R.P. v. First Student, Inc. ( 2022 )


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  •                                          No. 124,197
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    R.P., as guardian for A.P., and A.P.,
    Appellees,
    v.
    FIRST STUDENT INC., d/b/a/ FIRST STUDENT MANAGEMENT, LLC,
    and NELDA PIPER,
    Appellants.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1.
    The Kansas Tort Claims Act (KTCA) defines "governmental entity" as
    encompassing both the state and municipalities. K.S.A. 75-6102(c). "State" under the
    KTCA is defined as "the state of Kansas and any department or branch of state
    government, or any agency, authority, institution or other instrumentality thereof." K.S.A.
    75-6102(a).
    2.
    The Kansas Tort Claims Act (KTCA) defines "municipality" to include "any
    county, township, city, school district or other political or taxing subdivision of the state,
    or any agency, authority, institution, or other instrumentality thereof." K.S.A. 75-6102(b).
    The KTCA does not define the term "instrumentality."
    3.
    To qualify as an instrumentality under the Kansas Tort Claims Act, a private entity
    that contracts with a governmental entity must either be an integral part of or controlled
    by a governmental entity.
    1
    Appeal from Johnson District Court; JAMES F. VANO, judge. Opinion filed July 1, 2022.
    Affirmed.
    Jeremy K. Schrag and Alan L. Rupe, of Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith LLP, of Wichita, for
    appellants.
    Michael L. Brooks, pro hac vice, of The Brooks Law Firm, of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and
    Rachel E. Smith, Michael P. Waddell, and Oscar P. Espinoza, of Smith Mohlman Injury Law, LLC, of
    Kansas City, Missouri, for appellees.
    James R. Howell and Jakob Provo, of Prochaska, Howell & Prochaska LLC, of Wichita, for
    amicus curiae Kansas Trial Lawyers Association.
    Andrew Foulston, of McDonald Tinker PA, of Wichita, for amicus curiae The Kansas
    Association of Defense Counsel.
    Before BRUNS, P.J., CLINE, J., and JAMES L. BURGESS, S.J.
    CLINE, J.: This case addresses whether a private company that provides bussing
    services under contract with a school district qualifies as a governmental entity under the
    Kansas Tort Claims Act (KTCA). We agree with the district court—under the
    circumstances presented in this case—the private company providing contractual services
    to the school district is not a governmental entity under the KTCA. Thus, we affirm its
    summary judgment ruling.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    First Student, Inc. is a private, for-profit corporation incorporated under the laws
    of Delaware and headquartered in Ohio. During the 2015-2016 school year, First Student
    provided bussing services for students in the Shawnee Mission U.S.D. 512 school district
    under a contract with the district.
    2
    The contract identified First Student as an independent contractor and specified
    that neither First Student nor its employees were to be considered employees or agents of
    the school district. In line with this designation, the contract required First Student to
    supply and maintain all school busses and personnel necessary to serve the school
    district's needs. First Student controlled the hiring and firing of all operations personnel
    and drivers, subject to the school district's right to request removal of any unsuitable
    employee. First Student similarly controlled the planning of all stops and schedules,
    subject to school district approval, as well as the licensing and training of drivers. First
    Student was also required to maintain its own liability insurance and agreed to indemnify
    the school district from claims or demands "arising from or caused by any act of neglect,
    default or omission of" First Student in the performance of the contract.
    In April 2016, A.P., a special-needs student in the school district, was sexually
    assaulted by another student while riding on a bus owned and operated by First Student
    and driven by Nelda Piper, a First Student employee. A.P. and her father, R.P., filed a
    negligence claim against First Student and later Piper, alleging that First Student and
    Piper (Defendants) failed to stop or prevent the assault. A.P. and R.P. (Plaintiffs) later
    moved to amend their petition to add a claim for punitive damages against First Student
    based on its failure to employ sufficient staff to monitor activity on the bus, as well as its
    failure to properly train Piper.
    Defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing First Student qualified as a
    governmental entity under the KTCA because it was an instrumentality of the school
    district. As such, they contended Plaintiffs' claims should be dismissed for failure to
    provide pre-suit notice under K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 12-105b. Plaintiffs responded by
    arguing this notice was not required since First Student was an independent contractor
    and thus not covered by either the KTCA or K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 12-105b.
    3
    The district court denied Defendants' motion, finding it was "highly doubtful the
    Kansas Legislature intended to call a contracting for-profit Delaware corporation
    operating from its home base in Ohio, i.e., a foreign entity that had agreed in [its] contract
    with a school district that it is an independent contractor, a Kansas 'municipality' or any
    other such governmental entity subject to the KTCA protections and K.S.A. 12-105b
    notice." At Defendants' request, the district court certified four issues of law for
    interlocutory appeal under K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 60-2102(c):
    "(1) Whether as a matter of law the Defendants are instrumentalities of the school district
    as defined by the [KTCA]; (2) If the Defendants are instrumentalities, whether they are
    entitled to receive a K.S.A. 12-105b pre-suit notice; (3) Whether Defendants received a
    K.S.A. 12-105b notice; and (4) Whether First Student, if it is an instrumentality of the
    governmental entity as a matter of law, should be exempt from punitive damages under
    K.S.A. 75-6105(c)."
