HB-4839, As Passed Senate, December 18, 2008
SENATE SUBSTITUTE FOR
HOUSE BILL NO. 4839
<<A bill to amend 1949 PA 300, entitled
"Michigan vehicle code,"
by amending sections 11, 208c, 216, 244, 252a, 252d, 252e, 252f,
252g, 252k, 252l, 625n, 716, 717, and 726 (MCL 257.11, 257.208c, 257.216,
257.244, 257.252a, 257.252d, 257.252e, 257.252f, 257.252g,
257.252k, 257.252l, 257.625n, 257.716, 257.717, and 257.726), section 11
as amended by 2003 PA 37, section 208c as amended by 2004 PA 362,
sections 216 and 244 as amended by 2002 PA 642, sections 252a,
252d, 252e, and 252f as amended by 2004 PA 495, section 252g as
amended and sections 252k and 252l as added by 2004 PA 493, section
625n as amended by 1998 PA 349, section 716 as amended by 2006 PA
509, and section 717 as amended by 2004 PA 511, and section 726 as
amended by 1983 PA 107, and by adding section 79f.>>
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 11. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section,
"dealer" means a person who is 1 or more of the following:
(a) A person who in a 12-month period did 1 or more of the
following:
(i) Engaged in the business of purchasing, selling, exchanging,
brokering, leasing, or dealing in vehicles of a type required to be
titled under this act.
(ii) Engaged in the business of purchasing, selling,
exchanging, brokering, or dealing in salvageable parts of 5 or more
vehicles.
(iii) Engaged in the business of buying 5 or more vehicles to
sell vehicle parts or process into scrap metal.
(b) A person engaged in the actual remanufacturing of engines
or transmissions.
(2) There is a rebuttable presumption that a person who in a
12-month period buys and sells, exchanges, brokers, leases, or
deals in 5 or more vehicles, or buys and sells, exchanges, brokers,
or deals in salvageable parts for 5 or more vehicles, or buys 5 or
more vehicles to sell vehicle parts or to process into scrap metal
is engaged in a business of being a dealer as described in
subsection (1).
(3) Dealer does not include any of the following:
(a) A financial institution, as defined in section 10 of 1909
PA 99, MCL 129.40, or an entity wholly owned by 1 or more financial
institutions.
(b) A bank holding company.
(c) A person who buys or sells remanufactured vehicle engine
and transmission salvageable vehicle parts or who receives in
exchange used engines or transmissions if the primary business of
the person is the selling of new vehicle parts and the person is
not engaged in any other activity that requires a dealer license
under this act.
(d) For purposes of dealer licensing, a person who negotiates
the lease of a vehicle of a type required to be titled under this
act for a lease term of less than 120 days.
(e) A person whose business is the financing of the purchase,
sale, or lease of vehicles of a type required to be titled under
this act and that is not otherwise engaged in activities of a
dealer as described in subsection (1).
(f) An employee or agent of a dealer acting in the scope of
his or her employment or agency.
(g) An insurer, as defined in section 106 of the insurance
code of 1956, 1956 PA 218, MCL 500.106.
(h) A person engaged in leasing vehicles solely for commercial
or other nonhousehold use.
(i) A lessor selling 1 or more off lease vehicles.
(j) A person who has received a vehicle under section
252g(3)(a) for the purpose of selling that vehicle to a dealer
licensed under this act.
Sec. 79f. "Boat lift" means a vehicle owned and operated by a
marina or watercraft dealer in a commercial boat storage operation
with a framework designed to surround or straddle a boat and lift
the boat from water or a storage space using a sling and hoisting
mechanism. A boat lift shall be specifically designed for and used
exclusively to transport a boat between a place of storage and a
marina or in and around a marina. Boat lift does not include a boat
trailer designed for normal or routine transportation of a
watercraft.
Sec. 208c. (1) Except as provided in this section and in
section 232, personal information in a record maintained under this
act shall not be disclosed, unless the person requesting the
information furnishes proof of identity satisfactory to the
secretary of state and certifies that the personal information
requested will be used for a permissible purpose identified in this
section or in section 232. However, highly restricted personal
information shall be used and disclosed only as expressly permitted
in section 307 or as otherwise expressly provided by law.
(2) Personal information in a record maintained under this act
shall be disclosed by the secretary of state if required to carry
out the purposes of federal law or federal regulations.
(3) Personal information in a record maintained under this act
may be disclosed by the secretary of state as follows:
(a) For use by a federal, state, or local governmental agency,
including a court or law enforcement agency, in carrying out the
agency's functions, or by a private person or entity acting on
behalf of a governmental agency in carrying out the agency's
functions.
(b) For use in connection with matters of motor vehicle and
driver safety or auto theft; motor vehicle emissions; motor vehicle
product alterations, recalls, or advisories; performance monitoring
of motor vehicles; motor vehicle market research activities,
including survey research; and the removal of nonowner records from
the original records of motor vehicle manufacturers.
(c) For use in the normal course of business by a legitimate
business, including the agents, employees, and contractors of the
business, but only to verify the accuracy of personal information
submitted by an individual to the business or its agents,
employees, or contractors, and if the information as so submitted
is no longer correct, to obtain the correct information, for the
sole purpose of preventing fraud by pursuing legal remedies
against, or recovering on a debt against, the individual.
(d) For use in connection with a civil, criminal,
administrative, or arbitration proceeding in a federal, state, or
local court or governmental agency or before a self-regulatory
body, including use for service of process, investigation in
anticipation of litigation, and the execution or enforcement of
judgments and orders, or pursuant to an order of a federal, state,
or local court, an administrative agency, or a self-regulatory
body.
(e) For use in legitimate research activities and in preparing
statistical reports for commercial, scholarly, or academic purposes
by a bona fide research organization, if the personal information
is not published, redisclosed, or used to contact individuals.
(f) For use by an insurer or insurance support organization,
or by a self-insured entity, or its agents, employees, or
contractors, in connection with claims investigating activity,
antifraud activity, rating, or underwriting.
(g) For use in providing notice to the owner of an abandoned,
towed, or impounded vehicle or for use by the custodian of a
vehicle that is considered an abandoned vehicle as defined in
section 252a, 252b, and 252d.
(h) For use either by a private detective or private
investigator
licensed under the private detective license
professional investigator licensure act, 1965 PA 285, MCL 338.821
to 338.851, or by a private security guard agency or alarm system
contractor licensed under the private security business and
security alarm act, 1968 PA 330, MCL 338.1051 to 338.1083, only for
a purpose permitted under this section.
