Defendant appeals by leave granted a circuit court order affirming the district court’s finding that defendant was responsible for a civil infraction for violating an ordinance that prohibits blasting without a permit. We reverse.
Defendant operates a quarry in the city of Trenton that runs along Trenton’s border with plaintiff. 1 Plaintiffs police chief, Patrick Knight, issued a civil infraction citation to defendant for blasting without a permit, contrary to Riverview ordinances § 22-173 and § 22-191 of article V of plaintiffs code. Defendant pleaded not responsible and requested a formal hearing in the district court. Defendant moved in the district court to dismiss the citation on the grounds that it conducted its activities solely within Trenton. It argued that plaintiff could not lawfully exercise its authority beyond its boundaries and that the 27th District Court was not the proper venue to adjudicate civil infractions occurring in Trenton. 2
*629 The district court concluded that the effect of the blasting on plaintiffs real estate and citizens fell within the scope of plaintiffs ordinance, which was presumed valid and constitutional, and it found that venue was proper. It conducted a formal hearing on the civil infraction citation. Chief Knight testified that he felt and heard a blast at his home. He later ascertained that the blasting occurred at its scheduled time. After verifying with plaintiffs engineering office that defendant did not procure a blasting permit, he issued a civil infraction citation to the quarry. He was unaware of any possible source of the blast other than the quarry operation. The district court found by a preponderance of the evidence that defendant committed a civil infraction under the ordinance. It assessed fines and costs of $150 against defendant, but stayed payment pending appeal.
On appeal, the circuit court affirmed the district court’s decision. It relied on
Coldwater v Tucker,
The general doctrine is clear that a municipal corporation cannot usually exercise its powers beyond its own *630 limits. If it has in any case authority to do so, the authority must be derived from some statute which expressly or impliedly permits it. [Id. at 477-478.]
Defendant first argues that the circuit court erred when it determined that plaintiff had authority to adopt an ordinance regulating defendant’s blasting operations outside plaintiffs boundaries pursuant to MCL 117.4i(d). We agree.
Issues of statutory interpretation are reviewed de novo.
Ford Motor Credit Co v Detroit,
*631 It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, entity, corporation or association to engage in any blasting operations within the city or located outside of the city whose operations affects any real property or persons located within the city, without having first secured a permit from the city council.
Defendant argues that the challenged ordinance was not permitted under MCL 117.4Í, which provides in part:
Each city may provide in its charter for 1 or more of the following:
(d) The regulation of trades, occupations, and amusements within city boundaries, if the regulations are not inconsistent with state or federal law, and the prohibition of trades, occupations, and amusements that are detrimental to the health, morals, or welfare of the inhabitants of that city. [Emphasis added.]
The circuit court essentially ruled that plaintiffs ordinance should be presumed valid under this statute and that the authority to regulate a trade outside plaintiffs boundaries could be implied from the statute’s “prohibition” clause. Laws concerning a city must be liberally construed in its favor. Const 1963, art 7, § 34;
Bivens, supra
at 400. But the primary purpose of statutory interpretation is to give effect to legislative intent.
Casco Twp v Secretary of State,
Here, it is clear that the “regulation” clause in MCL 117.4i(d) only authorizes the regulation of a trade within a city’s boundaries. Had the Legislature intended to allow regulation outside a city’s boundaries, it could have used the phrase “within or without,” as it has done when enacting other statutes. See
Sabaugh v Dearborn,
Furthermore, the “prohibition” clause is not relevant to plaintiffs permit ordinance because the ordinance does not prohibit any particular trade, but rather requires a permit, subject to specified regulations, to engage in a blasting operation. To the extent that the circuit court construed the “prohibition” clause as impliedly authorizing a city to “regulate” a trade outside its boundaries, its construction was incorrect. An absolute prohibition is an extreme form of regulation. See
Grocers Dairy Co v Dep’t of Agriculture Director,
Legal texts and case authority from other jurisdictions do not support a different interpretation of Michigan law. The general rule appears to be that a municipality’s police powers may only be exercised within its boundaries, absent statutory or other special authority. See 56 Am Jur 2d, Municipal Corporations, Counties, & Other Political Subdivisions, § 395, p 435, and 6A McQuillian, Municipal Corporations (3d ed), § 24.57, pp 163-164.
5
In
Almquist v City of Biwabik,
224 Minn 503,
*634
507;
The right given to the people within prescribed territorial limits to adopt a complete municipal code does not warrant the assumption by them of power over territory and people beyond those limits, even though the control of such territory and people would be convenient and gratifying to the people within the city. The practical difficulties involved in the assumption by cities of such power are apparent. Innumerable conflicts in authority would inevitably follow. Such a result is not reasonably within the purview of the constitutional amendment. The ordinance, with the violation of which the defendant was charged, is, as to territory beyond the city limits, invalid. [Id. at 270.]
