Charter Township of Lansing v. Ingham County Clerk ( 2023 )


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  •             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
    CHARTER TOWNSHIP OF LANSING,                                        UNPUBLISHED
    July 20, 2023
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                   No. 363214
    Ingham Circuit Court
    INGHAM COUNTY CLERK,                                                LC No. 22-000560-CZ
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    CITY OF LANSING,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: GADOLA, P.J., and MURRAY and MALDONADO, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    This appeal arises from a dispute between the Charter Township of Lansing and the City
    of Lansing as to whether the Ingham County Clerk was required to place proposals for the
    annexation of two separate areas of the township on the November 8, 2022, general election ballot
    for those electors residing within the boundaries of the areas sought to be annexed. The Ingham
    Circuit Court permanently enjoined the county clerk from placing the two annexation proposals
    on the November 8, 2022, ballot. The city now appeals as of right, and we affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The material facts are undisputed. The township comprises noncontiguous areas and shares
    borders with the city, the City of East Lansing, Delta Charter Township, and DeWitt Charter
    Township. The residents of two separate portions of the township, referred to as “islands” because
    the portions are completely surrounded by the city, made a written request to the city’s mayor to
    be annexed to the city. On August 8, 2022, the city council adopted two resolutions to initiate the
    annexation of the two areas under MCL 42.34(3) of the Charter Township Act, MCL 42.1 et seq.
    MCL 42.34(3) provides, in relevant part, that “a portion of a charter township, which charter
    township is contiguous on all sides with a city or village, may be annexed by that city or village
    with the approval of a majority of the electors in that portion of a charter township.” The city
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    council forwarded the ballot proposals contained in the resolutions to the county clerk to place the
    question of annexation on the November 8, 2022, election ballots of the electors in the areas sought
    to be annexed.
    The township filed a complaint for injunctive relief, seeking to (1) temporarily restrain and
    preliminarily and permanently enjoin the city from violating § 34(3); and (2) temporarily restrain
    and preliminarily and permanently enjoin the county clerk from certifying the city’s two
    annexation proposals for the ballot for the November 8, 2022 election. The township argued that
    the annexation proposals were not authorized by the plain language of § 34(3) because that section
    applies only when an entire township is surrounded by a city. It argued that because the entire
    township was not surrounded by the city, MCL 42.34(5)1 provides the method for seeking
    annexation of a portion of a charter township contiguous to a city. The township then moved for
    a temporary restraining order (TRO) and preliminary injunction, seeking to enjoin the annexation
    proposals from being placed on the November 8, 2022 ballot.
    The city opposed the township’s motion, arguing that, under the last antecedent rule of
    statutory construction, the phrase “which charter township is contiguous on all sides with a city or
    village” was modified or restricted by the immediately preceding phrase “a portion of a charter
    township.” Therefore, the city argued, “which charter township is contiguous on all sides with a
    city or village” refers to the portion of the township sought to be annexed rather than the entire
    township.
    Following a hearing on September 6, 2022, the circuit court held that the procedure for
    annexation under § 34(3) is available only where a city or village entirely surrounds the charter
    township, which was not the situation before the court. The court issued an amended TRO the
    same day, ordering the city to show cause on September 22, 2022, as to why an injunction should
    not be issued.
    The city filed an emergency application for leave to appeal the September 6, 2022, order
    in this Court and moved for immediate consideration. This Court granted immediate consideration
    but denied the application for leave to appeal “for lack of merit in the grounds presented.” Charter
    Twp of Lansing v Ingham Co Clerk, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered September
    9, 2022 (Docket No. 362897).2
    1
    MCL 42.34(5) provides:
    Notwithstanding subsections (1) and (3), a portion of a charter township
    contiguous to a city or village may be annexed to that city or village upon the filing
    of a petition with the county clerk which petition is signed by 20% of the registered
    electors in the area to be annexed and approval by a majority of the qualified and
    registered electors voting on the question in the city or village to which the portion
    is to be annexed, and the portion of the township which is to be annexed, with the
    vote in each unit to be counted separately. [Emphasis added.]