(i) For use by an employer, or the employer's agent or
insurer, to obtain or verify information relating either to the
holder of a commercial driver license that is required under
federal law or to the holder of a chauffeur's license that is
required under chapter 3.
(j) For use by a car rental business, or its employees,
agents, contractors, or service firms, for the purpose of making
rental decisions.
(k) For use in connection with the operation of private toll
transportation facilities.
(l) For use by a news medium in the preparation and
dissemination of a report related in part or in whole to the
operation of a motor vehicle or public safety. "News medium"
includes a newspaper, a magazine or periodical published at regular
intervals, a news service, a broadcast network, a television
station, a radio station, a cablecaster, or an entity employed by
any of the foregoing.
(m) For any use by an individual requesting information
pertaining to himself or herself or requesting in writing that the
secretary of state provide information pertaining to himself or
herself to the individual's designee. A request for disclosure to a
designee, however, may be submitted only by the individual.
(4) Medical and disability information in a record maintained
under this act may be used and disclosed for purposes of subsection
(3)(a), (d), or (m).
Sec. 216. Every motor vehicle, pickup camper, trailer coach,
trailer, semitrailer, and pole trailer, when driven or moved upon a
highway, is subject to the registration and certificate of title
provisions of this act except the following:
(a) A vehicle driven or moved upon a highway in conformance
with the provisions of this act relating to manufacturers,
transporters, dealers, or nonresidents.
(b) A vehicle that is driven or moved upon a highway only for
the purpose of crossing that highway from 1 property to another.
(c) An implement of husbandry.
(d) Special mobile equipment for which the secretary of state
may issue a special registration to an individual, partnership,
corporation, or association not licensed as a dealer to identify
the equipment when being moved over the streets and highways upon
payment of the required fee.
(e) A vehicle that is propelled exclusively by electric power
obtained from overhead trolley wires though not operated upon
rails.
(f) Any vehicle subject to registration, but owned by the
government of the United States.
(g) A certificate of title need not be obtained for a trailer,
semitrailer, or pole trailer weighing less than 2,500 pounds.
(h) A vehicle driven or moved upon the highway only for the
purpose of securing a weight receipt from a weighmaster as is
required in section 801, or for obtaining a vehicle inspection by a
law enforcement agency before titling or registration, and then
only by the most direct route.
(i) A certificate of title need not be obtained for a vehicle
owned by a manufacturer or dealer and held for sale or lease, even
though incidentally moved on the highway or used for purposes of
testing or demonstration.
(j) A bus or school bus, as defined in section 4b or 57, that
is not self-propelled and used exclusively as a construction
shanty.
(k) A certificate of title need not be obtained for a moped.
(l) For 3 days immediately following the date of a properly
assigned title or signed lease agreement from any person other than
a vehicle dealer, a registration need not be obtained for a vehicle
driven or moved upon the highway for the sole purpose of
transporting the vehicle in the most direct route from the place of
purchase or lease to a place of storage if the driver has in his or
her possession the assigned title showing the date of sale or lease
agreement showing the date of the lease.
(m) A certificate of registration need not be obtained for a
pickup camper, but a certificate of title shall be obtained.
(n) A new motor vehicle driven or moved upon the highway only
for the purpose of moving the vehicle from an accident site to a
storage location if the vehicle was being transported on a railroad
car or semitrailer that was involved in a disabling accident.
(o) A boat lift used for transporting vessels between a marina
or a body of water and a place of inland storage.
Sec. 244. (1) A manufacturer owning a vehicle of a type
otherwise required to be registered under this act may operate or
move the vehicle upon a street or highway primarily for the
purposes of transporting or testing or in connection with a golf
tournament or a public civic event, if the vehicle displays, in the
manner prescribed in section 225, 1 special plate approved by the
secretary of state.
(2) A producer of a vehicle subcomponent system essential to
the operation of the vehicle or the safety of an occupant may
operate or move a motor vehicle upon a street or highway solely to
transport or test the subcomponent system if the motor vehicle
displays, in the manner prescribed in section 225, 1 special plate
approved by the secretary of state. To be eligible for the special
plate, the subcomponent system producer must be either a recognized
subcomponent system producer or must be a subcomponent system
producer under contract with a vehicle manufacturer.
(3) A dealer owning a vehicle of a type otherwise required to
be registered under this act may operate or move the vehicle upon a
street or highway without registering the vehicle if the vehicle
displays, in the manner prescribed in section 225, 1 special plate
issued to the owner by the secretary of state. As used in this
subsection, "dealer" includes an employee, servant, or agent of the
dealer.
(4) Solely to deliver the vehicle, a transporter may operate
or move a vehicle of a type otherwise required to be registered
under this act upon a street or highway if the vehicle displays, in
the manner prescribed in section 225, a special plate issued to the
transporter under this chapter.
(5) A licensee shall not use a special plate described in this
section on service cars or wreckers operated as an adjunct of a
licensee's business. A manufacturer, transporter, or dealer making
or permitting any unauthorized use of a special plate under this
chapter forfeits the right to use special plates and the secretary
of state, after notice and a hearing, may suspend or cancel the
right to use special plates and require that the special plates be
surrendered to or repossessed by the state.
(6) A transporter shall furnish a sufficient surety bond or
policy of insurance as protection for public liability and property
damage as may be required by the secretary of state.
(7) The secretary of state shall determine the number of
plates a manufacturer, dealer, or transporter reasonably needs in
his or her business.
(8) If a vehicle that is required to be registered under this
act is leased or sold, the vendee or lessee is permitted to operate
the vehicle upon a street or highway for not more than 72 hours
after taking possession if the vehicle has a dealer plate attached
as provided in this section. The application for registration shall
be made in the name of the vendee or lessee before the vehicle is
used. The dealer and the vendee or lessee are jointly responsible
for the return of the dealer plate to the dealer within 72 hours,
and the failure of the vendee or lessee to return or the vendor or
lessor to use due diligence to procure the dealer plate is a
misdemeanor, and in addition the license of the dealer may be
revoked. While using a dealer's plate, a vendee or lessee shall
have in his or her possession proof that clearly indicates the date
of sale or lease of the motor vehicle.
(9) A vehicle owned by a dealer and bearing the dealer's plate
may be driven upon a street or highway for demonstration purposes
by a prospective buyer or lessee for a period of 72 hours.
