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Date: 11-21-2020

Case Style:

UPPER POND CREEK VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT V. RONNIE KINSER AND AMANDA KINSER

Case Number: 2019-SC-0563-DG

Judge: Michelle M. Keller

Court: Supreme Court of Kentucky

Plaintiff's Attorney:

Defendant's Attorney:


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Frankfort, KY - Professional Negligence lawyer represented defendant Upper Pond Creek Volunteer Fire Department, Inc. with appealing an order of the Pike Circuit Court, in which the trial court denied Pond Creek’s motion to dismiss a portion of its claims until material facts could be developed in discovery.




On the morning of October 19, 2016, a Kentucky State Police trooper
responded to a call in Pike County. When the trooper arrived on the scene, he
found Ronnie Kinser lying beside his car, with his right arm pinned beneath
2
the car’s front tire. Kinser was conscious and explained that he had been
beneath the car all night, though he could not explain how he had become
trapped. In his incident report, the trooper speculated that Kinser exited the
vehicle and may have tried to stop it from “going over the hill,” at which point
he became trapped beneath the vehicle and dragged down the hill.
Members of the Upper Pond Creek Volunteer Fire Department responded.
Appalachian First Response Emergency Services, Inc., a private ambulance
provider, also responded. The first responders ultimately freed Kinser and
transported him to Pikeville Medical Center. Kinser suffered serious injuries
and was hospitalized for several weeks. His right arm was eventually
amputated.
On June 9, 2017, Ronnie and his wife, Amanda Kinser, filed a complaint
against Pond Creek and unknown employees of the fire department, as well as
the private ambulance provider and unknown employees of that ambulance
service. Counts I and II were against the ambulance provider and are not at
issue in this appeal. Count III alleged that the fire department “either
intentionally or negligently failed to properly train its employees in accordance
with industry standards,” “either intentionally or negligently failed to ensure
that its employees followed their training and protocols when administering
medical treatment or other assistance to its patients in accordance with the
standards of medical care,” and “either intentionally or negligently failed to hire
and retain qualified and properly trained employees to provide care or other
3
assistance for its patients in accordance with the standards of medical care.”1
Count IV alleged that the employees of the fire department “either intentionally
or negligently failed to follow their training in providing care or other assistance
to Ronnie Kinser” and “either intentionally or negligently failed to provide
proper care or other assistance to their patient, Ronnie Kinser, within the
standards of medical care.”2 In Count V, against all of the defendants, Amanda
Kinser alleged a loss of consortium. The Kinsers also alleged that Ronnie
suffered from extreme emotional distress and permanent disfigurement and
Amanda also suffered from extreme emotional distress. The couple sought
punitive damages for the “gross negligence and malice” of the defendants.
Pond Creek filed a Motion to Dismiss, asserting governmental immunity
under Kentucky Revised Statute (“KRS”) 75.070. Under that statute, a
volunteer fire department is considered an agent of the Commonwealth and
acting in a governmental capacity when “answering any fire alarms, performing
fire prevention services, or other duly authorized emergency services.” KRS
75.070(1). The volunteer fire department “shall [not] be liable in damages for
any omission or act of commission or negligence while answering or returning
from any fire or reported fire, or doing or performing any fire prevention work
under and by virtue of this chapter.” KRS 75.070(2). In response, the Kinsers

