OPINION
¶ 1 Appellee Steven Files approached an undercover police officer who was posing as a prostitute and offered her “at least $40.00” if she would have “ ‘straight sex’” with him. Files was charged with violating Tucson City Code § 11 — 28(l)(c), which criminalizes the conduct of anyone who “[a]ids, offers or agrees to commit or conspires to commit or commits any act of prostitution.” After the city court denied his motion to dismiss, Files brought a special action in the superior court, which granted relief and instructed the city court to dismiss the charge. This appeal by the state followed.
¶ 2 We conduct a bifurcated review of an appeal taken from a non-statutory special action initiated in the superior court.
1
Bazzanella v. Tucson City Court,
¶3 The state argues that § 11— 28(l)(c) encompasses Files’s conduct, even though the undercover police officer would not have accepted his offer to engage in sexual conduct. In response, Files argues that because the officer “was not a true prostitute,” the common law defense of impossibility precludes his prosecution. We find no merit to this argument; the defense of impossibility no longer exists in Arizona. In
State v. Galan,
¶ 4 In apparent recognition of this holding, Files next argues that a sex-for-fee offer to someone who will not actually engage in the proposed sexual conduct constitutes, at best, an attempted violation of § ll-28(l)(c), citing
Galan
and
State v. DiGiulio,
¶ 5 Files nonetheless contends he did not “offer” or “agree” to commit an act of prostitution, arguing that the “dictionary definition of ‘prostitution’ does not cover the client” and, thus, “it is the putative recipient of the money (the decoy officer) who is agreeing to commit the act of prostitution.” Because the city code does not define the word “prostitution,” we would ordinarily refer to a widely used dictionary to determine its meaning.
See State v. Mahaney,
II6 For the foregoing reasons, we find that the superior court abused its discretion in granting special action relief. We therefore vacate the court’s order instructing the city court to dismiss the prostitution charge against Files and remand the case to the city court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Statutory special actions are in the nature of an appeal and thus, under Rule 1(b), Ariz. R.P. Special Actions, 17B A.R.S., "the questions to be raised and considered are wholly unaffected by this Rule.” See also State Bar Committee Note (b), Ariz. R.P. Special Actions 1.
