Pleak v. ENTRADA PROPERTY OWNERS'ASS'N

                    SUPREME COURT OF ARIZONA
                             En Banc


ROBIN R. PLEAK and AUDREY PLEAK,  )   Arizona Supreme Court
husband and wife; and MICHAEL T.  )   No. CV-03-0310-PR
SHURTLIFF and ANN SHURTLIFF,      )
husband and wife,                 )   Court of Appeals
                                  )   Division Two
           Plaintiffs/Appellants, )   No. 2 CA-CV 01-0100
                                  )
                 v.               )   Pima County
                                  )   Superior Court
ENTRADA PROPERTY OWNERS'          )   No. C20001553
ASSOCIATION, an Arizona           )
non-profit corporation; PALO      )
SECO CORPORATION, an Arizona      )   O P I N I O N
corporation; BETTY C. BRITTON,    )
an unmarried woman; JUAN A.       )
SOMOZA, an unmarried man; TRES    )
PIEDRAS, L.L.C., an Arizona       )
limited liability corporation;    )
STEVE V. THILL, an unmarried      )
man; CINDY D. BEGNER, an          )
unmarried woman; EDNA C. STACK,   )
an unmarried woman; CAROLINE      )
DODGE, a married woman; MARY R.   )
DERRICK, an unmarried woman;      )
FLEET MORTGAGE CORP., a South     )
Carolina corporation; DETLEF D.   )
LANGE and SALLY F. LANGE,         )
husband and wife; BGR, L.L.C.,    )
an Arizona limited liability      )
company; and MORTON R. ROSEN, a   )
widower,                          )
                                  )
            Defendants/Appellees. )
                                  )
__________________________________)
            Appeal from the Superior Court of Pima County
               The Honorable Jane L. Eikleberry, Judge

                       VACATED AND REMANDED
________________________________________________________________

            Opinion of the Court of Appeals, Division Two
                      205 Ariz. 471, 73 P.3d 602

                             AFFIRMED
_________________________________________________________________

GUST ROSENFELD, P.L.C.                                                Phoenix
     By: Charles W. Wirken
Attorney for Plaintiffs-Appellants

LAW OFFICE OF MARK RUBIN, P.L.C.                                       Tucson
     By: Mark Rubin
LEWIS AND ROCA, L.L.P.                                                 Tucson
     By: John N. Iurino
          John Hinderaker
          Erin O. Simpson
Attorneys for Defendants-Appellees

MARISCAL, WEEKS, MCINTYRE & FRIEDLANDER, P.A.                         Phoenix
     By: Gary L. Birnbaum
          Michael S. Rubin
          David J. Ouimette
Attorneys for Amicus Curiae
Land Title Association of Arizona

MATTHEW J. SMITH, MOHAVE COUNTY ATTORNEY                              Kingman
     By: John K. White, Deputy County Attorney
Attorneys for Amicus Curiae
Mohave County


H U R W I T Z, Justice

¶1          The   central   issue   in   this   case   is   whether   Arizona

continues    to   recognize    common     law   dedications     of    roadway

easements for public use.           We conclude that such common law




                                     2
dedications remain viable, and that the dedication at issue in

this case meets the requirements of the common law.

                                          I.

¶2          On    June     3,    1988,     First      American   Title      Insurance

Company of Arizona recorded a “Record of Survey” for the Entrada

development      in   rural     Pima   County.        The   survey    covered   three

adjacent sections of real property and divided each section into

sixteen    forty-acre      parcels.        The     survey   depicts    an   easement

along the eastern seventy-five foot edge of Entrada.                     The survey

also contains a “Grant of Roadway and Utility Easement” stating

that    First    American,      “the     owner   of    record    of   the   property

included   in    the     easements     shown     hereon[,]    hereby     dedicate[s]

these easements to the public for the use as such.”

¶3          The developer of Entrada then sold the lots created by

the survey; each conveyance document expressly referred to the

survey.     In 1988, the easement specified in the survey was a

jeep trail used only by a rancher who had been grazing cattle on

the property, and was impassable by conventional motor vehicles.

Access to the road was barred by a barbed wire fence.                       In 1996,

however, the Entrada Property Owners’ Association improved the

road.     In 1997, Pima County named the road Kolb Road, but in

doing so expressly disavowed any responsibility for the road,

and has never performed any improvement or maintenance on it.