1 Throughout this opinion, we refer to these allegations as claims of intentional
or negligent training, supervision, hiring, and retention.
2 The complaint does not clearly state whether these claims are against the
unnamed employees in their official or individual capacities. However, based upon the
parties’ arguments before the trial court, we believe these claims were made against
the employees in their individual capacities.
4
argued that at least some of their claims fell outside the scope of this statute
and, furthermore, the motion was premature and should be denied until
discovery concluded.
A hearing was held on August 18, 2017. On October 4, 2017, the circuit
court granted the Motion to Dismiss as to all claims against Pond Creek and its
unknown employees based on governmental immunity. The claims against the
private ambulance provider were allowed to continue, but as noted above,
those claims are not at issue in this appeal.
The Kinsers thereafter filed a Motion to Alter, Amend, or Vacate, and the
court conducted a hearing on November 3, 2017. At that hearing, the Kinsers
conceded that the fire department was likely immune under KRS Chapter 75
for certain actions taken while responding to the emergency call. However, the
Kinsers argued that KRS 75.070 does not expressly apply to their other claims,
such as negligent hiring and training. Furthermore, they argued, the “unnamed
employee” defendants would only be entitled to qualified official immunity, and
the facts would need to be further developed in discovery to determine if such
immunity applied.
After the November 3, 2017 hearing, the circuit court entered an order
granting the Kinsers 120 days “to conduct discovery regarding the
governmental immunity of Upper Pond Creek Volunteer Fire Department and
its unknown employees.” The circuit court also set a hearing for March 16,
2018.
5
Soon after, on November 8, 2017, the circuit court issued an order
addressing the Motion to Alter, Amend, or Vacate. In that order, the circuit
court found that the fire department was entitled to statutory immunity3 for
“any acts or omissions to act or negligence while answering an alarm,
performing fire prevention services, or other duly authorized emergency
services.” Accordingly, the court upheld that portion of its October 4, 2017
order dismissing such claims. However, the circuit court found that the statute
did not expressly provide immunity for the remaining claims (i.e, the claims
related to training, supervision, hiring, and retention), and further found that it
could not make a proper determination of immunity for such acts based on the
limited information in the record. It also found that the unknown employees of
the fire department “would only be entitled to qualified official immunity.” The
court again found that it could not make a determination of such immunity
given the lack of evidence in the record.
Accordingly, the circuit court (1) overruled the Motion to Alter, Amend, or
Vacate to the extent it applied to any allegations against Pond Creek related to
“any acts or omissions to act or negligence while answering an alarm,
performing fire prevention services, or other duly authorized emergency

