This сase presents the question of whether Hihcrest Training School, a juvenile facility created pursuant to Ohio Rev. Code § 2151.65, is cloaked with Ohio’s sovereign immunity against a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action brought by a former Hill-crest resident. , The district court held that Hillcrest was not entitled to sovereign immunity. For the reasons explained below, we affirm.
*418 I
Plaintiff S.J., when a minor, was referred tо Hillcrest by order of the Hamilton County Juvenile Court. His complaint alleges that he was sexually assaulted several times by a fellow resident, R.B., who sneaked into his room at night. The last attack took place on the night after S.J. had informed a Hillcrest employee about the assaults. R.B. later admitted attacking S.J., and was adjudicated a delinquent. S.J. sued Hillcrest, its superintendent, and Hamilton County under § 1983, alleging that they violated his Fourteenth Amendment rights by failing to investigate and prevent sexual abuse, and failing to train Hillcrest employees adequately. The defendants moved for summary judgment on the basis of sovereign immunity, arguing that Hillcrest is an arm of the State of Ohio because it was created by state law and is overseen by the juvenile court. The magistrate judge disagreed, and recommended denying the motion. The district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation in relevant part.
Later, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss the complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, in effect asking the district court to revisit its ruling on sovereign immunity.
1
The motion arguеd that dismissal was necessary in light of this court’s unpublished decision in
Oswald v. Lucas County Juvenile Det. Ctr.,
Defendants timely appealed. Under the collateral order doctrine, we have jurisdiction over an appeal from a district court’s denial of sovereign immunity to a government entity that claims to be an “arm of the state.”
Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Auth. v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc.,
II
A
Hillcrest operates within a statutory framework that vests both the state and Hamilton County with a role in its administration. Juvenile training facilities such as Hillcrest belong to a broader class of facilities referred to in the Ohio Code as “single county or joint-county facilities.” Ohio Rev.Code § 307.021(A) (authorizing board of county commissioners to con *419 struct such facilities). The same statutory-provision states generally that “the juvenile court [is] ... the branch of state government having jurisdiction over any such ... juvenile ... facilities.” Ibid. Hillcrest’s specific authorizing statute, Ohio Rev.Code § 2151.65, provides:
Upon thе advice and recommendation of the juvenile judge, the board of county commissioners may provide by purchase, lease, construction, or otherwise a school ... or other facility] where delinquent children, ... dependent children, abused children, unruly children, ... or neglected children or juvenile traffic offenders may be held for training, treаtment, and rehabilitation_ Such ... facility ... shall be maintained as provided in Chapters 2151. and 2152. of the Revised Code. [...]
The juvenile court shall determine:
(A) The children to be admitted to any school ... or other facility maintained under this section;
(B) The period such children shall be trained, treated, and rehabilitated at such facility;
(C) The removal and transfer of children from such facility.
Thus, by the terms of thе statute, the initial request to create a facility such as Hillcrest originates from the juvenile court, which is a division of the Ohio Court of Common Pleas. Ohio Rev.Code § 2151.08. The county possesses the discretion to grant or refuse this initial request. However, if the county agrees, the facility must “be maintained as provided in [Ohio Rev.Code §§ ] 2151. and 2152.”
Ibid.
These sections аuthorize the juvenile court to demand funds from the county that are reasonably necessary to operate Hillcrest, as part of the court’s annual appropriation for “administrative ' expenses.” Ohio Rev.Code § 2151.10. The county must provide the funds requested if they are “reasonably necessary to meet ... [the] administrative expensеs of the court” and its facilities.
Ibid.; see
§ 2151.13;
State ex rel. Wilke v. Hamilton County Bd. of Comm’rs,
Hillcrest receives the large majority of its funding from Hamilton County. It also rеceives some funds from the Ohio Department of Youth Services and the Ohio Department of Mental Health, and it is .subject to standards promulgated by the Department of Youth Services.
