Samantha Killary v. Linda Thompson ( 2022 )


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  •                     RENDERED: JUNE 24, 2022; 10:00 A.M.
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2020-CA-0194-MR
    SAMANTHA KILLARY                                                        APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
    v.              HONORABLE A. C. MCKAY CHAUVIN, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 18-CI-002551
    LINDA THOMPSON; CITY OF
    LOUISVILLE/JEFFERSON COUNTY
    METRO GOVERNMENT; RICK
    JACKMAN; AND SEAN JACKMAN                                                APPELLEES
    OPINION
    REVERSING AND REMANDING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: CALDWELL, MAZE, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.
    CALDWELL, JUDGE: Samantha Killary appeals the trial court’s entry of
    dispositive orders in favor of the Appellees, terminating the litigation. Having
    reviewed the record, the trial court order, and the briefs of the parties, we reverse
    the trial court and remand this matter back to the trial court for proceedings
    consistent with this Opinion.
    FACTS
    Appellant Samantha Killary (“Killary”) was adopted by Appellee
    Sean Jackman (“Sean”) when she was a toddler, approximately two (2) years of
    age. Sean was a police officer with the Louisville Police Department, as was his
    father, Appellee Rick Jackman (“Rick”).1 Shortly after turning eighteen (18) years
    of age on February 7, 2009, Killary alleged that Sean had subjected her to sexual
    abuse throughout her childhood, ceasing only when she reached her majority.
    In 2016, Sean was charged with various criminal offenses for sexually
    abusing his adopted daughter. He entered a guilty plea in 2017 and was sentenced
    to a total sentence of fifteen (15) years’ imprisonment in January of 2018.
    On May of 2018, Killary filed a civil complaint seeking damages for
    the abuse she had suffered. In addition to Sean, the complaint named her adoptive
    grandfather, Rick, a retired Louisville Police Department detective sergeant.
    Killary alleged that Rick had knowledge of the abuse she suffered at Sean’s hands
    and failed to take any action to prevent the abuse. In addition, the complaint
    1
    Before the merger of the City of Louisville and Jefferson County in 2003 to form
    Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government, each entity had its own police force. After
    merger, both agencies became one, namely the Louisville Metro Police Department, but at the
    time of the adoption, Sean was an officer with the entity then known as the Louisville Police
    Department.
    -2-
    named Linda Thompson, (“Thompson”), also a former Louisville Police
    Department officer, who had dated Sean for several years. Killary alleged
    Thompson had likewise known about and failed to take any action to prevent
    Sean’s abuse of her, as well as alleging that Thompson had actively participated in
    the abuse. Lastly, Killary named the Louisville/Jefferson County Metro
    Government (“Metro”), alleging that they were vicariously liable for the actions of
    their employees (Sean, Rick, and Thompson) as well as claims of negligent hiring
    and retention and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
    Metro filed a motion to dismiss, citing sovereign immunity.
    Thompson, Rick, and Sean all moved to terminate the litigation, arguing that
    Killary filed her action only after the applicable statute of limitations had run. The
    trial court granted all the motions, so ruling based upon the 2007 version of the
    statute, holding that the 2017 version of the statute did not apply to Killary’s case
    because it was enacted after the acts of abuse had occurred. Killary now appeals
    the order terminating her litigation to this Court. Having reviewed the record, the
    briefs of the parties, and the applicable law, we reverse the trial court and remand
    the matter back to the trial court for further proceedings below in accord with our
    holding.
    -3-
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The determination of whether a cause of action was filed before the
    lapse of the applicable statute of limitations is a question of law. Questions of law
    are reviewed by appellate courts de novo. Estate of Wittich By & Through Wittich
    v. Flick, 
    519 S.W.3d 774
    , 776 (Ky. 2017).
    Whether an entity is entitled to sovereign immunity is likewise a
    question of law, to be reviewed de novo. Louisville Arena Auth., Inc. v. RAM
    Eng’g & Const., Inc., 
    415 S.W.3d 671
    , 677 (Ky. App. 2013).
    ANALYSIS
    This case presents two questions for this Court: whether the trial
    court properly determined that Killary’s cause of action was filed beyond the
    applicable statute of limitations, and whether Metro was entitled to sovereign
    immunity. Utilizing the version of the statute in place at the time the abuse
    occurred, the trial court determined the action was filed untimely and that Metro
    was entitled to sovereign immunity and dismissed Killary’s case.
    After the trial court entered the order dismissing, and while this appeal
    was pending, the General Assembly passed another amended version of the statute.
    This new iteration of the statute states expressly that it is to be applied retroactively
    to claims which may have expired prior to the enactment of the 2021 version of the
    statute and also makes retroactive the 2017 version that the trial court refused to
    -4-
    apply to Killary’s case because of the lack of retroactivity language in the statute at
    that time.2 Therefore, we must determine if the version of the statute the trial court
    was applying, effective beginning in 2007, was the proper version to apply to
    Killary’s causes of action, or if the 2017 version was applicable. And further, if
    the newly-enacted 2021 version of the statute, which provides a new starting point
    for the running of statutes of limitations to be applied retroactively, applies, and to
    which defendants.
