered Melissa's body. The coroner determined that Melissa had committed suicide near the time she left Liberty Place.
Phirman, as administratrix of Melissa's estate, and Joanne and Daryll Gilliam, as guardians of Melissa's two minor sons, filed suit against Liberty Place and Kentucky River. The parties conducted extensive discovery and, on July 22, 2013 — approximately six weeks before trial — Kentucky River filed a motion for summary judgment asserting "sovereign immunity."
Kentucky River appealed to the Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals, in a divided opinion, affirmed. In doing so, the Court first noted that Kentucky River is neither the Commonwealth nor a county, therefore, it is not entitled to sovereign immunity. The Court then determined that Kentucky River, which was initially formed as a private nonprofit corporation, was not entitled to governmental immunity under Comair's parent test because it had not been created by an entity entitled to immunity, i.e., a county. The Court also noted that Kentucky River continues to operate as a private nonprofit entity.
As noted above, Kentucky River sought discretionary review, which we granted to address the issue of governmental immunity.
Whether a defendant is entitled to "immunity is a question of law ..., which we review de novo." Rowan County v. Sloas, 201 S.W.3d 469, 475 (Ky. 2006), as corrected (Sept. 26, 2006)(internal citations omitted).
At the outset, we note that this matter involves services provided by Liberty Place, an entity administered by Kentucky River. It does not involve any other services that Kentucky River may provide. Thus, the issue is whether Kentucky River has immunity with regard to its operation of Liberty Place, and our holding today is limited to that issue. Our holding does not apply to Kentucky River's operations generally or to its operation of any other services.
Kentucky River is a community action agency. The Court of Appeals did a commendable job of summarizing the history of community action agencies and we adopt that summary as our own.
Kentucky River Foothills Development Council, Inc. v. Cathy Phirman, et al., 2013-CA-001858-MR, 2015 WL 1746483, at *6-8 (Ky. App. April 17, 2015).
Kentucky River was created in 1962 as a private nonprofit corporation. In 1968, Clark County designated Kentucky River as a community action agency for the purpose of receiving Economic Opportunity Act funding from the federal government. Kentucky River's designation as a community action agency continued through the adoption of KRS 273.405, et seq., and it receives federal funding through the Community Services Block Grant Program.
Ultimately, Kentucky River also became the community action agency for Community Services Block Grant Program purposes for Madison, Estill, and Powell Counties. As a community action agency, Kentucky River administers a number of programs, including Head Start, and programs to provide emergency food, shelter, and energy assistance; housing assistance for the homeless; public transportation; and health care for the uninsured and underinsured homeless citizens in Estill and Powell Counties. Kentucky River's Articles of Incorporation, which were amended in 2002, state, in pertinent part, that Kentucky River:
As noted above, Kentucky River also administers Liberty Place, which, according to Kentucky River's response to interrogatories:
Comair, 295 S.W.3d at 94.
In Comair, we attempted to clarify this confusion by setting forth a two-prong standard to be used in determining whether an agency has immunity. The first prong deals with the origins of the entity claiming immunity, i.e., "an entity's immunity status depends to some extent on the immunity status of the parent entity." Id. at 99. The second and "more important" prong focuses "on whether the entity exercises a governmental function, which ... means a `function integral to state government.'" Id. (citing Kentucky Center for the Arts v. Berns, 801 S.W.2d 327, 332 (Ky. 1990)).
The circuit court and Court of Appeals focused on the first prong, the "parentage" of Kentucky River. Citing to Marion County v. Rives & McChord, 133 Ky. 477, 118 S.W. 309 (1909), they both concluded that, by providing services to the poor, Kentucky River was performing a function integral to state government. However, because Kentucky River existed as an independent nonprofit entity before it began operating as a community action agency, they concluded it was not born of immune parents and thus not entitled to immunity. We believe that the issue raised herein does not primarily concern Kentucky River's parentage, but whether Kentucky River, through Liberty Place, is performing an integral state function. Furthermore, because this matter can be resolved by analyzing the integral-state-function prong, we need not address the parentage prong.
"The question of whether an entity carries out an integral state function has remained the primary focus of our sovereign immunity analysis since at least the turn of the twentieth century." Coppage Construction Company, Inc. v. Sanitation District No. 1, 459 S.W.3d 855, 862 (Ky. 2015). To determine if an entity is performing an integral state function, we must analyze what that entity actually does. Id. That analysis has "two elements: whether the entity's function is `governmental' as opposed to proprietary, and whether it is a matter of `statewide' concern." Id. (emphasis in original).
As noted above, community action agencies were created to alleviate poverty. Certainly
Kentucky River, in administering Liberty Place, is not performing the function of a community action agency. As noted above, a community action agency is "a corporation organized for the purpose of alleviating poverty within a community or area by developing employment opportunities; by bettering the conditions under which people live, learn, and work; and by conducting, administering, and coordinating similar programs." KRS 273.410(2). Providing and administering a substance abuse program alleviates substance abuse/addiction, not poverty. In Coppage, we determined that storm water management is "not a traditional and necessary state function such as those functions performed by the state police, our public schools, the corrections system, and public highways and airways." 459 S.W.3d at 864. Likewise, the alleviation of substance abuse/addiction is not a traditional and necessary state function. Rather, it is substantially the same function performed by any number of private businesses involved in the provision of services to those who have fallen prey to substance abuse. See Breathitt County Bd. of Educ. v. Prater, 292 S.W.3d 883, 887 (Ky. 2009). Therefore, while Kentucky River may be functioning as a private nonprofit agency by administering Liberty Place, it is not functioning as a community action agency or performing a necessary state function by doing so. Because the preceding resolves the issue before us, we need not address the Estate's argument that Kentucky River waived its right to assert immunity by waiting until nearly the eve of trial to do so.
Kentucky River is not entitled to immunity with regard to its operation of Liberty House. Therefore, we affirm the circuit court's denial of Kentucky River's motion for summary judgment, and the affirmation of that denial by the Court of Appeals; although we do so for different reasons.
All sitting. Minton, C.J., Cunningham, Keller, Noble and Wright, JJ., concur. Venters, J., concurs in result only by separate opinion in which Hughes, J., joins.
VENTERS, J., CONCURRING IN RESULT ONLY:
I concur in result only. While I agree with the Majority's conclusion that Kentucky River is not covered by governmental immunity in its Liberty Place operations, I would go further and say that the protective shield of governmental immunity does not extend to any aspect of Kentucky River's operation.
Hughes, J., joins.