OPINION
¶ 1 In this personal injury action, defendanVappellant City of Tucson appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiff/appellee Thomas MacKinney. The city argues the trial court erred in denying its motion for summary judgment, asserting that Arizona’s recreational-use immunity statute, A.R.S. § 33-1551, barred MaeKinney’s negligence claim as a matter of law. For the following reasons, we vacate and remand.
Factual Background and Procedural History
¶ 2 In reviewing a summary-judgment ruling, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
City of Phoenix v. Yarnell,
¶ 3 The city moved for summary judgment, arguing it was not liable for MacKinney’s injuries because it was immune under Arizona’s recreational-use immunity statute. See § 33-1551. MacKinney opposed the motion, asserting the city was not immune because the golf course was not a “premises” protected under the statute and he was not a “recreational user” as defined by the statute because he had paid an admission fee for purposes of entering and using the course. The trial court denied the city’s motion, initially without explanation, but subsequently issued two minute entries clarifying that the denial was based on its conclusion that a golf course is not included in the statutorily enumerated “premises” implicating recreational-use immunity and that an issue of fact existed as to whether the fee MacKinney had paid was a “nominal” one under the statute.
¶ 4 The matter proceeded to trial, and the jury found in favor of MacKinney, determining his damages to be $180,000 but allocating seventy percent of the fault to him such that *586 the court entered final judgment against the city in the amount of $54,000. We have jurisdiction over the city’s appeal pursuant to A.R.S. §§ 12-120.21(A)(1) and 12-2101(A)(1).
Discussion
¶ 5 “Generally, the denial of a summary judgment motion is not reviewable on appeal from a final judgment entered after a trial on the merits.”
John C. Lincoln Hosp. & Health Corp. v. Maricopa Cnty.,
¶ 6 Summary judgment is proper only when “ ‘there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’”
Villa de Jardines Ass’n v. Flagstar Bank, FSB,
¶ 7 The applicability of the reereational-use immunity statute is a question of law, subject to
de novo
review.
Andresano v. Cnty. of Pima,
Premises
¶ 8 The city first contends the trial court erred in concluding a golf course is not a “premises” that implicates recreational-use immunity. Section 33-1551(A) (1998), the version of the statute in force when MacKinney was injured, 3 provides:
A public or private owner, easement holder, lessee or occupant of premises is not liable to a recreational or educational user except upon a showing that the owner, easement holder, lessee or occupant was guilty of wilful, malicious or grossly negligent conduct which was a direct cause of the injury to the recreational or educational user.
MacKinney alleged only that the city was negligent, not that its conduct was wilful, malicious, or grossly negligent; thus, if the elements of § 33-1551 are met, it provides the city with immunity from his lawsuit.
See Andresano,
agricultural, range, open space, park, flood control, mining, forest or railroad lands, and any other similar lands, wherever located, which are available to a recreational or educational user, including, but not limited to, paved or unpaved multi-use trails and special purpose roads or trails not open to automotive use by the public and any building, improvement, fixture, water conveyance system, body of water, channel, canal or lateral, road, trail or structure on such lands.
As MacKinney points out, neither former § 33-1551 nor the current version expressly includes a golf course within the definition of premises.
¶ 9 The city argues a golf course is similar to a park and therefore is included in the definition of “premises” through the phrase “other similar lands.”
See
§ 33-1551(C)(3) (1998) (“premises” includes park lands “and any other similar lands”). The city points out that when the legislature expanded the definition of “premises” to include park lands,
see
1993 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 90, § 25, ease law already had established for various purposes that golf courses are parks or are similar to parks.
See Moore v. Valley Garden Ctr.,
¶ 10 We find additional evidence of the legislature’s intent to include golf courses within the definition of “premises” in the evolution of § 33-1551. In
Walker,
relied upon by MacKinney, this court held that a previous version of the statute did not provide recreational immunity against liability for injuries suffered by a bicyclist during a fall on a bicycle path in an urban greenbelt.
¶ 11 In 1993, our legislature amended the definition of premises contained in § 33-1551 to add to the enumerated lands. See 1993 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 90, § 25. As amended, the definition of “premises” was broadened to include
agricultural, range, open space, park, flood control, mining, forest or railroad lands, and any other similar lands, wherever located, which are available to a recreational or educational user, including, but not limited to, paved or unpaved multi-use trails and special purpose roads or trails not open to automotive use by the public and any building improvement, fixture, water conveyance system, body of water, ehannel, canal or lateral, road, trail or structure on such lands.