    I.    Timeliness
    At the time Killary alleged the abuse ended and she attained majority,
    in 2009, the statute providing a cause of action for the victims of child sexual
    abuse to seek remuneration provided any action must be filed within five (5) years
    of the latest of several events:
    2
    Kentucky Revised Statute (“KRS”) 413.249(7):
    (a) As was its intention with the passage of 2017 Ky. Acts ch. 114,
    sec. 2, the General Assembly hereby states that the
    amendments enacted in 2017 Ky. Acts ch. 114, sec. 2 shall be
    applied retroactively to actions accruing before its effective
    date of June 29, 2017. This section is a remedial statute which
    is to be given the most liberal interpretation to provide
    remedies for victims of childhood sexual assault or abuse.
    (b) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, any
    claim for childhood sexual assault or abuse that was barred as
    of March 23, 2021, because the applicable statute of limitations
    had expired is hereby revived, and the action may be brought if
    commenced within five (5) years of the date on which the
    applicable statute of limitations expired.
    -5-
    (2) A civil action for recovery of damages for injury or
    illness suffered as a result of childhood sexual abuse or
    childhood sexual assault shall be brought before
    whichever of the following periods last expires:
    (a) Within five (5) years of the commission of the
    act or the last of a series of acts by the same
    perpetrator;
    (b) Within five (5) years of the date the victim
    knew, or should have known, of the act; or
    (c) Within five (5) years after the victim attains the
    age of eighteen (18) years.
    KRS 413.249 (as effective June 26, 2007, to June 24, 2013).3
    Killary did not file her complaint until May 2, 2018. Under the
    language of the statute in effect at the time the abuse occurred, the complaint was
    filed untimely. She turned eighteen (18) years of age in 2009 and per the 2007
    statute, she had five (5) years to file her action from that date, so under that version
    of the statute the time to file expired in 2014. Thus, Killary’s complaint was not
    timely under the 2007 version of the statute.
    However, Killary argued to the trial court that a later amendment was
    applicable to her complaint. In 2017, the General Assembly had amended the
    statute to expand the limitations period to the events that would begin the running
    3
    The amendment effective June 25, 2013, until June 28, 2017, did not change the limitations
    language.
    -6-
    thereof and added another event that would trigger the running of the statute of
    limitations period:
    (2) A civil action for recovery of damages for injury or
    illness suffered as a result of childhood sexual abuse or
    childhood sexual assault shall be brought before
    whichever of the following periods last expires:
    (a) Within ten (10) years of the commission of the act
    or the last of a series of acts by the same
    perpetrator;
    (b) Within ten (10) years of the date the victim knew,
    or should have known, of the act;
    (c) Within ten (10) years after the victim attains the
    age of eighteen (18) years; or
    (d) Within ten (10) years of the conviction of a civil
    defendant for an offense included in the definition
    of childhood sexual abuse or childhood sexual
    assault.
    KRS 413.249 (as effective June 29, 2017, to March 22, 2021).
    Under this amendment, Killary would have had ten (10) years after
    she reached the age of majority in 2009, or ten (10) years following the conviction
    of Sean for his crimes against her, whichever was later. Sean entered a guilty plea
    in October of 2017 and was sentenced in January of 2018.
    The trial court determined that the 2017 amendments did not apply to
    Killary’s claim. The trial court determined that only the 1998 version of the
    -7-
    statute, which established the cause of action, provided for retroactive application,4
    and that the 2017 amendment did not so provide. Thus, the court reasoned, the
    version of the statute which was applicable to her claim was the version in place
    when she attained her majority; to wit, the 2007 version, which provided only five
    (5) years in which to file a claim, resulting in her claim having expired in 2014.5
    As the court noted, at the time of their passage, there was nothing in
    the 2017 amendments to indicate that they were to be retroactively applied.
    Further, under KRS 446.080(3), “[n]o statute shall be construed to be retroactive,
    unless expressly so declared.” See Holcim v. Swinford, 
    581 S.W.3d 37
    , 44 (Ky.
    2019).
    4
    See 1998 Kentucky Acts Ch. 577, SB 53 (“Section 2. This Act shall apply to all actions which
    accrue before or after the date this Act becomes law. The General Assembly finds that
    retroactive effect is necessary to provide uniform justice to the victims of sexual offenses who
    were children when the offenses occurred.”).
    See also Doe v. Roman Cath. Diocese of Covington, No. 03-CI-00181, 
    2006 WL 250694
    ,
    at *2 n.2 (Ky. Cir. Ct. Jan. 31, 2006) (“This statute was enacted in 1998 and was retroactive.
    1998 Ky. Acts, Ch 577, Sec 2.”).
    5
    KRS 413.249 has been amended several times. In fact, the first iteration was effective in 1998.
