OPINION
Myma Walker appeals from the trial court’s dismissal on summary judgment of her complaint against the City of Scottsdale (City) and the McCormick Ranch Property Owners’ Association (Association). The issue on appeal is whether the trial court properly construed A.R.S. § 33-1551, Arizona’s recreational use statute, to limit the defendants’ duty to Walker, thereby precluding her recovery.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Walker was injured in a fall which occurred while she was riding her bicycle along a bicycle path at 85th Street and Hayden Road in Scottsdale, Arizona. The property on which the bicycle path is located is a greenbelt area within McCormick Ranch, a planned, residential community in Scottsdale, Arizona. The property was owned by the Association. The City of Scottsdale owned an easement on the McCormick Ranch property for the bicycle path, which it constructed and maintained. Walker filed suit against the Association and the City for her injuries, alleging that her fall was caused by the negligence of the defendants in the design, construction, and maintenance of the bike path.
Both defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that they owed no duty of care to Walker pursuant to A.R.S. § 33-1551. The trial court agreed and granted summary judgment for both defendants. After the trial court denied Walker’s motion for reconsideration or new trial, Walker appealed from the judgment and the order denying her motion. Walker argues that A.R.S. § 33-1551 cannot be read to preclude her suit under the facts presented in this case.
DISCUSSION
Arizona Revised Statutes § 33-1551, enacted in 1983, is a statute granting immunity from suit, with limited exceptions, to owners, lessees or occupants of certain types of property for injuries to persons who have made certain recreational uses of the property without paying an admission fee for such use. Subsection (A) of the statute provides that:
A. An owner, lessee or occupant of premises does not:
1. Owe any duty to a recreational user to keep the premises safe for such use.
2. Extend any assurance to a recreational user through the act of giving permission to enter the premises that the premises are safe for such use.
3. Incur liability for an injury to persons or property caused by any act of a recreational user.
Subsection (B) defines the statute’s key words, “premises” and “recreational user,” as follows:
B. As used in this section:
1. “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.
2. “Recreational user” means a person to whom permission has been granted or implied without the payment of an admission fee or other consideration to enter upon premises to hunt, fish, trap, camp, hike, ride, swim or engage in similar recreational pursuits. The purchase of a state hunting, trapping or fishing license is not the payment of an admission fee or other consideration as provided in this section.
Subsection (C) lists the limited circumstances in which liability is not precluded:
C. This section does not limit the liability which otherwise exists for maintaining an attractive nuisance, or for wilful or malicious failure to guard or warn *208 against a dangerous condition, use or activity.
Statutes of this general type are frequently referred to as “recreational use” statutes.
In this appeal, we must construe Arizona’s recreational use statute to determine whether it applies under the facts of this case to bar Walker’s suit. The narrow question presented is whether A.R.S. § 33-1551 limits the liability of those with an interest in a maintained bike path running through a greenbelt area of an urban, residential neighborhood in a suit brought by a bicyclist injured on the bike path. The trial court concluded that the limitations in the statute were applicable in this situation.
In reviewing the trial court’s decision, this court is not bound by the legal conclusions reached by the trial court.
Gary Outdoor Advertising Co. v. Sun Lodge, Inc.,
No contention is made in this case that Walker’s claim might fall within the exceptions to the immunity provided in subsection (C) of the statute. Walker does not charge the defendants with acting wilfully or maliciously or with maintaining an attractive nuisance. Walker’s contention is that the facts existing in this case cause it to fall outside the statute. Walker’s primary argument is that the property on which her injury occurred was not “premises” as that term is defined in subsection (B). Secondarily, she argues that she is not the type of “recreational user” to which the statute applies. She does not deny that she was using the property without paying a fee and that at least part of her purpose for riding on the bike path was recreational. Even so, she maintains that the riding of her bicycle was not the type of “riding” that the legislature meant to include within the statute.
We turn first to the question of whether the greenbelt area of McCormick Ranch within which the accident occurred falls within the statutory definition of “premises.” The cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to determine and effectuate the legislative intent behind the statute.