                                           3
¶4          Sycamore Canyon Estates is a development abutting the

eastern edge of Entrada.               After Kolb Road was improved, the

developer of Sycamore Canyon cut the fence to gain access to the

improved    road.          Sycamore    Canyon       property   owners,       including

appellees Robin R. and Audrey Pleak, thereafter used the road to

access their property.

¶5          The Pleaks and the other appellees (collectively, the

“Pleaks”) subsequently filed a three-count complaint, requesting

the superior court to declare that First American had dedicated

the Kolb Road easement to the public, quiet title in the roadway

“in   trust    for    the      public,”       and    permanently         enjoin    First

American’s successors in interest (collectively, “Entrada”) from

interfering with the use of the road.                      The Pleaks argued that

the dedication had occurred both statutorily and pursuant to

common law.      Entrada counterclaimed, asking the superior court

to quiet title in the easement “as a private road” and to enjoin

the Pleaks from using it.

¶6          The superior court granted partial summary judgment to

Entrada.      The court first rejected the argument that Kolb Road

had been statutorily dedicated to public use pursuant to Arizona

Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) § 9-254 (2001) or A.R.S. § 11-806.01

(2001),    finding    that     neither    statute      applied      to    the     Entrada

development.         The    superior     court      also    found   no     common    law

dedication, holding that although First American had intended to


                                          4
dedicate the roadway to the public, the dedication had never

been properly accepted.          The court of appeals reversed.              Pleak

v. Entrada Prop. Owners’ Ass’n, 205 Ariz. 471, 73 P.3d 602 (App.

2003).    The court of appeals agreed with the superior court as

to the absence of a statutory dedication, but found a valid

common law dedication.         Id. at 478 ¶¶ 23-24, 73 P.3d at 609.

¶7          Entrada    petitioned     for    review,   claiming    that   common

law   dedications     of   roadway    easements    for    public   use    are    no

longer recognized in Arizona.               Entrada’s petition also argued

that,    even   if    common    law    dedications       remain    viable,      the

dedication in this case is ineffective because it has not been

validly accepted.      We granted review because these issues are of

statewide   importance.         We    exercise    jurisdiction     pursuant      to

Article 6, Section 5(3), of the Arizona Constitution, A.R.S. §

12-120.24 (2003), and Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate Procedure

23(c)(3).

                                       II.

                                        A.

¶8          Under the common law, an owner of land can dedicate

that land to a proper public use.             Restatement (Third) of Prop.:

Servitudes § 2.18(1) (2000).           Our cases have long recognized and

applied this common law doctrine.             E.g., Evans v. Blankenship, 4

Ariz. 307, 39 P. 812 (1895) (upholding common law dedication of

a public park).       The effect of a common law dedication is that


                                        5
the public acquires an easement to use the property for the

purposes specified, while the fee remains with the dedicator.

Allied Am. Inv. Co. v. Pettit, 65 Ariz. 283, 290, 179 P.2d 437,

441 (1947); Moeur v. City of Tempe, 3 Ariz. App. 196, 199, 412

P.2d 878, 881 (1966).

¶9        It   was   settled   long       ago   in   this   state   that   the

doctrine of common law dedication applies to the dedication of

roadway easements for public use.           Thorpe v. Clayton, 10 Ariz.

94, 99-100, 85 P. 1061, 1062 (1906).             Entrada argues, however,

that the common law was abrogated in the 1901 Territorial Code,

and that since 1901, dedications of roadway easements for public

use can only be made pursuant to a specific authorizing statute.1

¶10       The linchpin of Entrada’s argument is paragraph 3956 of

the 1901 Code, which provides:

      All roads and highways in the territory of Arizona
      which have been located as public highways by order of
      the board of supervisors, and all roads in public use
      which have been recorded as public highways, or which
      may be recorded by authority of the board of
      supervisors, from and after the passage of this title,
      are hereby declared public highways; and all roads in
      the territory of Arizona now in public use, which do
      not come within the foregoing provisions of this
      section, are hereby declared vacated . . . .

Ariz. Civ. Code ¶ 3956 (1901).            Entrada reads this statute as

providing that, from 1901 onward, there are only two categories


      1
          The Pleaks do not contest in this court the holdings
below that there has been no valid statutory dedication of Kolb
Road.

                                      6
of roads — public and private — and the former can only be

created pursuant to statute.

