OPINION
¶ 1 Sarah Wertheim, the widow of Carter Wertheim and the personal representative of his estate, brought this wrongful death action against Pima County and Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik (collectively, the County) and the City of Tucson. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law following Wertheim’s presentation of evidence at trial. She appeals. We review the court’s ruling de novo to determine whether the evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom, viewed in the light most favorable to Wertheim, demonstrate that no material issues of fact existed and that the County and the City were entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See Crackel v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
¶ 2 Wertheim presented the following evidence. On July 29, 2001, Kenneth Dillard shot and killed Carter Wertheim at the home of Dillard’s estranged wife, Shari Dillard, and then killed himself. Kenneth Dillard was a Tucson Police Department (TPD) detective assigned to the Metropolitan Area Narcotics Trafficking Interdiction Squad (MANTIS) and was supervised by both TPD and the Pima County Sheriffs Department (PCSD). Dillard’s immediate supervisor was TPD Sergeant Robert Martin. In the MANTIS chain of command, Martin reported to PCSD Lieutenant Ron Benson, and Benson reported to MANTIS commander and TPD Captain Robert Shoun. Dillard was not on duty at the time of the shooting, but he shot Carter with a gun he used as his primary on-duty weapon. The gun was not a TPD-issued weapon but was Dillard’s personal property that he had purchased and that TPD had approved for Dillard to use on duty.
¶ 3 On May 27, 2001, approximately two months before the shooting, Dillard had entered the Wertheims’ residence in the middle of the night and had found his wife and Carter asleep in bed together. Dillard confronted the two. He yelled and screamed at the couple and then struck himself violently over the head with a large, heavy flashlight, causing himself serious injury. After PCSD responded to Shari’s 911 call, Dillard was taken to a hospital for emergency medical treatment and then was voluntarily admitted to a psychiatric hospital.
¶4 PCSD reported the incident to TPD, and TPD ordered Dillard to undergo a fitness-for-duty evaluation. When Dillard was released from the psychiatric hospital, TPD granted him leave from work, and he spent, approximately four weeks with family members out of state. When he returned, TPD placed Dillard on limited duty pending the outcome of the evaluation. No criminal charges were pursued against Dillard as a result of the May 27 incident.
¶ 5 On July 13, 2001, Shari was granted an order of protection against Dillard. On the same day, Carter was granted an injunction from harassment by Dillard. The order of protection, if served, would have required Dillard to “not possess, receive and/or purchase firearms.” The injunction was served on Dillard; the order of protection was not.
¶ 6 On Sunday, July 15, Shari contacted Lieutenant Benson and asked for his “assistance in serving” the order of protection. She also apparently told Benson that Dillard had been stalking her. 1 Benson did not question Shari about the details of the order and did not request or obtain a copy of it, but *424 he told her that he “would help her to the extent [he] could.” Benson then contacted Sergeant Martin and asked if TPD procedures required Dillard to “stay at one place” until the process server arrived or if TPD was obligated to assist Shari in having the order served on Dillard. Martin told Benson no such policy or obligation existed, and Benson did nothing else about the order.
¶ 7 After the May 27 incident, PCSD had given Dillard’s gun to TPD along with other items deputies had collected from Dillard’s MANTIS vehicle that night. Dillard’s gun remained in TPD’s possession until sometime during the week of July 16 through 20 when Sergeant Martin returned it to Dillard at his request. Dillard told Martin he needed the gun because, although he was assigned to desk duty, he was driving to and from work daily in his MANTIS vehicle. Martin explained to the jury that police officers are required to be armed while on duty and are “required to intervene” if they observe a felony being committed or some other “incident.” Martin conferred with Lieutenant Benson and Captain Shoun about returning Dillard’s gun; neither voiced an objection. Martin returned the gun even though the fitness-for-duty evaluation had not been completed and even though the psychologist who was to conduct the evaluation told the TPD psychologist on July 18 that Dillard should not be given his weapon until the evaluation was completed. As noted above, Dillard used the gun to kill Carter and himself on July 29.
¶ 8 Wertheim asserts that the trial court erred in granting the motion for judgment as a matter of law, arguing the jury could reasonably have concluded, based on these facts and reasonable inferences therefrom, that the City and the County had negligently investigated the circumstances that had triggered TPD’s decision to conduct the fitness-for-duty evaluation and the facts underlying Shari’s order of protection; that Dillard’s supervisors had failed to recognize and/or pursue Dillard’s criminal conduct and the domestic violence issues Wertheim asserts should have been apparent in the situation; and that, therefore, they had failed to comprehend the risk Dillard had posed to Carter and had negligently returned Dillard’s gun to him. Wertheim further asserts that TPD’s negligence in returning Dillard’s gun to him was a proximate cause of Carter’s death.
¶ 9 “The basic elements of actionable negligence are a duty owed to the plaintiff, a breach thereof and an injury proximately caused by the breach.”
Ballesteros v. State,
¶ 10 We may affirm a trial court’s ruling if it is correct for any reason.
Glaze v. Marcus,
151 Adz. 538,
The question of duty ... is whether the relationship of the parties was such that the defendant was under an obligation to use some care to avoid or prevent injury to the plaintiff. If the answer is no, the defendant is not liable even though he may have acted negligently in light of the foreseeable risks.