3 In the November 8, 2017 order, the circuit court repeatedly references KRS
75.050. Under that statute, fire protection districts and similar entities may contract
with other such entities, like volunteer fire departments, for the furnishing or receiving
of fire protection services. It further provides that “[t]he personnel and equipment of a
contracting party, in going to and returning from a fire, or in answering and
responding to a false fire alarm or call, and while endeavoring to extinguish fires
within the area covered by the contract, shall be deemed and hereby is declared to be
engaged in the exercise of a governmental function.” However, at both the trial level
and on appeal, the parties argued the applicability of KRS 75.070.
6
services”; and (2) sustained the Motion to Alter, Amend, or Vacate as to the
remaining allegations. As to those claims, the court clarified that “at this point
the Upper Pond Creek Volunteer Fire Department is not entitled to immunity,
and the parties shall continue to conduct discovery on this matter.” The court
also clarified that the fire department could raise the issue of immunity “after
sufficient proof has been discovered to allow the Court to make sufficient
findings on this issue.”
Pond Creek filed a Notice of Appeal of the circuit court’s November 8,
2017 order. On February 15, 2018, the Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal
as an improper interlocutory appeal. It subsequently denied Pond Creek’s
Motion to Reconsider, and the Kinsers sought discretionary review with this
Court. On August 8, 2018, this Court granted discretionary review, vacated the
Court of Appeals’ February 15, 2018 decision, and remanded the matter back
to the Court of Appeals “for consideration of whether there was sufficient
evidence to warrant a summary judgment on immunity grounds.”
On remand, the Court of Appeals reviewed the record and “conclude[d]
that there is no evidence in the record whatsoever to warrant entry of
summary judgment on the issue of immunity.” As a result, the Court of
Appeals dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. In doing so, the court
acknowledged that a circuit court’s denial of immunity, to the extent that
decision turns on an issue of law, is immediately appealable. In this case,
however, the circuit court did not conclusively resolve the immunity issue or
make a finding as a matter of law on the issue of immunity; rather, the court
7
denied the claim of immunity pending further discovery. The Court of Appeals
therefore concluded that the interlocutory order was not immediately
appealable, and as a result, the Court of Appeals lacked jurisdiction.
This Court granted discretionary review to determine whether the
immunity provided under KRS 75.070 for the performance of emergency
services also applies to the training, supervision, hiring, and retention of the
personnel who perform those emergency services. However, having reviewed
the record and the arguments of the parties, we now hold that this was an
improper interlocutory appeal, and as a result, we cannot consider the merits
of the immunity issue.
II. ANALYSIS.
The Court of Appeals twice concluded that it lacked the jurisdiction
necessary to review the trial court’s order. In its second order, it explained that
“the circuit court did not conclusively determine any disputed question, resolve
any right, or otherwise provide us with anything to review.” Rather, the Court
of Appeals explained, the trial court’s order “denied a claim of immunity for
the time being on the basis that further discovery was needed.” Stated
another way, the interlocutory order did not deny a claim of immunity as a
matter of law.
In disagreement with the Court of Appeals, the fire department argues
that it was entitled to absolute immunity as a matter of law, and the trial
court’s denial of that immunity claim warrants an immediate appeal. The
Kinsers, on the other hand, argue that this appeal involves a claim of qualified
8
governmental immunity that requires further factual development. As a point
of clarification, we note that KRS 75.070 “does not attempt to
grant absolute immunity, but rather recognizes and extends waiver of
immunity for acts carried out only in a government capacity.” Caneyville
Volunteer Fire Dep’t. v. Green’s Motorcycle Salvage, Inc., 286 S.W.3d 790, 806
(Ky. 2009).
However, the propriety of this appeal does not necessarily turn on