¶11       However, the central historical premise of Entrada’s

argument — that the 1901 Code abrogated the existing common law

— is flawed.      Paragraph 3956 of the 1901 Code was simply a

recodification of a provision first appearing, in substantially

the same form, in the 1871 Code, Ariz. Civ. Code § 1 at 550

(1871), and subsequently recodified in the 1887 Code.                   Ariz.

Civ. Code ¶ 2736 (1887).         Therefore, if the 1901 Code were

intended to abrogate the common law with respect to dedications

of roadway easements for public use, the same would necessarily

have been true of the 1871 and 1887 Codes.         Yet, in Thorpe, this

court recognized the validity of an 1888 common law dedication

of a roadway easement to public use, a result clearly precluded

under Entrada’s reading of paragraph 3956.         See Thorpe, 10 Ariz.

at 99-100, 85 P. at 1062.

¶12       More    importantly,   Entrada’s     argument   that   paragraph

3956 abrogated the common law with respect to the dedication of

roadway easements for public use fails as a matter of statutory

construction.     Our statutes have long provided that the common

law,   except    when   “repugnant   to   or    inconsistent     with    the

constitution of the United States or the constitution or laws of

this state . . . is adopted and shall be the rule of decision in

all courts of this state.”       1907 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 10, § 8,


                                     7
codified at A.R.S. § 1-201 (2002).                   Therefore, if the common law

is to be changed or abrogated by statute, the legislature must

do    so    expressly      or    by   necessary      implication.        See    Wyatt   v.

Wehmuller, 167 Ariz. 281, 284, 806 P.2d 870, 873 (1991) (citing

S.H. Kress & Co. v. Superior Court, 66 Ariz. 67, 73, 182 P.2d

931, 935 (1947)).               Absent a clear manifestation of legislative

intent to abrogate the common law, we interpret statutes with

“every intendment in favor of consistency with the common law.”

In re Thelen’s Estate, 9 Ariz. App. 157, 160-61, 450 P.2d 123,

126-27 (1969).

¶13            Paragraph 3956 does not manifest a clear intention by

the legislature to abrogate the common law of roadway dedication

to    public    use.       Its    first     clause      merely    denominates     certain

roads as “public highways.”                   As this court recognized in 1904,

the phrase “public highways” in paragraph 3956 was meant simply

to describe those roads “as come within the express provisions

of    the    statutes      declaring        them   to    be    such.”     Territory     v.

Richardson, 8 Ariz. 336, 339, 76 P. 456, 457 (1904); cf. State

v. Cardon, 112 Ariz. 548, 550, 544 P.2d 657, 659 (1976) (noting

that       “public     highways”        are     those     established      by     various

statutory means).               Nothing in this portion of paragraph 3956

suggests       that    landowners       are    somehow        thereby   prevented    from

dedicating their privately owned land to public use.                           Cf. Moeur,

3    Ariz.    App.    at   199,       412   P.2d   at    881    (contrasting     a   valid


                                               8
statutory dedication, in which the fee passes to a governmental

entity, with a common law dedication, for which the fee remains

with the dedicator).2

¶14       Nor does the final phrase of paragraph 3956, which

provides that “all roads in the territory of Arizona now in

public use, which do not come within the foregoing provisions of

this section, are hereby declared vacated,” abrogate the common

law allowing dedications of roadway easements to public use.

This portion of the statute merely declares certain existing

roads in “public use” to be “vacated.”           As the contemporaneous

construction of paragraph 3956 in Richardson makes clear, this

“vacation”   simply   meant   that   these   roads   could   no   longer   be

considered “public highways,” not that they thereby reverted to

solely private ways.    8 Ariz. at 340, 76 P. at 456.

¶15       Indeed, Richardson expressly recognized that “public

highways” and “private roads” were not the only two categories

of roads in the territory in 1904.            Rather, this court noted

that “a way may be a road that is neither a public highway nor a

      2
          See A.R.S. § 9-254 (providing that upon filing of a
map or plat for a town, the “fee of streets . . . reserved
therein to the use of the public vests in the town, in trust,
for   the  uses   therein  expressed”;   if  the   town  is  not
incorporated, then the “fee vests in the county until such time
as the town becomes incorporated”); A.R.S. § 11-806.01(F)
(providing that on recording of a plat for certain subdivisions,
“the fee of streets . . . reserved to the use of the public
vests in trust in the county for the uses and to the extent
depicted on the plat”; in the event of “annexation by any city
or town such fee automatically vests in the city or town”).