Calvert v. Farmers Ins. Co.,
We recognize that the impetus for the Council of State Governments’ proposal of the model act was the growing awareness of the need for additional recreational areas to serve the general public. Suggested State Legislation, Vol. XXIV, Public Recreation on Private Lands: Limitation on Liability, pp. 150-52 (1965). It was felt that “in those instances where private owners are willing to make their land available to members of the general public without charge, it is possible to argue that every reasonable encouragement should be given *209 to them.” Id. at 150. The stated purpose of the model act is “to encourage availability of private lands by limiting the liability of owners to situations in which they are compensated for the use of their property and to those in which injury results from malicious or willful acts of the owner.” Id.
Unfortunately, this information does not carry us far in determining whether the McCormick Ranch greenbelt area is encompassed within Arizona’s recreational use statute.
In order to determine the legislature’s intention as to what property is encompassed within the statute, we must look to the language used in the statute. The language of a statute is the most reliable evidence of its intent.
State ex rel. Corbin v. Pickrell,
The defendants apparently concede that the property where plaintiff’s injury occurred is not “agricultural, range, mining or forest lands.” They argue, though, that the property falls within the phrase “any other similar lands.” They argue that a reading of the entire statute leads to the conclusion that in using the phrase “any other similar lands which by agreement áre made available to a recreational user,” the legislature meant to encompass any land made available by agreement to persons performing the activities listed in subsection (B)(2). They emphasize that the statute contains no express language limiting it to rural or semi-rural properties, and they urge us to find no implication of such limitation. They cite numerous cases in which courts have found recreational use statutes in other states to apply to properties located in urban areas such as city parks. They contend that these cases provide support for their argument that Arizona’s statute applies to the McCormick Ranch greenbelt area even though it is located in an urban area.
We find the cases cited by the defendants to be of little assistance to them. We note that approximately forty states have enacted some type of recreational use statute, many of them patterned after the model act.
See Riksem v. City of Seattle,
In
Syrowik v. City of Detroit,
Similarly, the Idaho Supreme Court in
McGhee v. City of Glenns Ferry,
A California appellate court also held that California’s recreational use statute is applicable to urban lands in
Moore v. City of Torrance,
In contrast to the statutes involved in these cases which place little or no limitation on the types of property encompassed within the statute, the Arizona legislature specifically limited immunity under its recreational use statute to an owner, lessee or occupant of “agricultural, range, mining or forest lands and any other similar lands.” Were we to accept the defendants' argument that the phrase “any other similar lands” expresses a legislative intent that the statute apply to any land upon which, by agreement, any of the stated recreational activities could be performed, the words, “agricultural, range, mining or forest lands” would become surplusage. We are forbidden to construe a statute in such a manner; instead each word, phrase, clause, and sentence must be given meaning so that no part of the statute will be void, inert, redundant, or trivial.
City of Phoenix v. Yates,
Clearly, the legislature chose the words “agricultural, range, mining or forest lands,” for a purpose, and we must look to the common elements existing among these four types of lands to determine whether the property on which Walker was injured can be considered “other similar lands.” The four types of lands listed in the statute normally are relatively large areas of land. Most frequently, these types of property are located outside urban areas in thinly populated rural or semi-rural locales. All four types of land listed in the statute have as their primary use economic activities which are compatible with incidental recreational use.
Also, property of this nature is often in a natural, undeveloped state, although the express language of the statute provides that the legislature would not exclude any buildings or structures which happen to exist on such lands. Moreover, when we look to the recreational activities
*211
enumerated in subsection (B)(2) of the statute, we see that, taken as a whole, they are pursuits that would normally be undertaken on large-sized tracts of land located in “the wilds” rather than in populated areas. Very few of the activities listed would be conducted on the property where plaintiff was injured. Finally, we are mindful that a statute in derogation of the common law, such as this one, must be strictly construed.