whether the statute confers absolute or qualified immunity. Rather, we focus
on the nature of the trial court’s ruling. On this point, the Kinsers argue that
the trial court neither granted nor denied the motion to dismiss the claims
related to the training, supervision, hiring, or retention of the fire department
employees; rather, they argue, the trial court passed ruling on those claims
pending further discovery. We disagree. In its November 8, 2017 order, the trial
court sustained the Kinser’s Motion to Alter, Amend, or Vacate as to the claims
related to training, supervision, hiring, and retention. In doing so, it amended
its previous order and explained that “at this point the Upper Pond Creek
Volunteer Fire Department is not entitled to immunity [for these claims], and
the parties shall continue to conduct discovery on this matter.” We believe that
this is best characterized as a denial of the fire department’s Motion to Dismiss
the claims related to training, supervision, hiring, and retention, as well as the
claims against the individual unnamed employees. Nevertheless, for the
reasons stated below, we agree with the Kinsers and the Court of Appeals that
this matter was not ripe for review.
9
Typically, only final judgments are appealable. Under Kentucky Rule of
Civil Procedure (“CR”) 54.01, “[a] final or appealable judgment is a final order
adjudicating all the rights of all the parties in an action or proceeding.” If the
order is interlocutory, rather than final, an appellate court lacks the
jurisdiction necessary to review the order. Wilson v. Russell, 162 S.W.3d 911,
913 (Ky. 2005) (citations omitted).
An order denying a dispositive motion, like a motion to dismiss, is
usually considered to be an interlocutory, non-appealable order. Breathitt Cty.
Bd. of Educ. v. Prater, 292 S.W.3d 883, 887 (Ky. 2009); see also Chen v. Lowe,
521 S.W.3d 587, 590 (Ky. App. 2017) (citations omitted). However, KRS
22A.020(2) states, “The Court of Appeals has jurisdiction to review
interlocutory orders of the Circuit Court in civil cases, but only as authorized
by rules promulgated by the Supreme Court.” For example, “an order denying a
substantial claim of absolute immunity is immediately appealable even in the
absence of a final judgment.” Prater, 292 S.W.3d at 887. We have therefore
permitted interlocutory appeals of orders denying claims of sovereign,
governmental, and official immunity. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Ky. Ret.
Sys., 396 S.W.3d 833 (Ky. 2013) (sovereign immunity); Univ. of Louisville v.
Rothstein, 532 S.W.3d 644 (Ky. 2017) (governmental immunity); Baker v.
Fields, 543 S.W.3d 575 (Ky. 2018) (qualified official immunity).
However, a trial court’s order is not immediately appealable simply
because immunity is at issue. If the trial court’s decision leaves the immunity
question unresolved, that order is not immediately appealable. For example,
10
the Court of Appeals held in Chen v. Lowe that a trial court’s denial of a motion
for summary judgment was not subject to immediate appellate review, even
though immunity served as the basis for the motion. 521 S.W.3d at 591. In
that case, a former law student of the University of Louisville’s Brandeis School
of Law sued the University and the law school’s former dean, in both his
individual and official capacities. The dean filed a motion to dismiss4 on the
basis of qualified official immunity. Id. at 590. The trial court denied the motion
to dismiss the claims against the dean in his individual capacity, finding that
genuine issues of material fact remained regarding the dean’s entitlement to
qualified immunity. Id.
In dismissing that appeal, the Court of Appeals acknowledged that “if we
were to determine that the circuit court actually denied [the dean’s] claim of
immunity, we would have jurisdiction to hear his appeal.” 521 S.W.3d at 590.
The Court of Appeals explained,
“[i]n denying [the dean’s] motion to dismiss, however, the circuit
court did not make a final ruling on the issue of qualified
immunity. Rather, the court found that there were disputed issues
of material fact regarding [the dean’s] entitlement to qualified
immunity. Therefore, the issue of [the dean’s] immunity remains
unresolved, and the order denying his motion to dismiss is not
immediately appealable.
Id. at 590–91 (citing Broughton v. Russell, No. 2009-CA-001753-MR, 2010 WL
4320436, at *2 (Ky. App. Oct. 29, 2010); Hyden-Leslie Water Dist. v. Hoskins,