                                     9
private road or way, under our statutes.”             8 Ariz. at 339, 76 P.

at 457.    Richardson therefore emphasized that “many, if not a

majority, of the roads and ways running throughout all parts of

the territory, and frequently in general public use, are neither

public highways nor private ways.”            Id.    This category of roads,

as Richardson recognized, included roads where individuals had

obtained   an   easement   to   pass   over    grounds   owned   by   another,

whether by grant or other means.            Id. at 339, 76 P. at 457.

¶16        Moreover, Entrada’s argument that paragraph 3956 was

intended to abrogate the doctrine of common law road dedications

for public use runs afoul of A.R.S. § 40-283(D) (2001).                     In

pertinent part, that statute provides:

      A board of supervisors may authorize public service
      corporations, telecommunications corporations or cable
      television systems to construct a line, plant, service
      or system within the right-of-way of any road, highway
      or easement that is designated for access or public
      use by plat or survey of record of a subdivision, or
      of unsubdivided land as defined in § 32-2101, provided
      that any such authorization or construction pursuant
      to such authorization does not impose on the county
      the duty of maintaining the road or highway unless the
      county accepts the road or highway into the county
      maintenance system by appropriate resolution . . . .

¶17        Section   40-283(D)    applies       to   roads   “designated   for

. . . public use” by a plat or survey of “unsubdivided land.”

But, as the court of appeals correctly noted below, A.R.S. § 11-

806.01(F), which authorizes dedications of roads and highways in

those areas of a county lying outside municipal boundaries, only



                                       10
applies to recorded plats of subdivided land.                               Pleak, 205 Ariz.

at    473   ¶     6,    73    P.3d      at     604.       Section      40-283(D)       therefore

implicitly assumes that a plat or survey filed under § 32-2101

covering        unsubdivided            land      outside       municipal      boundaries     can

designate a roadway for public use — and subject the roadway to

use by various utilities — even absent a statutory dedication to

the county.            That is precisely what occurred here.                          Indeed, if

there were no such thing as a common law dedication of the

roadway      to      public      use,        it     is    difficult       to    see     how   the

legislature could empower the board to grant utility easements

on such a roadway, the fee to which remains in private hands,

without providing for compensation to the fee owner.

¶18             We     therefore        conclude         that    paragraph      3956    did   not

abrogate the settled common law allowing private landowners to

dedicate roadway easements for public use.                             Entrada’s suggestion

that this conclusion is contrary to prior decisions of the court

of    appeals        and     this       court,      while       finding     some   superficial

support in isolated language from various cases, dissolves under

closer examination.              One case upon which Entrada relies, Champie

v. Castle Hot Springs Co., 27 Ariz. 463, 233 P. 1107 (1925), did

not deal at all with the issue of common law dedication, but

rather      with       whether      a    “public        road”    can   be    created     through

prescription.           Id. at 466, 233 P. at 1108.                    In concluding that a

“public road” can be created only by statutory means, this court


                                                   11
did   not    hold    that      a   private      landowner    could    not     dedicate       a

roadway     to    public       use.     Indeed,       Champie     recognized       that    the

roads   at    issue       in    that    case     were    neither    public     roads       nor

private      ways,       but    rather      “fall      squarely     within     the    class

described in Territory v. Richardson as ‘without a legal status

either as public highways or private ways.’”                        Id. at 467, 233 P.

at 1108 (quoting Richardson, 8 Ariz. at 340, 76 P. at 457).

¶19          Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Arizona

Corporation Commission, 198 Ariz. 604, 12 P.3d 1208 (App. 2000),

the other case upon which Entrada primarily relies, did not deal

at all with the ability of a private landowner to dedicate a

roadway easement to public use.                      Rather, the issue in that case

was whether a statute granting the Corporation Commission the

power to regulate railroad crossings of “public roads” included

roads   on       which    there       was   a   history     of    public     use     but    no

statutory dedication.              The court of appeals correctly concluded

that the statutory language was meant to describe only those

roads first identified in Richardson as “public highways.”                                 Id.

at 607-08 ¶¶ 13-21, 12 P.3d at 1211-12.                           The suggestion in a

footnote in Burlington Northern that public roads may not be

created by “common-law dedication and acceptance,” id. at 608 ¶

18 n.2, 12 P.3d at 1212 n.2, is thus dictum, but in any event

gives no aid to Entrada’s position.                       “Public roads,” or those

roads in which the fee is owned by governmental entities, cannot


                                                12
be created except by statute, but this does not mean, as we have

demonstrated     above,   that     the    common     law   doctrine    allowing    a

private landowner to give the public an easement to pass over a

privately owned road has somehow been abrogated under Arizona

law.