B
The text of the Eleventh Amendment explicitly refers to the immunity of the states from suits “commenced or prosecuted ... by Citizens of another State.” U.S. Const., amend. XI. Howevеr, the Supreme 1 Court has made clear that the sovereign immunity of the states “neither derives from nor is limited by the terms of the Eleventh Amendment,”
Alden v. Maine,
Because Ohio counties lack sovereign immunity,
see ibid,
(holding that an Ohio school board lacked immunity because it was “more like a county” than an arm of the state);
Alkire v. Irving,
The difficult issue is determining whether the same is true of Hillcrest itself — and, derivatively, of its superintendent, Mr. Hamilton, since for the purpose of sovereign immunity “individuals sued in their official capacities stand in the shoes of the entity they represent.”
Alkire,
To determine whether an entity is an arm of the state, courts have traditionally looked to several factors, including: (1) whether the state would be responsible for a judgment against the entity in question; (2) how state law defines the entity; (3) what degree of control the state maintains over the entity; and (4) the sourcе of the entity’s funding.
Brotherton,
Our recent decisions have modified this arm-of-the-state framework, in light of Supreme Court opinions that “ha[ve] ... explicitly [stated] that ... the most important factor bearing on the Eleventh Amendment question” is “who would pay for a damage judgment” against the entity being sued.
Alkire,
Alkire v. Irving
has been our latest word on this evolving legal issue. In
Alkire,
a § 1983 action against an Ohio county court, we expressed some doubt about the continued validity of
Mmnford’s
reasoning, noting that
Mumford
had not taken into account, as the Supreme Court requires, whether the state would be legally responsible for a judgment against an Ohio court.
See Alkire,
Resolving the present case does not require us to decide whether one of the several
Mt. Healthy
criteriа has now become the sole criterion for determining whether an agency is a state entity for sovereign immunity purposes. But there are significant reasons to doubt such a suggestion. The Supreme Court explained in
Hess v. Port Auth. Trans-Hudson Corp.,
Examining the contours of related sovereign immunity doctrines reinforces the impression that values beyond guarding the public fisc play a role in the arm-of-the-state inquiry. The Eleventh Amendment ordinarily bars
all
actions brought against a State itself, even injunctive actions that raise no risk of an impact on the treasury.
See Pennhurst St. Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman,
To the extent that considerations of dignity are relevant in determining whether an entity is protected by state sovereign immunity, one would expect this factor to weigh heavily in a suit against a state court.
See Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
In the present case, however, we are asked only to determine whether Hill-crest is an arm of the state, not whether the Hamilton County Juvenile Court itself is such. We conclude that Hillcrest is not an arm of the state.
As noted above, our inquiry begins by asking who would be responsible for a judgment against Hillcrest. Hillcrest’s brief concedes (consistent with the magistrаte judge’s finding, adopted by the district court) that Hamilton County, not the state of Ohio, would pay such a judgment. Appellant Br. at 18. Thus, this “important” factor weighs against sovereign immunity.
Doe,
The second factor is how state law defines Hillcrest. As we have noted, the authorizing statute describes Hillcrest as a “single-county juvenile facility,” rather than, for example, as a state facility. Ohio Rev.Code § 2151.65. However, many of the relevant statutory provisions suggest a significant connection between the state and Hillcrest. Under Ohio law, it is “a public purpose and function of the state” to “acquire, construct, [and] renovate” training facilities such as Hillcrest. Ohio Rev.Code § 307.021(A). The counties act as “state agenciеs ... performing] duties of the state” in carrying out such capital improvements. Ibid. 4 , Moreover, the juvenile court, a “branch of state government,” exercises “jurisdiction” over Hillcrest. Ibid. We conclude that the state-law factor somewhat supports extending sovereign immunity to Hillcrest, though other entities, such as a court itself, would present a strongеr claim to sovereign immunity in this regard.
Turning to the third factor, state control, we find that Ohio exercises some, but limited, control over Hillcrest. The Hamilton County Juvenile Court, a part of the Ohio judicial system, controls the admission of juveniles to the facility. The court appoints Hillcrest’s supervisor and sets his salary, though it does not administer Hill-crest directly. The juvenile court also possesses discretion over the facility’s budget: within reasonable limits, its funding requests for Hillcrest must be honored by the county.
