H.B. 5541-5552: COMMITTEE SUMMARY CIVIL INFRACTIONS
House Bills 5541 through 5546 (as passed by the House) House Bill 5547 (Substitute H-1 as passed by the House) House Bill 5548 (Substitute H-1 as passed by the House) House Bill 5549 (Substitute H-1 as passed by the House) House Bills 5550 through 5552 (as passed by the House) Sponsor: Representative Alan Cropsey (H.B. 5541 & 5552)
Representative Eric Bush (H.B. 5542) Representative Jessie Dalman (H.B. 5543) Representative Michael Nye (H.B. 5544 & 5546) Representative Candace Curtis (H.B. 5545) Representative Roland Jersevic (H.B. 5547) Representative Allen Lowe (H.B. 5548) Representative Frank M. Fitzgerald (H.B. 5549) Representative James Ryan (H.B. 5550) Representative David Galloway (H.B. 5551)
House Committee: Judiciary and Civil Rights Senate Committee: Judiciary
Date Completed: 3-19-96
House Bills 5541 through 5546, 5547 (H-1),
5548 (H-1), 5549 (H-1), and 5550 through 5552
would amend various acts to designate specific civil infractions or civil violations as State civil infractions or municipal civil infractions or require them to be processed in the same manner as civil infractions under the Michigan Vehicle Code. Some of the bills also would specifically designate as civil fines the fines assessed for civil infractions.
Several of the bills also would make other changes to the acts.
The bill would amend the handgun licensure Act to designate as a State civil infraction failure to ensure that a pistol presented for a safety inspection is unloaded and equipped with a trigger lock or other disabling mechanism or encased, which currently is a civil violation. The Act specifies that a person who commits the civil violation may be fined not more than $50. The bill,
instead, provides that a person who committed the State civil infraction could be ordered to pay a civil fine of up to $50.
The bill would amend Public Act 359 of 1921, which provides for the issuance of veterans’ licenses without cost to former members of the
U.S. armed forces to sell their own goods within Michigan, to designate as a State civil infraction certain civil infractions under the Act. The Act requires a licensee under the Act to display signs stating that the sale of the products is for his or her own personal benefit, and prohibits a person from knowingly making a false representation that the proceeds from goods sold would benefit a veterans’ organization. Violation of these provisions is a civil infraction and the Act specifies that a violator may be “liable for” a civil fine of not more than $1,000. The bill would designate those violations as State civil infractions and provides that a violator could be “ordered to pay” a civil fine of up to $1,000.
The bill also would delete a provision requiring that the prosecutor for the county in which a person violated the Act bring a civil action to enforce the Act.
specifies, instead, that a violator would be “responsible for a municipal civil infraction” and could “be ordered to pay a civil fine” of not more than $500.
The bill would amend the Pupil Transportation Act to specify that civil infractions for a school bus driver’s violation of the Act’s guidelines either for railroad crossings or improper transportation of people other than pupils would have to be processed in the same manner as a civil infraction under the Michigan Vehicle Code. The bill also specifies that a violator could be ordered to pay a civil fine of not more than $100. Currently, the violations are designated as civil infractions, but the Act is silent on the question of fines.
The bill would amend the Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act (NREPA) to provide that a person who violated a rule promulgated or order issued under a section dealing with the protection of the lands and property under the control of the Department of Natural Resources against wrongful use or occupancy would be responsible for a State civil infraction and could be order to pay a civil fine of up to $500. Currently, the Act provides that the violation is a misdemeanor, punishable by up to 90 days’ imprisonment and/or a maximum fine of $500, and that on and after the date the “civil procedures act” is enacted into law, the violation is a civil infraction subject to a civil fine of not more than $500.
The bill also would delete a park and recreation enforcement officer’s authority to arrest a person without a warrant if the person commits a civil infraction in violation of any of a number of provisions of the Michigan Vehicle Code. Instead, the bill would allow a park and recreation officer to issue a citation for those civil infractions. (An officer could still make an arrest without a warrant for certain misdemeanor violations of the Vehicle Code.)
The bill would amend the NREPA to designate as a municipal civil infraction the violation of a local ordinance enacted under authority granted by the NREPA regarding the posting and notification of the application of a pesticide. The Act provides that violations of an ordinance “are limited to a civil infraction of not more than $500". The bill
The bill would amend the NREPA to specify that a person who owned land that was not in compliance with a part of the Act dealing with soil erosion and sedimentation control or who, after notice, refused to implement and maintain soil erosion and sedimentation control measures, would be responsible for a State civil infraction and could be ordered to pay a civil fine of not more than $500. The Act currently provides that a violator is subject to a civil fine of up to $500.
In addition, the bill would delete a provision requiring that the fines be paid to the responsible enforcing agency in the local unit in which the land is located, and allowing a default in payment to be remedied by any means authorized under the Revised Judicature Act.
The bill would amend the NREPA to specify that a person who violated the Act’s requirement regarding providing a personal flotation device for each child under six years old on a vessel would be responsible for a State civil infraction and could be ordered to pay a civil fine of up to $100. Currently, the Act provides that a violator is subject to a civil fine of up to $100. In addition, the bill would designate as a State civil infraction a boat operator’s refusal to submit to a preliminary chemical breath analysis upon a lawful request by a peace officer, which currently is a civil infraction. A person responsible for the current civil infraction is “subject to a civil fine” of up to $100; under the bill, a violator could “be ordered to pay a civil fine” of up to $100.