(10) The secretary of state may issue a registration plate
upon application and payment of the proper fee to an individual,
partnership, corporation, or association that in the ordinary
course of business has occasion to legally pick up or deliver a
commercial motor vehicle being driven to a facility to undergo
aftermarket modification, or to repair or service a vehicle, or to
persons defined as watercraft dealers under part 801 of the natural
resources and environmental protection act, 1994 PA 451, MCL
324.80101 to 324.80199, or to the owner of a marina for the purpose
of delivering a vessel or trailer to a purchaser, to transport a
vessel between a body of water and a place of storage, to transport
a vessel or trailer to and from a boat show or exposition, to
repair, service, or store a vessel or trailer, or to return a
vessel or trailer to the customer after repair, service, or
storage. A registration plate issued under this subsection shall be
used to move the vehicle or trailer.
Sec. 252a. (1) A person shall not abandon a vehicle in this
state. It is presumed that the last titled owner of the vehicle is
responsible for abandoning the vehicle unless the person provides a
record of sale as that term is defined in section 240. A person who
violates this subsection and who fails to redeem the vehicle before
disposition of the vehicle under section 252g is responsible for a
civil infraction and shall be ordered to pay a civil fine of
$50.00.
(2) As used in this section and sections 252a through 252l,
"abandoned vehicle" means either of the following:
(a) A vehicle that has remained on private property without
the consent of the owner.
(b) A vehicle that has remained on public property for a
period of not less than 48 hours, or on a state trunk line highway
as described in section 1 of 1951 PA 51, MCL 247.651, as follows:
(i) If a valid registration plate is affixed to the vehicle,
for a period of not less than 18 hours.
(ii) If a valid registration plate is not affixed to the
vehicle.
(3) If a vehicle has remained on public property for the
period of time described in subsection (2)(b) so that it qualifies
as abandoned, a police agency having jurisdiction over the vehicle
or the agency's designee shall determine whether the vehicle has
been reported stolen and may affix a written notice to the vehicle.
The written notice shall contain the following information:
(a) The date and time the notice was affixed.
(b) The name and address of the police agency taking the
action.
(c) The name and badge number of the police officer affixing
the notice.
(d) The date and time the vehicle may be taken into custody
and stored at the owner's expense or scrapped if the vehicle is not
removed.
(e) The year, make, and vehicle identification number of the
vehicle, if available.
(4) If the vehicle is an abandoned vehicle, the police agency
or the agency's designee may have the towing agency take the
vehicle into custody.
(5) A police agency that has received a vehicle taken into
custody as abandoned shall do all of the following:
(a) Recheck to determine if the vehicle has been reported
stolen.
(b) Within 24 hours after the vehicle is taken into custody,
enter the vehicle as abandoned into the law enforcement information
network, and notify the secretary of state through the law
enforcement information network that the vehicle has been taken
into custody as abandoned. Each notification shall contain the
following information:
(i) The year, make, and vehicle identification number of the
vehicle, if available.
(ii) The address or approximate location from which the vehicle
was taken into custody.
(iii) The date on which the vehicle was taken into custody.
(iv) The name and address of the police agency that had the
vehicle taken into custody.
(v) The name and business address of the custodian of the
vehicle.
(vi) The name of the court that has jurisdiction over the case.
(c) Within 7 days after receiving notice under subdivision (b)
that the vehicle has been taken into custody, the secretary of
state shall do both of the following:
(i) Send to the last titled owner and secured party, as shown
by the records of the secretary of state as described in section
221 or 237, by first-class mail or personal service, notice that
the vehicle is considered abandoned. The form for the notice shall
be furnished by the secretary of state. Each notice form shall
contain the following information:
(A) The year, make, and vehicle identification number of the
vehicle if available.
(B) The address or approximate location from which the vehicle
was taken into custody.
(C) The date on which the vehicle was taken into custody.
(D) The name and address of the police agency that had the
vehicle taken into custody.
(E) The name and business address of the custodian of the
vehicle.
(F) The procedure to redeem the vehicle.
(G) The procedure to contest the fact that the vehicle is
considered abandoned or the reasonableness of the towing fees and
daily storage fees.
(H) A form petition that the owner may file in person or by
mail with the specified court that requests a hearing on the police
agency's action.
(I) A warning that the failure to redeem the vehicle or to
request a hearing within 20 days after the date of the notice may
result in the sale of the vehicle and the termination of all rights
of the owner and the secured party to the vehicle or the proceeds
of the sale.
(ii) Enter the information described in subparagraph (i) on a
website maintained by the department for public use in locating
vehicles that are removed under this section as abandoned. The
department shall maintain the data on the website for 1 year or
until the vehicle is disposed of under this act, whichever occurs
first.
(6) The owner may contest the fact that the vehicle is
considered abandoned or the reasonableness of the towing fees and
daily storage fees by requesting a hearing and posting a bond equal
to $40.00 plus the amount of the accrued towing and storage fees. A
request for a hearing shall be made by filing a petition with the
court specified in the notice described in subsection (5)(c) within
20 days after the date of the notice. If the owner requests a
hearing, the matter shall be resolved after a hearing conducted
under sections 252e and 252f. An owner who requests a hearing may
obtain release of the vehicle by posting a towing and storage bond
in an amount equal to the $40.00 plus the accrued towing and
storage fees with the court. The owner of a vehicle who requests a
hearing may obtain release of the vehicle by paying a fee of $40.00
to the court and the accrued towing and storage fees instead of
posting the towing and storage bond.
(7) If the owner does not request a hearing under subsection
(6), he or she may obtain the release of the vehicle by paying a
fee of $40.00 and the accrued towing and storage fees to the
custodian of the vehicle. The custodian of the vehicle shall
forward $25.00 of the fee to the secretary of state within 30 days
after receipt in a manner prescribed by the secretary of state, who
shall deposit the fee into the abandoned vehicle fund created in
section 252h.
(8) If the owner does not redeem the vehicle or request a
hearing within 20 days after the date of the notice described in
subsection (5)(c), the secured party may obtain the release of the
vehicle by paying a $40.00 fee plus the accrued charges to the
custodian of the vehicle. The custodian of the vehicle shall
forward $25.00 of the fee to the secretary of state, who shall
deposit the fee into the abandoned vehicle fund created in section
252h.
