Court Opinion

ID: 9891981
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-10-20 05:07:29.460174+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:16:47.717502
License: Public Domain

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
                  revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

                            STATE OF MICHIGAN

                             COURT OF APPEALS

RICHARD MCCOY, ROBYN GRAFFENIUS,                                       FOR PUBLICATION
WILLIAM GRAFFENIUS, and ASHLEY WHITE,                                  October 19, 2023
                                                                       9:05 a.m.
               Plaintiffs-Appellants,

and

AIMEE FOSTER,

               Plaintiff,

v                                                                      No. 365187
                                                                       Berrien Circuit Court
BERRIEN COUNTY CLERK,                                                  LC No. 2022-000179-AW

               Defendant-Appellee,

and

BERRIEN COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR and
BERRIEN COUNTY CHIEF DEPUTY CLERK
AND ELECTIONS ADMINISTRATOR,

               Defendants.

Before: RICK, P.J., and SHAPIRO and YATES, JJ.

YATES, J.

        The recall process can rightly be described as either the most democratic or the most anti-
democratic device in the toolkit of democracy. On one hand, a recall allows an electorate to replace
an elected official who has engaged in misconduct or failed to carry out the will of the voters. On
the other hand, a recall effectively nullifies the outcome of a recent election and destabilizes public
office in a representative democracy. In this case, plaintiffs launched a recall effort aimed at two
members of a local school board, but were thwarted when defendant, Berrien County Clerk Sharon

                                                 -1-
Tyler, refused to approve signatures on recall petitions and to schedule a recall election.1 The trial
court granted voluntary dismissal after denying plaintiffs’ request for a writ of mandamus to direct
defendant to approve the signatures. On appeal, plaintiffs argue that defendant improperly rejected
petition signatures for: (1) lack of genuineness without challenge; (2) handwriting in the address
field did not match that of the signature; (3) errors in the dates; (4) removing original and duplicate
signatures; and (5) failing to check the box for “township” in the header. We affirm.

                                  I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

        This case involves an attempt to recall two school-board members of the Lakeshore Public
Schools District: Jason Beckrow and Rachel Wade. Plaintiffs, Richard McCoy and Ashley White,
lived in Stevensville, Michigan, and intended to run for positions on the Lakeshore school board.
Plaintiffs, Robyn and William Graffenius, lived in Lincoln Township and signed recall petitions
at issue in this appeal. Aimee Foster filed the recall petitions. She was named as a plaintiff in the
first amended complaint, but she is not participating as an appellant.

        The Berrien County Election Commission approved the language for the recall petitions
on April 25, 2022. Berrien County Chief Deputy Clerk Sheila Reitz explained at an evidentiary
hearing on November 1, 2022, that the petition language is valid for 180 days once it is approved.
After the canvassers begin collecting signatures, “they have 60 days” to submit the petitions to the
county clerk’s office. Here, the petitions were submitted on August 1, 2022. The canvassers were
required to collect 2,165 signatures to initiate a recall election.2 The Beckrow petition had 2,388
signatures; the Wade petition had 2,400 signatures. Deputy Clerk Reitz conducted an initial review
of the petitions, rejecting some of the signatures because they failed to meet certain requirements.
After Deputy Clerk Reitz’s initial review, she ensured the petitions still had more than the required
number of signatures before sending them to local township clerks to check the genuineness of the
signatures. The local township clerks then reviewed and returned the petitions to the clerk’s office.
After the review process, neither petition had enough valid signatures to require a recall election,
so Deputy Clerk Reitz contacted the circulators to inform them that the number of signatures was
deficient for both petitions. She also gave the circulators spreadsheets that listed all the rejected
signatures and the reason for each rejection.

         McCoy and another person met with Deputy Clerk Reitz. They were upset that the petitions
were not successful. Deputy Clerk Reitz agreed to review the petition signatures. She discovered
signatures she believed were rejected in error. After that secondary review, the Beckrow petition
had a total of 2,066 signatures and the Wade petition had 2,035 signatures. Because both of those
totals fell short of the threshold of 2,165 valid signatures, no recall election was scheduled.

