Grandparenting Time Legislation
Enacted on January 4, 2005 and effective immediately, Public Act of 542 of 2004 (SB 717) amends the Child Custody Act and restores grandparenting time.
This statute is different from Michigan’s previous grandparenting time law in several ways, including:
- The law gives preference to decisions fit parents make regarding their children, including the decision not to see a grandparent.
- To be awarded grandparenting time, a grandparent must show that a fit parent’s decision to deny grandparenting time creates a substantial risk of harm to the child’s mental, physical or emotional health.
- Now there are more circumstances when a grandparent will be able to petition for a court to order time with grandchildren.
Basic Requirements
Under the new law, a grandparent can seek an order for time with grandchildren if:
- An action for divorce, seperate maintenance or annulment between the child's parents is currently going on in the court.
- The court already entered an order for the parents' divorce, seperate maintenance or annulment.
- The child's parent who is the son or daughter of the grandparent is deceased.
- The child's parents have never been married, are not residing together and paternity has been established by a court order.
- Legal custody of the child has been given to someone other than the child's parent, or the child is placed outside the home.
- During the year prior to seeking grandparenting time, the grandparent provided a home for the child whether or not there was a custody order.
Note on Paternity: When the grandparent making the request is the parent of an alleged, but not proven, father to the child, the right to an order is limited. The alleged (or ‘putative’) father needs to have provided “substantial and regular support or care in accordance with [his] ability” before an order is available.
How to File
A grandparent must request an order by filing a motion with the circuit court in the county where a divorce or similar action would be filed. If no such court is known, it can be filed in the county where the child resides.
An affidavit (a written statement describing facts that support the request and signed by the person offering the facts) must be filed at the same time. A grandparent must give notice to the child’s legal custodian and anyone else with parenting time that was previously ordered by the court.
The child’s legal custodian may file their own affidavit to oppose the request. The court will hold a hearing if it is requested.
How the Court Decides
If the court considers a child’ parents to be fit parents, and the parents do not want a grandparent to get a visitation order, the court must dismiss the grandparent’s request.
Otherwise, the law sets up a two-part process:
- Evidence of Harm: A grandparent must present evidence to the court showing that the parent’s decision to deny grandparenting time creates a substantial risk of harm to the child.
- Best Interests: If the grandparent makes such a showing, the court must decide, based on evidence from both parties, whether grandparenting time is in the best interests of the child.
Statutory Best Interest Factors
Other Issues
- Mediation: When parents and grandparents disagree, the court may require them to try to come to an agreement with the help of a mediator. If no agreement is reached, the court must decide the issue.
- Filing Frequency: A grandparent may file a request for grandparenting time only once every 2 years, unless there is a special reason the court accepts as sufficient for making a request more often.
- Attorney Fees: If a person who succeeds in getting a grandparenting order is represented by an attorney, the court may require the opposing party to pay attorney fees.
Modification or Termination
To modify or terminate a grandparenting time order, the court must find that facts arising since entry of the order or facts that were not available when the order was entered prove that a change in circumstances regarding the child or child’s parent has occurred.
In addition, the court must find that modification or termination is necessary to avoid a substantial risk of harm to the child.