(9) If a vehicle has remained on private property without the
consent of the property owner, the owner of the private property
may have the vehicle taken into custody as an abandoned vehicle by
contacting a local towing agency. A local towing agency is
considered a towing agency whose storage lot is located within 15
miles from the border of the local unit of government having
jurisdiction over the abandoned vehicle.
(10) Before removing the vehicle from private property, the
towing
agency shall notify provide
reasonable notice by telephone,
or otherwise, to a police agency having jurisdiction over the
vehicle that the vehicle is being removed. The police agency shall
determine
if the vehicle has been reported stolen and have enter
the
vehicle entered into the law enforcement information network as
an abandoned vehicle. Verification by the police agency of
compliance with this section is not necessary and is not a
predicate to the entrance of the vehicle into the law enforcement
information network.
(11) Within 24 hours after taking the abandoned vehicle into
custody, the police agency shall notify the secretary of state
through the law enforcement information network that the vehicle
has been taken into custody as abandoned. Each notification shall
contain the following information:
(a) The year, make, and vehicle identification number of the
vehicle if available.
(b) The address or approximate location from which the vehicle
was taken into custody.
(c) The date on which the vehicle was taken into custody.
(d) The name and address of the police agency that had the
vehicle taken into custody.
(e) The name and business address of the custodian of the
vehicle.
(f) The name of the court that has jurisdiction over the case.
(12) Within 7 days after being notified under subsection (11),
the secretary of state shall do both of the following:
(a) Send to the owner and secured party, as shown by the
records of the secretary of state, by first-class mail or personal
service, notice that the vehicle is considered abandoned. The form
for the notice shall be furnished by the secretary of state. Each
notice form shall contain the following information:
(i) The year, make, and vehicle identification number of the
vehicle if available.
(ii) The location from which the vehicle was taken into
custody.
(iii) The date on which the vehicle was taken into custody.
(iv) The name of the towing agency that had the vehicle taken
into custody.
(v) The business address of the custodian of the vehicle.
(vi) The procedure to redeem the vehicle.
(vii) The procedure to contest the fact that the vehicle is
considered abandoned or the reasonableness of the towing fees and
daily storage fees.
(viii) A form petition that the owner may file in person or by
mail with the specified court that requests a hearing on the
custodian's action.
(ix) A warning that the failure to redeem the vehicle or to
request a hearing within 20 days after the date of the notice may
result in the sale of the vehicle and the termination of all rights
of the owner and the secured party to the vehicle or the proceeds
of the sale.
(b) Enter the information described in subdivision (a) on a
website maintained by the department for public use in locating
vehicles that are removed under this section as abandoned.
(13) The owner may contest the fact that the vehicle is
abandoned or, unless the towing fees and daily storage fees are
established by contract with the local governmental unit or local
law enforcement agency and comply with section 252i, the
reasonableness of the towing fees and daily storage fees by
requesting a hearing. A request for a hearing shall be made by
filing a petition with the court specified in the notice within 20
days after the date of the notice. If the owner requests a hearing,
the matter shall be resolved after a hearing conducted under
section 252f. An owner who requests a hearing may obtain release of
the vehicle by posting with the court a towing and storage bond in
an amount equal to $40.00 plus the accrued towing and storage fees.
The owner of a vehicle who requests a hearing may obtain release of
the vehicle by paying a fee of $40.00 to the court plus the towing
and storage fees instead of posting the towing and storage bond. An
owner requesting a hearing but not taking possession of the vehicle
shall post with the court a towing and storage bond in an amount
equal to $40.00 plus the accrued towing and storage fees.
(14) If the owner does not request a hearing, he or she may
obtain the release of the vehicle by paying a fee of $40.00 plus
the accrued charges to the custodian of the vehicle. The custodian
shall forward $25.00 of the fee collected under this subsection to
the secretary of state within 30 days after receipt in a manner
prescribed by the secretary of state, who shall deposit the fee
into the abandoned vehicle fund created in section 252h.
(15) If the owner does not redeem the vehicle or request a
hearing within 20 days after the date of the notice, the secured
party may obtain the release of the vehicle by paying a fee of
$40.00 and the accrued towing and storage fees to the custodian of
the vehicle. The custodian shall forward $25.00 of the fee
collected under this subsection to the secretary of state within 30
days after receipt in a manner prescribed by the secretary of
state, who shall deposit the fee into the abandoned vehicle fund
created in section 252h.
(16) Not less than 20 days after the disposition of the
hearing described in subsection (6) or, if a hearing is not
requested, not less than 20 days after the date of the notice, the
police agency if the abandoned vehicle is found on public property,
or the custodian of the vehicle if the vehicle is found on private
property, shall offer the vehicle for sale at a public sale under
section 252g.
(17) If the ownership of a vehicle that is considered
abandoned under this section cannot be determined either because of
the condition of the vehicle identification numbers or because a
check with the records of the secretary of state as described in
section 221 or 237 does not reveal ownership, the police agency may
sell the vehicle at public sale as provided in section 252g not
less than 30 days after public notice of the sale has been
published.
(18) The secretary of state shall release a vehicle for
disposition under section 252b or 252g within 45 days after the
vehicle is entered into the law enforcement information network as
an abandoned vehicle.
Sec. 252d. (1) A police agency or a governmental agency
designated by the police agency may provide for the immediate
removal of a vehicle from public or private property to a place of
safekeeping
at the expense of the registered last-titled owner of
the vehicle in any of the following circumstances:
(a) If the vehicle is in such a condition that the continued
operation of the vehicle upon the highway would constitute an
immediate hazard to the public.
(b) If the vehicle is parked or standing upon the highway in
such a manner as to create an immediate public hazard or an
obstruction of traffic.
(c) If a vehicle is parked in a posted tow away zone.
(d) If there is reasonable cause to believe that the vehicle
or any part of the vehicle is stolen.
(e) If the vehicle must be seized to preserve evidence of a
crime, or if there is reasonable cause to believe that the vehicle
was used in the commission of a crime.
(f) If removal is necessary in the interest of public safety
because of fire, flood, storm, snow, natural or man-made disaster,
or other emergency.
(g) If the vehicle is hampering the use of private property by
the owner or person in charge of that property or is parked in a
manner which impedes the movement of another vehicle.
(h) If the vehicle is stopped, standing, or parked in a space
designated as parking for persons with disabilities and is not
permitted by law to be stopped, standing, or parked in a space
designated as parking for persons with disabilities.