§ 33-1551 (1993). Certain of the 1993 amendments clearly repudiate portions of this court’s reasoning in
Walker.
The addition of park lands suggests the legislature intended to immunize owners of properties that are not necessarily large areas of land located in “thinly populated rural or semi-rural locales” as we found in
Walker,
¶ 12 In light of the broader definition of “premises” established by the 1993 amendments, the present case requires us to determine whether a golf course is “similar” to any of the types of lands enumerated under § 33-1551 (1998) because golf courses are not specifically listed in the definition. One type of property added in the 1993 amendments was “park ... lands.” 1993 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 90, § 25. And one of the common definitions of “park” is “[a] tract of land set aside for public use, as ... [a]n expanse of enclosed grounds for recreational use within or adjoining a town.” The American Heritage Dictionary 903 (2d college ed. 1982). “Golf,” of course, is “[a] game played on a large outdoor course with a series of 9 *589 or 18 holes spaced far apart.” Id. at 566. Our legislature has defined “golf course” in another context as “substantially undeveloped land, including amenities such as landscaping, irrigation systems, paths and golf greens and tees, that may be used for golfing or golfing practice by the public or by members and guests of a private club.” A.R.S. § 42-13151.
¶ 13 In view of these definitions and our legislature’s expansion of the types of lands that implicate recreational immunity in supersession of Walker, we conclude golf courses are sufficiently similar to park lands to be included in the statutory definition of “[premises” under § 33-1551(C)(3) (1998). A golf course fits within the common definition of “park” — it is a parcel of property kept for recreational use that is designed and maintained for the primary purpose of allowing users to engage in an undisputedly recreational activity. Accordingly, that MacKinney was injured on a golf course does not avoid the applicability of the recreational-use immunity statute.
Recreational User
¶ 14 Although the golf course is a premises under § 33-1551, for the city to have been immune MacKinney must also have been a recreational user. Because the trial court’s ruling on the premises issue prevented resolution of this question, we must vacate the judgment and remand for additional proceedings. In the interest of judicial economy, however, and because we have had the benefit of briefing and oral argument by the parties on the issue, we address certain aspects of the recreational-user question that will undoubtedly arise on remand.
See Czarnecki v. Volkswagen of Am.,
¶ 15 Section 33-1551(0(4) (1998) defines a “[r]ecreational user” as
a person to whom permission has been granted or implied without the payment of an admission fee or any other consideration to travel across or to enter upon premises to hunt, fish, trap, camp, hike, ride, exercise, swim or engage in similar pursuits. The purchase of a state hunting, trapping or fishing license is not the payment of an admission fee or any other consideration as provided in this section. A nominal fee that is charged by a public entity or a nonprofit corporation to offset the cost of providing the educational or recreational premises and associated services does not constitute an admission fee or any other consideration as prescribed by this section.
Golf is similar to the activities enumerated in this definition in that it is an outdoor recreational pursuit included in the broad term “exercise.” See discussion supra ¶ 12. But even if a person uses property recreationally, he nevertheless is not a recreational user if he paid an admission fee in exchange for use of the property. The city makes three arguments in an attempt to show that MacKinney did not pay an admission fee and therefore was a recreational user.
¶ 16 The city first asserts MacKinney personally paid no fee to play golf; instead, his son, with whom he was playing, paid a fee on his behalf. Although MacKinney agreed with this assertion at his deposition, he later recanted it in an affidavit submitted to the trial court with his “Separate Statement of Facts Re A.R.S. [§ ] 33-1551.” However, any factual dispute as to whether MacKinney paid a fee himself is immaterial to the question of whether he was a recreational user because “ ‘[a] fee does not necessarily have to be paid by the injured party himself to take a ease outside the recreational user statute so long as someone in the plaintiffs party has paid a fee to utilize the overall benefits.’”
Prince,
¶ 17 The city additionally argues Mae-Kinney was a recreational user for purposes of the statute because his fee was paid to GolfNow, a third-party booking service, rather than to the golf course. To support this argument, the city relies on
Andresano,
¶ 18 Finally, the city argues the fee paid on MacKinney’s behalf was a nominal one and therefore exempt under § 33-1551(C)(4) (1998). In the 1998 amendment to § 33-1551, our legislature added the following sentence to the definition of “[r]ecreational user”:
A nominal fee that is charged by a public entity or a nonprofit corporation to offset the cost of providing the educational or recreational premises and associated services does not constitute an admission fee or any other consideration as prescribed by this section.
