Bill Text: MI HB5037 | 2017-2018 | 99th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Probate; guardians and conservators; power of guardian to implant a tracking device with a ward; provide for. Amends sec. 5314 of 1998 PA 386 (MCL 700.5314).
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2017-09-28 - Bill Electronically Reproduced 09/27/2017 [HB5037 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2017-HB5037-Introduced.html
HOUSE BILL No. 5037
September 27, 2017, Introduced by Rep. Lucido and referred to the Committee on Judiciary.
A bill to amend 1998 PA 386, entitled
"Estates and protected individuals code,"
by amending section 5314 (MCL 700.5314), as amended by 2013 PA 157.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec.
5314. Whenever If meaningful communication is possible, a
legally incapacitated individual's guardian shall consult with the
legally incapacitated individual before making a major decision
affecting the legally incapacitated individual. To the extent a
guardian of a legally incapacitated individual is granted powers by
the court under section 5306, the guardian is responsible for the
ward's care, custody, and control, but is not liable to third
persons
by reason because of that responsibility for the ward's
acts. In particular and without qualifying the previous sentences,
a guardian has all of the following powers and duties, to the
extent granted by court order:
(a) The custody of the person of the ward and the power to
establish
the ward's place of residence within in or without
outside this state. The guardian shall visit the ward within 3
months after the guardian's appointment and not less than once
within 3 months after each previous visit. The guardian shall
notify the court within 14 days of a change in the ward's place of
residence or a change in the guardian's place of residence.
(b) If entitled to custody of the ward, the duty to make
provision for the ward's care, comfort, and maintenance and, when
appropriate, arrange for the ward's training and education. The
guardian shall secure services to restore the ward to the best
possible state of mental and physical well-being so that the ward
can return to self-management at the earliest possible time.
Without regard to custodial rights of the ward's person, the
guardian shall take reasonable care of the ward's clothing,
furniture, vehicles, and other personal effects and commence a
protective proceeding if the ward's other property needs
protection. If a guardian commences a protective proceeding because
the guardian believes that it is in the ward's best interest to
sell or otherwise dispose of the ward's real property or interest
in real property, the court may appoint the guardian as special
conservator and authorize the special conservator to proceed under
section 5423(3). A guardian shall not otherwise sell the ward's
real property or interest in real property.
(c) The power to give the consent or approval that is
necessary to enable the ward to receive medical or other
professional care, counsel, treatment, or service. The power of a
guardian to execute a do-not-resuscitate order under subdivision
(d) does not affect or limit the power of a guardian to consent to
a physician's order to withhold resuscitative measures in a
hospital.
(d)
The power of a guardian to execute, reaffirm, and revoke a
do-not-resuscitate
order on behalf of a ward. is subject to this
subdivision.
A However, a guardian shall not execute a do-not-
resuscitate order unless the guardian does all of the following:
(i) Not more than 14 days before executing the do-not-
resuscitate
order, the guardian visits the ward and, if meaningful
communication is possible, consults with the ward about executing
the do-not-resuscitate order.
(ii) The guardian consults Consults directly
with the ward's
attending physician as to the specific medical indications that
warrant the do-not-resuscitate order.
(e) If a guardian executes a do-not-resuscitate order under
subdivision (d), not less than annually after the do-not-
resuscitate
order is first executed, the guardian shall duty to do
all of the following:
(i) Visit the ward and, if meaningful communication is
possible, consult with the ward about reaffirming the do-not-
resuscitate order.
(ii) Consult directly with the ward's attending physician as
to specific medical indications that may warrant reaffirming the
do-not-resuscitate order.
(f) The power to implant a subcutaneous tracking device with
the ward. As used in this subdivision:
(i) "Subcutaneous" means existing, performed, or introduced
under or on the skin.
(ii) "Tracking device" means an item, application, or product
that is passively or actively capable of transmitting location.
(g) (f)
If a conservator for the ward's
estate is not
appointed, the power to do any of the following:
(i) Institute a proceeding to compel a person under a duty to
support the ward or to pay money for the ward's welfare to perform
that duty.
(ii) Receive money and tangible property deliverable to the
ward and apply the money and property for the ward's support, care,
and education. The guardian shall not use money from the ward's
estate for room and board that the guardian or the guardian's
spouse, parent, or child have furnished the ward unless a charge
for
the service is approved by court order made upon on notice
to
at least 1 of the ward's next of kin, if notice is possible. The
guardian shall exercise care to conserve any excess for the ward's
needs.
(h) (g)
The guardian shall duty to report
the condition of the
ward and the ward's estate that is subject to the guardian's
possession or control, as required by the court, but not less often
than annually. The guardian shall also serve the report required
under this subdivision on the ward and interested persons as
specified in the Michigan court rules. A report under this
subdivision
shall must contain all of the following:
(i) The ward's current mental, physical, and social condition.
(ii) Improvement or deterioration in the ward's mental,
physical, and social condition that occurred during the past year.
(iii) The ward's present living arrangement and changes in his
or her living arrangement that occurred during the past year.
(iv) Whether the guardian recommends a more suitable living
arrangement for the ward.
(v) Medical treatment received by the ward.
(vi) Whether the guardian has executed, reaffirmed, or revoked
a do-not-resuscitate order on behalf of the ward during the past
year.
(vii) Services received by the ward.
(viii) A list of the guardian's visits with, and activities on
behalf of, the ward.
(ix) A recommendation as to the need for continued
guardianship.
(i) (h)
If a conservator is appointed, the
duty to pay to the
conservator, for management as provided in this act, the amount of
the ward's estate received by the guardian in excess of the amount
the guardian expends for the ward's current support, care, and
education. The guardian shall account to the conservator for the
amount expended.
Enacting section 1. This amendatory act takes effect 90 days
after the date it is enacted into law.