The bill also would change references to a boat operator’s measure of bodily alcohol content from a percentage of alcohol by weight in the blood to specific measures of alcohol in the blood, breath, or urine. (This would be consistent with recent revisions in the Michigan Vehicle Code’s drunk driving provisions.)
The bill would amend the NREPA to designate as a State civil infraction violation of the Act’s requirements regarding a certificate of title for an
off-road recreational vehicle (ORV). A violator currently is responsible for a civil violation and is “subject to a civil fine” of up to $100; under the bill a violator could “be ordered to pay a civil fine” of up to $100. In addition, the bill would designate as a State civil infraction an ORV operator’s refusal to submit to a preliminary chemical breath analysis upon a lawful request by a peace officer, which currently is a civil infraction, and specifies that a violator could be ordered to pay a civil fine of up to $100. The bill would delete a requirement that the violation be processed in the same manner as a civil infraction under the Michigan Vehicle Code.
The bill also would designate as State civil infractions violation of several sections that the Act specifies are civil violations on and after the date the “civil procedures act” is enacted into law. Under the Act, violators are “subject to a civil penalty” of up to $500; under the bill, violators could “be ordered to pay a civil fine” of up to $500.
The bill also would change references to an ORV operator’s measure of bodily alcohol content from a percentage of alcohol by weight in the blood to specific measures of alcohol in the blood, breath, or urine. (This would be consistent with recent revisions in the Michigan Vehicle Code’s drunk driving provisions.)
The bill would amend the NREPA to designate as a State civil infraction failure to secure a snowmobile permit (currently a civil infraction), add to that violation failure to affix a permit properly on a snowmobile, and remove court costs from the penalty for the violation. Currently, a violator is “subject to a fine of $50 plus court costs”; under the bill, a violator “could be ordered to pay a civil fine” of up to $50.
The bill also would change references to a snowmobile operator’s measure of bodily alcohol content from a percentage of alcohol by weight in the blood to specific measures of alcohol in the blood, breath, or urine. (This would be consistent with recent revisions in the Michigan Vehicle Code’s drunk driving provisions.)
The bill would amend the Michigan Liquor Control Act to establish a maximum civil fine of $100 for the State civil infraction of refusal by a person less than 21 years of age to submit to a preliminary chemical breath test analysis. The violation
currently is designated as a State civil infraction, but the Act is silent on the question of a fine.
In addition, the bill would delete a requirement, rendered unenforceable by Public Act 122 of 1995, that 50% of fines collected for a minor’s illegal purchase, consumption, or possession of alcohol be deposited with the State Treasurer for deposit in the General Fund to the credit of the Department of Public Health for substance abuse prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation. (Public Act 122 changed those sanctions from civil fines to criminal fines. Since Article VIII, Section 9 of the State Constitution requires penal fines to be used exclusively for the support of public libraries, the Liquor Control Act’s requirement that the fines be used for substance abuse prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation is in conflict with the Constitutional requirement.)
The bill would amend the Revised Judicature Act to designate as a State civil infraction the Act’s civil infraction for violating prohibited actions of a sheriff, deputy sheriff, or county medical examiner licensed to practice law. The current civil infraction is “punishable by a fine” of up to $500; under the bill, a violator could “be ordered to pay a civil fine” of up to $500.
The bill would amend Chapter 171 of the Revised Statutes of 1846, which provides for the regulation of county jails, to designate as State civil infractions both of the following, which currently are civil infractions:
-- Selling, hiring, leasing, loaning, contracting for, or otherwise using the labor of prisoners for a person’s own private benefit or financial gain.
-- A sheriff’s deriving any private benefit or financial gain from the provision of food to prisoners, whether by retaining the difference between money budgeted for food and money spent for food, or by any other method.
Violators currently are “subject to a fine of not more than $500 plus the value of the private benefit or financial gain”. Under the bill, violators could “be ordered to pay a civil fine” of up to $500.
MCL 28.429 (H.B. 5541)
35.442 (H.B. 5542)
257.1857 & 257.1859 (H.B. 5543)
324.504 & 324.74124 (H.B. 5544)
324.8328 (H.B. 5545)
324.9121 (H.B. 5546)
324.80142 et al. (H.B. 5547)
324.81109 et al. (H.B. 5548)
324.82118 et al. (H.B. 5549)
436.33b (H.B. 5550)
600.586 (H.B. 5551)
801.10 (H.B. 5552)
Legislative Analyst: P. Affholter
House Bills 5541, 5542, 5544 to 5549 (H-1),
5551, and 5552
The bills would have no fiscal impact on State or local government.
The State Court Administrative Office guide for fines and costs listed $31 as the recommended fine for this infraction under the Pupil Transportation Act.
The provisions of the bill that would strike the requirement that 50% of the revenue collected from fines imposed on underage drinkers be credited to the Department of Public Health (DPH) would have no fiscal impact. A previously enacted amendment to this Act (Public Act 122 of 1995) converted these fines from civil to penal fines, thus, per Article VIII, Section 9 of the State Constitution, the $80,000 previously allocated annually to the DPH, will be dedicated to libraries.
The provisions of the bill that would impose a fine of up to $100 on persons under 21, who do not consent to a breathalyzer, would result in an indeterminate increase in revenue that would be dedicated to libraries. The amount of revenue would depend on the number of violations and the level of the fine imposed. Guidelines issued by the State Court Administrator’s Office for a similar violation by adults recommend a $54 fine.
Fiscal Analyst: M. Bain
R. Ross
B. Bowerman
G. Cutler
P. Graham
S9596\S5541SA
This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.