¶ 1 F. Ron Krausz and Elana Krausz Pyle (“Taxpayers”) appeal from summary judgment approving the commercial classification of Taxpayers’ office building by Maricopa County (“the County”). The office building was leased to and used by the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (“ADEQ”). The dispositive question is whether real property that is not specifically included within a legal class other than class one (commercial) pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) section 42-12001(12)(Supp.2000),
FACTS AND RELEVANT PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2 Taxpayers own an eight-story office building in Maricopa County. Since 1991, ADEQ has been the principal tenant of the building. From the beginning of its tenancy, ADEQ has used its leased space to carry out its governmental duties.
¶ 3 The County has consistently classified Taxpayers’ building as class one (commercial) property. See A.R.S. section 42-12001(12). Taxpayers brought this tax court appeal to challenge the commercial classification of the portion оf the building that they leased to ADEQ during tax year 1999. The tax court sustained the County’s classification. We have jurisdiction of Taxpayers’ appeal pursuant to A.R.S. section 12-2101(B)(1994).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 4 On appeal from summary judgment when the material facts are not in dispute, we examine whether the lower court correctly applied the law and whether the appellant was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We conduct a de novo review of the interpretation of statutes. Cable Plus Co. v. Arizona Dep’t of Revenue,
ANALYSIS
¶ 5 Arizona Revised Statutes section ■ 42-12001 lists several types of commercial property that are to be taxed as class one property. Section 42-12001(12) provides that property put to “any other commercial ... use, other than property that is specifically included in another class” shall be taxed as class one property. Although governmental use falls within no other specific class, Tаxpayers argue that their tenant’s governmental use of the subject property controls the property’s classification, thereby disqualifying it from classification as commercial class one property.
¶ 6 Taxpayers first rely on A.R.S. section 42-11054(B)(1999), which provides: “In apрlying prescribed standard appraisal methods and techniques, current usage shall be included in the formula for reaching a determination of full cash value.” But that statute does not help taxpayers here because it provides only that “current usage” must be considered in determining property tax values. See A.R.S. § 42-11001(4)(Supp.2000) (“ ‘Current usage’ means the use to which property
¶ 7 Taxpayers next argue that, because A.R.S. section 42-12004(A)(l)(Supp.2000) creates a separаte classification (“class four”) for leased residential property, thereby segregating it from other putatively commercial property, the overall legislative intent must be to rely only on the tenant’s “actual physical use” of the property when determining classificatiоn. We disagree.
¶ 8 The legislature clearly desired a separate specific class for leased residential property. It accomplished its purpose by creating class four property that includes real and personal property and improvеments “used solely as leased or rented property for residential purposes, that are not included in class one [including commercial], two, three, six, seven or eight.” A.R.S. § 42-12004(A)(1). Class four constitutes an exception to the broader class one “commercial” proрerty, which is property “devoted to any ... commercial or industrial use, other than property that is specifically included in another class.”
¶ 9 The adoption of A.R.S. section 42-12004(A)(1) illustrated the need to statutorily segregate leased residential proрerty lest it be classified as commercial. Without the statute, class one would have arguably included leased residential property because the owner could have been viewed as putting the property to a commercial use. With the adoption of A.R.S. section 42-12004(A)(l), such property plainly falls within the narrower classification of leased residential property, and thereby is excluded from the broader commercial classification created by A.R.S. section 42-12001. In such circumstances, the narrower classification сontrols. City of Phoenix v. Superior Court,
¶ 10 Taxpayers next point to the responses given by Ron Loder of the Maricopa County Assessor’s Office to the hypotheticals posed by Taxpayers’ attorneys. Loder was asked to address situations in which an owner of property leases it to a tenant who uses it for a residence (A.R.S. section 42-12004(A)(l)), for a business (A.R.S. section 42-12001(12)), for a day-care center or preschool (A.R.S. section 42-12004(A)(2)), or for an agricultural establishment (A.R.S. section 42-12002(l)(a),(2)(a) (Supp.2000)). For each hypothetical, Loder testified that the tenant’s use of the property would control its classification. Taxpayers claim that his answers bolster their position that the tenant’s use must control.
¶ 11 What Taxpayers ignore, however, is that in all the foregoing hypotheticals the tenant’s use of the property brought it within a specific property tax classification, thereby controlling the outcome. The situation in Taxpayers’ case is quite different. Here, it is only the landlords’ use of the property that places it within a property tax classificatiоn. Taxpayers lease their building for profit, and
¶ 12 The principal cases upon which Taxpayers rely provide no support for their argument. Stewart Title & Trust v. Pima County,
¶ 13 Division Two of this court disagreed. The court determined that the purpose of the special valuation provision for agricultural property (now expressed in A.R.S. section 42-13101(A)(1999)) was
[t]o reinforce the concept of current usage in determining valuation with respеct to property used for agricultural purposes. Under this interpretation, leased land which otherwise meets the Department’s guidelines for agricultural property ... must be given that classification and valued using solely the income approach set forth in the statute, notwithstanding the fact that the owner intends ultimately to sell or develop the property for other purposes. To hold otherwise would render the amendment meaningless and ineffectual.
Id. at 243,
¶ 14 Taxpayers’ reliance on Hibbs v. Calcot, Ltd.,
¶ 15 Finally, ACF Indus., Inc. v. State of Arizona,
¶ 16 However, a mоre cogent analysis of a similar situation has been made by the Iowa Supreme Court. In Warden Plaza v. Bd. of Review,
[A]n investor who owns valuable property, real or personal, and leases it for profit ... is exercising his right to use the property just as surely as if he were utilizing it in a physical sense for his own objec-tives____ The renting by the lessor and the physical use by the lessee constitute simultaneous uses of the property and when an owner leases his property to another, the lessee cannot be said to be the only one using the property. The owner is using it as he sees fit to reap a profit from his investment just as surely as if he physically operated the property.
Accord Sisters of Providence in Washington, Inc. v. Municipality of Anchorage,
¶ 17 Thus, neither statute nor logic requires the conclusion that the tenant’s use of the property must control its classification. Here, because Taxpayers’ use of the property falls within the ambit of A.R.S. section 42-12001(12), while the tenant’s use does not fall within any more specific classification, it is the Taxpayers’ use that must control the property tax classification.
ATTORNEY’S FEES
¶ 18 Taxpayers request an award of attorney’s fees on appeal рursuant to A.R.S. section 12-348(B)(2000). Because Taxpayers are not the successful party on appeal, we deny the request.
CONCLUSION
¶ 19 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the tax court’s judgment.
Notes
. Previously A.R.S. section 42-162(A)(3) (1991). Renumbered as A.R.S. section 42-12003 (1999), then revised in form and renumbered as A.R.S. section 42-12001(12) (Supp.2000), effective for tax year 2000 and following. To facilitate application of this 'opinion in the future, we use the relevant statutes' current numbering unless the context requires otherwise.
. Taxpayers also rely on the language of the classification statutes themselves, A.R.S. sеctions 42-12001 through 42-12009 (Supp.2000), that they claim focus on the use of property. But we find nothing in the text of these sections or their predecessors that suggests that the “use” on which a property's classification turns can only be that of the tenant. Nor have taxpayers provided any basis for attributing such intent to the legislature.
. Former A.R.S. § 42-12003(2)(1999), in effect during the tax year at issue, similarly defined the commercial classification as property "devoted to any commercial or industrial use other than property that is included in class one, two, four, six [rented residential property], seven, eight, nine or ten.”