(i) If the vehicle is located in a clearly identified access
aisle or access lane immediately adjacent to a space designated as
parking for persons with disabilities.
(j) If the vehicle is interfering with the use of a ramp or a
curb-cut by persons with disabilities.
(k) If the vehicle has been involved in a traffic crash and
cannot be safely operated from the scene of the crash.
(2) If the owner or other person who is legally entitled to
possess the vehicle arrives at the location where a vehicle is
located before the actual towing or removal of the vehicle, the
vehicle shall be disconnected from the tow truck, and the owner or
other person who is legally entitled to possess the vehicle may
take possession of the vehicle and remove it without interference
upon the payment of the reasonable service fee, for which a receipt
shall be provided.
(3) A police agency that authorizes the removal of a vehicle
under subsection (1) shall do all of the following:
(a) Check to determine if the vehicle has been reported stolen
prior to authorizing the removal of the vehicle.
(b)
Follow Except for vehicles
impounded under subsection
(1)(d), (e), or (k), a police agency shall enter the vehicle into
the law enforcement information network as abandoned not less than
7 days after authorizing the removal and follow the procedures set
forth in section 252a.
(4) A vehicle impounded under subsection (1)(d), (e), or (k)
must first be released by the police agency that authorized the
removal prior to the towing agency or custodian releasing the
vehicle to the vehicle owner.
(5) Not less than 20 days but not more than 30 days after a
vehicle has been released under subsection (4), the towing agency
or custodian shall notify the police agency to enter the vehicle as
abandoned and the police agency shall follow the procedures set
forth in section 252a if the impounded vehicle has not been
redeemed.
Sec. 252e. (1) The following courts have jurisdiction to
determine if a police agency, towing agency or custodian, or
private property owner has acted properly in reporting or
processing a vehicle under section 252a, 252b(6) to (11), or 252d:
(a) The district court.
(b) A municipal court.
(2) The court specified in the notice prescribed in section
252a(5)(b) or 252b(7) or as provided in section 252d(3)(b) shall be
the court that has territorial jurisdiction at the location from
where
the vehicle was removed or deemed considered abandoned. Venue
in the district court shall be governed by section 8312 of the
revised judicature act of 1961, 1961 PA 236, MCL 600.8312.
(3) If the owner fails to pay the accrued towing and storage
fees, the towing and storage bond posted with the court to secure
release of the vehicle under section 252a, 252b, or 252d shall be
used to pay the towing and storage fees.
(4) The remedies under sections 252 through 254 are the
exclusive remedies for the disposition of abandoned vehicles.
Sec. 252f. (1) Upon the filing of a petition prescribed in
section 252a, 252b, or 252d, signed by the owner of the vehicle
which has been taken into custody, the court shall do both of the
following:
(a) Schedule a hearing within 30 days for the purpose of
determining whether the police agency, towing agency or custodian,
or private property owner acted properly.
(b)
Notify the owner, towing service, agency or custodian, of
the
vehicle, and police agency or if the vehicle was removed from
private property, notify the private property owner also of the
time and place of the hearing.
(2) At the hearing specified in subsection (1), the police
agency, towing agency or custodian, or, if the vehicle was removed
from private property, the private property owner shall have the
burden of showing by a preponderance of the evidence that it has
complied with the requirements of this act in reporting or
processing the abandoned vehicle or vehicle removed under section
252d.
(3) After the hearing, the court shall make a decision that
includes 1 or more of the following:
(a) A finding that the police agency complied with the
procedures established for the processing of an abandoned vehicle
or a vehicle removed under section 252a, 252b, or 252d, and an
order providing a period of 20 days after the decision for the
owner to redeem the vehicle. If the owner does not redeem the
vehicle within 20 days, the police agency shall dispose of the
vehicle under section 252b or 252g. The court shall forward $25.00
of the fee collected under section 252b or 252g to the secretary of
state within 30 days after the court's decision in a manner
prescribed by the secretary of state. The towing and storage fees
and $15.00 of the fee collected under section 252b or 252g shall be
forwarded to the towing agency.
(b) A finding that the police agency did not comply with the
procedures established for the processing of an abandoned vehicle
or a vehicle removed under section 252a, 252b, or 252d. After
making the finding, the court shall issue an order directing that
the vehicle immediately be released to the owner, and that the
police agency is responsible for the accrued towing and storage
charges. The court shall also order any fee or bond posted by the
owner to be returned to the owner.
(c) A finding that the towing fees and daily storage fees were
reasonable.
(d) A finding that the towing fees and daily storage fees were
unreasonable and issue an order directing the towing agency or
custodian of the vehicle to provide the last titled owner of the
vehicle with an appropriate reduction or refund.
(e) A finding that the owner of the real property complied
with the provisions of section 252k or 252l.
(f) A finding that the owner of the real property did not
comply with the provisions of section 252k or 252l, and issue an
order requiring the owner of the real property to reimburse the
last titled owner of the vehicle for the accrued towing and storage
charges.
(g) A finding that the towing agency did not comply with the
procedures established for the proper removal and reporting of an
abandoned vehicle removed under section 252a(10), 252b, or 252d.
After making the finding, the court shall issue an order directing
that the vehicle immediately be released to the owner and that the
towing agency is responsible for the accrued towing and storage
charges. The court shall also order any fee or bond posted by the
owner to be returned to the owner.
(h) A finding that the towing agency did comply with the
procedures established for the proper removal and reporting of an
abandoned vehicle removed under section 252a(10), 252b, or 252d.
Sec. 252g. (1) Subject to section 252a(16), a public sale for
a vehicle and its contents that has been determined to be abandoned
under section 252a or removed under section 252d shall be conducted
in the following manner:
(a)
It shall be under the control of the police agency. or
the
agency's
designee or the custodian of the vehicle or the
custodian's
designee However, a police
agency may designate the
custodian of the vehicle or a third party to conduct the auction.
(b) It shall be open to the public and consist of open auction
bidding or bidding by sealed bids. If sealed bids are received, the
person submitting the bid shall receive a receipt for the bid from
the police agency or the agency's designee or, if the vehicle is
being sold under section 252a(16), the custodian of the vehicle.
(c)
Except as otherwise provided in sections 252a(17) 252a(16)
and (17) and 252b(7), it shall be held not less than 5 days after
public notice of the sale has been published.
