Terri Bradshaw v. Capital Community economic/industrial Development Authority

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 5, 2025
Docket2024-CA-1259
StatusPublished

This text of Terri Bradshaw v. Capital Community economic/industrial Development Authority (Terri Bradshaw v. Capital Community economic/industrial Development Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terri Bradshaw v. Capital Community economic/industrial Development Authority, (Ky. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 5, 2025; 10:00 A.M. TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2024-CA-1259-MR

TERRI BRADSHAW APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE PHILLIP J. SHEPHERD, JUDGE ACTION NO. 24-CI-00151

CAPITAL COMMUNITY ECONOMIC/ INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY d/b/a KENTUCKY CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION APPELLEE

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: EASTON, A. JONES, AND LAMBERT, JUDGES.

JONES, A., JUDGE: Terri Bradshaw appeals the Franklin Circuit Court’s

summary dismissal of claims she asserted against the above-captioned appellee

(“KCDC”), her former employer, for breach of contract and alleged violations of Kentucky’s Open Meetings Act and Whistleblower Act. Each of her claims are

discussed in depth below. Upon review, we affirm.

1. Breach of contract for failing to hire an executive assistant and offering an insufficient amount to compensate for vacation and comp time

a. Background

While the record in this matter is relatively small, the nature of

Bradshaw’s claims, how they were resolved below, and her appellate arguments

relative to them are complex and require a thorough understanding of this case’s

procedural history. Bradshaw asserted four ostensible “breach of contract” claims

against KCDC, but the first three of them (discussed here) were separate aspects of

just one overarching claim. The relevant sections of her February 14, 2024

complaint were as follows:

9. On January 16, 2019, [Bradshaw] and KCDC signed an employment contract wherein [Bradshaw] would serve as KCDC’s President and Chief Executive Officer for five (5) years starting on January 15, 2019[,] until January 15, 2024. Exhibit 1 – Contract.

10. [Bradshaw] was to be paid $90,000.00 per year with the potential to “receive annual raises as determined by the board in accordance with performance evaluations, to be done annually.”

11. [Bradshaw’s] salary was raised to $100,000.00 in 2020. No additional raises extended during the Contract term.

-2- 12. [Bradshaw] was entitled to the same fringe benefits, “including holidays, vacations, and sick leave, as regular full-time employees of Franklin County.”

13. Additionally, [Bradshaw] was to be supplied with “one (1) full-time executive assistant” at KCDC’s expense.

... COUNT I – BREACH OF CONTRACT (“EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT”) ...

76. Section 7 of the Contract required KCDC to supply [Bradshaw] with a full-time staff assistant at KCDC’s cost.

77. KCDC breached Section 7 by failing and refusing to supply a full-time assistant.

78. Due to KCDC’s breach, [Bradshaw] was required to work significant overtime to satisfy her duties under Section 6 of the Contract.

79. Specifically, during the five-year term, [Bradshaw] worked 3143.5 hours over and above her standard work hours that KCDC now claims she is not entitled under the Contract.

80. Therefore, as a direct and proximate result of KCDC’s breach, [Bradshaw] has been damaged in the amount of $161,204.97 plus costs, pre-judgment interest, and post-judgment interest from the date of Judgment until satisfied in full.

-3- COUNT II – BREACH OF CONTRACT (“VACATION TIME”)

81. [Bradshaw] reaffirms and reiterates the allegations contained in numerical paragraphs 1 through 80 above, the same as if set forth verbatim herein.

82. Per Section 5 of the Contract, [Bradshaw] is entitled to be paid for accumulated vacation time upon employment completion.

83. [Bradshaw]’s claim of accumulated vacation time totaled 1,189.5 hours.

84. KCDC claims [Bradshaw] is only entitled to 277.5 hours, thereby breaching the Contract.

85. Therefore, as a direct and proximate result of KCDC’s breach, [Bradshaw] has been damaged in the amount of $60,997.56 plus costs, pre-judgment interest, and post-judgment interest from the date of Judgment until satisfied in full.

COUNT III – BREACH OF CONTRACT (“COMP TIME”)

86. [Bradshaw] reaffirms and reiterates the allegations contained in numerical paragraphs 1 through 85 above, the same as if set forth verbatim herein.

87. Per Section 5 of the Contract, [Bradshaw] is entitled to be paid for accumulated vacation time upon employment completion.

88. [Bradshaw’s] claim of accumulated comp time totaled 3,143.5.

89. KCDC claims [Bradshaw] is only entitled to 50 hours, thereby breaching the Contract.

-4- 90. Therefore, as a direct and proximate result of KCDC’s breach, [Bradshaw] has been damaged in the amount of $161,204.97 plus costs, pre-judgment interest, and post-judgment interest from the date of Judgment until satisfied in full.

In summary, Bradshaw asserted she needed to work 3,143.5 hours in

excess of her regular salaried hours during her five-year contract because KCDC

failed to hire an executive assistant for her; and that those excessive hours entitled

her, in turn, to: (1) the cash equivalent of 1,189.5 hours of accumulated vacation

time ($60,997.56);1 and (2) the cash equivalent of 3,143.5 hours of accumulated

comp time ($161,204.97). She further alleged KCDC was in breach of the five-

year contract because it claimed, to the contrary, that she was only entitled to the

cash equivalent of 277.5 hours of accumulated vacation time and the cash

equivalent of 50 hours of accumulated comp time.

On March 7, 2024, rather than answering Bradshaw’s complaint,

KCDC moved to dismiss pursuant to CR2 12.02. In its motion, KCDC

acknowledged its position was indeed that Bradshaw was only entitled to the cash

equivalent of 277.5 hours of accumulated vacation time and the cash equivalent of

50 hours of accumulated comp time. KCDC also asserted that on February 20,

2024, at Bradshaw’s direction, it had also issued a check to the Franklin County

1 It is undisputed that Bradshaw’s hourly rate of pay for vacation and comp hours was $51.28. 2 Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.

-5- Treasurer (to be deposited into Bradshaw’s deferred compensation account) for

what KCDC had calculated was the cash equivalent of those hours.

Further, KCDC contended that even if the facts of Bradshaw’s

complaint were taken as true, Bradshaw had failed to state legally cognizable

claims for any amount beyond what it had paid the Franklin County Treasurer.

First, “Section 7 of the Contract” did not simply require “KCDC to supply

[Bradshaw] with a full-time staff assistant at KCDC’s cost,” as Bradshaw had

alleged in Paragraph 76 of her complaint. The full text of that provision, as set

forth in Bradshaw’s employment contract (which Bradshaw had attached to her

complaint as an exhibit) provided:

7. Office and Staff. Employee shall be supplied a furnished office and one (1) Full-Time Equal Executive Assistant at the cost of the Employer. Employee shall recommend to the Employer the name of such Executive Assistant and terms and conditions of employment; however, the said Executive Assistant and the terms and conditions of such employment shall be approved and accepted only by action of the Employer.

(Emphasis added.) As KCDC noted, Bradshaw’s complaint did not allege

Bradshaw had made any such recommendation.

Second, KCDC argued Bradshaw’s contract did not entitle her to

more than the cash equivalent of 277.5 hours of accumulated vacation time and the

cash equivalent of 50 hours of accumulated comp time, irrespective of whether she

was provided an executive assistant. As Bradshaw acknowledged in Paragraph 12

-6- of her complaint, she was “entitled to the same fringe benefits, ‘including holidays,

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