    This court granted Defendants' application for interlocutory appeal on August 12,
    2021. Although the district court certified four issues for appeal, we find that resolving
    the first issue controls the outcome here. Since we find Defendants are not covered by the
    KTCA, we need not address the remaining three issues.
    ANALYSIS
    Standard of review
    Resolution of this appeal requires us to interpret both the parties' contract and
    Kansas statutes. This exercise involves questions of law over which we have unlimited
    review. Born v. Born, 
    304 Kan. 542
    , 554, 
    374 P.3d 624
     (2016).
    4
    Rules of statutory and contractual interpretation
    The parties' intent governs our interpretation of the contract, and the Legislature's
    intent governs our interpretation of Kansas statutes. Russell v. Treanor Investments, 
    311 Kan. 675
    , 680, 
    466 P.3d 481
     (2020) (contract interpretation); State ex rel. Schmidt v. City
    of Wichita, 
    303 Kan. 650
    , 659, 
    367 P.3d 282
     (2016) (statutory interpretation). We
    ascertain that intent by examining the plain language used in the contract and statutes,
    giving common words their ordinary meanings. Nauheim v. City of Topeka, 
    309 Kan. 145
    , 149, 
    432 P.3d 647
     (2019). When doing so, we must consider statutory provisions in
    pari materia with a view of reconciling and bringing them into workable harmony if
    possible. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co. v. Beachner Constr. Co., 
    289 Kan. 1262
    , 1270, 
    221 P.3d 588
     (2009). Likewise, we cannot isolate a sentence or provision of the parties'
    contract but must instead construe and consider the entire contract. Russell, 311 Kan. at
    680. Last, we must avoid unreasonable or absurd results when interpreting both the
    parties' contract and Kansas statutes. 311 Kan. at 680 (construing contracts); Northern
    Natural Gas Co. v. ONEOK Field Services Co., 
    296 Kan. 906
    , 918, 
    296 P.3d 1106
     (2013)
    (construing statutes).
    The Kansas Tort Claims Act
    The KTCA applies to tort claims brought against governmental entities and their
    employees. See, e.g., K.S.A. 75-6103; K.S.A. 75-6104. The KTCA defines
    "governmental entity" as encompassing both the state and municipalities. K.S.A. 75-
    6102(c). "State" under the KTCA is defined as "the state of Kansas and any department
    or branch of state government, or any agency, authority, institution or other
    instrumentality thereof." K.S.A. 75-6102(a). The KTCA defines "municipality" to include
    "any county, township, city, school district or other political or taxing subdivision of the
    state, or any agency, authority, institution or other instrumentality thereof." K.S.A. 75-
    6102(b). The KTCA does not define the term "instrumentality."
    5
    The KTCA specifically excludes from its coverage "any independent contractor
    under contract with a governmental entity except those contractors specifically listed in
    [the definition of 'employee']." K.S.A. 75-6102(d)(2)(B). The KTCA does not provide a
    definition for "independent contractor," but relies on agency principles to define the term.
    See Mitzner v. State Dept. of SRS, 
    257 Kan. 258
    , 261, 
    891 P.2d 435
     (1995).
    Under the KTCA, governmental entities are not liable for punitive damages or
    prejudgment interest. K.S.A. 75-6105(a), (c). It also caps liability for compensatory
    damages at $500,000 per occurrence or the amount of the governmental entity's insurance
    coverage, if greater than $500,000. K.S.A. 75-6105(a); K.S.A. 75-6111(a). The KTCA
    grants governmental entities complete immunity from liability when engaged in certain
    enumerated activities. This immunity extends to the governmental entity's employees
    when they act within the scope of their employment. See K.S.A. 75-6104.
    K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 12-105b imposes a pre-suit notice requirement for claims against
    municipalities.
    Before suing a municipality or employee of a municipality under the KTCA, a
    plaintiff must provide the municipality with written notice of its claim, along with certain
    information about the claim specified by law. K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 12-105b(d). No action
    can be commenced against the municipality or its employee until after the municipality
    notifies the plaintiff that it has denied the claim or 120 days has passed after filing the
    notice of claim. K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 12-105b(d). Plaintiffs admit they did not provide pre-
    suit notice of their claim to First Student. Our Supreme Court has held the failure to
    substantially comply with the pre-suit notice statute deprives the court of subject matter
    jurisdiction over the claim. Sleeth v. Sedan City Hospital, 
    298 Kan. 853
    , 871, 
    317 P.3d 782
     (2014).
    6
    This case calls us to decide whether Defendants are instrumentalities of the school
    district as defined by the KTCA.
