The instant case involves a so-called "pistol zone” annexation matter. Some years ago Michigan State University was annexed to the City of East Lansing; subsequently, the University built new dormitories. As it turned out the line dividing the annexed portions of the University campus from those portions which remained in the Charter Township of Meridian ran through the dormitories, so that some university students living inches from one another were required to vote in different municipalities. On July 26, 1979, petitions were presented to the Ingham County Clerk pursuant to § 34(5) and (6) of the charter township act, MCL 42.34; MSA 5.46(34), seeking annexation of the "pistol zone” to the City of East Lansing. On August 15, 1979, the clerk certified the petitions as containing the requisite number of signatures and being in suitable form and, pursuant to the Charter Township statute, directed that the annexation matter be submitted at the November 6, 1979, general election. The Election Scheduling Committee of the County of Ingham on August 29, 1979, confirmed the election date. At the general election then held, the annexation petition was approved by a two-to-one vote of East Lansing voters and by an almost four-to-one margin by those living in the "pistol zone” itself.
Upset with the loss of possibly more than $100,-000 annually in Federal and state revenue sharing funds, the Charter Township of Meridian attempted to invalidate the annexation referendum. On January 23, 1980, the Ingham County Circuit Court declared the annexation election invalid on the grounds that subsections (5) and (6) of § 34 of the charter township act, MCL 42.34; MSA 5.46(34), were unconstitutional. Defendant City of East Lansing appealed as of right. Pending deci *808 sion, this Court issued an order staying the circuit court judgment.
The trial court held that
"No law shall be revised, altered or amended by reference to its title only. The section or sections of the act altered or amended shall be reenacted and published at length.”
The trial court held that subsections (5) and (6) of § 34 of the charter township act are a wholesale repeal of § 9(11) of the home rule cities act, and accordingly in violation of art 4, § 25.
In this conclusion the trial court erred.
The second reason advanced by the trial court, that the act fails to indicate sufficient standards for exercise of the authority granted and delegated to the county clerk therein, is likewise unsupportable on this record. The pertinent section is subsection (6), which provides, in relevant part:
"If a petition is filed pursuant to subsection (5), the county clerk, after determining the validity of the petition, shall order a referendum on the question of annexation.”
The county clerk testified that in determining the validity of the petition, he referred to other statutes, including the home rule cities act, which contain specifications for the form, circulation, and notarization of petitions relating to election matters. The trial court felt that this involved unbridled discretion by the county clerk. This conclusion was clearly erroneous.
Numerous statutes in this state deal with the form of petitions and the manner by which signatures on petitions are checked for validity. No allegation has been made in this case that the county clerk applied any inappropriate standard in certifying the petitions filed with him regarding this annexation as valid, or that some other standard should have been applied and, if applied, would have led to the invalidating of these petitions.
Matters of concern to one inquiring as to the validity of petitions would be whether the requisite number of signatures required by the statute, in this case 20 percent of the electors of the city, are present, meaning that the signatures must be checked, as with any election petition, against
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those on file with the county clerk regarding eligible voters. The petitions must have been circulated only in the affected area, must bear the names and signatures of the circulators, and must be in sufficiently clear terms so that those signing the petition can be assumed to have understood to what it was they were appending their signatures. As a 200-year history of democracy in this country and nearly 150 years in this state have given county clerks substantial experience in such matters, ample standards exist by which clerical discretion in determining the validity of such petitions can be guided, measured, and restricted. As a general principle, all doubts as to technical deficiencies or failure to comply with the exact letter of procedural requirements are resolved in favor of permitting the people to vote and express their will on any proposal subject to election.
Boucher v Engstrom,
In view of the foregoing the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the annexation held valid by this Court. No costs, a public question involved.