    2
    Judge RONAYNE KRAUSE concurred, stating in relevant part:
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    At the show cause hearing on September 12, 2022, the circuit court acknowledged that this
    Court had denied the city’s application for leave to appeal for lack of merit in the grounds
    presented. The court entered an order permanently enjoining the county clerk from placing the
    city’s two annexation proposals on the ballot for the November 8, 2022, election. On September
    30, 2022, the city filed this claim of appeal from the circuit court’s September 12, 2022 order. The
    only issue raised by the city is the interpretation of MCL 42.34(3).3
    II. ANALYSIS
    The city argues that the circuit court erred by concluding that the plain language of MCL
    42.34(3) provides a procedure for annexation only where a city or village entirely surrounds the
    charter township. However, before doing so, we first address two important preliminary principles
    raised by the township: mootness and law of the case.
    A. MOOTNESS
    The township argues that the city’s appeal is moot. “Mootness is a threshold issue that
    must be addressed before any substantive issues in a case.” Davis v Secretary of State, ___ Mich
    App ___, ___; ___ NW2d ___ (2023) (Docket No. 362841); slip op at 8, citing Can IV Packard
    Square, LLC v Packard Square, LLC, 
    328 Mich App 656
    , 661; 
    939 NW2d 454
     (2019). In Adams
    v Parole Bd, 
    340 Mich App 251
    , 259; 
    985 NW2d 881
     (2022), this Court explained with respect to
    mootness:
    This Court’s duty is to consider and decide actual cases and controversies. Barrow
    v Detroit Election Comm, 
    305 Mich App 649
    , 659; 
    854 NW2d 489
     (2014) (citation
    omitted). Generally, this Court does not address moot questions or declare legal
    principles that have no practical effect in a case. 
    Id.
     Mootness occurs when an
    event has occurred that renders it impossible for the court to grant relief. An issue
    is also moot when a judgment, if entered, cannot for any reason have a practical
    legal effect on the existing controversy. 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). There is an
    exception, however, when an issue is publicly significant, likely to recur, and yet
    I agree with the result reached by the majority. However, because the trial court’s
    order failed to “set forth the reasons for its issuance,” as required by MCR
    3.310(C)(1), I would explain the reasoning for this Court’s decision. The trial court
    correctly determined that the procedures for annexation under [MCL] 42.34(3) are
    only available where a city entirely surrounds the charter township, which is not
    the situation in this matter. Therefore, the City was instead required to follow the
    procedures under [MCL] 42.34(5), which require a petition signed by 20% of the
    registered electors in the portion of the charter township to be annexed. 
    Id.
    3
    On October 10, 2022, the city filed a bypass application in the Supreme Court seeking leave to
    appeal the September 12, 2022 order. The Supreme Court denied the application for leave to
    appeal prior to a decision by this Court. Charter Twp of Lansing v City of Lansing, ___ Mich ___
    (2022).
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    likely to evade judicial review. 
    Id. at 660
     (citation omitted). [Quotations marks
    omitted.]
    Here, the circuit court’s order permanently enjoined the city from placing the two
    annexation proposals on the November 2022 election ballot, and there is no dispute that the
    election has occurred and that it is impossible to place the annexation proposals on the ballot for
    the November 2022 election. The issue presented is moot.