(d) The public notice shall be published at least once in a
newspaper having a general circulation within the county in which
the vehicle was abandoned. The public notice shall give a
description of the vehicle for sale and shall state the time, date,
and location of the sale.
(2) The money received from the public sale of the vehicle
shall be applied in the following order of priority:
(a) Towing and storage charges.
(b) Expenses incurred by the police agency or the custodian of
the vehicle.
(c) Payment of the $40.00 abandoned vehicle fee described in
section 252f(3)(a).
(d) Any extra money shall be sent to the department of
treasury's unclaimed property division to be disbursed as follows:
(i) To the secured party, if any, in the amount of the debt
outstanding on the vehicle.
(ii) Remainder to the owner. A reasonable attempt shall be made
to mail the remainder to the last titled owner. If delivery of the
remainder cannot be accomplished, the remainder shall become the
property of the unit of government governing the location from
which the vehicle was towed.
(3) If there are no bidders on the vehicle, the police agency
or the custodian of the vehicle may do 1 of the following:
(a) Turn the vehicle over to the towing firm or the custodian
of the vehicle to satisfy charges against the vehicle. However, if
the value of the vehicle does not satisfy the towing fees and
accrued daily storage fees, the custodian of the vehicle may
collect the balance of those unpaid fees from the last titled
owner, subject to section 252i.
(b) Obtain title to the vehicle for the police agency or the
unit of government the police agency represents, by doing the
following:
(i) Paying the towing and storage charges.
(ii) Applying for title to the vehicle.
(c) Hold another public sale under subsection (1).
(4) A person who acquires ownership of a vehicle under
subsection (1) or (3) that has been designated as a distressed
vehicle shall apply for a salvage certificate of title within 15
days after obtaining the vehicle.
(5) Upon disposition of the vehicle, the police agency or
towing agency or custodian shall provide the secretary of state and
the police agency, if that police agency did not conduct the sale,
with the vehicle's disposition and the name of the agency that
disposed of it and the police agency shall cancel the entry in the
law enforcement information network.
(6) Not less than 25 days after the date of notice required
under section 252a, if the police agency does not provide a copy of
the bill of sale by the police agency for the abandoned vehicle to
the towing agency or custodian or police agency's designee, the
towing agency or custodian or police agency designee may obtain an
original of the bill of sale by submitting an application to the
secretary of state in a form as determined by the secretary of
state.
Sec. 252k. Except as otherwise provided in section 252l, an
owner or lessor of private real property shall post a notice that
meets all of the following requirements before authorizing the
towing or removal of a vehicle from the real property without the
consent of the owner or other person who is legally entitled to
possess the vehicle:
(a)
The notice shall be prominently displayed at a each point
of entry for vehicular access to the real property. If the real
property lacks curbs or access barriers, not less than 1 notice
shall be posted for each 100 feet of road frontage.
(b) The notice clearly indicates in letters not less than 2
inches high on a contrasting background that unauthorized vehicles
will be towed away at the owner's expense.
(c) The notice provides the name and telephone number of the
towing service responsible for towing or removing vehicles from
that property.
(d) The notice is permanently installed with the bottom of the
notice located not less than 4 feet from the ground and is
continuously maintained on the property for not less than 24 hours
before a vehicle is towed or removed.
Sec.
252l. Section 252k does not apply to either any of
the
following:
(a) Real property that is appurtenant to and obviously part of
a single- or dual-family residence.
(b) An instance when notice is personally given to the owner
or other legally entitled person in control of a vehicle that the
area where the vehicle is parked is reserved or otherwise
unavailable to unauthorized vehicles and that the vehicle is
subject to towing or removal from the private real property without
the consent of the owner or other legally entitled person in
control of the vehicle.
(c) A vehicle removed from private property under section
252d.
Sec. 625n. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section
and in addition to any other penalty provided for in this act, the
judgment of sentence for a conviction for a violation of section
625(1)
described in section 625(8)(b) or (c) 625(9)(b) or (c), a
violation
of section 625(3) described in section 625(10)(b) or (c)
625(11)(b) or (c), a violation of section 625(4), (5), or (7), or a
violation of section 904(4) or (5) may require 1 of the following
with regard to the vehicle used in the offense if the defendant
owns the vehicle in whole or in part or leases the vehicle:
(a) Forfeiture of the vehicle if the defendant owns the
vehicle in whole or in part.
(b) Return of the vehicle to the lessor if the defendant
leases the vehicle.
(2) The vehicle may be seized pursuant to an order of seizure
issued by the court having jurisdiction upon a showing of probable
cause that the vehicle is subject to forfeiture or return to the
lessor.
(3) The forfeiture of a vehicle is subject to the interest of
the holder of a security interest who did not have prior knowledge
of or consent to the violation.
(4) Within 14 days after the defendant's conviction for a
violation described in subsection (1), the prosecuting attorney may
file a petition with the court for the forfeiture of the vehicle or
to have the court order return of a leased vehicle to the lessor.
The prosecuting attorney shall give notice by first-class mail or
other process to the defendant and his or her attorney, to all
owners of the vehicle, and to any person holding a security
interest in the vehicle that the court may require forfeiture or
return of the vehicle.
(5) If a vehicle is seized before disposition of the criminal
proceedings, a defendant who is an owner or lessee of the vehicle
may move the court having jurisdiction over the proceedings to
require the seizing agency to file a lien against the vehicle and
to return the vehicle to the owner or lessee pending disposition of
the criminal proceedings. The court shall hear the motion within 7
days after the motion is filed. If the defendant establishes at the
hearing that he or she holds the legal title to the vehicle or that
he or she has a leasehold interest and that it is necessary for him
or her or a member of his or her family to use the vehicle pending
the outcome of the forfeiture action, the court may order the
seizing agency to return the vehicle to the owner or lessee. If the
court orders the return of the vehicle to the owner or lessee, the
court shall order the defendant to post a bond in an amount equal
to the retail value of the vehicle, and shall also order the
seizing agency to file a lien against the vehicle.
(6) Within 14 days after notice by the prosecuting attorney is
given under subsection (4), the defendant, an owner, lessee, or
holder of a security interest may file a claim of interest in the
vehicle with the court. Within 21 days after the expiration of the
period for filing claims, but before or at sentencing, the court
shall hold a hearing to determine the legitimacy of any claim, the
extent of any co-owner's equity interest, the liability of the
defendant to any co-lessee, and whether to order the vehicle
forfeited or returned to the lessor. In considering whether to
order forfeiture, the court shall review the defendant's driving
record to determine whether the defendant has multiple convictions
under section 625 or a local ordinance substantially corresponding
to section 625, or multiple suspensions, restrictions, or denials
under section 904, or both. If the defendant has multiple
convictions under section 625 or multiple suspensions,
restrictions, or denials under section 904, or both, that factor
shall weigh heavily in favor of forfeiture.