1
 Additionally, plaintiffs named Berrien County Administrator Brian Dissette and Berrien County
Chief Deputy Clerk and Elections Administrator Sheila Reitz as defendants, but on September 19,
2022, the parties stipulated to their dismissal from the case.
2
  According to MCL 168.955, “[t]he petitions shall be signed by registered and qualified electors
equal to not less than 25% of the number of votes cast for candidates for the office of governor at
the last preceding general election in the electoral district of the officer sought to be recalled.”

                                                 -2-
        On August 31, 2022, plaintiffs filed a complaint requesting mandamus, declaratory relief,
and injunctive relief on an emergency basis. Plaintiffs contended that defendant erred by rejecting
numerous signatures. The trial court declined to grant emergency relief because it concluded that
an evidentiary hearing was necessary. Before the evidentiary hearing took place, defendant moved
for partial summary disposition to narrow the focus of the evidentiary hearing, and the trial court
granted that motion on October 27, 2022.

         At the evidentiary hearing on November 1, 2022, Deputy Clerk Reitz was the only witness
who testified. The trial court subsequently entered an eight-page order on November 22, 2022, in
which the trial court ruled that defendant’s rejection of signatures was not improper. Accordingly,
the trial court denied plaintiffs’ request for mandamus. After that, plaintiffs moved to voluntarily
dismiss the remaining counts in the complaint that presented constitutional claims. The trial court
granted that motion and dismissed the case on February 27, 2023. This appeal followed.

                                       II. LEGAL ANALYSIS

         This appeal involves nearly every imaginable issue concerning signature challenges. First,
defendant contends this Court lacks jurisdiction to entertain this appeal. Second, defendant asserts
that plaintiffs failed to preserve the issues that they now present on appeal. For their part, plaintiffs
contest five grounds offered by defendant for rejecting signatures. We shall address all these issues
in turn.

                       A. DEFENDANT’S THRESHOLD CHALLENGES

       Defendant attempts to cut off analysis of the merits of plaintiffs’ appeal by contending that
we lack jurisdiction to hear this appeal and that plaintiffs failed to preserve the issues they are now
presenting on appeal. We disagree.

                                 1. APPELLATE JURISDICTION

         As an initial matter, defendant contests this Court’s jurisdiction over this appeal. Plaintiffs
filed a claim of appeal from an order granting their motion to voluntarily dismiss Counts II and III
of their amended complaint. Pursuant to MCR 7.203(A)(1), an appeal of right may be taken from
“[a] final judgment or final order” as defined in MCR 7.202(6). Under MCR 7.202(6)(a)(i), a final
judgment or final order is “the first judgment or order that disposes of all the claims and adjudicates
the rights and liabilities of all the parties[.]” Defendant argues that this order was not a final order
under MCR 7.202(6)(a)(i). Rather, defendant asserts that the order denying the writ of mandamus
on November 22, 2022, was the final order disposing of all the parties’ claims, and plaintiffs did
not appeal that order within 21 days, so this Court does not have jurisdiction as an appeal of right.
See MCR 7.204(A)(1).

         The trial court’s order denying mandamus did not specify the counts in the complaint that
it resolved. It simply denied plaintiffs’ request for a writ of mandamus. Although not dispositive,
the order did not specify that it was a final order that closed the case under MCR 2.602(A)(3). See,
e.g., Faircloth v Family Indep Agency, 232 Mich App 231, 401; 591 NW2d 314 (1998) (stating
“[m]ere certification, however, does not resolve whether an order is actually ‘final’ ”). Moreover,
Counts II and III of the amended complaint involved claims under the Michigan Constitution of
1963. Neither defendant’s motion for partial summary disposition, nor the evidentiary hearing,

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nor the mandamus order addressed constitutional claims or provisions. Instead, the summary
disposition motion and the mandamus order determined that defendant had the authority to review
signatures pursuant to statute. As a result, the order denying mandamus did not dispose of all the
claims in the complaint, so it was not a final order appealable by right under MCR 7.202(6). Thus,
the order dismissing Counts II and III was a final order, so we have jurisdiction over this appeal
of right.