    The version applicable to Killary’s claim, according to the trial court’s ruling, was the version
    which was effective at the time she reached her majority in 2009, which was the first time the
    statute was amended, effective June 26, 2007.
    The 2017 amendments changed the limitations period from five (5) years to ten (10)
    years and added as a triggering event the criminal prosecution of a person charged with a sexual
    offense against the plaintiff.
    The 2021 amendments made several changes to the statute, adding not only retroactivity
    language, but also establishing that an “entity” could be held liable under the statute and also
    included some evidentiary provisions. This is discussed, infra.
    -8-
    Even so, we find that the trial court erred in not applying the 2017
    version of the statute to Killary’s claim against Sean. Under KRS 413.249(2)(d) of
    that version, Killary had ten years from the day that Sean was convicted of the
    crimes against her to initiate her suit, and he was convicted in 2017 and sentenced
    in 2018. Retroactivity language, or lack thereof, is a red herring as to this
    subsection of the statute; at the time Killary filed her action, subsection (2)(d) was
    in effect and gave her a term of limitations of ten (10) years from Sean’s
    conviction, which was finalized with his sentencing in 2018. The trial court’s
    ruling that Killary’s complaint was out of time as to subsections (a), (b), and (c) of
    the 2007 version of the statute was correct. And the longer provisions of ten years
    for the triggering events in subsections (a), (b), and (c) in the 2017 statute could
    not be applied to Sean as he had “vested rights” in the running of the statutes of
    limitations from those events, at that time. But the creation of a new triggering
    event in the 2017 version can and shall be applied in this case.6 Sean had no vested
    right to the statute of limitations running upon his conviction because that right did
    not exist until the 2017 amendments to the statute. There can be no “revival” of an
    action or defense that heretofore did not exist.
    Killary filed her claim in 2018, after the effective date of the 2017
    version of the statute which established the statute of limitation which we hold
    6
    See discussion of “vested rights” in the running of statutes of limitation, supra.
    -9-
    applies to the claim against Sean, to wit, “(d) [w]ithin ten (10) years of the
    conviction of a civil defendant for an offense included in the definition of
    childhood sexual abuse or childhood sexual assault.” KRS 413.249, as amended in
    2017. We, therefore, remand this matter back to the Jefferson Circuit Court for
    further proceedings as to the case against Sean, having reversed the court’s
    determination that the complaint was untimely.
    Turning now to the claims against the other defendants, under the
    most recent version of the statute, third parties may be liable for damages suffered
    by a victim due to the abusive acts of another if the third party is found to have had
    a duty to the victim of the abuse and failed to act reasonably as to that duty. The
    relevant portion of KRS 413.249 as amended in 2021 states:
    (5) A victim of childhood sexual assault or abuse shall
    not have a cause of action against a third party, unless the
    third party failed to act as a reasonable person or entity in
    complying with their duties to the victim. If a victim of
    childhood sexual assault or abuse has a cause of action
    under this section, the cause of action shall be
    commenced within the time period set forth in subsection
    (2) of this section.
    As argued by the Appellees, and as noted by this Court, the trial court
    had no opportunity to determine if Thompson, Rick, or Metro would be subject to
    liability under the new statute, so we remand for that consideration. Insofar that
    the trial court determined that the former statute of limitations applied to the third-
    -10-
    party defendants, we find that the specific limitations period in the 2021 version of
    the statute applies and Killary’s claims have not expired.
    Generally, once a claim expires with the running of the applicable
    statute of limitation, a later change in the statute cannot revive the expired claim.7
    This is because a defendant has a “vested right” in the expiration of a statute of
    limitations.
    Statutes of limitation serve important purposes. They encourage the
    filing of actions as close to the injury as practicable, guarding against spoliation of
    evidence and providing potential defendants with peace of mind as time passes so
    as not to be surprised by a stale claim.
    It is also consistent with the overarching purpose behind
    statutes of limitations. “Statutes of limitations ‘promote
    justice by preventing surprises through [plaintiffs’]
    revival of claims that have been allowed to slumber until
    evidence has been lost, memories have faded, and
    witnesses have disappeared.’” CTS Corp. v. Waldburger,
    
    573 U.S. 1
    , 8-9, 
    134 S. Ct. 2175
    , 
    189 L. Ed. 2d 62
     (2014)
    (quoting Railroad Telegraphers v. Railway Express
    Agency, Inc., 
    321 U.S. 342
    , 348-349, 
    64 S. Ct. 582
    , 
    88 L. Ed. 788
     (1944)).
    Smith v. Fletcher, 
    613 S.W.3d 18
    , 27 (Ky. 2020).
    7
    “Although an amendment that extends the period of limitation may be applied to a claim in
    which the period has not already run, it may not be applied to revive a claim that has expired
    without impairing vested rights.” Johnson v. Gans Furniture Indus., Inc., 
    114 S.W.3d 850
    , 854-
    55 (Ky. 2003) (citations omitted).
