Summary — SB 111 (Michigan): Elder and Vulnerable Adult Personal Protection Orders (adds MCL 600.2950p)
Status & Context
- Bill: SB 111 (Substitute S‑1 as passed by the Senate)
- Purpose: Add a new section (MCL 600.2950p) to the Revised Judicature Act (1961 PA 236) to create a specific personal protection order (PPO) remedy for elder and vulnerable adults.
- Sponsor / Origin: Introduced in the Michigan Senate (reported with substitute S‑1 by committee). As of committee materials, substitute S‑1 passed the Senate; referred initially to Civil Rights, Judiciary, and Public Safety.
- Rationale: Address financial exploitation, neglect, abuse and other harms targeting older adults and vulnerable adults; create a tailored court tool to prevent and remedy such conduct.
Who may seek relief
- Petitioner: an individual who is
- age 60 or older, or
- a “vulnerable adult” as defined in MCL 750.174a (broadly persons age 18+ who need supervision/personal care or are suspected of abuse/neglect/exploitation), or
- an individual with a “developmental disability” as defined under the Mental Health Code (MCL 330.1100a).
- How: By independent action, by joining an existing action, or by motion in a pending case where petitioner and respondent are parties.
Key substantive provisions / relief available
- Scope of injunctive relief: court may restrain or enjoin a respondent from acts including (non‑exhaustive):
- entering or refusing to leave premises;
- assaulting, threatening, or otherwise harming the petitioner;
- purchasing or possessing firearms;
- engaging in certain criminal conduct (MCL 750.411h/411i);
- abusing, injuring, removing, or retaining an animal owned by the petitioner;
- threatening, destroying, or withholding access to property, goods, services, or basic necessities; and
- exercising or asserting decision‑making authority over the petitioner (subject to limits where authority already granted by another court).
- Financial‑exploitation remedies (expressly authorized):
- prohibit respondent from accessing, transferring, or exercising control over petitioner’s funds, benefits, property or assets;
- require respondent to submit paperwork to remove themselves as a representative payee;
- after evidentiary hearing, require return of property;
- award actual damages (capped per MCL reference), and actual attorney fees (after hearing);
- require respondent to post a bond to protect disputed assets;
- permit temporary lis pendens on disputed real property (consistent with chapter 27).
- Standard for issuance: court must issue an elder/vulnerable adult PPO upon a finding of reasonable cause; the bill defines examples of acts that constitute reasonable cause.
- Procedural protections and mechanics:
- Ex parte issuance procedures and a required PPO form (with enforceability information, covered actions, penalties, modification instructions) are prescribed.
- Courts may not refuse to issue a PPO solely for absence of a police report, medical report, or visible physical abuse.
- If petitioner is a ward/protected person in an active guardianship/conservatorship, the issuing court must transfer the action to the probate court; records must be securely transferred promptly.
- If respondent currently serves as court‑appointed fiduciary, respondent must notify the guardianship/conservatorship court within 7 days of service.
- Duties for clerks and law enforcement service procedures are specified (filing true copies with law enforcement, etc.).
- If respondent is licensed and required to carry a concealed weapon for employment, employer notification is required before issuing the PPO.
Who/what is affected
- Primary: people age 60+, vulnerable adults, persons with developmental disabilities who are victims or at risk of abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation.
- Secondary: respondents (including family members, caregivers, fiduciaries), probate/ circuit courts, law enforcement, guardians/conservators, employers of licensed concealed‑carry employees, probate clerks, attorneys.
- Systemic: may increase circuit/probate court hearings and related administrative duties.
Fiscal and practical impact
- Committee analyses note likely increased hearing costs for circuit and probate courts; the amount is unknown.
- Data cited: Michigan had large numbers of PPO filings in 2023 (over 34,000 across stalking/domestic PPO types); the elder population (60+) is about 24.7% of Michigan’s population—indicating potential substantial demand.
- Other bills in the package (SBs 112–114) address racketeering enhancements and multidisciplinary teams to combat exploitation; SB 111 focuses on the civil protective remedy.
Timing / Next steps
- At committee reporting, the substitute (S‑1) had been reported favorably by Senate committee and placed for further consideration; additional committee or chamber action (and concurrence by the House) would be required for enactment. Check the Legislature’s status portal for the latest procedural steps and amendments.