                                 2. PRESERVATION OF ISSUES

        Defendant asserts that plaintiffs failed to preserve the issues that they seek to advance on
appeal. “In general, an issue must have been raised in or decided by the trial court to be preserved
for appeal.” Stegall v Res Tech Corp (On Remand), ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW2d ___
(2023) (Docket No. 341197); slip op at 5. In the trial court, plaintiffs claimed that defendant was
prohibited from rejecting signatures on the same grounds that the plaintiffs now raise in this appeal.
The trial court issued an express ruling on at least four of those grounds and denied the request for
mandamus. Therefore, the claims are preserved for purposes of this appeal. See Glasker-Davis v
Auvenshire, 333 Mich App 222, 227; 964 NW2d 809 (2020) (issues that are undecided by the trial
court are not unpreserved for appeal). To the extent that defendant insists plaintiffs failed to raise
specific arguments and legal authority in the trial court, “so long as the issue itself is not novel, a
party is generally free to make more sophisticated or fully developed argument on appeal than was
made in the trial court.” Id. at 228. Indeed, “issue preservation requirements only impose a general
prohibition against raising an issue for the first time on appeal.” Id. at 227. Accordingly, we must
address plaintiffs’ arguments on the merits.

                             B. PLAINTIFFS’ ISSUES ON APPEAL

        Plaintiffs accurately assert that defendant rejected petition signatures for a host of reasons.
Plaintiffs claim that defendant’s actions violated her clear legal duty, so the trial court erred when
it refused to issue a writ of mandamus directing defendant to approve the signatures at issue. We
review de novo, as a question of law, whether a defendant had a clear legal duty to perform and
whether a plaintiff has a clear legal right to performance of any such duty. Berry v Garrett, 316
Mich App 37, 41; 890 NW2d 882 (2016). But “because mandamus is a ‘discretionary writ,’ ” we
review the trial court’s decision whether to grant mandamus relief for an abuse of discretion. Id.
(citation omitted). “An abuse of discretion occurs when the decision results in an outcome falling
outside the range of principled outcomes.” Ronnisch Constr Group, Inc v Lofts On the Nine, LLC,
306 Mich App 203, 208; 854 NW2d 744 (2014). Moreover, “[t]his Court reviews de novo a trial
court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition.” Gorman v Am Honda Motor Co, 203 Mich
App 113, 115; 839 NW2d 223 (2013).

        Under MCR 2.116(C)(8), a trial court may award summary disposition when an opposing
party has failed to state a claim on which relief can be granted. Id. at 131. Accordingly, a motion
under MCR 2.116(C)(8) “tests the legal sufficiency of a claim.” Id. “The motion may not be
supported or opposed with affidavits, admissions, or other documentary evidence, and must be
decided on the basis of the pleadings alone.” Id. “The trial court reviewing the motion must accept
as true all factual allegations supporting the claim, and any reasonable inferences or conclusions
that might be drawn from those facts.” Id. The court may grant a motion for summary disposition

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under MCR 2.116(C)(8) “only when a claim is so clearly unenforceable as a matter of law that no
factual development could possibly justify recovery.” Id. at 131-132.

         We review every question of statutory interpretation de novo. Aroma Wine & Equip Inc v
Columbian Dist Servs, Inc, 497 Mich 337, 345; 497 Mich 337 (2015). When interpreting a statute,
“we follow the established rules of statutory construction, the foremost of which is to discern and
give effect to the intent of the Legislature.” Id. (quotation marks omitted). Thus, “[t]he language
of the statute is the most reliable evidence of that intent, and we enforce the clear and unambiguous
language of the statute as written.” Id. at 345-346. Also, “[e]ffect should be given to every phrase,
clause, and word in the statute and, whenever possible, no word should be treated as surplusage or
rendered nugatory.” Id. at 346 (quotation marks omitted). With these principles in mind, we must
take up all five of plaintiffs’ challenges to defendant’s rejection of signatures.