4 The Court of Appeals clarified that the motion to dismiss was transformed into
a motion for summary judgment when the trial court considered facts and evidence
outside the complaint.
11
No. 2010-CA-000599-MR, 2011 WL 919818, at *2 (Ky. App. Mar. 18,
2011); Adair Cty. v. Stearman, No. 2010-CA-001953-MR, 2011 WL 4103137, at
*2 (Ky. App. Sept. 16, 2011)).
The Court of Appeals therefore dismissed the appeal. In doing so, it
explained that it had reviewed the record and agreed with the circuit court’s
finding that factual issues remained unresolved. Id. at 591. Thus, the Court of
Appeals stated, “We will not overstep our bounds by attempting to make
findings of fact on those issues so we can determine an immunity question that
the circuit court has not yet fully addressed.” Id.
The three unpublished cases cited by the Court of Appeals reflect similar
analyses. For example, in Hyden-Leslie Water District v. Jessie Hoskins and
Perry Construction, Inc., also cited by the Kinsers, the Court of Appeals
dismissed an appeal of an order denying summary judgment. 2011 WL
919818, at *1. The defendant water district had argued that it was entitled to
statutory immunity under KRS 65.2003, but the circuit court found that there
were “genuine issues of material fact to be tried.” Id. The Court of Appeals
distinguished the case from Breathitt County Board of Education v. Prater, in
which a proper interlocutory appeal had been taken from a trial court’s order
denying a motion to dismiss based on immunity. In that case, the trial court
had expressly ruled that the defendant’s actions were proprietary rather than
governmental. In Hyden-Leslie, however, the circuit court had made no such
ruling. Instead, it only found that material issues of fact remained in dispute.
The Court of Appeals therefore dismissed the appeal.
12
In this case, we adopt a similar analysis. The trial court did not make a
final ruling on the issue of immunity. Rather, the trial court concluded that
additional factual development was necessary to determine if governmental
immunity applied to the claims of intentional or negligent training, supervision,
hiring, and retention. The trial court also declined to dismiss the claims against
the unknown employees because additional facts were needed to determine if
they qualified for official immunity. Stated another way, the trial court left
these questions of immunity unresolved.
We agree with the trial court’s conclusion that additional factual
development was necessary. Under the plain language of KRS 75.070, the
statute does not expressly provide statutory immunity for claims of intentional
or negligent training, supervision, hiring, and retention. Rather, by its own
terms, it provides immunity for “any omission or act of commission or
negligence while answering an alarm, performing fire prevention services, or
other duly authorized emergency services.” KRS 75.070(1). Nevertheless, we
recognized in Caneyville Volunteer Fire Department v. Green’s Motorcycle
Salvage, Inc. that “[f]ire departments are agents of the Commonwealth who
engage in an essential governmental function in providing for the safety and
well-being of its citizens.” 521 S.W.3d at 805. We further recognized that KRS
75.070 “confers governmental immunity to fire departments and qualified
official immunity to firefighters engaged in discretionary functions.”
Therefore, two questions remain. The first is whether the fire
department’s actions—namely, training, supervision, hiring, and retention—
13
were governmental as opposed to proprietary functions entitling the
department to immunity. The second is whether the employees’ actions were
discretionary as opposed to ministerial entitling them to immunity. The dissent
urges us to answer the first question on the merits, that training, supervision,
hiring, and retention are intimately tied to a volunteer fire department’s
governmental mission and KRS 75.070 confers immunity for these actions. We
do not necessarily disagree but based on the record before us are unwilling to
make that definitive statement. Rather, we agree that additional factual
development is necessary to answer these questions. We will not undertake a
fact-finding mission to resolve questions that the circuit court has not yet fully
addressed.
For these reasons, we hold that the trial court’s order was interlocutory;
it was not subject to immediate review, and the Court of Appeals properly
concluded that it lacked appellate jurisdiction. In reaching this conclusion, we
are mindful that orders denying immunity are subject to immediate appeal
because “unlike other defenses, immunity is meant to shield its possessor not
simply from liability but from the costs and burdens of litigation as well.”
Prater, 292 S.W.3d at 888. The fire department argues that it is now subject to
the burdens of litigation, namely, discovery. However, we note that the trial
court’s November 3, 2017 order allowed 120 days “to conduct discovery
regarding the governmental immunity of Upper Pond Creek Volunteer Fire
Department and its unknown employees.” Similarly, its November 8, 2017
order directed the parties to “continue to conduct discovery on this matter,”
14
referring to the immunity issues. In other words, the trial court limited
discovery to the issue of immunity. It then explained that, after that limited
period of discovery, the fire department could reassert its immunity defense. If
the trial court denies that claim, Pond Creek can file a proper interlocutory
