OPINION
¶ 1 Plaintiffs Robin and Audrey Pleak and Michael and Ann Shurtliff (collectively, the Pleaks) filed this action seeking a roadway easement over real property the defendants (collectively, Entrada) own or hold liens against. The Pleaks appeal from the trial court’s order denying them motion for summary judgment and granting partial summary judgment in favor of Entrada, arguing Entrada’s predecessor in interest, First American Title Insurance Company of Arizona, dedicated the easement to thе public. The Pleaks further claim the trial court *473 erred in awarding Entrada attorney’s fees pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-341.01. We agree First American dedicated the roadway easement to the public and reverse the judgment.
Facts and Procedural History
¶ 2 In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we view the facts and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion.
Link v. Pima County,
¶ 3 The Pleaks, who own real property in a section abutting the eastern edge of the Entrada property, filed a three-count complaint requesting the trial court to declare that First American had dedicated the Kolb Road easement to the public, quiet title in the roаdway “in trust for the public,” and permanently enjoin Entrada from interfering with the Pleaks’ use of the Kolb Road easement. 1 They also alleged the survey “eonstitute[d] a contract, express or implied, between [First American] and Pima County and members of the public” and argued, “as the successful parties in this action, [they were] entitled to recover their attorneys’ fees pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-341.01.” The Pleaks also requested attorney’s fees pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-1103. Entrada filed a counterclаim asking the trial court to quiet title in the easement “as a private road” and to enjoin the Pleaks from using it.
¶ 4 The Pleaks moved for summary judgment, contending that First American had dedicated the easement to the public, both statutorily and pursuant to common law. Entrada filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. The trial court granted partial summary judgment in favor of Entrada on count one, finding that the survey did not constitute a statutory dedication of the roadway to the public and that, although First American had intended to dedicate the easement to the public, because the dedication had never been accepted, no common law dedication had occurred. The court also awarded Entrada them attorney’s fees. After the court denied the Pleaks’ motion for reconsideration, they appealed.
Statutory Dedication
¶ 5 Summary judgment is proper if the evidence presented by the party opposing the motion has so little prоbative value, given the required burden of proof, that reasonable jurors could not agree with the opposing party’s conclusions. Ariz. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(1), 16 A.R.S., Pt. 2;
Orme School v. Reeves,
¶ 6 We first address the Pleaks’ contention that summary judgment was erroneous because the survey constituted a statutory dedication of the roadway. The Pleaks admit the survey does not meet the requirements of A.R.S. § 11-806.01 as a plat depicting a subdivision under the county’s jurisdiction, see AR.S. § 32-2101(54) (defining “subdivision”), but contend the survey fulfills the requirements of AR.S. § 9-254. That section provides:
Upon filing a map or plat, the fee of the streets, alleys, avenues, highways, parks and other parcels of ground 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, *474 then the fee vests in the county until the town becomes incorporated.
Whethеr the statute can serve as the basis for any dedication of the easement here is a question of law subject to our
de novo
review.
See State v. C & H Nationwide, Inc.,
¶ 7 Our principal goal in interpreting a statute is to discern legislative intent.
Moore v. Browning,
¶8 Section 9-254 lies within Title 9 (titled “Cities and Towns”), Chapter 2 (titled “Form of Government”), Article 3 (titled “Town Incorporated under Common Council Government”). Section 9-251, A.R.S., provides in part, “[w]hen a town is laid out, the proprietors of the town shall cause to be made an accurate plat or map thereof____” The maps required under § 9-251 must be acknowledged and filed with the county recorder and with the town сlerk. A.R.S. § 9-252. These headings and statutes clearly encompass only issues affecting cities and towns and strongly suggest the legislature did not intend § 9-254 to apply to land such as Entrada’s, which lies entirely outside the shadow of any municipality’s corporate boundaries.
