This case is now before the court pursuant to the allowance of an application for rehearing. Upon the original hearing, the court denied a writ of prohibition seeking to prevent the Board of Elections of Butler Coun
Belator, in his motion for rehearing, raises the question of whether Section 1 g of Article II applies to referendum zoning petitions under R. C. 303.12. R. C. 303.12 sets out procedures for amendments and supplements to zoning resolutions affecting unincorporated territory, where the resolutions are under the authority of the board of county commissioners. An analogous statute, E. C. 519.-12, establishes similar procedures to be followed by township trustees in amending or supplementing zoning resolutions affecting unincorporated territory within a township. In Markus v. Bd. of Elections (1970),
The referendum petitions in the instant case were timely filed following the passage of a rezoning resolution by the board of county commissioners of Butler County on July 11, 1974. The petitions were certified by the county board of elections as containing a sufficient number of valid signatures. Relator contends that the petitions are invalid because they fail to conform to the requirement of E. C. 3501.38(E) that “every petition paper shall bear the
An examination of the petition papers filed with the petition shows that the circulators’ affidavits omitted the statement that they “witnessed the affixing of every signature.”
In State, ex rel. Janasik, v. Sarosy (1967),
“Thus, sound public policy dictates that the section requiring the affidavit of a circulator of an initiative petition to contain a statement that the signers thereof ‘ signed such petition with knowledge of the contents thereof’ must be strictly complied with, and that the failure to include such statement will invalidate the petition.”
The same policy and reasoning require that the statutory provision in the instant case also be complied with. Therefore, our judgment of November 20, 1974 (40 Ohio St. 2nd 42), is vacated and the writ of prohibition is allowed.
Writ allowed.