(7) If a vehicle is forfeited under this section, the unit of
government that seized the vehicle shall sell the vehicle pursuant
to the procedures under section 252g(1) and dispose of the proceeds
in the following order of priority:
(a) Pay any outstanding security interest of a secured party
who did not have prior knowledge of or consent to the commission of
the violation.
(b) Pay the equity interest of a co-owner who did not have
prior knowledge of or consent to the commission of the violation.
(c) Satisfy any order of restitution entered in the
prosecution for the violation.
(d) Pay any outstanding accrued towing and storage fees.
(e) (d)
Pay the claim of each person who
shows that he or she
is a victim of the violation to the extent that the claim is not
covered by an order of restitution.
(f) (e)
Pay any outstanding lien against
the property that has
been imposed by a governmental unit.
(g) (f)
Pay the proper expenses of the
proceedings for
forfeiture and sale, including, but not limited to, expenses
incurred during the seizure process and expenses for maintaining
custody of the property, advertising, and court costs.
(h) (g)
The balance remaining after the
payment of items (a)
through
(f) (g) shall be distributed by the court having
jurisdiction over the forfeiture proceedings to the unit or units
of government substantially involved in effecting the forfeiture.
Seventy-five percent of the money received by a unit of government
under this subdivision shall be used to enhance enforcement of the
criminal laws and 25% of the money shall be used to implement the
crime victim's rights act, 1985 PA 87, MCL 780.751 to 780.834. A
unit of government receiving money under this subdivision shall
report annually to the department of management and budget the
amount of money received under this subdivision that was used to
enhance enforcement of the criminal laws and the amount that was
used to implement the crime victim's rights act, 1985 PA 87, MCL
780.751 to 780.834.
(8) The court may order the defendant to pay to a co-lessee
any liability determined under subsection (6). The order may be
enforced in the same manner as a civil judgment.
(9) The return of a vehicle to the lessor under this section
does not affect or impair the lessor's rights or the defendant's
obligations under the lease.
(10) A person who knowingly conceals, sells, gives away, or
otherwise transfers or disposes of a vehicle with the intent to
avoid forfeiture or return of the vehicle to the lessor under this
section is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for
not more than 1 year or a fine of not more than $1,000.00, or both.
(11) The failure of the court or prosecutor to comply with any
time limit specified in this section does not preclude the court
from ordering forfeiture of a vehicle or its return to a lessor,
unless the court finds that the owner or claimant suffered
substantial prejudice as a result of that failure.
(12) The forfeiture provisions of this section do not preclude
the prosecuting attorney from pursuing a forfeiture proceeding
under any other law of this state or a local ordinance
substantially corresponding to this section.
Sec. 716. (1) Unless specifically declared to be a civil
infraction, it is a misdemeanor for a person to drive or move or
for the owner to cause or permit to be driven or moved on a highway
a vehicle or vehicles of a size or weight exceeding the limitations
stated in this chapter or otherwise in violation of this chapter,
and the maximum size and weight specified in this chapter are
lawful throughout this state, and local authorities shall not alter
those size and weight limitations except as express authority is
granted in this chapter.
(2)
The provisions of this chapter governing size, weight, and
load
do not apply to a fire apparatus, to an implement of husbandry
incidentally
moved upon a highway, a combination of vehicles
described
in, and under the conditions provided by, subsection (4),
or
to a vehicle operated under the terms of a special permit issued
as
provided in this chapter. The
provision of this chapter
governing size, weight, and load do not apply to a fire apparatus,
to an implement of husbandry, a boat lift or oversized hydraulic
boat trailer owned and operated by a marina or watercraft dealer
used exclusively in a commercial boat storage operation and
incidentally moved upon a highway, a combination of vehicles
described in, and under the conditions provided by, subsection (4),
or to a vehicle operated under the terms of a special permit issued
as provided in this chapter.
(3) The state transportation department, under the
administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to
24.328, may promulgate rules permitting and regulating the
operation of a vehicle or vehicles of a size or weight that exceeds
the size or weight limitations in this chapter. The rules may
restrict or proscribe the conditions of operation of a vehicle or
vehicles of a size or weight that exceeds the size or weight
limitations in this chapter, if the restriction or proscription is
necessary to protect the public safety or to prevent undue damage
to a road foundation or surface, a structure, or an installation.
The rules may provide for a reasonable inspection fee for an
inspection of a vehicle or vehicles to determine whether their
sizes and weights are in conformance with this act, and may require
other security necessary to compensate for damage caused by the
vehicle or vehicles described in this subsection.
(4) A wrecker and a disabled vehicle, or a wrecker and a
combination of a disabled vehicle and 1 trailer, that exceeds the
size and weight limitations in this chapter may be operated upon
the highways of this state under the following conditions:
(a) The wrecker is specifically designed for such towing
operations, is equipped with flashing, oscillating, or rotating
amber or red lights as permitted under section 698, and is capable
of utilizing the lighting and braking systems of the disabled
vehicle or combination of disabled vehicles if those systems are
operational.
(b) For a combination of disabled vehicles, the wrecker is
issued a special permit under section 725 by the state
transportation department if each trip beginning from the place of
original disablement of the combination of disabled vehicles is 25
miles or less except that, for each trip that begins and ends north
of a line between Ludington and Pinconning, the trip beginning from
the place of original disablement of the combination of vehicles
may be 50 miles or less. The special permit is valid for the entire
towing distance set forth in this subdivision, and the operator of
the wrecker may remove the disabled vehicles from the roadway at
any lawful point of his or her choosing within that distance.
(c) For a single disabled vehicle, the wrecker is issued a
special permit under section 725 by the state transportation
department for the transport of the disabled vehicle. A wrecker
operator is not subject to mileage limitations for a special permit
issued for purposes of this subdivision.
(d) The wrecker does not operate on any highway, road, street,
or structure included on a list provided by the state
transportation department unless the disabled vehicle or
combination of vehicles is located on 1 of those roads or
structures.