    -11-
    Statutes of limitation may also act as an affirmative defense to a suit,
    providing the party forwarding the defense a “vested right” in the running of the
    statutory period. For example, we hold Sean had such a “vested right” as to the
    five (5) year statute of limitation in place at the time Killary became an adult under
    KRS 413.249(2)(c) in the 2007 version of the statute, so that even the 2017 version
    of the statute under 413.249(2)(c), which provided the longer term of ten (10) years
    following the majority of the accuser, could not properly be applied as to him. His
    defense having vested at the expiry of five (5) years under the 2007 version of the
    statute would not allow for the revival of the claim. The General Assembly cannot
    revive a claim through legislation once a defendant has a “vested right,” as did
    Sean here as to subsection (2)(c).
    Kentucky case law supports the assertion that the
    affirmative defense of an expired statute of limitation is a
    vested right of which a defendant cannot be divested
    through legislative action. Lawrence v. City of
    Louisville, 
    96 Ky. 595
    , 
    29 S.W. 450
    , 451 (1895) (holding
    that, if a right to maintain an action has lapsed, “no
    legislative authority can reimpose the obligation” upon
    the defendant). This fits with the rule stated in Barnes,
    Stone, and Kiser. Thus, if any Plaintiff’s statute of
    limitations under KRS 413.249 expired before the filing
    of suit, that right became vested and cannot be divested
    through the 2017 Amendment of KRS 413.249.
    B.L. v. Schuhmann, 
    380 F. Supp. 3d 614
    , 641 (W.D. Ky. 2019).
    The relevant portions of the statute as amended in 2021 are as follows:
    -12-
    (7) (a) As was its intention with the passage of 2017 Ky.
    Acts ch. 114, sec. 2, the General Assembly hereby
    states that the amendments enacted in 2017 Ky. Acts
    ch. 114, sec. 2 shall be applied retroactively to actions
    accruing before its effective date of June 29, 2017.
    This section is a remedial statute which is to be given
    the most liberal interpretation to provide remedies for
    victims of childhood sexual assault or abuse.
    (b) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary,
    any claim for childhood sexual assault or abuse that
    was barred as of March 23, 2021, because the
    applicable statute of limitations had expired is hereby
    revived, and the action may be brought if commenced
    within five (5) years of the date on which the
    applicable statute of limitations expired.
    KRS 413.249 (as amended in 2021).
    The rules of statutory interpretation compel us to interpret statutes
    consistent with the clear intent of the legislation. And clearly, the General
    Assembly wanted to ensure all child victims of sexual abuse were entitled to seek
    compensation from those responsible for the lasting harm caused by such actions,
    not just the perpetrators. “In other words, we assume that the ‘[Legislature] meant
    exactly what it said, and said exactly what it meant.’ Only ‘when [it] would
    produce an injustice or ridiculous result’ should we ignore the plain meaning of a
    statute.” Revenue Cabinet v. O’Daniel, 
    153 S.W.3d 815
    , 819 (Ky. 2005) (citations
    omitted).
    Further, statutes which are remedial, that is, which are seeking to
    correct a past injustice or promote an important public policy, should be interpreted
    -13-
    in a manner consistent with remediating the wrong they are designed to correct.
    Therefore, retroactive application of remedial statutes is proper. The 2021 version
    of the statute is expressly made remedial in its language.8
    However, the general rule is that “where the amendment
    represents a procedural or remedial change only . . .
    ‘legislation has been applied to causes of action which
    arose before its effective date[.]’” Schmidt v. S. Cent.
    Bell, 
    340 S.W.3d 591
    , 595 (Ky. App. 2011) (quoting
    Spurlin v. Adkins, 
    940 S.W.2d 900
    , 901 (Ky. 1997)).
    Legislation is remedial if it seeks to reform or extend
    existing rights aimed at the “promotion of justice and the
    advancement of the public welfare and of important and
    beneficial public objects.” Kentucky Ins. Guar. Ass’n v.
    Jeffers ex rel. Jeffers, 
    13 S.W.3d 606
    , 610 (Ky. 2000)
    (quoting 73 Am.Jur.2d Statutes § 11 (1974)). In fact, the
    term remedial applies to statutes which give a party a
    remedy where he previously had none. Id.
    Virgil v. Commonwealth, 
    403 S.W.3d 577
    , 580 (Ky. App. 2013).
    When interpreting a statute, a court should “give effect to the intent of
    the General Assembly.” Beckham v. Bd. of Educ., 
    873 S.W.2d 575
    , 577 (Ky.
    1994).
    [W]e must look first to the plain language of a statute
    and, if the language is clear, our inquiry ends. We hold
    fast to the rule of construction that the plain meaning of
    the statutory language is presumed to be what the
    legislature intended, and if the meaning is plain, then the
    court cannot base its interpretation on any other method
    or source. In other words, we assume that the Legislature
    8
    “This section is a remedial statute which is to be given the most liberal interpretation to provide
    remedies for victims of childhood sexual assault or abuse.” KRS 413.249(7)(a).