                               1. GENUINENESS OF SIGNATURES

        Plaintiffs accuse defendant of impermissibly reviewing signatures for genuineness despite
the lack of challenges to the signatures on that basis. According to MCL 168.961a(2), “[a]n officer
whose recall is sought” can challenge “the validity and genuineness of the signature of a circulator
or person signing the recall petition.” To do so, “[a] challenge shall be in writing” and it “shall be
delivered to the filing official within 30 days after the filing of the petitions.” MCL 168.961a(2).
Here, because the two school-board members subject to the recall petitions did not challenge any
signatures for genuineness, plaintiffs insist that defendant had no authority to conduct a review for
genuineness.

        But to say that defendant’s actions appeared contrary to some statute does not necessarily
mean that an extraordinary writ of mandamus must issue. In order to obtain a writ of mandamus,
“the plaintiff must show that (1) the plaintiff has a clear, legal right to performance of the specific
duty sought, (2) the defendant has a clear legal duty to perform, (3) the act is ministerial, and (4)
no other adequate legal or equitable remedy exists that might achieve the same result.” Berry, 316
Mich App at 41. “[A] clear, legal right is one clearly founded in, or granted by, law; a right which
is inferable as a matter of law from uncontroverted facts regardless of the difficulty of the legal
question to be decided.” Id. “ ‘A ministerial act is one in which the law prescribes and defines
the duty to be performed with such precision and certainty as to leave nothing to the exercise of
discretion or judgment.’ ” Id. at 42 (quotation marks and citation omitted). Here, plaintiffs do not
even have the law right because their argument fails to consider separate statutes, including MCL
168.961, that define the “duties” of defendant in dealing with recall petitions.

         This case concerns the attempted recall of two school-board members. Recall petitions are
addressed by MCL 168.951 et seq. According to MCL 168.951(1), “[e]ach elective officer, except
a judicial officer, is subject to recall by the voters of the electoral district in which the officer is
elected . . . .” “A petition demanding the recall of an elective county commissioner or township,
city, village, or school official shall be filed with the county clerk of the county in which the largest
portion of the registered voters in the electoral district reside.” MCL 168.960(1). Then, “[w]ithin
7 days after a recall petition is filed, the filing official with whom the recall petition was filed shall
examine the recall petition” and “shall determine if the recall petition is in proper form and shall
determine the number of signatures of the recall petition.” MCL 168.961(2). “In determining the

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number of signatures, the filing official shall not count signatures on a recall petition sheet if 1 or
more” specific concerns exist. Id.

        After that initial review, if the filing official decides that the number of signatures exceeds
the minimum number required to proceed with a recall election, “the filing official shall determine
the validity of the signatures by verifying the registration of signers under subsection (6) and may
determine the genuineness of signatures under subsection (7) or shall forward each recall petition
sheet to the clerk of the city or township appearing on the head of the recall petition sheet.” MCL
168.961(4) (emphasis added). Pursuant to MCL 168.961(6): “The qualified voter file shall be used
to determine the validity of recall petition signatures by verifying the registration of signers.” And,
more to the point in this case, MCL 168.961(7) states that “[t]he qualified voter file shall be used
to determine the genuineness of a challenged petition signature appearing on a recall petition.
Signature comparisons shall be made with the digitized signature in the qualified voter file. If the
qualified voter file does not contain a digitized signature of an elector, the official with whom the
recall petition was filed shall compare the challenged signature to the signature on the master card.”

         In Jaffe v Oakland Co Clerk, 87 Mich App 281, 282; 274 NW2d 38 (1978), we reversed
the trial court’s ruling that a clerk was required to compare each signature on a recall petition with
the signature on the voter registration card. In that case, the clerk compared the signatures on the
recall petition with the names on a printed list of voters on file in the clerk’s office to determine
whether the signers were registered voters. Id. at 283. The plaintiffs requested injunctive and
declaratory relief, claiming that the defendant clerk failed to follow the mandates of MCL 168.961
by not comparing each signature on the petition with the signature on the voter registration card.
Id. The trial court agreed and set aside the recall election. Id. at 283-284.