¶ 9 Our supreme court reached this same result with respect to § 9-254’s predecessor statute in
County of Yuma v. Leidendeker,
Common Law Dedication
¶ 10 The Pleaks alternatively ask us to find that the survey established a common law dedication of the Kolb Road easement to the public. Such a “Medication is the intentional appropriation of land by the owner to some proper public use.”
Allied Am. Inv. Co. v. Pettit,
¶ 11 Entrada contends Arizona courts no longer recognize common law dedi
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cation of roadway easements, citing
Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Arizona Corp. Commission,
¶ 12 Arizona courts follow the common law to the extent it is “not reрugnant to or inconsistent with the constitution of the United States or the constitution or laws of this state.” A.R.S. § 1-201;
see also Berthot v. Security Pac. Bank of Arizona,
¶ 13 In
Burlington,
pursuant to its statutory authority to determine whether crossings at “public roads or streets” are necessary, A.R.S. § 40-337(C), the Arizona Corporаtion Commission had ordered the plaintiff railway company to maintain a road crossing it had intended to close. On appeal, the company challenged the commission’s jurisdiction, arguing the road was not a public road. Although the road had never been “established by any governmental entity as a public road,”
Burlington,
We have found one ease suggesting that public roads may be established by “common-law dedication and acceptance.” Rodgers v. Ray,10 Ariz.App. 119 , 121,457 P.2d 281 , 283 (1969). Rodgers, however, relies on Allied American Investment Co. v. Pettit,65 Ariz. 283 , 290,179 P.2d 437 , 441 (1947), in which the issue was whether a subdivision plot was properly dedicated as a public park. We find Rodgers entirely unpersuasive on this point.
Burlington,
¶ 14 The Pleaks ask us to reject this statement in
Burlington
as сonstituting no more than dictum, citing several cases that, they argue, have recognized common law dedications of public roadway easements.
Avery v. Drone,
¶ 15 The Pleaks maintain, however, that a roadway such as the Kolb Road easement here is neither a “public highway” nor a private road and suggest that, as the amicus curiae frames the issue, there “exists a class of roads which are public, in the sense that the public has a right to use them, but which the government has not yet committed to maintain. These latter roads may be established by common law ... but [that law] impose[s] no burden on anyone to maintain [them].” Notwithstanding Entradа’s suggestion to the contrary, the issue of maintenance is not before us, and we limit our discussion *476 to whether Arizona law permits the dedication of a roadway easement to the public by other than statutory means.
¶ 16 The Pleaks rely on Leidendeker for their contention that a roadway easement can be dedicated to the public under the common law. As discussed earlier, our supreme court found in that case that recording a plat had not effectuated a statutory dedicatiоn within the meaning of § 9-254 of property situated outside any municipality’s actual or proposed boundaries. The court then addressed whether a common law dedication had occurred, noting the common law rule that
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 аct of selling lots with reference to such plat resulted in an immediate and irrevocable common law dedication of areas delineated thereon for public purposes.
Leidendeker,
¶ 17 The supreme court addressed a similаr question more than sixty years earlier in
Evans v. Blankenship,
¶ 18 Citing among other cases
Cardon,
and
Champie v. Castle Hot Springs Co.,
¶ 19 In
Champie,
the plaintiff had filed a trespass action against the defendant, alleging he competed with the plaintiffs stables by bringing horses оnto the plaintiffs property and renting them to the plaintiffs customers. The trial comí; permanently enjoined the defendant from taking his horses onto the plaintiffs property despite his claim .that the property was a public road created by prescription. On review, the supreme comí; rejected the notion that public roadways could be created by prescription. Although, as Entrada points out, the court stated that the only method of establishing рublic roads was statutory, that statement does not preclude a finding of common law dedication of a public roadway, not only because the issue was not before the court, but also because the court expressly affirmed its previous holding in
Territory v. Richardson,
¶20 There, the defendants were charged with digging up a private way. In affirming the tidal court’s sustaining of the defendants’ demurrer, the supreme comí; addressed the definitions of public highway and private way, noting that, in 1901, the legislature hаd declared “vacated” all roads within the territory that were not public highways. The court held that, by doing so, the legislature had not automatically made vacated roads into private ways but had instead created, in addition to public highways and private ways, a third class of roads within the state, namely, “roads established without authority [of law] for the convenience of individuals, and without a legal
status
either as public highways or private ways.”