Markowitz v. Ariz. Parks Bd.,
¶ 11 Put in the context of the relationships here, the question is whether an employer (the City and/or the County) owed a duty to a third person (Carter) injured by the conduct of its off-duty employee (Dillard). Arizona has adopted and follows the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 315 (1965) and its related sections.
In Arizona, there is no duty to control the conduct of a third party unless “ ‘(a) a special relation exists between the [defendant] and the third person which imposes a duty upon the [defendant] to control the *425 third person’s conduct, or (b) a special relation exists between the [defendant] and the [plaintiff] which gives to the [plaintiff] a right of protection.” ’ Martinez v. Woodmar IV Condominiums Homeowners Ass’n,189 Ariz. 206 , 207-08,941 P.2d 218 , 219-20 (1997), quoting Martinez v. Woodmar IV Condominiums Ass’n,187 Ariz. 408 , 409,930 P.2d 485 , 486 (App.1996), quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 315 (1965) (brackets added by supreme court); Fedie v. Travelodge Int’l, Inc.,162 Ariz. 263 , 265,782 P.2d 739 , 741 (App.1989). Therefore, a duty to control the conduct of a third party arises only when a special relationship exists between the defendant and the third party, such as “parent-child, master-servant, possessor of land-licensee, or guardian-ward.” Fedie,162 Ariz. at 265 ,782 P.2d at 741 ; see also Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 316-319. And a duty to protect arises only where there is a special relationship between the defendant and the victim, “such as carrier-passenger, innkeeper-guest, landlord-invitee, guardian-ward, teacher-student, or jailer-prisoner.” Fedie,162 Ariz. at 265 ,782 P.2d at 741 ; see also Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 314A, 320; Martinez.
Bloxham v. Glock Inc.,
¶ 12 Although Dillard and the City and the County had an employment relationship, that relationship did not impose a duty on either to control the actions Dillard took here. Under the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 317 (1965), an employment relationship imposes a duty on the employer “to exercise reasonable care ... to control his servant while acting outside the scope of his employment” only when the employee is on the employer’s premises or using the employer’s chattel. Neither was the case here. The gun Dillard used to kill Carter was Dillard’s property, and Dillard was not on duty or on defendants’ premises when he shot Carter.
¶ 13 That the gun was also Dillard’s service weapon did not create a duty. For a duty to exist under the Restatement, the employee must use the chattel of the employer. The obvious basis for this requirement is that the employer may exercise control over the use of its property. TPD had authorized Dillard to use his own gun in his employment, but Wertheim has cited no authority for the proposition that, by doing so, TPD gained control over the property itself.
¶ 14 Nor do we find the requisite relationship between the City or the County and Carter to create a duty to protect him. Wertheim argues a duty arose because TPD and PCSD should have foreseen the danger Dillard had posed to Carter as “an object of ... Dillard’s emotions,” which they would have understood had they fully investigated the May 27 incident at the Wertheims’ residence and the order of protection Shari had subsequently obtained. But, even if the jury could have determined some risk had reasonably been foreseeable, “foreseeable danger d[oes] not dictate the existence of a duty but only the nature and extent of the conduct necessary to fulfill the duty.”
Martinez v. Woodmar IV Condos. Homeowners Ass’n,
¶ 15 We find this ease analogous to
Riddle.
In that case, an injured motorist sued an employer after colliding with a car being driven by the employer’s impaired employee. The employer had ordered the employee to leave work because she had been “conspicuously intoxicated and incapable of performing her work duties.”
*426
¶ 16 Wertheim attempts to distinguish
Riddle
on the ground that the employer had “not furnish[ed the employee] with any intoxicants or with a vehicle.”
Id.
at 468,
¶ 17 We find distinguishable the principal eases on which Wertheim relies. Both
Hutcherson v. City of Phoenix,
¶ 18 Had the supreme court intended to impose such a broad duty, it could easily have said so. Instead, in
Hutcherson,
the supreme court interpreted its own language in
Austin
much more narrowly. It stated that, under
Austin,
“[t]he City clearly had a duty to act reasonably in handling emergency calls,” and “[b]y creating a 911 system, it accepted the obligation of attempting to prevent the very kind of harm that occurred” in that case.
¶ 19 Wertheim cites
Newman v. Maricopa County,
¶ 20 Duty is “ ‘an expression of the sum total of those considerations of policy which lead the law to say that a particular plaintiff is entitled to protection.’ ”
Ontiveros v. Borak,
¶21 Finally, Wertheim suggests that an analysis of whether a “special relationship” existed between Dillard, the defendants, and/or Carter under Restatement § 315 is inappropriate under
Ryan v. State,
We shall no longer engage in the speculative exercise of determining whether the tort-feasor has a general duty to the injured party, which spells no recovery, or if he had a specific individual duty which means recovery. Thus, the parameters of duty owed by the state will ordinarily be ■coextensive with those owed by others.
¶ 22 Because we conclude the City and the County owed no duty to Carter, we affirm the trial court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law.
Notes
. Wertheim claims Shari testified about this in her deposition, the transcript of which was read to the jury but not recorded by the court reporter. The transcript is not in the record before us, but no defendant disputes that that testimony was presented to the jury.
. Although Wertheim cites and relies on only the court of appeals’ opinion in
Hutcherson,
our supreme court vacated that opinion on review. Vacated cases have no precedential value.
Wetherill v. Basham,