    The dispositive question on appeal is whether First Student qualifies as a
    governmental entity under the KTCA. If it does, then both First Student (as a
    governmental entity) and Piper (as an employee of a governmental entity) fall under the
    Act. See K.S.A. 75-6103. Defendants say First Student qualifies because it is an
    "instrumentality" of the school district. As noted above, the KTCA defines
    "governmental entity" to include a "municipality," which is defined as "any county,
    township, city, school district or other political or taxing subdivision of the state, or any
    agency, authority, institution or other instrumentality thereof." K.S.A. 75-6102(b) and (c).
    Thus, the district court certified the question of whether, as a matter of law, Defendants
    are instrumentalities of the school district as defined by the KTCA.
    The ejusdem generis interpretive canon provides guidance because the meaning of
    instrumentality is unclear.
    Plaintiffs argue the syntax of the KTCA's definition of municipality calls for
    application of the ejusdem generis canon of statutory construction. This canon instructs
    that where a more general word or phrase follows the enumeration of specific things, the
    general word or phrase should usually be understood to refer to things of the same kind or
    within the same classification as the specific terms. See Rockers v. Kansas Turnpike
    Authority, 
    268 Kan. 110
    , 115, 
    991 P.2d 889
     (1999); Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner,
    Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts, 199 (2012). For example, if one speaks
    of "Eric Church, Luke Combs, Ashley McBride, and other famous artists," the last noun
    does not reasonably refer to Pablo Picasso (a renowned painter) or Auguste Rodin (a
    well-known sculptor). It refers to other famous musical artists.
    Here, the definition of "municipality" includes two specific enumerations followed
    by more general phrases: The first specific enumeration, "any county, township, city,
    7
    school district," is followed by the more general phrase "or other political or taxing
    subdivision of the state." K.S.A. 75-6102(b). The second specific enumeration, "or any
    agency, authority, institution," is followed by the more general phrase "or other
    instrumentality thereof." K.S.A. 75-6102(b). What is more, these two sets of
    enumerations and general phrases are nested within one another, with the second set
    acting as a sort of generic phrase to the first set's more specific enumeration of terms.
    Applying ejusdem generis, we can interpret the general phrase "any agency,
    authority, institution or other instrumentality thereof" to mean something within the same
    classification as "any county, township, city, school district or other political or taxing
    subdivision of the state." K.S.A. 75-6102(b). And we can interpret the general phrase
    "other instrumentality thereof" to mean something within the same classification as "any
    agency, authority, [or] institution." K.S.A. 75-6102(b). As Plaintiffs note, each
    specifically enumerated entity in K.S.A. 75-6102(b) is a division of a larger
    governmental entity or a body organized by a governmental entity to perform a
    government function. They contend application of this statutory canon narrows the
    meaning of instrumentality to a public entity or arm of the state, and the determination of
    whether an entity qualifies thus turns on governmental control of the entity at issue.
    Defendants resist application of this interpretive canon, claiming that, because the
    statutory text is plain and unambiguous, "extratextual considerations" are prohibited. But
    this canon is not extratextual since it relies on the statute's text to provide the context for
    interpreting the words used. And while the language is plain, the meaning of the term
    instrumentality, in the context of the KTCA, is ambiguous enough to call for this canon's
    application. See Rockers, 
    268 Kan. at 115
     ("Moreover, when there is doubt as to the
    particular meaning of a word taken by itself, doubt may be removed by reference to
    associated words."). As Plaintiffs note, "[w]hen taken in context, a word may have a
    broader or narrower meaning than it might have if used alone." Jones v. Kansas State
    University, 
    279 Kan. 128
    , 149, 
    106 P.3d 10
     (2005).
    8
    Plaintiffs analogize this situation to the one facing our Supreme Court in Rockers.
    There, the court used ejusdem generis to determine whether the Kansas Turnpike
    Authority (KTA) was a "municipality" under K.S.A. 12-105b (the statute requiring pre-
    suit notice of KTCA claims). The question in Rockers was whether the KTA qualified as
    an "other political subdivision" as that term was used in the definition of "municipality"
    in K.S.A. 12-105b. The court examined the specific political subdivisions listed in that
    definition before the phrase "other political subdivision" and found the KTA did not fit
    within the list (i.e., "county," "township," "school district," "drainage district"). Rockers,
    
    268 Kan. at 115
    .
    Similarly, Plaintiffs argue First Student does not fit within the list of
    instrumentalities in K.S.A. 75-6102(b). First Student is not a governmental "agency,"
    "authority," or "institution," nor is it a "county, township, city, school district or other
    political or taxing subdivision of the state." K.S.A. 75-6102(b). Instead, it is a multi-state,
    for-profit private company whose own contract prohibits its consideration as an agent of
    the school district.
    The Kansas Supreme Court has previously defined the term "instrumentality" in the
    context of the Kansas Open Records Act.
    Defendants, on the other hand, argue we should look at the services First Student
    contracted to perform, rather than its private corporate status. They contend the Kansas
    Supreme Court looked at the function of the entity rather than who controlled it when
    determining whether an entity qualified as a "public agency" under the Kansas Open
    Records Act (KORA), which also includes the term instrumentality in this definition. See
    State v. Great Plains of Kiowa County, Inc., 
    308 Kan. 950
    , 954, 
    425 P.3d 290
     (2018).