    -14-
    meant exactly what it said, and said exactly what it
    meant.
    Merritt v. Cath. Health Initiatives, Inc., 
    612 S.W.3d 822
    , 829 (Ky. 2020) (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted) (citing University of Louisville v. Rothstein,
    
    532 S.W.3d 644
    , 648 (Ky. 2017)).
    Further, we must interpret statutes in such a way that all parts and
    subsections of a statute are given effect.
    “One of the most basic interpretative canons” of statutory
    interpretation is that “[a] statute should be construed so
    that effect is given to all its provisions, so that no part
    will be inoperative or superfluous, void or
    insignificant[.]” Corley v. United States, 
    556 U.S. 303
    ,
    314, 
    129 S. Ct. 1558
    , 
    173 L. Ed. 2d 443
     (2009) (quoting
    Hibbs v. Winn, 
    542 U.S. 88
    , 101, 
    124 S. Ct. 2276
    , 
    159 L. Ed. 2d 172
     (2004) (internal citation omitted)).
    Travelers Indem. Co. v. Armstrong, 
    565 S.W.3d 550
    , 563 (Ky. 2018).
    We hold that as to Thompson, Rick, and Metro, the 2021 amendments
    must be applied in this instance so as to ensure the intent of the General Assembly
    is given due respect. Further, there is a finite class of litigants that fall into the gap
    between the enactment of the 2017 version of the statute, which was not expressly
    retroactive, and the clear intent of the General Assembly through the 2021
    amendment to make the 2017 version apply retroactively. In such situations, cases
    which are still pending, as is this one now before an appellate court, shall get the
    benefit of temporary retroactivity.
    -15-
    Here, the language in the Act regarding retroactivity is
    temporary. It applies to those cases which “have not
    been fully and finally adjudicated, or are in the appellate
    process, or for which time to file an appeal as not lapsed,
    as of the effective date of this Act.” For any new injuries
    and claims, the retroactivity of the Act will not be an
    issue. Therefore, the language is only relevant to a
    particular time frame and once cases arising during that
    time frame are fully adjudicated, it will be unnecessary.
    Holcim, 581 S.W.3d at 44 (Ky. 2019).
    It was not until the 2021 amendments that the statute provided a basis
    for litigation against third parties who owed a duty to the victim and failed to act
    reasonably, here Thompson,9 Rick, and Metro. The question then is whether they
    had a “vested right” in the expiry of any relevant statute of limitation.
    By the time the 2021 amendments were enacted, the third-party
    defendants had “vested rights” in the running of the only applicable statute of
    limitation in place at the time of the filing, to wit, the statute pertaining to general
    personal injury liability, for which there is a one-year limitations period pursuant to
    KRS 413.140(1)(a).10 However, a more specific statute shall apply over a general
    statute and the 2021 version of the statute expressly provided a cause of action
    9
    Although Killary alleges that Thompson was an active participant in the abuse she suffered, she
    is also named as a third party, and it is in that role that we discuss the case against her here. We
    discuss the suit as against Louisville Metro, infra.
    10
    “(1) The following actions shall be commenced within one (1) year after the cause of action
    accrued: (a) An action for an injury to the person of the plaintiff, or of her husband, his wife,
    child, ward, apprentice, or servant[.]” KRS 413.140 (1)(a).
    -16-
    against third parties who “failed to act as a reasonable person or entity in
    complying with their duties to the victim.” KRS 413.249(5).11
    The statute of limitation provided for filing of such a claim is the
    same as applies to the perpetrator under section (2) of the statute.12 Thus, if any or
    11
    “Our rules of statutory construction are that a special statute preempts a general statute, that a
    later statute is given effect over an earlier statute, and that because statutes of limitation are in
    derogation of a presumptively valid claim, a longer period of limitations should prevail where
    two statutes are arguably applicable.” Troxell v. Trammell, 
    730 S.W.2d 525
    , 528 (Ky. 1987).
    See also Bevin v. Beshear, 
    526 S.W.3d 89
    , 91, n.6 (Ky. 2017):
    “. . . Kentucky follows the rule of statutory construction that the
    more specific statute controls over the more general statute.” Light
    v. City of Louisville, 
    248 S.W.3d 559
    , 563 (Ky. 2008); see Withers
    v. University of Kentucky, 
    939 S.W.2d 340
     (Ky. 1997); City of
    Bowling Green v. Board of Education of Bowling Green
    Independent School District, 
    443 S.W.2d 243
     (Ky. 1969). This
    Court reaffirmed that principle in 2013 with Abel v. Austin when
    we stated, “where there is both a specific statute and a general
    statute seemingly applicable to the same subject [the rule] is that
    the specific statute controls.” Abel v. Austin, 
    411 S.W.3d 728
    , 738
    (Ky. 2013) (citing Parts Depot, Inc. v. Beiswenger, 
    170 S.W.3d 354
    , 361 (Ky. 2005)) (quoting Meyers v. Chapman Printing Co.,
    Inc., 
    840 S.W.2d 814
    , 819 (Ky. 1992)). Further, “where an
    apparent conflict in statutes exists, the later statute is given effect
    over an earlier statute.” Bowling v. Kentucky Dep’t of Corr., 
    301 S.W.3d 478
    , 491 (Ky. 2009) (quoting Troxell v. Trammell, 
    730 S.W.2d 525
    , 528 (Ky. 1987)).
