APPOINTMENT
OF A GUARDIAN FOR A MINOR
The Estates and Protected Individuals Code includes proceedings
regarding guardianships and Conservatorships. This article
will explain minor
guardianships, including the basis and the process for obtaining
a guardian for a person under age 18 years. For information
on guardianships for adults, see the article titled: Appointment
Of
A Guardian For An Adult.
A guardian
is a person appointed by a court to make personal decisions for
another, called a ward. The person needing the
guardian can be
either a minor or an adult. To simplify this complicated area
of the law, this article reviews only guardianships of minors.
The
guardian of a minor has the care and control of the minor nearly
the same as a parent. There are some distinctions. A
parent always
has more authority than a guardian and likewise has more duties
and potential liabilities.
There
are two types of minor guardianships, namely, “limited
guardianship” and “full guardianship”.
The difference between the two guardianships is the authority
the respective guardian
has by law.
A limited
guardian has the same duties, responsibilities and authority of
a full guardian except the limited guardian
does not have authority to consent to a marriage or to
adoption of the
minor or to release the child for purposes of adoption.
A full guardian can obtain court authority to consent to an
adoption of the child
or to release of the minor for adoption.
In a
limited guardianship, only the custodial parent or parents can
petition for another to be appointed as limited
guardian.
The petition
names the person preferred by the parent to be appointed.
It is filed in the probate court of the county where
the unmarried
minor
resides
or is found. MCL 700.5205
When
filing the petition, a limited guardianship placement plan must
accompany the petition. Both the petition
and the plan are
forms
available in the court. The plan is completed and signed
by the petitioning parent or parents and the proposed
guardian. The
court must approve
a plan before appointing the limited guardian.
When
the petition is filed with the court, a hearing date is set. The
petitioner must timely serve the
petition and
notice
of the
hearing on the parents, the minor if 14 years of
age or older, the proposed
guardian, and each person who had the principal care
and custody of the minor during the 60 days before
the filing
of the petition.
Sometimes
there are other persons having a special interest who must be notified
of the hearing. These
could include
an attorney
who has
filed an appearance for an interested person, a
conservator or guardian ad litem for an interested person,
and
a court that
has prior jurisdiction
over the minor.
A full
guardianship of a minor has several differences from a limited
guardianship. The petition for
ha appointment of
a guardian
can
be filed by a parent, the minor if age 14 or
more, or any other person
interested in the welfare of the minor. The petition
is filed in the county where the minor resides
or is present.
A full
guardian may be appointed for an unmarried minor if one of the
three statutory circumstances
exists.
This significantly
differs
from a limited guardianship where only the
parent requests the
appointment and consents to the suspension
of parental rights.
The
court may appoint a full guardian if the parental rights of both
parents or the surviving
parent
have been terminated
or suspended
because of a specific circumstance. The circumstances
include a court
order, or because of the death, disappearance,
confinement in a place of detention, or a
judicial determination
of mental incompetency
of the parent. MCL 700.5204
A second,
and most common, basis for appointing a full guardian is that the
parent or parents
have permitted
the minor to
reside with
another person and have not provided the
other person
with legal authority for the care and maintenance
of the minor,
and the
minor is not residing with his or her parent
or parents when the petition
is filed with the court.
The
third basis for appointing a full guardian has three requirements.
First, the minor’s biological parents have never been married
to one another. Second, the minor’s
parent who has custody of the minor dies
or is missing and the other parent has
not been
granted legal custody under court order.
The
last requirement under this basis for
appointment is that the person named
to be appointed
guardian is related to the minor within
the fifth degree by marriage, blood,
or adoption. This requirement often
prevents the appointment
of the guardian because the nominated
person is not so related to the minor.
After
the petition is filed with the court, a hearing date is set and
the petitioner
must serve
the interested
persons
with
the petition
and notice of hearing. The interested
persons are the same as with a limited
guardianship.
A father
whose paternity has not been established is not a parent
with custodial
rights under
the guardianship statute
until his
paternity is established. Therefore,
his consent is
not required in a limited
guardianship. Also, it is not mandated
that he be served with
notice of the petition and hearing
in either form of minor guardianship.
The
court conducts a hearing by taking testimony from the petitioner
and
others as may be
necessary. The
court then
appoints the
guardian and issues a document
called “letters of authority.” The
guardian uses this document to
prove his or her authority to
act on behalf of the minor.
More
information on this topic can
be found
at the Calhoun
County Courts Probate Notes site.
Top of Page
|