                                          B.

¶20        Having concluded that the common law still continues

to allow a private landowner to dedicate a roadway easement to

public   use,    we   must   now    decide     whether      there   was   a     valid

dedication in this case.

¶21        An effective dedication of private land to a public

use has two general components — an offer by the owner of land

to dedicate and acceptance by the general public.                      See Allied

Am. Inv. Co., 65 Ariz. at 287, 179 P.2d at 439; Restatement

(Third) of Prop.: Servitudes § 2.18(1).                    No particular words,

ceremonies, or form of conveyance is necessary to dedicate land

to public use; anything fully demonstrating the intent of the

donor to dedicate can suffice.             Allied Am. Inv. Co., 65 Ariz. at

287, 179 P.2d at 439.

¶22        In this case, given the unequivocal language in the

Record   of     Survey,   Entrada        correctly    does    not     dispute    the

existence of an offer to dedicate.                 Rather it claims that the

offer could not be accepted by the general public in the absence

of public use and that the use by the Sycamore Canyon Estates


                                          13
residents did not suffice.           In response, the Pleaks argue that

acceptance occurred as a matter of law once lots were sold in

the Entrada subdivision.

¶23         Our cases discussing common law dedications of parks

teach   that    the    sale   of    lots     referencing        a    recorded     plat

containing      the    dedication     constitutes          an       “immediate     and

irrevocable”     dedication.        County    of    Yuma   v.       Leidendeker,    81

Ariz. 208, 213, 303 P.2d 531, 535 (1956) (holding that park was

properly dedicated because the “mere act of surveying land into

lots, streets, and squares by the owner, and the recordation of

such plat, constituted an offer to dedicate and was subject to

revocation by the dedicator until it was accepted, but the mere

act of selling lots with reference to such plat resulted in an

immediate      and    irrevocable    common        law   dedication       of     areas

delineated thereon for public purposes”); Evans, 4 Ariz. at 316,

39 P. at 814 (holding that dedication of park “certainly . . .

had been accepted on the part of the public by those persons who

had bought lots in the addition”).             There is no dispute in this

case that the lots in Entrada were sold after recordation of the

Survey and that the conveyance documents specifically referred

to the Survey.        Therefore, if the rule announced in our prior

cases with respect to parks applies, there has been an effective

acceptance of common law dedication of Kolb Road to public use.




                                       14
¶24         Entrada         argues,       however,       for      a    different        test   for

acceptance      of     common       law    dedications            of   roadway        easements,

requiring actual use by the general public before the road is

effectively dedicated to public use.                         That argument finds some

support in the language of several cases.                              See Drane v. Avery,

72 Ariz. 100, 102, 231 P.2d 444, 445 (1951) (stating that the

recordation       of    a    plat     containing         a       dedication       of    streets,

coupled with sale of lots, “constitutes a ‘dedication,’ and use

thereof by purchasers of lots and the general public constitutes

sufficient acceptance of the dedication”); Edwards v. Sheets, 66

Ariz. 213, 218, 185 P.2d 1001, 1004 (1947) (“The making and

recordation       of   the    plat        coupled    with         sale     of    lots    therein

constituted the dedication.                 The use by purchasers of lots and

the     general      public     constituted          a       sufficient          acceptance.”)

(citations omitted).

¶25         However, neither of these cases actually held that use

by the general public — as opposed to mere sale of lots pursuant

to a recorded survey or plat — is a prerequisite to acceptance

of a common law roadway easement dedication.                                    In Drane, the

parties     conceded         that     there        was       a     valid        and    effective

dedication; and the only dispute before this court was over the

plaintiffs’ standing to sue and whether the suit was barred by

laches.    72 Ariz. at 102-03, 231 P.2d at 445-46.                              In Edwards the

issue     was     whether       the       appellants         had       obtained        title   by


                                              15
prescription to a street dedicated as a public road.                         66 Ariz.