       At the time this Court issued its decision in Jaffe, MCL 168.961 provided:

               Before a recall petition is filed the petition shall be submitted to the clerk of
       the governmental unit appearing the heading of the petition. The clerk shall
       compare the signatures of the petition with the registration records on file in his
       office and shall within 15 days after receipt of the petition attach to the petition a
       certificate showing the numbers of signers on each petition sheet who are registered
       electors of the governmental unit. The certificate shall be on a form approved by
       the secretary of state. [Jaffe, 87 Mich App at 284-285.]

This Court held that a comparison of every signature on a petition with the signature in the voter
file was not required of the clerk. This Court explained that “signatures appearing on petitions
filed with the Secretary of State for initiative and referendum are presumed valid, and the burden
is on the protestant to establish their invalidity by clear, convincing and competent evidence.” Id.
at 285. This Court observed that “[i]t has long been recognized that handwriting similarity is so
much a matter of opinion and so indefinite that generally it may not be acted upon in canvassing
petitions.” Id. This Court noted that signatures change with age or illness. Id. In fact, this Court
posited that “[h]andwriting hastily affixed to a petition at a shopping center or while standing on
a street corner differs materially from handwriting leisurely affixed sitting at a desk.” Id.

        Although Jaffe held that the comparison of signatures was not mandatory, it did not hold
that such comparisons were prohibited. See id. at 282 (stating that the original signature card was

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checked if the signature on the petition was illegible). Indeed, MCL 168.961(4) currently provides
that “the filing official shall determine the validity of the signatures by verifying the registration
of signers . . . and may determine the genuineness of signatures . . . .” The plain language of MCL
168.961(4) allows a clerk to compare a signature on a recall petition with the signature in the voter
file regardless of whether a challenge is made. No language in that subsection requires a challenge
before a clerk may compare signatures. MCL 168.961(4) simply states that the filing official “may
determine the genuineness of signatures” under MCL 168.961(7) by comparing the signature with
the qualified voter file. (Emphasis added.) As a result, under the plain language of MCL 168.961,
a clerk has the discretion to check the genuineness of a signature without a challenge. Therefore,
defendant was permitted to check the genuineness of signatures that had not been challenged.

        Plaintiffs insist the presence of the term “challenged petition signature” in MCL 168.961(7)
means that a challenge is necessary before the clerk is permitted to compare signatures on a recall
petition with the signatures in the qualified voter file. We do not believe that the word “challenge”
in MCL 168.961(7) is so significant because there is no mention of the word “challenge” in MCL
168.961(4) and MCL 168.961a expressly requires the clerk to determine genuineness in the event
of a challenge. In other words, if plaintiffs’ position were correct, then there would be no reason
for the latter portion of MCL 168.961(4) or the entirety of MCL 168.961(7) because challenges
are specifically addressed by MCL 168.961a. See Aroma Wines & Equip, 497 Mich at 346. Thus,
because defendant was allowed to check the genuineness of signatures without a challenge, there
existed no clear legal duty for defendant to count the signatures that had been rejected for lack of
genuineness. Therefore, the trial court properly granted defendant’s motion for partial summary
disposition on this basis and properly denied plaintiff’s request for mandamus. See Berry, 316
Mich App at 41.

                              2. ADDRESS AFFIXED BY SIGNER

        Plaintiffs next argue that a clerk may not reject an otherwise-valid signature simply because
the signer did not personally provide an address on the petition. According to MCL 168.954(1),
which addresses signatures on recall petitions,

               A recall petition must be signed by registered and qualified electors of the
       electoral district of the official whose recall is sought. Each signer of a recall
       petition shall affix his or her signature, address, and the date of signing. An
       individual who signs a recall petition must be a registered and qualified elector of
       the governmental subdivision designated in the heading of the petition. [Emphasis
       added.]

In Schmidt v Genesee Co Clerk, 127 Mich App 694, 701; 339 NW2d 526 (1983), we explained
that the language chosen by the Legislature in MCL 168.954 “clearly and unambiguously requires
the signer of the petition to affix the date of signing personally.” Accordingly, this Court affirmed
the rejection of signatures for which the signers did not provide the date. Id. at 703. This Court
observed that the requirement that the date be written by the signer “directly eliminate[d] serious
potential for fraud.” Id. On the other hand, this Court ruled that if the post office portion of the
address was filled in by someone other than the signer, it still complied with MCL 168.954. Id.