    They argue the definition of instrumentality adopted by the court for KORA should be
    applied here.
    9
    In Great Plains of Kiowa County, Inc., the Kiowa County Commission sought
    public records under KORA from a private not-for-profit corporation (Great Plains).
    Great Plains was formed to operate the county hospital under a lease agreement with the
    County, and that agreement allowed Great Plains to request that the County levy an ad
    valorem tax to support the hospital's operations. In 2012, one such levy contributed
    $300,000 to the hospital's operations; in 2013, $950,000; and, in 2014, around
    $1,050,000. These funds constituted 14%, 16%, and 20% of Great Plains' budget for
    those years.
    After these significant increases, the County sought information under KORA
    about the hospital's budget to answer public interest questions about the hospital's
    finances and use of taxpayer dollars. Great Plains resisted the County's request, claiming
    it was not a "public agency" under KORA and was thus exempt from KORA's
    requirements. The County, designated as the State of Kansas, petitioned in district court
    seeking enforcement of KORA and access to the requested records. Both the district court
    and our court found Great Plains was subject to KORA. The Supreme Court agreed.
    KORA provides for public access to records maintained by "public agencies" and
    defines that term to include
    "the state or any political or taxing subdivision of the state or any office, agency or
    instrumentality thereof, or any other entity receiving or expending and supported in
    whole or in part by the public funds appropriated by the state or by public funds of any
    political or taxing subdivision of the state." (Emphases added.) K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 45-
    217(i)(1).
    In interpreting this language, the Supreme Court relied on Black's Law Dictionary
    to define "instrumentality" as "'a thing used to achieve an end or purpose, or a means or
    agency through which a function of another entity is accomplished.'" Great Plains of
    Kiowa County, Inc., 308 Kan. at 954. The court held that Great Plains met this definition.
    10
    In explaining this decision, the court noted that Kansas law authorizes counties to
    establish county hospitals operated by county boards. Kansas law also provides that a
    county board may enter into a lease agreement to allow a private entity to carry out the
    regular management of a county hospital established under this authority. In such a case,
    the court explained, the private entity becomes an instrumentality of the board. "Instead
    of managing the Hospital directly through an elected board, Kiowa County chose to have
    Great Plains manage the Hospital. Great Plains thus became the instrumentality for
    fulfilling the will of the voters of Kiowa County that they should have access to hospital
    facilities." 308 Kan. at 954.
    Since both KORA and the KTCA use the term instrumentality (in KORA's
    definition of public agency and the KTCA's definition of municipality), Defendants
    contend we should apply the Kansas Supreme Court's definition of that term as it is used
    in KORA. They argue that, based on the similarities in statutory language between
    KORA and the KTCA, the term "instrumentality" should have the same meaning under
    both statutes. In Defendants' view, because First Student provides the means by which the
    school district accomplishes its statutorily mandated function of transporting students,
    First Student is an instrumentality of the school district. But there are important
    distinctions in both the language and purposes of the Acts which prevent transposing the
    definition of instrumentality in KORA to the KTCA.
    KORA and the KTCA differ in purpose and scope.
    When examining the language of the two statutes, we must keep in mind the
    context in which that language is used. Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts,
    56 ("words are given meaning by their context"). "The subject matter of the document (its
    purpose, broadly speaking) is the context that helps to give words meaning—that might
    cause draft to mean a bank note rather than a breeze." Reading Law: The Interpretation
    11
    of Legal Texts, 56. Here, the KTCA's purpose infuses the meaning of its text, just as
    KORA's purpose infuses the meaning of its text.
    KORA is a "sunshine law," designed to promote transparency in government
    activity by "shining the sun" into the way public services are performed. Nuckolls,
    Kansas Sunshine Law; How Bright Does it Shine Now?, 72 J.K.B.A. 28, 28-29 (May
    2003). KORA mandates that all "public records shall be open for inspection by any
    person," subject to certain exceptions. K.S.A. 45-216(a); K.S.A. 45-218(a). The
    Legislature also specified that KORA "shall be liberally construed and applied to
    promote" this stated public policy. K.S.A. 45-216(a). Under KORA, access to
    governmental activity is the rule and shielding the governmental agency from such access
    is the exception. See 72 J.K.B.A. at 29. Thus, in Great Plains of Kiowa County, Inc., our
    Supreme Court broadly interpreted the term "instrumentality" under KORA, since such a
    construction expanded access to records of the county hospital's operations.
    The KTCA, on the other hand, has a different purpose. It was enacted to waive the
    common-law doctrine of sovereign immunity of the state and impose liability on
    governmental entities for their employees' torts just like a private employer is liable for
    its employees' torts (with limited exceptions outlined in the Act). Westerbeke, The
    Immunity Provisions in the Kansas Tort Claims Act: The First Twenty-Five Years, 
    52 U. Kan. L. Rev. 939
    , 944 (2004). Thus, expanding the KTCA's application to all
    nongovernmental entities that provide contractual services to a governmental entity
    would not fulfill the Act's purpose since private entities do not enjoy common-law
    sovereign immunity.