    12
    (2) A civil action for recovery of damages for injury or illness suffered as a result of childhood
    sexual assault or abuse shall be brought before whichever of the following periods last
    expires:
    (a) Within ten (10) years of the commission of the act or the last of a series of acts by
    the same perpetrator;
    (b) Within ten (10) years of the date the victim knew, or should have known, of the
    act;
    (c) Within ten (10) years after the victim attains the age of eighteen (18) years; or
    -17-
    all of the third-party defendants are found to have had a duty to Killary and failed
    to act reasonably in complying with that duty, the statute of limitations for such
    claim shall be ten (10) years from Sean’s conviction, which appears to be the last
    of the enumerated events to expire under the 2021 statute. Thus, we remand to the
    trial court to determine whether any such duty existed for either Thompson, Rick,
    or Metro, and, if so, whether any of them failed to act reasonably as to such duty.
    II.    Sovereign Immunity
    Metro argued to the trial court, and continues to argue on appeal, that
    sovereign immunity bars Killary’s suit from proceeding against it. The trial court
    agreed and dismissed the case against it on those grounds. “Louisville Metro is
    entitled to sovereign immunity as a matter of statute.” Bryant v. Louisville Metro
    Hous. Auth., 
    568 S.W.3d 839
    , 844 n.3 (Ky. 2019) (citing KRS 67C.101(2)(e)) (“A
    consolidated local government shall be accorded the same sovereign immunity
    granted counties, their agencies, officers, and employees.”).13
    (d) Within ten (10) years of the conviction of a civil defendant for an offense
    included in the definition of childhood sexual assault or abuse.
    KRS 413.249(2).
    13
    See Lexington-Fayette Urban Cty. Gov’t v. Smolcic, 
    142 S.W.3d 128
    , 132 (Ky. 2004) (“urban
    county governments constitute a new classification of county government . . . entitled to
    sovereign immunity”).
    -18-
    Killary argues that the 2021 amendments to KRS 413.249 act to
    abrogate sovereign immunity by adding “entity” to the possible defendants to be
    named in a complaint arising from the cause of action established in the statute.
    (b) “Entity” means a firm, partnership, company,
    corporation, trustee, association, or any private or public
    entity, including the Commonwealth, a city, county,
    urban-county, consolidated local government, unified
    local government, or charter county government, or any
    of their agencies, departments, or any KRS 58.180
    nonprofit nonstock corporation[.]
    KRS 413.249(1)(b).
    Having determined that the 2021 amendments provide for Killary’s
    case to proceed against the third-party defendants, we will remand the question of
    whether the addition of “entity” to the statute with the 2021 amendments shall
    provide for the suit against Metro to proceed to trial. The trial court shall
    determine whether the General Assembly waived sovereign immunity with the
    enactment of the 2021 amendment with regard to Metro. If it is determined that
    Metro is not entitled to sovereign immunity, the trial court shall then determine if
    Killary can provide sufficient proof to prove liability under KRS 413.249(3)(b).
    CONCLUSION
    We hold that the trial court erred in not applying the 2017 amendment
    creating a new event, Sean’s criminal convictions as to the acts of sexual abuse
    perpetrated on Killary, for the running of the statute of limitation as to Killary’s
    -19-
    case against Sean. Further, having determined that we must remand this matter
    back to the trial court for the above-mentioned error, we order the circuit court, on
    remand, to analyze the claims against Thompson and Rick, as well as Metro, given
    the 2021 amendment to KRS 413.249 and its creation of new causes of action
    against third parties and “entities.”
    MCNEILL, JUDGE, CONCURS.
    MAZE, JUDGE, DISSENTS AND FILES SEPARATE OPINION.
    MAZE, JUDGE, DISSENTING: It is with great regret that I must respectfully
    dissent from the majority as to the retroactive application of KRS 413.249.
    On July 15, 1998, KRS 413.249 was enacted. At that time, it placed a
    five-year limitations period on civil actions for childhood sexual abuse triggered by
    1) the victim’s eighteenth birthday; 2) the last act of abuse; or 3) the date on which
    he/she knew or should have known that he/she had been abused, whichever event
    was latest in time. Although there were amendments in 2007 and 2013, the
    limitations period was not altered until 2017.