    Nevertheless, the exception allowing review of a moot case that presents an issue of public
    significance that is likely to recur yet evade judicial review applies. See Socialist Workers Party
    v Secretary of State, 
    412 Mich 571
    , 582 n 11; 
    317 NW2d 1
     (1982) (“Typically, these parties will
    raise the issue after a primary election in August. As here, they will rarely obtain appellate review
    before the general election takes place in early November. This, then, presents the classic situation
    where a controversy is “ ‘capable of repetition, yet evading review’ ”) (citation omitted), and
    Davis, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 1. In Davis, this Court noted that legal questions affecting
    election ballots, such as the requirements for affidavits of incumbency, “are the classic example of
    an issue that the courts will nevertheless review as matters of public significance that are likely to
    recur yet evade judicial review.” Davis, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 8-9. Although emergency
    appellate review is available in election matters, as it was in this case, the ability to provide a more
    thorough review with a full explanation of any decision is not always possible. Johnson v Bd of
    State Canvassers, 
    509 Mich 1015
    , 1016; 
    974 NW2d 235
     (2022) (ZAHRA, J., concurring)
    (“Election-law cases have very concrete deadlines that are necessary to facilitate the printing and
    distribution of ballots. The current process provides very little time between decisions of the Board
    of State Canvassers and the date ballots must be finalized for printing. In the present case, there
    were only eight days between the vote of the Board of State Canvassers and the date a disposition
    was needed from this Court. These cases can present substantial and complex questions of law,
    which generally require extensive briefing and cannot properly be resolved in a matter of days.”).
    We therefore conclude that the fact that the issue is moot does not require dismissal of the appeal.
    B. LAW OF THE CASE
    The law of the case doctrine provides that “if an appellate court has passed on a legal
    question and remanded the case for further proceedings, the legal questions thus determined by the
    appellate court will not be differently determined on a subsequent appeal in the same case where
    the facts remain materially the same.” Rott v Rott, 
    508 Mich 274
    , 286; 
    972 NW2d 789
     (2021)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted). “Thus, as a general rule, an appellate court’s determination
    of an issue in a case binds lower tribunals on remand and the appellate court in subsequent
    appeals.” 
    Id.
     (quotation marks and citation omitted). “The purpose of the doctrine is primarily to
    maintain consistency and avoid reconsideration of matters once decided during the course of a
    single continuing lawsuit.” Id. at 286-287 (quotation marks and citation omitted). “[T]he doctrine
    applies only to issues actually decided, either implicitly or explicitly, in the prior appeal.” Id.
    at 287 (quotation marks and citation omitted).4 When an application for leave to appeal is denied
    4
    In its discussion of the law of the case doctrine, the Supreme Court explained that the doctrine is
    not a limit on the power of the judiciary, but instead reflects the practice of courts to refuse to
    reopen what has already been decided. Id. at 287.
    -4-
    for failure to persuade the Court of the need for immediate appellate review, it is not a decision on
    the merits. Id. at 288-289.
    As we recognized in Pioneer State Mut Ins Co v Michalek, 
    330 Mich App 138
    , 144; 
    946 NW2d 812
     (2019), when an application for delayed appeal from a final order is denied for lack of
    merit in the grounds presented, it is a merits-based ruling that is governed by law of the case. That
    differs from an application for leave to appeal from an interlocutory nonfinal order that is denied
    for failure to persuade the Court of the need for immediate appellate review. We explained:
    In exercising the discretion afforded it when reviewing an application for
    leave to appeal, the Court has numerous options: it can grant the application and
    hear the case on the merits, deny the application, enter peremptory relief, or take
    any other action deemed appropriate. See MCR 7.205(E)(2). If the assigned panel
    determines that an application (late or otherwise) from a final order should be
    denied, the panel often—as was done here—indicates that it is for lack of merit on
    the grounds presented. In contrast to interlocutory applications for leave to appeal
    from nonfinal orders, where the Court generally does not express an opinion on the
    merits, applications for delayed appeal address whether to allow an appeal (filed
    after the 21-day period has elapsed) on a merits challenge to a final order. Hence,
    when we deny an application from a noninterlocutory order for lack of merit in the
    grounds presented, the order means what it says—it is on the merits of the case.
    Consistent with this conclusion, this Court has previously applied the law of the
    case doctrine to orders denying applications for lack of merit in the grounds
    presented. [Id. (emphasis added; quotation marks and citations omitted).]