    Applying the KTCA to private entities would restrict liability, rather than expand
    it. As Plaintiffs note, the KTCA's immunity waiver is limited since the Act carves out
    several exceptions to the general rule of governmental liability. K.S.A. 75-6104;
    Schreiner v. Hodge, 
    315 Kan. 25
    , 37, 
    504 P.3d 410
     (2022) (recognizing "the exceptions
    12
    to the general rule of liability are numerous and confirm 'there has been no wholesale
    rejection of immunity by the Kansas Legislature'"). It also contains damages limitations
    which do not apply to suits against private entities. K.S.A. 75-6105.
    In addition, governmental entities are protected by the pre-suit notice requirement,
    which gives them "'the opportunity to investigate the claim, to assess its liability, to attain
    settlement, and to avoid costly litigation.'" Nash v. Blatchford, 
    56 Kan. App. 2d 592
    , 613,
    
    435 P.3d 562
     (2019) (quoting U.S.D. No. 457 v. Phifer, 
    729 F. Supp. 1298
    , 1306 [D. Kan.
    1990]); see K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 12-105b(d). We find that—as a general rule—allowing
    private entities to seek refuge under these exceptions, limit their damages liability, or
    protect them from liability altogether if no pre-suit notice was provided would not serve
    the KTCA's purpose. Such a construction would limit private entity liability and provide
    them with immunities which are not found under common law and were not intended by
    the Kansas Legislature.
    Our Legislature recognizes in the text of the KTCA that private entities are
    generally not entitled to the same protections afforded to governmental entities under the
    Act by carving out an independent contractor exception from its provisions. K.S.A. 75-
    6102(d)(2)(B). Here, the parties' contract expressly identified First Student as an
    independent contractor and stated that neither First Student nor any of its employees
    "shall be held or deemed in any way to be an agent, employee or official of" the school
    district. Thus, the district court found First Student was excluded from the Act.
    First Student's status as independent contractor under its contract with the school district
    is instructive here.
    Defendants ask us to ignore the parties' contract because they claim our Supreme
    Court ignored a similar provision in Great Plains of Kiowa County, Inc. when it found
    13
    Great Plains was an instrumentality under KORA. The parties' contract in Great Plains of
    Kiowa County, Inc. noted:
    "Relationship of the Parties. Relationship between the parties is solely that of
    Lessor/Lessee. Lessee shall not represent that it is Lessor's agent and shall not incur
    liabilities or obligations in the name of Lessor. Lessee shall conduct its operations of the
    Hospital and Clinic facility in its corporate name, though it may show on its letterhead,
    'Kiowa County Hospital, Operated by Great Plains of Kiowa County, Inc.'"
    We do not find Defendants' argument persuasive. First, the language of the Great
    Plains of Kiowa County, Inc. contract was not as strong as the language of the contract
    here, which specifically identified First Student as an independent contractor. And, more
    importantly, whether Great Plains was an independent contractor was not relevant to our
    Supreme Court's analysis under KORA. This is because the language of KORA does not
    exclude independent contractors from its coverage. On the other hand, the KTCA does.
    The court in Great Plains of Kiowa County, Inc. examined the parties' relationship
    and found the parties intended the hospital managed by Great Plains "to be an arm of the
    county government," which "requested and received substantial funds from a public tax
    levy." 308 Kan. at 954-55. The parties here demonstrated no such intention that First
    Student act as an "arm" of the school district, nor does our review of the contract lead us
    to such a conclusion.
    Defendants contend that excluding them from the protections provided by the
    KTCA because they are an independent contractor would cause a governmental entity to
    lose its status as a governmental entity by contracting with another governmental entity,
    since the entity would then qualify as an independent contractor. We do not find this
    argument to be persuasive because, as explained above, we do not find First Student to be
    a governmental entity, to be an arm of a governmental entity, or to be under the control of
    a governmental entity. Moreover, a governmental entity would not lose its KTCA
    14
    protections simply by contracting with another governmental entity because it would still
    be a governmental entity.
    The purpose and language of the KTCA suggest the definition of instrumentality should
    turn on governmental control of the entity at issue.
    Certainly, the function of a private entity contracting with a governmental entity is
    important to determining whether its records should be open to the public. As our
    Supreme Court found in Great Plains of Kiowa County, Inc., records of private entities
    performing government services should be open to the public under KORA where they
    serve as an arm of a governmental entity. And while what actions or services the private
    entity performs may be relevant in determining whether one of the exceptions from
    KTCA liability applies, those actions or services do not control whether the private entity
    qualifies as an instrumentality protected by the KTCA. See K.S.A. 75-6104.