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        The language of MCL 168.954(1) establishes that a signer of a recall petition must provide
an address for the signature to be valid. Because signatures for which the signer did not personally
write an address were invalid according to MCL 168.954(1), defendant had no duty to count those
signatures. Therefore, the trial court properly granted partial summary disposition and denied the
request for mandamus on that basis. See Berry, 316 Mich App at 41,

                                             3. DATES

        Plaintiffs contend that defendant was not permitted to reject signatures based on purported
irregularities in the date fields. MCL 168.961(2) identifies instances in which a filing official must
reject a signature on a recall petition. According to MCL 168.961(2)(d), which addresses the date
on which the petition was signed, rejection by the filing official is mandatory if “[t]he signature
was obtained before the date of determination as provided under [MCL 168.951a(8)] by the board
of state canvassers or the Michigan court of appeals, whichever occurs later, or as provided under
[MCL 168.952(8)] by the board of county election commissioners or the circuit court, whichever
occurs later, or more than 60 days before the filing of the recall petition.” Moreover, as previously
discussed, MCL 168.954(1) requires a signer to write the date on which the petition was signed.

        Under MCL 168.961(2)(d), the clerk must examine the date of each signature to determine
whether it was signed within the proper time frame. Accordingly, it seems reasonable for the clerk
to disregard a signature if the clerk cannot determine whether the signature was written within the
governing time frame because of illegibility or because the date appears to have been altered. At
the evidentiary hearing, Deputy Clerk Reitz testified that she would count a signature that appeared
to be changed from a date that was still within the allotted time frame. But if it appeared that the
date fell outside of the governing time frame, the signature was not counted.

         Although plaintiffs identify examples of dates that were rejected, they are not challenging
the rejection of any particular signatures. Rather, plaintiffs are challenging defendant’s authority
to reject signatures on this basis. But because MCL 168.961(2)(d) requires the clerk to reject any
signatures that are dated outside the proper time frame, the clerk is permitted to reject signatures
that the clerk cannot verify were collected within that governing time frame. Therefore, defendant
was not required to count signatures with dates that could not be properly verified. Accordingly,
the trial court properly denied the request for mandamus relief on that basis. See Berry, 316 Mich
App at 41.

                                 4. DUPLICATE SIGNATURES

        Plaintiffs contend that defendant was required to count the initial signature of an individual
who signed the petition more than once. The requirements for a recall petition are addressed in
MCL 168.951a. Specifically, MCL 168.951a(1)(a) requires that a recall petition must comply with
MCL 168.544c(1) and (2). Under MCL 168.544c(1), a warning must be included on the petition
in 12-point, boldface type, stating that a person who knowingly signs the petition more than once
violates Michigan Election Law. Additionally, a circulator of a recall petition must certify “that
he or she has neither caused nor permitted a person to sign the recall petition more than once and
has no knowledge of a person signing the recall petition more than once.” MCL 168.957(1)(a).

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        The recall petitions at issue in this appeal contained a warning in large, boldface type that
stated: “A PERSON WHO KNOWINGLY SIGNS A RECALL PETITION MORE THAN ONCE
OR SIGNS A NAME OTHER THAN HIS OR HER OWN IS VIOLATING THE PROVISIONS
OF THE MICHIGAN ELECTION LAW.” Similarly, the circulator certificate bore a statement
asserting that the circulator “has neither caused nor permitted a person to sign the petition more
than once and has no knowledge of a person signing the petition more than once.”