Schilling v. Embree,
The recreational use statutes in many other jurisdictions have received a similarly narrow construction due to the language or legislative history of the particular statute. For example, in
Tijerina v. Cornelius Christian Church,
Washington’s statute was similarly worded when the Washington Court of Appeals decided
Kucher v. Pierce County,
In
McCarver v. Manson Park and Recreation Dist.,
The arrangement was clear: While the primary use of the land would continue *212 to be for agricultural or forestry, a secondary use, without fee, for recreation would be allowed by the landowner in exchange for a limitation of liability ... Nothing in the legislative background or history of the act nor in its language leads to any other conclusion than that ROW 4.24.200-.210 is intended to cover a situation where public recreational use is a secondary and not a primary use of the land or water.
Id.
at 379-80,
The same distinction was made in
Stephens v. United States,
The New Jersey courts have long held that New Jersey’s recreational use statute does not apply to land situated within residential, urban areas. In
Boileau v. DeCecco,
In
Harrison v. Middlesex Water Co.,
[T]he application of the statute depends more upon the nature of the property, in terms of its use for the type of public recreational activity contemplated by the Legislature, than it depends upon the community or neighborhood in which the property is located. There may be a greater coincidence in the approved activity, the type of property and rural or semi-rural areas. We would not expect to find much hunting or trapping in suburbia, though stretches of land there may still support horseback riding and hiking. But the key factors must be the activity and the kind of property and use to which it is put.
Id.
at 381-82,
The use in the current statute of the word “premises” is in conjunction with provisions that failure to “post” such land in accordance with the posting statute, N.J.S.A. 23:7-1 to -8 would not af- *213 feet a landowner’s immunity. N.J.S.A. 2A:42A-3. The mention of the posting statutes is a strong indication that the kind of premises which the legislature contemplated when it enacted the Landowner’s Liability Act was primarily undeveloped, open and expansive rural and semi-rural properties where hunting, fishing and trapping might be expected to take place. This is supplemented by the specific inclusion of horseback riding, skiing, and toboganning in addition to other “outdoor sport, game and recreational activity.” N.J.S.A. 2A:42A-2. These are endeavors which can be accommodated, under normal conditions, only upon large sized tracts of rural or semi-rural lands, or other lands having similar characteristics.
Id.
at 399-400,
Like the courts in the cases cited above, we construe our statute strictly, attentive to the restrictive language chosen by the legislature, in determining the extent of our legislature’s abrogation of traditional common law liability. We conclude from the language chosen by our legislature that it did not intend to grant a blanket immunity to all landowners without regard to the characteristics of their property. In determining what properties are to receive the protection of the statute, characteristics such as size, naturalness, primary and secondary uses of the land, remoteness or isolation from populated areas would all be considered. While the line might be hard to draw in some instances, we are satisfied that the statutory immunity does not extend to the property in question.
Having reached the conclusion that the property where the accident occurred does not fall within the definition of “premises”, it is unnecessary for us to consider Walker’s other contention that she was not a “recreational user” as defined in the statute.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons previously stated, we find that the trial court erred in holding that A.R.S. § 33-1551 applies to the property where Walker’s injuries occurred. The case is reversed and remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
NOTE: The Honorable MICHAEL C. NELSON of the Apache County Superior Court, State of Arizona, has been authorized to participate in this matter by the Chief Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court, pursuant to Ariz. Const. Art. VI, § 3.
Notes
. Remarks made by Representative Jim Ratliff, sponsor of the bill - in explaining the bill to the House Committee on the Judiciary as noted in the committee minutes of February 14, 1983.
. Remarks made by Assistant Attorney General Joseph Clifford to the House Committee on the Judiciary as noted in the committee minutes of February 14, 1983. See also Comments of Representative Jim Ratliff to the Senate Committee on Natural Resources and Agriculture as noted in the committee minutes of March 16, 1983.
. The statute was subsequently amended in 1979 to omit any reference to agricultural and forest lands, thereby expanding coverage of the statute to include any lands, whether rural or urban. That amendment led to a different result in
Riksem,
. The Washington Court of Appeals in
Riksem
interpreted the majority’s declination as authority for the proposition that the statute could apply to land which was used primarily for recreational purposes.