    This focus on governmental control over the entity also aligns with the KTCA's
    purpose, which is to waive immunity for governmental entities in certain situations. As a
    private for-profit corporation, First Student enjoys no common-law protection from
    liability for its actions. And it makes little—if any—sense to subjectively immunize it,
    based solely on the type of services it contracts with governmental entities to provide.
    Such a transient immunity status would provide no predictability or guidance to claimants
    desiring to sue a private entity contracting with a governmental entity.
    Historically, Kansas courts have relied on governmental control over the entity
    and not what the entity does when determining whether it is an instrumentality under the
    KTCA. While Defendants lean on Shriver v. Athletic Council of KSU, 
    222 Kan. 216
    , 
    564 P.2d 451
     (1977), and Gragg v. Wichita State Univ., 
    261 Kan. 1037
    , 
    934 P.2d 121
     (1997),
    claiming these cases hold that a private corporation acting at the direction of a state entity
    15
    is subject to the KTCA, a closer look reveals these findings turned on governmental
    control of the entities, not the services they provided.
    In Shriver, the Kansas Supreme Court looked at whether the Athletic Council of
    Kansas State University was an instrumentality of KSU and thus subject to the KTCA's
    predecessor statute, K.S.A. 46-901. In Gragg, it looked at whether Wichita State
    University's athletic association (WSUIAAI) was an instrumentality of WSU under the
    KTCA. And in both situations the court found the entities subject to the KTCA since they
    were each an "integral part" of their respective universities and each entity was
    dominated or controlled by those universities. Shriver, 
    222 Kan. at 219
     (finding KSU's
    Athletic Counsel was "completely dominated by and [was] operated as an integral part of
    the University" and was "subject to the policy and control of the University" "in its every
    activity and function"); Gragg, 
    261 Kan. at 1058
     (finding WSUIAAI was "an integral
    part of WSU, as it is controlled and operated by its employees and enjoys the same
    privileges as WSU") (citing Shriver).
    Plaintiffs similarly point to Lane v. Atchison Heritage Conference Center, Inc., 
    35 Kan. App. 2d 838
    , 
    134 P.3d 683
     (2006), as another case where whether an entity
    qualified as an instrumentality under the KTCA turned on control of the entity. In Lane,
    this court found Atchison Heritage Conference Center, Inc. (AHCC), an entity
    incorporated to manage a conference center owned by the City of Atchison, was an
    instrumentality under the KTCA. Relying on Gragg, our court noted AHCC was
    "substantially controlled by the City of Atchison through the terms of its annual lease, the
    composition of AHCC's Board, and the control over capital improvement funds for the
    conference center facilities," and was thus an instrumentality of the city. 35 Kan. App. 2d
    at 843-44.
    And, last, Plaintiffs claim Lee v. Orion Management Solutions, Inc., No. 08-2242-
    DJW, 
    2010 WL 4106696
     (D. Kan. 2010), is instructive. There, the United States District
    16
    Court for the District of Kansas considered whether Orion, a private corporation which
    managed golf courses, including one owned by the City of Leawood, was an
    instrumentality of Leawood under the KTCA. That court looked to Lane and Gragg,
    noting both decisions turned on the amount of control the governmental entity exercised
    over the private entity or whether the private entity was an integral part of the
    governmental entity. Lee, 
    2010 WL 4106696
    , at *12. And when examining the facts in
    Lane, it found Orion did not establish it was an instrumentality. When reaching this
    decision, the court noted that, unlike AHCC in Lane, Orion was not incorporated to
    manage Leawood's golf course, it was not a wholly owned subsidiary of a Leawood-
    affiliated corporation, its purpose was not the economic development of Leawood, and its
    Board of Directors was not comprised of representatives of Leawood. Rather, Orion was
    a private, outside management company engaged in the business of operating golf
    courses in general (including three other golf courses). The court also found it significant
    that Orion was paid a monthly management fee and no evidence suggested that Leawood
    advised or controlled Orion. Rather, under the agreement between Orion and Leawood,
    Orion managed and controlled its day-to-day management activities. And, last, the
    agreement between Orion and Leawood specified that Orion was an independent
    contractor and not an agent of Leawood. Lee, 
    2010 WL 4106696
    , at *12-13.
    Defendants do not address Lane or Lee, and the amicus curiae brief filed by the
    Kansas Association of Defense Counsel simply asks us to ignore these cases (as well as
    Shriver and Gragg) because it claims each of those entities was "unquestionably a
    municipality under the KTCA." But this argument begs the question since the reason
    these entities were all found to be instrumentalities (and thus municipalities) is because
    they were integral parts of or controlled by a governmental entity. Here, First Student
    does not fall into either of these categories.
    As Plaintiffs correctly note, First Student was not incorporated by a governmental
    entity to provide transportation services but was incorporated by private citizens to do
    17
    business for the benefit of its owners and shareholders. It is a private corporation serving
    many clients in addition to the school district. Nor is there any evidence that any owner,
    shareholder, officer, director, or employee of First Student is employed or otherwise
    affiliated with the school district. Although the school district exercises limited control
    over First Student through the right to approve routes, review certain reports, and request
    that First Student personnel be reassigned or busses taken out of service, the school
    district does not exercise significant control over how First Student performs its
    contractual obligations. Thus, when looking at control of the entity, First Student does not
    qualify as an instrumentality under the KTCA.