        In any event, there is no dispute that duplicate signatures on a recall petition are invalid.
Rather, the dispute focuses on whether the original signature should also be rejected. The relevant
statutes do not specifically address this issue. In Mich State Dental Society v Secretary of State,
294 Mich 503, 514; 293 NW 865 (1940), the Michigan Supreme Court explained that “signatures
appearing twice or more upon the same or several sections of a petition should be rejected.” The
practice of excluding the signatures of any person who signed a petition more than once was briefly
analyzed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Taxpayers United for Assess
Cuts v Austin, 994 F2d 291 (CA 6, 1993).3 There, the Sixth Circuit explained:

                Plaintiffs next contend that the practice in Michigan of excluding the
        signatures of any person who has signed the petition twice is irrational. In this case,
        5,000 persons signed twice. The Board excluded both the first signature, and the
        subsequent duplicative signature. Excluding these signatures, however, is
        rationally related to Michigan’s interest in protecting against fraud in its initiative
        system. [Id. at 299.]

The Sixth Circuit addressed the claim that Michigan’s procedures concerning initiative petitions
violated the plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights to free speech and political association, id. at 296-
297, rejecting that theory and stating that “the state may constitutionally place nondiscriminatory,
content-neutral limitations on the plaintiffs’ ability to initiate legislation.” Id. at 297. Beyond that,
the Sixth Circuit observed that the procedures did not restrict the means the plaintiffs could use to
advocate their proposal or limit speech on the basis of content. Id.

        In Doe v Reed, 561 US 186, 198; 130 S Ct 2811; 177 L Ed 2d 493 (2010), the United States
Supreme Court explained that “the State’s interest in preserving electoral integrity is not limited
to combating fraud. That interest extends to efforts to ferret out invalid signatures caused not by
fraud but by simple mistake, such as duplicate signatures or signatures of individuals who are not
registered to vote in the State.” The Supreme Court noted that states have “significant flexibility
in implementing their own voting systems.” Id. at 195. Additionally, “[t]o the extent a regulation
concerns the legal effect of a particular activity in that process, the government will be afforded
substantial latitude to enforce that regulation.” Id. at 195-196.

        Here, defendant was allowed to disqualify both the initial signature as well as the duplicate
signatures on the recall petitions. To the extent that plaintiffs contend that this action resulted in
a violation of First Amendment rights, the exclusion of both the initial signature and subsequent,
duplicate signatures is a content-neutral, nondiscriminatory practice that is reasonably related to

3
 Cases from other jurisdictions are not binding precedent, but we may find them persuasive. See
Hiner v Mojica, 271 Mich App 604, 612; 722 NW2d 914 (2006).

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Michigan’s interest in protecting against fraud and mistake in the recall process. See Taxpayers
United for Assess Cuts, 994 F2d at 297, 299. In addition, this practice does not bar a signer from
signing a recall petition as long as he or she signs the petition only once, as allowed under Michigan
election law. Hence, plaintiffs were not entitled to defendant’s acceptance of the initial signatures,
and the trial court properly denied mandamus relief on that basis. See Berry, 316 Mich App at 41.

                                          5. CHECKBOXES

         Finally, plaintiffs claim defendant erred in rejecting signatures if the “city,” “township,” or
“village of” box was not checked at the top of the petition sheet. Even if plaintiffs are correct, the
number of signatures rejected on that basis is insufficient to increase the number of valid signatures
to the level necessary to require a recall election.

            Under MCL 168.961(2)(b), the clerk “shall not count signatures on a recall petition sheet
if . . . [t]he heading of the recall petition sheet is improperly completed.” Here, plaintiffs’ challenge
concerns the top of the recall petition, which contains a section with three checkboxes identified
as “City,” “Township,” and “Village of” with instructions to “check one.” Deputy Clerk Reitz’s
affidavit explains that 12 signatures on the Beckrow petition were not counted and 11 signatures
on the Wade petition were not counted because the recall petition sheet was improperly completed.
Even if the signatures were counted, the Beckrow petition would have a total of 2,078 (2,066 plus
12) signatures and the Wade petition would have a total of 2,046 (2,035 plus 11) signatures. The
number of signatures would still fall short of the 2,165 required for a recall election. Accordingly,
plaintiffs were not entitled to have defendant schedule a recall election. Therefore, plaintiffs are
not entitled to a writ of mandamus on that basis. See Berry, 316 Mich App at 41.

        Affirmed.

                                                                /s/ Christopher P. Yates
                                                                /s/ Michelle M. Rick
                                                                /s/ Douglas B. Shapiro

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