New York's Mental Hygiene Law (MHL) is one of the most significant bodies of law affecting incapacitated individuals and their families in the state. Enacted in its current form over decades of legislative development, the MHL governs the legal rights, care, and treatment of individuals with mental illness, intellectual disabilities, and developmental disabilities — and, through Article 81, provides the legal framework for appointing guardians when adults can no longer manage their own affairs. For New York families navigating the intersection of mental health, cognitive decline, and legal decision-making authority, understanding the MHL is essential.
Article 81, which took effect in 1993, was a landmark reform that replaced New York's older, blunter "incompetency" law with a sophisticated, functional framework. The old system required courts to declare an entire person legally "incompetent" — stripping them of essentially all legal rights at once. Article 81 replaced this approach with a needs-based model: rather than a wholesale declaration of incompetence, the court determines specifically what the person can and cannot do for themselves, and limits the guardian's authority to only those areas where the person genuinely needs assistance. This tailored approach is sometimes called the "least restrictive intervention" principle, and it is the organizing philosophy of the entire Article 81 framework. At Morgan Legal Group, Russel Morgan, Esq. and our team are deeply familiar with the MHL's requirements, its procedural rules, and the way courts in each borough apply its standards.
The MHL also created and funds Mental Hygiene Legal Service (MHLS), a state agency with offices in each judicial department that provides free legal representation to individuals who are the subject of MHL proceedings — including Article 81 guardianship cases. MHLS plays an important role in every guardianship proceeding, and understanding how MHLS operates and how to work constructively with MHLS attorneys is an important aspect of navigating an Article 81 case. Our attorneys have extensive experience working alongside MHLS in both uncontested and contested proceedings, and we coordinate with MHLS to ensure that the process moves forward efficiently and that all parties' interests are properly addressed.