    Continuing, the Pioneer Court stated that “[i]f a panel decides to deny an application challenging
    an interlocutory nonfinal order, it typically uses language indicating that the application was
    denied because the Court was not persuaded that immediate appellate review was necessary. There
    is no merits language in those denial orders because no merits determination was made; instead,
    the panel has simply determined appellate intervention was not necessary at the time. As a result,
    parties are still free to challenge these interlocutory orders when appealing the final order.” 
    Id.
    at 144 n 6 (emphasis added).
    Here, we are presented with a hybrid situation. With respect to the prior appeal, this Court
    entered an order denying the interlocutory application for leave to appeal for “lack of merit in the
    grounds presented.” This language was used even though the appeal was from a nonfinal order.
    Nevertheless, the law of the case doctrine “applies only to those questions determined by the
    appellate court’s prior decision and to those questions that are necessary to the court’s
    determination.” Marysville v Pate, Hirn & Bogue, Inc, 
    196 Mich App 32
    , 34; 
    492 NW2d 481
    (1992). The grant of a temporary restraining order requires consideration of four factors: “(1)
    harm to the public interest if an injunction issues, (2) whether harm to the applicant in the absence
    of temporary relief outweighs the harm to the opposing party if relief is granted, (3) the strength
    of the applicant’s demonstration that the applicant is likely to prevail on the merits, and (4)
    demonstration that the applicant will suffer irreparable injury if the relief is not granted.” Comm’r
    -5-
    of Ins v Arcilio, 
    221 Mich App 54
    , 77-78; 
    561 NW2d 412
     (1997). And, of course, the point of
    such a temporary order is to provide a hold on the dispute until a court can peacefully resolve it.
    Hammel v Speaker of House of Representatives, 
    297 Mich App 641
    , 647; 
    825 NW2d 616
     (2012).
    It is unclear from the prior panel’s order on what basis the application was determined to
    lack merit. It could have been on the basis that irreparable harm was shown to support the issuance
    of a TRO, it could have been a determination that the trial court correctly found a substantial
    likelihood of success on the merits, or both rationales,5 or something else.6 Indeed, that the
    concurring judge stated a statutory basis for her vote places into question whether the other two
    judges voted for to deny that same reason. For this reason, law of the case does not bar our
    consideration of the merits, as we cannot discern the legal conclusions made by the prior panel,
    other than the challenge to the issuance of the TRO lacked merit. Rott, 508 Mich at 286-287.
    C. THE MERITS
    The trial court properly concluded that MCL 42.34(3) does not apply to this annexation
    vote.
    “The primary goal of statutory interpretation is to give effect to the Legislature’s intent,
    focusing first on the statute’s plain language.” Klooster v Charlevoix, 
    488 Mich 289
    , 295; 
    795 NW2d 578
     (2011). “If the statutory language is clear and unambiguous, judicial construction is
    neither required nor permitted, and courts must apply the statute as written.” USAA Ins Co v
    Houston Gen Ins Co, 
    220 Mich App 386
    , 389; 
    559 NW2d 98
     (1996). However, when an ambiguity
    exists, construction of the statute is appropriate. Whitman v Burton, 
    493 Mich 303
    , 312; 
    831 NW2d 223
     (2013).
    At issue is MCL 42.34, the statute governing annexation of charter townships to contiguous
    cities or villages. The purpose of MCL 42.34 is primarily to protect charter townships against
    annexation. Shelby Charter Twp v State Boundary Comm, 
    425 Mich 50
    , 61-63; 
    387 NW2d 792
    (1986). The statute exempts charter townships from annexation if they meet certain statutory
    criteria, and also provides exceptions. The statute provides, in relevant part:
    (1) A charter township existing on June 15, 1978, or a township
    incorporated after June 15, 1978 as a charter township that complies with the
    following standards, is exempt from annexation to any contiguous city or village
    except as provided in subsections (2) to (8):
    * * *
    5
    In its application, the city challenged the TRO on these two bases.