Id.
at 339-40,
¶ 21 We therefore turn to the Pleaks’ argument that Entrada’s predecessor in interest, First American, effected a common law dedication of the Kolb Road easement. The Pleаks maintain that under
Leidendeker
and
Evans,
once a “plat” purporting to dedicate land to the public had been recorded, the sale and purchase of parcels referring to that plat constituted effective acceptance of the dedication as it pertains to members of the public at large. The trial court, however, found that the survey here did not constitute a plat, noting that, whereas a plat under § 11-806.01 requires “not only exact dimensions, but also water and sewage plans, as well as approval by the county’s legislative body,” the survey here “only sets forth a general description of the land, describing the boundaries of a large tract of land.” But in its brief on appeal, Entrada acknowledges the survey “may constitute a plat for purposes of meeting [the] requirements associated with a common-law dedication.” We agree.
See Transamerica Title Ins. Co. v. Cochise County,
¶ 22 Entrada nevertheless contends that, even “if appellant’s legal theory can be sustained under Arizona law,” questions of fact remain as to whether the survey “established an intent to dedicate” the Kolb Road easement. The trial court, however, expressly found that First American had recorded the survey with the intent “to dedicate a seventy-five foot strip of land for a roadway and utility easement.” Entrada failed to make this argument or controvert the Pleaks’ factual assertion below, adopted by the trial court, and thereby waived the issue on appeal.
See United Bank of Arizona v. Allyn,
¶ 23 The trial court also found that, although Entrada had purchased parcels of land, the general public had never accepted the dedication. Entrada agrees, asserting that a dedication is not accepted by the public until both the purchasers of land and the general public accept it, citing three cases from other jurisdictions.
City of Santa Clara v. Ivancovich,
¶24 We disagree with Entrada that this result “forces private landowners to provide public access to property they don’t own, so long as they want access to their own property.” Instead, our decisiоn merely confirms and effectuates First American’s attempt to attract purchasers by creating a public easement allowing access to its rural land. It is also consistent with the purchasers’ knowledge that First American had, according to the survey, “dedicated] these easements to the public for the use as such.” Because dedication of the Kolb Road easement was complete upon the sale of lots referring to the recorded survеy, see Richardson, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in Entrada’s favor.
Attorney’s Fees
¶25 The Pleaks contest the trial court’s authority to award attorney’s fees against them pursuant to § 12-341.01, arguing in direct contravention of the position they took in their complaint. But because Entrada is not the prevailing party, we vacate the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees.
Disposition
¶ 26 The trial court’s order granting Entrada partial summary judgment and attorney’s fees is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this decision. At oral argument, the Pleaks urged that we also direct the trial
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court to enter summary judgment in their favor. Although the denial of summary judgment is generally neither appealable nor subject to review, we may in certain limited circumstances reverse a trial court’s denial of summary judgment.
See Bothell v. Two Point Acres, Inc.,
Notes
. The Pleaks’ complaint, the trial court’s judgment, and, accordingly, the scope of our review are limited to addressing only the status of Kolb Road abutting Entrada’s property'.
. Section § 611, Rev. Stat. Ariz. (1901), provided:
Upon the filing of any such map or plat, the fee of all streets, alleys, avenues, highwayfs], parks and other parcels of ground reserved therein to the use of the public, shall vest in such city or town, if incorporated, in trust, for the uses therein named and expressed; or if such town be not incorporated, then in the county until such town shall become incorporated, for the like uses.