appeal, even before a final judgment is entered in the case. Thus, at this stage
of the proceedings, the only burden that Pond Creek faces is proving its
entitlement to immunity.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we hereby affirm the decision of the
Court of Appeals.
Minton, C.J; Hughes, Keller, Lambert, VanMeter and Wright, JJ., sitting.
Minton, C.J.; Hughes, Keller, Lambert and VanMeter, JJ., concur. Wright, J.,
dissents by separate opinion. Nickell, J., not sitting.
WRIGHT, J., DISSENTING: I respectfully dissent. I would reverse the
Court of Appeals and instruct the trial court to dismiss the case on immunity
grounds.
Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 75.070(1) provides:
A . . . volunteer fire department and the personnel [thereof],
answering any fire alarms, performing fire prevention services, or
other duly authorized emergency services . . . shall be considered
an agent of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and . . . shall not be
liable in damages for any omission or act of commission or
negligence while answering an alarm, performing fire prevention
services, or other duly authorized emergency services.
Pursuant to the statute, the trial court dismissed all the Kinsers’ claims
against the Upper Pond Creek Volunteer Fire Department based on “any acts or
15
omissions to act or negligence while answering an alarm, performing fire
prevention services, or other duly authorized emergency services.” This is not
in contention. The bases of the current appeal are the claims related to hiring,
retention, or training of the volunteer firefighters.
As the trial court found, any claims based on Pond Creek’s “acts or
omissions . . . while . . . performing . . . emergency services” have been
dismissed on grounds of statutory immunity. That is now the law of the case
and not before this Court on appeal. It is undisputed Pond Creek and its
personnel performed an authorized emergency service when volunteer
firefighters rescued Kinser; therefore, any injury Kinser suffered was a result of
that rescue, and the fire department and its personnel are immune from suit
related to said rescue.
I. GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY
A. Volunteer Fire Department
Pond Creek is a volunteer fire department and was acting in its official
and governmental capacity; therefore, Pond Creek had governmental immunity
granted by the General Assembly in KRS 75.070. Fire and emergency rescue
services are essential governmental services, and a lawsuit against Pond Creek
would impact the sovereign’s purse. Justice Venters’s concurrence in Coppage
Construction Co. v. Sanitation District No. 1, 459 S.W.3d 855, 865 (Ky. 2015),
states, “[i]t has long been recognized within the common law that the historical
origin of the doctrine of sovereign immunity was, in part, the protection of the
king’s purse.” Obviously, this governmental service is underfunded since it is
16
being performed by a volunteer group. If governmental resources are further
depleted by lawsuits, then the fire and emergency services may not be
available—or even exist—when citizens desperately need them in the future.
Little more than a decade ago, our Court addressed a case involving a
volunteer fire department’s statutory governmental immunity in Caneyville
Volunteer Fire Department v. Green’s Motorcycle Salvage, Inc., 286 S.W.3d 790
(Ky. 2009). This Court held volunteer fire departments are “cloaked in
immunity from suit in tort” and are “agent[s] of the Commonwealth, having
been recognized as such by the General Assembly by KRS 75.070 and declared
immune from suit in tort. . . . Therefore, it is not within our authority to impose
civil liability on an arm of the government carrying out such a government
function.” Id. at 805; 794. We also noted “volunteer fire departments are
government agents engaged in governmental, as opposed to, proprietary
functions.” Id. at 804-05. “To be sure, the very term ‘volunteer fire
department’ attests to their task: that is to provide a gratuitous service to the
population where by volunteer citizens risk life and limb to provide a public
service.” Id. at 805.
In Caneyville, Chief Justice Minton’s concurring opinion provided further
guidance: “[t]he statute is straightforward and uses language broad enough to
demonstrate the General Assembly’s intent to provide as much immunity
and protection as possible, both to fire departments and to their employees
answering fire alarms.” Id. at 814 (emphasis added). Justice Hughes authored
a separate concurring opinion clarifying that the volunteer fire department
17
qualified for sovereign immunity “through [its] ‘agent of the Commonwealth’
status accorded it in KRS 75.070.” Id. at 817.
Consequently, it is clear this Court read KRS 75.070 broad enough to
“confer[] governmental immunity upon municipal fire departments, fire
protection district fire departments and volunteer fire departments.” Id. at
807 (emphasis added). As this Court stated, “[s]ignificantly, KRS 75.070
characterizes fire departments and volunteer fire departments as ‘an agent of
the Commonwealth’ that acts ‘solely and alone in a governmental capacity.’”
Id. at 805 (quoting KRS 75.070). When a volunteer fire department is
“engaging to a function essential to government,” it has governmental
immunity. Id. at 809.
Could Pond Creek have carried out the emergency service of rescuing
Kinser without performing the tasks of hiring, retention, and training? No.