    Appellant turned eighteen in 2009. Based on her complaint, it appears
    that was the last year she experienced childhood sexual abuse at the hands of
    Appellee, Sean Jackman. As noted above, the applicable statute of limitations at
    that time was five years from the date of the statutory triggering event. Thus, she
    must have filed her complaint by 2014.
    -20-
    Similarly, her complaint alleges that she was subjected to childhood
    sexual abuse by Appellee Linda Thompson, at some time during Thompson’s
    relationship with Sean Jackman, from 2001-2003. Therefore, Appellant would
    have had to file her claim as to childhood sexual abuse by Thompson no later than
    2008.
    However, no complaint was filed until May 2, 2018, several years
    after the applicable statute of limitations for the claims against these two Appellees
    had run.
    It is well-established that a statute of limitation cannot be retroactively
    extended after it has run. In Lawrence v. City of Louisville, 
    96 Ky. 595
    , 
    29 S.W. 450
     (1895), the Court considered whether the six-month statute of limitations for
    negligence actions against the city could be employed to bar such an action where
    a one-year limitations period was in effect at the time the demurrer was overruled
    by the trial court. The former Court of Appeals, then the highest Court in the state,
    held that:
    We believe the right of defense is just as important as the
    right to bring an action. When the right to recover
    property has been extinguished because of the statute of
    limitation, we say that the one who thus holds has a
    vested right. He acquired it, not by a moral, but a legal,
    remedy. He is, then, beyond the power of the legislature
    to divest him of his rights therein, except by his consent
    or due process of law.
    Id. at 603, 29 S.W at 452.
    -21-
    Similarly, in Stone v. Thompson, 
    460 S.W.2d 809
    , 810 (Ky. 1970), the
    Court reiterated that Lawrence, 
    supra,
     remained the applicable law, holding firmly,
    “There is no vested right in the running of the statute of limitations unless it has
    completely run and barred the action, so that as to existing causes of action which
    are not barred, the statute may be amended, suspended or repealed.” (Emphasis
    added.)
    More recently, in 1993, the Kentucky Supreme Court addressed a
    legislative change in the statute of limitations applicable to asbestos claims.
    William A. Pope Co. v. Howard, 
    851 S.W.2d 460
    , 462 (Ky. 1993). The Court
    relied upon the case of Kiser v. Bartley Mining Company, 
    397 S.W.2d 56
     (Ky.
    1965), noting that “Kiser endorses retroactivity for those claims which have
    accrued before the date of amendment but are not already time-barred. In other
    words, when the ‘old’ limitation has not already run out, a claimant with a
    right of action will have the benefit of the ‘new’ limitation.” William A. Pope
    Co., 851 S.W.2d at 462 (emphasis added). As recognized once again in
    Officeware v. Jackson, 
    247 S.W.3d 887
    , 890 (Ky. 2008), retroactivity may only
    impact a statute of limitations which has not yet vested.
    The 2017 amendments to KRS 413.249 (effective June 29, 2017)
    expanded the statute of limitations to ten years from the date of the triggering
    event. The General Assembly included an additional triggering event, the
    -22-
    conviction of the perpetrator. If this limitation period applies, the claims against
    Appellee Thompson for acts of abuse would still have been untimely. However,
    the limitations period for Appellant’s claim as to Appellee Sean Jackman would
    have been extended to ten years from the date of his conviction.
    However, the 2017 amendments were silent as to the issue of
    retroactivity and therefore it must be presumed that the General Assembly intended
    their application to be prospective only. Indeed, in B.L. v. Schuhmann, 
    380 F. Supp. 3d 614
    , 641 (W.D. Ky. 2019), the federal court concluded that “. . . if any
    Plaintiff’s statute of limitations under KRS 413.249 expired before the filing of
    suit, that right became vested and cannot be divested through the 2017 Amendment
    of KRS 413.249.”
    Most recently, in Doe v. Logan, 
    602 S.W.3d 177
     (Ky. App. 2020), a
    suit by abused students against school employees who failed to report abuse, one
    of the victims argued that “KRS 413.249 allows an action relating to childhood
    sexual abuse or childhood sexual assault to be brought within ten (10) years after
    the victim attains the age of eighteen (18) years.” Id. at 188. This Court rejected
    that argument, instead finding that “[t]he extended ten-year limitations period
    under KRS 413.249 does not apply to claims against non-perpetrator third parties.
    B.L. v. Schuhmann, 
    380 F. Supp. 3d 614
     (W.D. Ky. 2019).” 
    Id.
     Thus, it is also
    -23-
    clear that the statute of limitations for claims against the remaining Appellees
    cannot be extended to ten years.
    It was not until the enactment of the 2021 amendments that the issue
    of the retroactivity of the 2017 amendment was addressed. The 2021 version of
    KRS 413.249 adds subsections 7(a) and (b) which provide that:
    (7) (a) As was its intention with the passage of 2017 Ky.