On the other hand, the authorizing statute vests Hamilton County with discretion over the crucial decision of whether to create a facility such as Hillcrest at all. Ohio Rev.Code § 2151.65. This fact marks an important difference between Hillcrest and the juvenile detention facility at issue *423 in this court’s unpublished decision in Oswald. Oswald concluded that “[u]nder Ohio law, a county juvenile detention center is part of the juvenile court, which is an arm of the state.” 2000 U.S.App. LEXIS 27990, at *2 (citing former Ohio Rev.Code § 2151.34). We agree with the district court that Oswald is distinguishable from the present case. 5 Former § 2151.34, now Ohio Rev.Code § 2152.41, the provision that authorized the “juvenile detention facility” at issue in Oswald, provides that the county “shall ” create the detention facility upon the recommendation of the juvenile court. Ibid, (emphasis added); see S.J. v. Hamilton County, No. C-1-98-603, Order Denying Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, slip op. at 4. Here, in contrast, § 2151.65 provides only that the county “may ” construct a juvenile facility such as Hillcrest, if the juvenile court so recommends. The difference in wording, at a crucial point, in two such closely related statutory provisions as §§ 2152.41 аnd 2151.65, clearly vests the county with authority to grant or deny the juvenile court’s initial request to create a facility such as Hillcrest.
In so construing this statutory language, we recognize that Ohio law places limits on the interaction between a legislative entity such as Hamilton County’s Board of Commissioners and a judicial entity such as the Hamilton County Juvenile Court. Ohio’s constitution forbids “granting to a legislative body ... the ‘power of the purse’ over judicial administration.”
State ex rel. Johnston v. Taulbee,
On balance, we conclude that the state control factor favors sovereign immunity, though not as strongly as it would in the case of a juvenile detention facility under § 2152.41 (as in Oswald) or an Ohio court itself.
The final factor, the source of Hillcrest’s funding, can be dealt with quickly. The parties have stipulated that the great majority of Hillcrest’s funding comes from Hamilton County, not the state of Ohio. Hillcrest’s budget in 2000 was approximately $9,000,000; approximately $710,000 of this came from state sources, and the rest from the county. Accordingly, this factor weighs strongly against extending sovereign immunity to Hillcrest.
Thus, of the four factors typically employed in the arm-of-the-state inquiry, two (status under state law, and level of state control) weigh somewhat in favor of sovereign immunity, and two (responsibility for a judgment, and source of funding) clearly weigh against sovereign immunity. Because our precedents and the Supreme Court’s case law still single out the factor of responsibility for a judgment as the most important (albeit not exclusive) determinant of arm-of-the-state status, we *424 hold that Hillcrest, as a juvenile training facility under Ohio Rev.Code § 2151.65, is not entitled to assert sovereign immunity as an arm of thе state of Ohio. Accordingly, the district court properly denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss S.J.’s complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Ill
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s order is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court properly construed this late-filed motion as a "suggestion” that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction. Such a filing may be made at any time. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(3);
Von Dunser v. Aronoff,
. Wе will henceforth refer to Hillcrest, and other facilities under § 2151.65, as "juvenile training facilities,” to distinguish them from the "juvenile detention facilities]” authorized by § 2152.41.
. In theory, Mr. Hamilton might be immune, even if Hillcrest is not, if he was
personally
acting as an "arm of the state” in connection with the alleged conduct described in SJ.'s complaint — in effect, if his actions or omissions giving rise to SJ.'s claim were prompted by a state statute.
See Brotherton v. Cleveland,
However, the standard to establish such a defense is rigorous, and Mr. Hamilton does not satisfy it. A local actor who "makes conscious policy decisions,” and does not simply "mechanically adopt and enforce ... a state policy,” cannot claim to have been acting as an arm of thе state under this theory. Id. at 565.
Here, while Mr. Hamilton was authorized by statute to supervise the juvenile facility at Hillcrest, the statute did not instruct him about how to exercise that authority. See Ohio Rev.Code § 2151.70. His entitlement to sovereign immunity thus stands or falls with that of Hillcrest.
. We note that this provision, by its terms, applies only to tasks performed in connection with the acquisition, construction, or renovation of juvenile facilities, and not to the ordinary operations of such facilities, which are the activities that gave rise to S.J.’s claim here.
. As an unpublished decision of this court, Oswald also lacks binding precedential value.