Without Pond Creek performing the tasks of hiring, retention, and training
personnel, it would have been impossible for Pond Creek to rescue Kinser.
Even though those tasks were performed prior to arrival on the scene of the
emergency, they were an essential part of the rescue. Therefore, the claims
against Pond Creek—even if for negligent hiring, retention, and training—
cannot go forward because Pond Creek is an agent of the Commonwealth and
would have been acting within its authority to carry out a clear governmental
function—emergency services—when hiring, retaining, and training its
personnel.
18
If the volunteer fire department was engaged in a non-government
function, then there may be a situation like this Court analyzed in Kentucky
River Foothills Development Council, Inc. v. Phirman, 504 S.W.3d 11 (Ky. 2016).
However, that is not the case here. It is undisputed this was a call for
emergency services; as such, any training, hiring, or retention of personnel
derives from the volunteer fire department’s essential need to perform its
government function of providing emergency services.
B. Firefighters
The personnel of the volunteer fire department are evaluated under an
official and qualified immunity analysis. See Caneyville, 286 S.W.3d at 808.
There is a difference in the types of immunity KRS 75.070 grants, which is why
we “construe[d] KRS 75.070 as acknowledging the governmental immunity of
fire departments and the official and qualified immunity of firefighters.”
Id. (emphasis added). “KRS 75.070 recognizes the official immunity enjoyed by
firefighters engaged in their official acts; it should not, however, be construed
to confer immunity upon firefighters sued in their personal capacity, as such
liability turns on a subsidiary qualified official immunity analysis.” Id. at 809.
In Caneyville, the fire chief was sued “in both his official and individual
capacities.” Id. at 810. We held the volunteer fire department’s “immunity
extends to its officers and employees who are sued in their official capacity.”
Id. at 810. Further, the fire chief was allegedly negligent for preparatory
matters—claims that he “lacked sufficient equipment and personnel”—related
to fire-fighting; we “noted that a judgment call by a fire chief as to how, with
19
what assistance, and in what manner to extinguish a fire is the very
definition of a discretionary act.” Id. at 810 (emphasis added).
Kinser alleges damages against the unknown employees for preparatory
matters—such as in Caneyville—related to emergency services. The remaining
claims before this Court are any training, hiring, or retention of personnel. Any
judgment call by an officer of Upper Pond Creek Volunteer Fire Department on
issues of training, hiring, or retention of personnel would also be discretionary
acts. For those discretionary acts, the volunteer fire department’s “immunity
extends to its officers and employees who are sued in their official capacity.”
Id. at 810.
In the present case, it is important to examine when Pond Creek’s
firefighters had any contact or connection with Kinser. It is clear that the
firefighters’ only contact with Kinser occurred when they rescued him from
being trapped beneath his vehicle—where he lay trapped by the weight of his
vehicle on his right arm.
Since KRS 75.070(1) plainly states personnel “shall not be liable in
damages for any omission or act of commission or negligence while . . .
performing . . . emergency services,” a volunteer fire department’s personnel
are clearly immune from tort damages occurring—by “any omission or act of
commission or negligence”—during an emergency response. Here, the only
time Pond Creek’s volunteer firefighters could have injured Kinser was by an
“omission or act of commission or negligence while . . . performing . . .
emergency services.”
20
We established the immunity of Pond Creek’s officers above. Next, we
examine the actions of the volunteer firefighters who responded to the
emergency call. The volunteers, who were not officers, would not have made
the decisions on hiring, retaining, or training personnel. As noted, their
actions could only have resulted in damages to Kinser if one of the volunteers
omitted an act—or performed an act improperly or negligently—during the
emergency for which they had immunity. Therefore, since the General
Assembly has made clear that Pond Creek and its personnel cannot be liable
for damages while performing emergency services, the cloak of immunity
during the emergency protects them from Kinser’s claims.

Outcome: If the Upper Pond Creek Volunteer Fire Department, or its volunteer
firefighters, committed negligence during the emergency rescue, they were
entitled to immunity pursuant to KRS 75.070. Importantly, Pond Creek is an
agent of the Commonwealth and has sovereign immunity because it was acting
in its governmental capacity. Its officers’ decision on training, hiring, or
retention of personnel were discretionary and an essential part of providing
emergency services, which provides governmental and statutory immunity for
them. Its volunteers were acting in their official capacities during the call for
emergency services and have statutory immunity. Therefore, if Pond Creek, its
officers, or its volunteers injured Kinser, it was clearly part of authorized
emergency services. As such, Upper Pond Creek Volunteer Fire Department
and its personnel are immune, and I would direct the trial court to enter an
order dismissing on those grounds.

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