at    215-18,   185     P.2d   at     1002-04.         The    sufficiency     of    the

acceptance simply was not an issue in either case.3

¶26        On    the      merits,         we    find    unpersuasive     Entrada’s

invitation to adopt a different rule with regard to common law

dedications     of    roads    than    for      dedications    of   parks.         As    a

preliminary matter, it is not clear, as Entrada argues, that

roadway   easements      involve      a    greater     financial    burden    to    the

dedicator than other public use easements such as parks.                            But

more importantly, Entrada’s proposed rule, which would require

proof of actual use by the public before finding an effective

dedication of a common law roadway easement, would inevitably

result in detailed case-by-case inquiries regarding whether and

how the public had used a particular roadway.                   This would inject

uncertainty      into     property         law,      where     predictability           is


      3
          As a technical matter, neither of the cited cases
appears to have involved a common law dedication, because in
each case, this court noted that that the fee to the roadway was
held by the county.    Drane, 72 Ariz. at 101, 231 P.2d at 445
(noting that the fee to the roadways had passed to the county);
Edwards, 66 Ariz. at 218, 185 P.2d at 1004 (noting that title to
streets at issue had passed to the county); see also Avery v.
Drane, 77 Ariz. 328, 334, 271 P.2d 480, 484 (1954) (noting that
streets at issue in the prior Drane opinion had been dedicated
to the county).    However, as we have previously stated, the
statutes governing dedications generally “contemplate the common
law modes of dedication.”    Leidendecker, 81 Ariz. at 213, 303
P.2d   at  535.     Therefore,   cases  dealing  with  statutory
dedications can be useful in determining whether the elements of
a common law dedication are present.



                                           16
paramount.4      The better approach is to treat acceptance of common

law dedications of areas for public use consistently, whether

they involve a park, a road, a public plaza, or some other

public space.

¶27           Entrada also suggests that it is unfair to give the

public use of a roadway constructed by a private landowner at

its own expense.5          But this is a dilemma entirely of Entrada’s

own making.       If its predecessor did not intend for the public at

large to have access to Kolb Road, or wanted that access limited

to    trips     within    the    borders       of     Entrada,      it   could     have   so

provided        within     its     dedication.                The     landowner      could

alternatively have dedicated a roadway easement that did not

extend     to    the     borders       of   Entrada,       thus       requiring     anyone

attempting      to     access    the    road     to    pass    over      clearly   private

property not subject to the easement.                     First American, however,


       4
          For example, in the case at hand, the superior court
concluded that there had been no public use of the road, and
hence no acceptance, because the road was fenced until 1996. It
is clear, however, that members of the public, including those
residing in Sycamore Canyon Estates, regularly used Kolb Road
after it was improved in 1996.      If Entrada’s position were
adopted, courts would be required in situations like this to
determine how much public use was required to constitute an
acceptance of a dedication, and precisely when that public use
had to take place.
       5
          This   case  presents   no  issue   as  to   Entrada’s
obligations, if any, with respect to the initial improvement and
subsequent maintenance of the roadway easement, and we express
no opinion on those subjects.



                                            17
dedicated the roadway easement unrestrictedly to “the public,”

and placed the easement so that those in the Sycamore Canyon

Estates         development     could    access    the     roadway   without    first

passing over any of Entrada’s private property.                        If developers

wish       to    avoid   the    consequences       about    which    Entrada    today

complains,        they   need     only   exercise    greater    care    in    drafting

dedicatory language regarding the scope or location of roadway

easements in plats or surveys of record.

                                          III.

¶28              We   therefore     conclude      that   the   court     of    appeals

correctly held that common law dedications of roadway easements

for public use are viable in Arizona, and that such a dedication

was validly made in this case.              We affirm the opinion below, and

remand to the superior court for further proceedings consistent

with this opinion.6




                                          Andrew D. Hurwitz, Justice




       6
          The Pleaks seek attorneys’ fees pursuant to A.R.S. §
12-1103(B) (2001).   This statute, which allows for recovery of
costs in actions to quiet title if the defendant refuses upon
request to execute a quit claim deed to the plaintiff, does not
apply to this case. As noted above, a common law dedication of
a roadway easement to public use leaves fee title to the roadway
in the landowner, and Entrada therefore properly refused in this
case to issue a quit claim deed to the Pleaks.

                                           18
CONCURRING:


                                       _
Charles E. Jones, Chief Justice


                               ______
Rebecca White Berch, Justice


                                       _
Michael D. Ryan, Justice


                                       _
John C. Gemmill, Judge*




     *
      The Honorable Ruth V. McGregor recused herself; pursuant to
Article VI, Section 3, of the Arizona Constitution, the
Honorable John C. Gemmill, Judge of the Court of Appeals,
Division One, was designated to sit in her stead.

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