City of Eugene v Nalven,
In
GTE Northwest Inc, v Oregon Pub Utility Comm,
[T]he concept of “extramural power,” power “outside the walls,” is relevant when a city undertakes to assert coercive authority over persons or property outside its boundaries. It has little relevance to a city’s contracts or other consensual transactions in goods or services, although an exercise of eminent domain outside city limits, for instance, would be an exercise of extramural power. [GTE Northwest Inc, supra at 58.]
Although the standards applied in Oregon are not controlling with respect to how Michigan’s home rule city law is construed,
GTE Northwest Inc
provides persuasive reasoning regarding the importance of distinguishing between a consensual and a coercive exercise of municipal authority outside the municipality’s borders. Moreover, it distinguishes this case from
Cold-water, supra
at 477-478, on which the circuit court relied to find that plaintiff had statutory authority under MCL 117.4Í to regulate blasting operations out
*636
side its borders. Plaintiff may have a legitimate concern regarding the effect on its own property and residents caused by blasting operations outside its borders even though the effect does not constitute a direct, tangible intrusion over the property. See
Adams v Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co,
Defendant next argues the 27th District Court lacked jurisdiction over the civil infraction action because it occurred in Trenton, and either a change of venue or dismissal should have been ordered. We disagree.
Jurisdiction is a question of law that is reviewed de novo.
Bass v Combs,
MCL 600.8703(4) governs the commencement of a municipal civil infraction action, and provides in relevant part:
The place specified in the citation for appearance shall be the court referred to in subsection (2) that has territorial jurisdiction of the place where the municipal civil infraction occurred. Venue in the district court is governed by section 8312.
The venue statute, MCL 600.8312(6), provides in part:
Venue in civil infraction actions shall be determined as follows:
(c) In a district of the third class, venue shall be in the political subdivision where the civil infraction occurred, except that when the violation is alleged to have taken place within a political subdivision where the court is not required to sit, the action may be heard or an admission entered in any political subdivision within the district where the court is required to sit.
The 27th Judicial District is a third-class district consisting of Wyandotte and Riverview. MCL 600.8121(12). The 33rd Judicial District, which includes Trenton, is also a third-class district. MCL 600.8121(19). Hence, the governing provision was MCL 600.8312(6)(c). The charged civil infraction was based on the following provision in § 22-173 of plaintiffs code:
*638 Any person, firm, corporation, association or entity is subject to prosecution and suit under this article who engages in an impulse noise, vibration, or blasting operation and:
(3) Fails to obtain any required permit....
Thus, it was the operation (without a required permit) involving impulse noise, vibration, or blasting that could be prosecuted by plaintiff. Because venue was controlled by where the civil infraction occurred, the proper inquiry should have been the location of the operation (without the required permit). Because defendant’s operation was situated in Trenton, the 27th District Court was not the proper venue. Nevertheless, MCL 600.1645 provides that “[n]o order, judgment, or decree shall be void or voidable solely on the ground that there was improper venue.” See also Bass, supra at 22. Therefore, the instant issue, standing alone, does not afford a basis for relief.
Defendant next argues that the provision in § 22-216(2) of plaintiffs ordinances for class A permit inspections contravenes the prohibition against unreasonable searches under the Fourth Amendment. Because defendant failed to brief the relevancy of its Fourth Amendment issue to the civil infraction citation, we decline to address this issue. Although there are instances in which a reviewing court may overlook preservation requirements,
Steward v Panek,
Reversed.
Notes
We granted Trenton’s and Detroit Edison’s motions to file briefs amicus curiae. Detroit Edison is the alleged owner of the land on which defendant operates its quarry.
An earlier circuit court lawsuit brought by plaintiff against defendant regarding blasting operations at the quarry had been dismissed without *629 prejudice. The dismissal order stated that a court-appointed monitor had approved a blasting design and operational plan for defendant, but authorized the monitor to continue overseeing defendant’s operations and to modify the plan before submitting a final report to the parties.
Also relevant are § 22-193(a), which provides for the payment of permit fees to plaintiffs general fund; § 22-173, which provides that failure to obtain a blasting permit results in a civil infraction; and *631 § 22-194, which provides, “If approved by the city council, subject to the regulations of this section and the provisions of the Fire Prevention Code (MCL 29.1 et seq.), and the Explosives Act of 1970 (MCL 29.41 et seq.), a permit shall be granted to the applicant....”
Plaintiffs claim that it has independent authority to enact the ordinance under MCL 117.3 is not properly before this Court because this claim was not argued in the circuit or the district court. Although an appellee need not file a cross-appeal to argue alternative reasons to support a judgment,
Middlebrooks v Wayne Co,
Plaintiffs reliance on
Huron Portland Cement Co v Detroit,
Because of our resolution of this issue, defendant’s argument that plaintiff failed to prove a prima facie case is moot.