    Finally, Defendants argue that adopting the "governmental control" test applied in
    Shriver and Gragg ignores the KTCA's clear language and leads to a circular and
    illogical reading of the Act. But restricting the meaning of instrumentality under the
    KTCA to those entities which are an integral part of or controlled by a political
    subdivision of the state does not supplant the independent contractor exclusion. Instead, it
    incorporates this definition, consistent with our directive to consider various provisions of
    an act in pari materia with a view of reconciling and bringing those provisions into
    workable harmony if possible. See Beachner Constr. Co., 289 Kan. at 1270. That is, if an
    entity is subject to the control of, or integral to, a political subdivision of the state, it is an
    instrumentality. If not, it is an independent contractor excluded from the Act's coverage.
    A private entity is not an instrumentality under the KTCA just because it contracts with a
    municipality to provide statutory services.
    While Defendants ask us to ignore their contract's identification of First Student as
    an independent contractor, they ask us to heed the contractual description of the services
    they agreed to perform. Since First Student contracted to provide statutorily mandated
    transportation services for the school district, it argues it is an instrumentality of the
    school district and thus a governmental entity under the KTCA. Defendants again rely on
    18
    Great Plains of Kiowa County, Inc., since that interpretation of instrumentality under
    KORA depended on the fact that Great Plains provided a traditional government
    service—managing a county-run hospital.
    As explained above, we find that an interpretation of instrumentality which looks
    at the control or status of the entity—and not simply to what it does—is more aligned
    with the KTCA's language and purpose. And we find the facts of Great Plains of Kiowa
    County, Inc. to be distinguishable from the facts of this case. While First Student
    provided a discrete service and was not controlled by the school district, Great Plains'
    relationship with the county was so intertwined that our Supreme Court considered it to
    be an arm of the county.
    Our courts regularly employ the same well-established standards for determining
    whether someone is an employee or independent contractor under the KTCA as they use
    to answer this question in other contexts. See Nash, 56 Kan. App. 2d at 600-01. The
    "right of control" test is primarily used, but sometimes the facts of a case call for a more
    in-depth examination (looking at several factors, most of which address control of the
    employer over the employee or independent contractor's work). See Olds-Carter v.
    Lakeshore Farms, Inc., 
    45 Kan. App. 2d 390
    , 401-03, 
    250 P.3d 825
     (2011). We see no
    reason to adopt a different test to determine whether a private entity is an instrumentality
    of a governmental entity under the KTCA.
    Defendants' argument also ignores other KTCA language, which extends the Act's
    protections to certain independent contractors by including them within the definition of
    "employee." This includes individuals working for private nonprofit programs providing
    services to inmates in the custody of the secretary of corrections, employees of indigent
    healthcare clinics, and various independent contractors performing duties authorized by
    statute. See K.S.A. 75-6102(d)(1)(B), (d)(1)(D), (d)(1)(E), (d)(1)(G), (d)(1)(I), (d)(1)(J).
    If our Legislature meant to include these entities within the definition of instrumentality,
    19
    it had no need to specifically exclude them from the definition of independent contractor
    under the KTCA.
    We find that Plaintiffs persuasively argue Defendants' overbroad interpretation of
    instrumentality (which would include independent contractors) conflicts with K.S.A. 75-
    6102(d)(2)(B) and renders the enumerated list of subcontractors in K.S.A. 75-6102(d)(1)
    redundant and meaningless. Appellate courts are required to avoid construing statutes in
    such a manner if possible. See State v. Smith, 
    311 Kan. 109
    , 114, 
    456 P.3d 1004
     (2020).
    As Plaintiffs note, the Oklahoma Supreme Court persuasively dispatched a similar
    argument in Sullins v. Am. Med. Response of Oklahoma, Inc., 
    23 P.3d 259
     (2001). There,
    the court was asked to determine whether a private corporation which had contracted
    with a public trust to provide emergency medical services qualified as a "political
    subdivision" under Oklahoma's Governmental Tort Claims Act (GTCA). 
    23 P.3d at 263
    .
    While Defendants correctly note there are important differences between the GTCA and
    the KTCA, these differences do not dilute the Oklahoma court's point that simply
    contracting with a public entity to provide services to the public is insufficient to qualify
    for governmental immunity. 
    23 P.3d at 264
    .
    Similar to the Oklahoma court, we conclude that our Legislature did not intend to
    transform a private entity into a governmental entity simply because it contracts to
    provide services to the state or a municipality. Likewise, we conclude that our Legislature
    did not intend to confer governmental immunity and other KTCA protections on
    independent contractors who are neither arms of a governmental entity or under the
    control of a governmental entity. Indeed, if we were to hold otherwise, it would likely
    lead to inconsistent application of the KTCA and unfairly impede a plaintiff's ability to
    predict whether a pre-suit notice of claim is required under K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 12-105b.