1998 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 22, § 1. 5 We agree with the city that if MaeKinney’s fee was a nominal one used merely to offset the cost of providing the golf course and associated services, the payment of that fee would not affect his status as a recreational user for purposes of the immunity statute. 6 However, for the reasons detailed below, we cannot agree with the city that the fee paid was necessarily “nominal” as a matter of law.
¶ 19 To classify the payer of a fee as a recreational user under the statute, the fee must have two characteristics: it must be “nominal,” and it must be charged to offset the cost of providing the recreational premises and associated services. § 33-1551(0(4) (1998). The city urges an alternative reading of the nominal-fee provision, arguing that it was the legislature’s intent to define “nominal” as a fee charged to offset the cost of providing the premises and associated services, rather than to express these as two separate requirements. Although the statute is arguably ambiguous in this regard, the city’s proposed resolution of the ambiguity fails for two reasons. When an ambiguity exists in an immunity statute, we have a duty to interpret the statute narrowly to avoid granting immunity that was not intended.
Prince,
¶ 20 The legislature has not defined “nominal” for purposes of the recreational-use immunity statute, nor has our research disclosed any case law addressing this issue. The plain meaning of the word, when relating to a price or amount, is: “Insignificantly small; trifling:
[e.g.,] a nominal sum.” The American Heritage Dictionary
845;
see also Black’s Law Dictionary
1148 (9th ed. 2009) (“nominal” means “trifling, especially] as compared to what would be expected”).
The American Heritage Dictionary
provides an additional usage note:
“Nominal
in one of its senses means ‘in name only.’ Hence a
nominal payment
is a token payment, bearing no relation to the real value of what is being paid for. The word is often extended in use, especially by sellers, to describe a low or bargain price.”
Id.
at 845. Although this does not provide a clear legal standard for determining whether any particular fee is “nominal” for purposes of the recreational-use immunity statute, unless and until the legislature speaks more definitively in this area, the question can be answered only through a fact-specific inquiry that incorporates relevant factors from the definition of “nominal” as that word is commonly understood.
7
Whether the fee charged by the golf course in this case fit within the definition of “nominal” was disputed by the parties and, under the standard articulated above, is a mixed question of law and fact that may require additional findings.
8
See Prince,
Conclusion
¶ 21 A golf course is a “premises” covered by Arizona’s recreational-use immunity statute, and thus the city may be entitled to immunity if MacKinney paid a nominal fee rather than an admission fee, such that he was a recreational user under § 33-1551. Because the trial court incorrectly concluded that the golf course was not a premises, the determinative question of whether or not the fee was “nominal” never was addressed or resolved below, and we are constrained to vacate the judgment and remand this matter for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
Notes
. Although the trial court initially believed there was a question of fact regarding whether Mac-Kinney was a recreational user as that term is defined by § 33-1551, this does not preclude our review because the issue was never reached due to the court’s ruling on the "premises" question.
See Navajo Freight Lines, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
. In
Samaritan Health System v. Superior Court,
. The legislature has amended § 33-1551 twice since MacKinney was injured.
See
2012 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 14, § 1; 2011 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 123, § 1. We apply the version in force at the time of the injury.
See
A.R.S. § 1-244 (“No statute is retroactive unless expressly declared therein.”);
Watts v. Ariz. Dep't of Revenue,
. Section 33 — 1551 (B)(1) (1983) provided, " 'Premises’ means agricultural, range, mining or forest lands, and any other similar lands which by agreement are made available to a recreational user, and any building or structure on such lands.” 1983 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 82, § 1.
. Below, as he does on appeal, MacKinney supported his argument that the fee charged was not "nominal” by relying on our holding in
Prince
that the payment of any fee would exclude the payer from recreational-user status.
.
MacKinney submitted in this court a request to file an addendum to his answering brief in which he points to an acknowledgement by the city in response to his requests for admissions that a portion of green-fees revenue is used for advertising purposes, and argues for the first time that such use negates his status as a recreational user. The argument was not raised below, however, and therefore is waived on appeal.
Englert v. Carondelet Health Network,
. Such factors might include, for example, the amount of the fee, the extent to which it approximates the value of the service received in exchange for it, and the fees charged for similar recreational uses in the community.
. Although the trial court initially concluded that the nominal-fee question presented an issue of fact for trial, upon remand this may or may not be the case.
See Filer v. Tohono O'Odham Nation Gaming Enter.,
