OPINION
¶ 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 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 dedicated] 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.
¶ 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
¶ 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,
¶ 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. Clanton,
¶ 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 vacat-ed____
Ariz. Civ.Code ¶ 3956 (1901). Entrada reads this statute as providing that, from 1901 onward, there are only two categories 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,
¶ 12 More importantly, Entrada’s argument that paragraph 3956 abrogated the
¶ 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,
¶ 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.
¶ 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 private road or way, under our statutes.”
¶ 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*423 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 res-olution____
¶ 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 applies to recorded plats of subdivided land. Pleak,
¶ 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.,
¶ 19 Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Arizona Corporation Commission,
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
¶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 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,
¶ 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 eases. See Drane v. Avery,
¶ 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.
¶ 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.
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 ease. We affirm the opinion below, and remand to the superior court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
. The Pleaks do not contest in this court the holdings below that there has been no valid statutory dedication of Kolb Road.
. 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”).
. 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 the fee to the roadway was held by the county. Drane,
. 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.
. 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.
. 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.