    6
    Some courts have even held that law of the case does not apply because of the different standards
    for a preliminary versus a permanent injunction. See, e.g., Belair v City of Treasure Island, 611
    So2d 1285, 1289 (CA Fla, 1992) (“the City’s argument that the law of the case has been established
    here is without merit. The fact that this court affirmed the trial court’s previous order granting a
    temporary injunction does not prohibit an appeal on the order granting a permanent injunction
    involving the same facts.”).
    -6-
    (3) Notwithstanding subsection (1), a portion of a charter township, which
    charter township is contiguous on all sides with a city or village, may be annexed
    by that city or village with the approval of a majority of the electors in that portion
    of a charter township.
    * * *
    (5) Notwithstanding subsections (1) and (3), a portion of a charter township
    contiguous to a city or village may be annexed to that city or village upon the filing
    of a petition with the county clerk which petition is signed by 20% of the registered
    electors in the area to be annexed and approval by a majority of the qualified and
    registered electors voting on the question in the city or village to which the portion
    is to be annexed, and the portion of the township which is to be annexed, with the
    vote in each unit to be counted separately.
    The section at issue is § 34(3). The city argues that the phrase “which charter township is
    contiguous on all sides with a city or village” modifies the preceding phrase, “a portion of a charter
    township,” such that the exception set forth in § 34(3) applies only if a portion of a charter
    township is contiguous on all sides with a city or village. The township argues that § 34(3) is clear
    and unambiguous—it authorizes annexation only where the entire charter township is contiguous
    on all sides with a city or village. The township argues that the phrase “which charter township is
    contiguous on all sides with a city or village” relates to and modifies the words “charter township,”
    not the words “portion of a charter township.” The township contends that in situations where a
    charter township is not surrounded, and the degree of contiguity is lower, the Legislature provided
    a more rigorous procedure for a proposed annexation in MCL 42.34(5).
    Although the city cites a number of rules of grammar and statutory interpretation in an
    attempt to support its interpretation of § 34(3), the proffered rules of construction serve no purpose
    here because the language of § 34(3) is clear. The section first refers to a portion of a charter
    township, and then identifies what type of charter township is implicated: a charter township that
    is contiguous on all sides with a city or village. The restrictive phrase “which charter township is
    contiguous on all sides with a city or village” clearly refers to the term “charter township” in the
    prior phrase and defines the type of “charter township” that is subject to the exception set forth in
    the provision. The city’s proposed construction would require either ignoring the repeated phrase
    “charter township” or adding the words “portion of a” between the word “which” and the phrase
    “charter township” in this restrictive phrase. “[I]t is important to ensure that words in a statute not
    be ignored, treated as surplusage, or rendered nugatory,” Robertson v DaimlerChrysler Corp, 
    465 Mich 732
    , 748; 
    641 NW2d 567
     (2002), and “nothing may be read into a statute that is not within
    the intent of the Legislature apparent from the language of the statute itself,” Detroit Pub Schs v
    Conn, 
    308 Mich App 234
    , 248; 
    863 NW2d 373
     (2014).
    By its plain language, § 34(3) applies only where the entire township is surrounded by a
    city or village. In other words, if the charter township is not totally surrounded by a single city or
    -7-
    village, then § 34(3) does not provide a method for a city or village to annex a portion of the
    township.7
    Affirmed.
    /s/ Michael F. Gadola
    /s/ Christopher M. Murray
    /s/ Allie Greenleaf Maldonado
    7
    Though we need not decide the issue, it appears that township residents of the affected areas are
    not without an avenue to seek annexation if the residents so desire. MCL 42.34(5) permits
    annexation of a portion of a township as long as that portion is contiguous to the city. Although
    the trial court stated that § 34(5) is the appropriate method for seeking annexation under these
    circumstances, we need not resolve that issue to decide this appeal.
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