    20
    Here, we find that First Student expressly represented in the contract that it is an
    independent contractor and not "in any way" "an agent, employee or official" of the
    school district. Just as we must consider all portions of a statute together when construing
    its provisions, we must construe and consider the terms of the entire contract. Russell,
    311 Kan. at 680. In other words, we cannot look at the services First Student agreed to
    provide in isolation, ignoring the rest of the parties' agreement.
    Looking to First Student's contractual status as an independent contractor is in line with
    our Supreme Court's consistent interpretation of the KTCA.
    Plaintiffs also mention that the Kansas Supreme Court has found a private
    corporation providing bussing for a school district was not a governmental entity under
    the KTCA. See Kansas State Bank & Tr. Co. v. Specialized Transportation Services, Inc.,
    
    249 Kan. 348
    , 368, 
    819 P.2d 587
     (1991). In that case, a special-needs student was
    allegedly molested by her bus driver. The bus driver worked for Specialized
    Transportation Services, Inc. (STS), which provided bussing services under a contract
    with the school district. Representatives of the student sued the driver for intentional
    battery and against STS and the school district on theories of respondeat superior,
    negligent hiring, and negligent retention and supervision of the driver. After the jury
    returned a verdict imposing liability on all three defendants, the school district and STS
    appealed. One issue on appeal was whether the school district should have been granted
    immunity under the KTCA's discretionary function exception. The school district argued
    that its failure to follow its own incident reporting procedures was a discretionary
    decision subject to immunity. Our Supreme Court found this exception did not apply.
    When describing the purpose of the KTCA, the court found:
    "In K.S.A. 75-6102(c), the term 'governmental entity' is defined to include a
    school district. Employee does not include an independent contractor under contract with
    21
    the governmental entity. K.S.A. 75-6102(d). Therefore, S.T.S. is not subject to the
    KTCA." 
    249 Kan. at 364
    .
    Defendants correctly note the finding that STS was not a governmental entity
    under the KTCA is obiter dictum and does not control here. "'Obiter dictum'" is defined
    as "'[w]ords of a prior opinion entirely unnecessary for the decision of the case.'" State v.
    Fortune, 
    236 Kan. 248
    , 251, 
    689 P.2d 1196
     (1984). At no point in the case did STS argue
    that it was subject to the KTCA, and the finding that STS was an independent contractor
    and not a governmental entity played no part in the court's analysis of the issue on appeal,
    which was application of the discretionary function exception. Kansas State Bank & Tr.
    Co., 
    249 Kan. at 366-68
    . Yet while this finding is not determinative, we do find our
    Supreme Court's view of whether a private bussing contractor is a governmental entity to
    be persuasive. This is especially true because the court recognized the importance of
    STS's status as an independent contractor in determining whether it was subject to the
    KTCA.
    We acknowledge the KTCA does not provide that a private entity can never be
    considered an instrumentality entitled to protections under the Act. The KTCA only
    excludes independent contractors that are neither arms of a governmental entity nor under
    the control of a governmental entity. But this does not mean First Student is protected by
    the KTCA under the circumstances presented in this case. This is because there is nothing
    in the contractual agreement between the parties to suggest that First Student is an
    integral part of or controlled by the school district. Instead, the contract establishes that
    First Student is an independent contractor providing contractual services to the school
    district.
    We also appreciate Defendants' desire for consistency in the law when they
    advocate for adopting our Supreme Court's definition of the term instrumentality under
    KORA. But, as noted above, we find that differences in the language and context of
    22
    KORA and the KTCA justify giving this term a narrower meaning under the KTCA. See
    Great Plains of Kiowa County, Inc., 308 Kan. at 957 ("Relying on the plain language
    selected by the legislature is the best and only safe rule for determining legislative intent,
    and such plain language takes priority over both judicial decisions and policies advocated
    by the parties.") (citing State v. Spencer Gifts, 
    304 Kan. 755
    , 761, 
    374 P.3d 680
     [2016]).
    This restrictive interpretation also aligns with Kansas courts' consistent reading of the
    KTCA in Gragg and Lane (and our Supreme Court's reading of the KTCA's predecessor
    statute in Shriver).
    In conclusion, we find that under the circumstances presented in this case, First
    Student does not qualify as an instrumentality under the KTCA because it is not an
    integral part of or controlled by the school district. Rather, we find that First Student is an
    "independent contractor under contract with a governmental entity." K.S.A. 75-
    6102(d)(2)(B). Because First Student is not an instrumentality of the school district, it
    had no right to receive pre-suit notice from the plaintiffs under K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 12-
    105b. Likewise, although we take no position on whether the district court should allow
    the plaintiffs to pursue a claim for punitive damages, we find that First Student is not
    exempt from such a claim under K.S.A. 75-6105(c). For these reasons, we affirm the
    district court's denial of summary judgment and remand this action to the district court
    for further proceedings.
    Affirmed.
    23