(5) The owner or operator of a wrecker that does not comply
with subsection (4)(d) is responsible for a civil infraction and
shall pay a civil fine of not less than $250.00 or more than
$500.00. The civil fine imposed under this subsection is in
addition to any fine that may be imposed under section 724 or 725.
Sec. 717. (1) The total outside width of a vehicle or the load
on a vehicle shall not exceed 96 inches, except as otherwise
provided in this section.
(2) A person may operate or move an implement of husbandry of
any width on a highway as required, designed, and intended for
farming operations, including the movement of implements of
husbandry being driven or towed and not hauled on a trailer,
without obtaining a special permit for an excessively wide vehicle
or load under section 725. The operation or movement of the
implement of husbandry shall be in a manner so as to minimize the
interruption of traffic flow. A person shall not operate or move an
implement of husbandry to the left of the center of the roadway
from a half hour after sunset to a half hour before sunrise, under
the conditions specified in section 639, or at any time visibility
is substantially diminished due to weather conditions. A person
operating or moving an implement of husbandry shall follow all
traffic regulations.
(3) The total outside width of the load of a vehicle hauling
concrete pipe, agricultural products, or unprocessed logs,
pulpwood, or wood bolts shall not exceed 108 inches.
(4) Except as provided in subsections (2) and (5) and this
subsection, if a vehicle that is equipped with pneumatic tires is
operated on a highway, the maximum width from the outside of 1
wheel and tire to the outside of the opposite wheel and tire shall
not exceed 102 inches, and the outside width of the body of the
vehicle or the load on the vehicle shall not exceed 96 inches.
However, a truck and trailer or a tractor and semitrailer
combination hauling pulpwood or unprocessed logs may be operated
with a maximum width of not to exceed 108 inches in accordance with
a special permit issued under section 725.
(5) The total outside body width of a bus, a trailer coach, a
trailer, a semitrailer, a truck camper, or a motor home shall not
exceed 102 inches. However, an appurtenance of a trailer coach, a
truck camper, or a motor home that extends not more than 6 inches
beyond the total outside body width is not a violation of this
section.
(6) A vehicle shall not extend beyond the center line of a
state trunk line highway except when authorized by law. Except as
provided in subsection (2), if the width of the vehicle makes it
impossible to stay away from the center line, a permit shall be
obtained under section 725.
(7) The director of the state transportation department, a
county road commission, or a local authority may designate a
highway under the agency's jurisdiction as a highway on which a
person may operate a vehicle or vehicle combination that is not
more than 102 inches in width, including load, the operation of
which would otherwise be prohibited by this section. The agency
making the designation may require that the owner or lessee of the
vehicle or of each vehicle in the vehicle combination secure a
permit before operating the vehicle or vehicle combination. This
subsection does not restrict the issuance of a special permit under
section 725 for the operation of a vehicle or vehicle combination.
This subsection does not permit the operation of a vehicle or
vehicle combination described in section 722a carrying a load
described in that section if the operation would otherwise result
in a violation of that section.
(8) The director of the state transportation department, a
county road commission, or a local authority may issue a special
permit under section 725 to a person operating a vehicle or vehicle
combination if all of the following are met:
(a) The vehicle or vehicle combination, including load, is not
more than 106 inches in width.
(b) The vehicle or vehicle combination is used solely to move
new motor vehicles or parts or components of new motor vehicles
between facilities that meet all of the following:
(i) New motor vehicles or parts or components of new motor
vehicles are manufactured or assembled in the facilities.
(ii) The facilities are located within 10 miles of each other.
(iii) The facilities are located within the city limits of the
same city and the city is located in a county that has a population
of more than 400,000 and less than 500,000 according to the most
recent federal decennial census.
(c) The special permit and any renewals are each issued for a
term of 1 year or less.
(9) A person may move or operate a boat lift of any width or
an oversized hydraulic boat trailer owned and operated by a marina
or watercraft dealer in a commercial boat storage operation on a
highway under a multiple trip permit issued on an annual basis as
specified under section 725. The operation or movement of the boat
lift or trailer shall minimize the interruption of traffic flow. It
shall be used exclusively to transport a boat between a place of
House Bill No. 4839 as amended December 18, 2008
storage and a marina or in and around a marina. A boat lift or
oversized hydraulic boat trailer may be operated, drawn, or towed
on a street or highway only when transporting a vessel between a
body of water and a place of storage or when traveling empty to or
from transporting a vessel. A boat lift shall not be operated on
limited access highways. A person moving or operating a boat lift
or oversized hydraulic boat trailer shall follow all traffic
regulations and shall ensure the route selected has adequate power
and utility wire height clearance.
(10) (9)
A person who violates this section
is responsible for
a civil infraction. The owner of the vehicle may be charged with a
violation of this section.
<<Sec. 726. (1) Local authorities and county road commissions with respect to highways under their jurisdiction, except state trunk line highways, by ordinance or resolution, may do any of the following:
(a) Prohibit the operation of trucks or other commercial vehicles on designated highways or streets.
(b) Impose limitations as to the weight of trucks or other commercial vehicles on designated highways or streets.
(c) Provide that only certain highways or streets may be used by trucks or other commercial vehicles.
(2) Any prohibitions, limitations, or truck route designations established under subsection (1) shall be designated by appropriate signs placed on the highways or streets. The design and placement of the signs shall be consistent with the requirements of section 608.
(3) If a township has established any prohibition or limitation under subsection (1) on any county primary road that an adjoining township determines diverts traffic onto a border highway or street shared by the township and the adjoining township, the adjoining township may submit a written objection to the county road commission having jurisdiction over the county primary road, along with a copy to the township that established the prohibition or limitation, on or before the later of March 1, 2009, or 60 days after the township approves the prohibition or limitation. The written objection shall explain how the prohibition or limitation diverts traffic onto the border highway or street shared by the township and the adjoining township. The county road commission shall then investigate the objection. The township and adjoining township shall cooperate with that investigation and negotiate in good faith to resolve the objection. If the objection is not resolved within 60 days after the township receives the copy of the written objection, the county road commission has the authority to, and shall, either approve or void the prohibition or limitation that is the subject of the objection within 60 days thereafter, which decision shall be final. For purposes of this subsection, "county primary road" means a highway or street designated as a county primary road pursuant to 1951 PA 51, MCL 247.671 to 247.675.
(4) (3) A person who violates a
prohibition, limitation, or truck route designation established pursuant to
subsection (1) is responsible for a civil infraction.>>