    Acts ch. 114, sec. 2, the General Assembly hereby
    states that the amendments enacted in 2017 Ky. Acts
    ch. 114, sec. 2 shall be applied retroactively to actions
    accruing before its effective date of June 29, 2017.
    This section is a remedial statute which is to be given
    the most liberal interpretation to provide remedies for
    victims of childhood sexual assault or abuse.
    (b) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary,
    any claim for childhood sexual assault or abuse that
    was barred as of March 23, 2021, because the
    applicable statute of limitations had expired is hereby
    revived, and the action may be brought if commenced
    within five (5) years of the date on which the
    applicable statute of limitations expired.
    While this is a tactic to revisit an issue that should have been raised in
    2017, it cannot operate to reverse by legislative fiat what has long been the law of
    this Commonwealth. Indeed, the Legislative Research Commission Note dated
    March 23, 2021, specifically states that the 2021 amendments apply only to
    “causes of action accruing on or after [March 23, 2021], and to causes of action
    accruing before [March 23, 2021], if the applicable statute of limitations, as it
    existed prior to [March 23, 2021], has not yet run before [March 23, 2021].”
    -24-
    (Emphasis added.) Thus, as to the claims against Appellees Sean Jackman and
    Linda Thompson, I simply cannot find that Appellant’s complaint was timely filed.
    Therefore, the trial court did not err in dismissing her claims.
    However, not only does the 2021 amendment extend the statute of
    limitations applicable to the perpetrator to ten years, but it also created expanded
    liability for any “entity” that “owed a duty of care to the plaintiff.” KRS
    413.249(3)(a) and (b). This encompasses the claims against Appellee Rick
    Jackman and Appellee City of Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government, as
    well as the claim against Appellee Linda Thompson as an agent of
    Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government rather than in her capacity as a
    perpetrator of abuse.
    In Peach v. 21 Brands Distillery, 
    580 S.W.2d 235
     (Ky. App. 1979),
    this Court distinguished between cases involving the imposition of a new duty and
    those addressed to “a mere passive extension of time.” 
    Id. at 237
    . Peach suffered
    a myocardial infarction on his employer’s premises in 1973. He did not file his
    worker’s compensation claim until 1976. However, in 1974 an amended version
    of KRS 342.186 went into effect which imposed an additional duty of notification
    on the employer. Peach argued that his employer’s failure to comply with that
    requirement prevented the statute of limitation from running on his claim. On
    appeal, the Court noted, “Whether a statute is to operate retrospectively, or
    -25-
    prospectively only, may depend on legislative intent, but courts apply a strict rule
    of construction against retrospective operation and presume that legislatures
    intended a prospective application, especially when new rights and duties are
    created.” 
    Id.
     The Court then concluded that, since the notice requirement was not
    in effect at the time of injury, the employer was not required to comply.
    I would conclude by noting that to apply either the 2017 or the 2021
    amendments to Appellee City of Louisville/Jefferson County Metro Government
    would be particularly egregious as it would penalize the City for failing to learn of
    the conduct in question and to put an end to it, at a time when it had no duty to do
    so. The language defining “entity” to include a “consolidated local government”
    was not contained in the 2017 amendment which the General Assembly attempted
    to render retroactive. It has long been held that consolidated local governments are
    entitled to claim sovereign immunity. Fields v. Lexington-Fayette Urban County
    Government, 
    91 S.W. 3d 110
     (Ky. App. 2001). Thus, Appellant has once again
    attempted to deprive a party of a vested defense. Retroactivity can clearly not be
    utilized for this purpose. See Lawrence, 
    supra.
    Although I am most sympathetic to the General Assembly’s clearly
    expressed intention to expand the remedies available to victims of childhood
    sexual abuse as well as the majority’s desire to extend the applicable statute of
    limitation in order to enable Appellant to obtain some measure of relief in this
    -26-
    case, the fact remains that there is clearly established case law precluding such an
    interpretation. I must therefore conclude that, although the result in this case is
    indeed harsh, the General Assembly was not authorized to revive causes of action
    where the applicable limitation period lapsed prior to enactment of the statutory
    amendment. Similarly, any application of this amendment to alleviate the severity
    of the result herein exceeds the authority of this Court on appeal, since the matter
    was never before the trial court.
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEE
    LOUISVILLE/JEFFERSON
    Tad Thomas                                 COUNTY METRO GOVERNMENT:
    Lindsay Cordes
    Lindsy Lopez                               Michael J. O’Connell
    Louisville, Kentucky                       Jefferson County Attorney
    Kristie B. Walker
    Assistant Jefferson County Attorney
    Louisville Kentucky
    BRIEF FOR APPELLEE RICK
    JACKMAN:
    Kent Wicker
    William H. Brammell, Jr.
    Kayla M. Campbell
    Erin M. Shaughnessy
    Louisville, Kentucky
    BRIEF FOR APPELLEE LINDA
    THOMPSON:
    Carol S. Petitt
    Adam E. Fuller
    Pewee Valley, Kentucky
    -27-