Mark Stewart Allen v. Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; The Honorable Tony Graf; Shawn Minter, Fourth Judicial District Clerk of Court; Chris Palmer, Security Director for the Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; and Does 1–20

CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedApril 2, 2026
Docket2:25-cv-00837
StatusUnknown

This text of Mark Stewart Allen v. Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; The Honorable Tony Graf; Shawn Minter, Fourth Judicial District Clerk of Court; Chris Palmer, Security Director for the Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; and Does 1–20 (Mark Stewart Allen v. Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; The Honorable Tony Graf; Shawn Minter, Fourth Judicial District Clerk of Court; Chris Palmer, Security Director for the Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; and Does 1–20) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mark Stewart Allen v. Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; The Honorable Tony Graf; Shawn Minter, Fourth Judicial District Clerk of Court; Chris Palmer, Security Director for the Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; and Does 1–20, (D. Utah 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH, CENTRAL DIVISION

MARK STEWART ALLEN, MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER DISMISSING CASE Plaintiff, v.

UTAH ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS; THE HONORABLE TONY GRAF; SHAWN MINTER, Fourth Judicial Case No. 2:25-cv-00837 District Clerk of Court; CHRIS PALMER, Security Director for the Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; and DOES 1–20, Judge Tena Campbell

Defendants.

Before the court are two motions filed by Plaintiff Mark Stewart Allen: a Motion for Leave to Proceed in forma pauperis (IFP) (ECF No. 3) and a Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order (ECF No. 4). For the following reasons, the court denies both motions and dismisses the matter. FACTUAL BACKGROUND This action derives from a long-standing dispute between Mr. Allen and a woman named A. Koehler. Because Mr. Allen’s lengthy Complaint (ECF No. 1) does not provide a clear summary, the court has taken judicial notice of the state court docket and related cases. Many of the relevant facts are summarized in a decision by the Utah Court of Appeals that is described more fully below. See Koehler v. Allen, 466 P.3d 738 (Utah Ct. App. 2020). Where indicated, the court has also summarized the relevant facts from the materials provided by Mr. Allen. The court provides this summary to illustrate the issues raised by Mr. Allen in his Complaint but does not take any of the facts recited by the state court as true at this stage of the litigation. After meeting on Facebook in 2011, Ms. Koehler asked Mr. Allen to stop contacting her in July 2013. Koehler, 466 P.3d at 740. But Mr. Allen continued to reach out to Ms. Koehler

through third parties, over email, and by sending gifts to her family. Id. Ms. Koehler went to the police in 2014 and 2015 and eventually sought a civil stalking injunction in April 2016. Id. A. Case No. 160400655 (Part I): Stalking Injunction The Utah district court granted Ms. Koehler a temporary ex parte civil stalking injunction on May 2, 2016. Id. at 741; Koehler v. Allen, Case No. 160400655 (4th Dist. Ct. Utah). Mr. Allen was served with that injunction on May 13, 2026. Koehler, 466 P.3d at 741; (see also Case Dkt., Case No. 160400655, ECF No. 1-7 at 10). The proof of service was filed with the court on May 20, 2026. (See ECF No. 1-7 at 10.) At the time, the relevant section of the Utah Code stated as follows: An ex parte civil stalking injunction is effective upon service. If no hearing is requested in writing by the respondent within 10 days of service of the ex parte civil stalking injunction, the ex parte civil stalking injunction automatically becomes a civil stalking injunction without further notice to the respondent and expires three years from the date of service of the ex parte civil stalking injunction.

Utah Code Ann. § 77-3a-101(9) (2017).1 Mr. Allen did request a hearing, but not until May 26, 2016. Koehler, 466 P.3d at 741. He therefore made his request over ten days after he was served with the injunction, although less than ten days after the proof of service was filed. The Utah Court of Appeals later held that

1 A substantially similar provision is now codified at Utah Code Ann. § 78B-7-701(7)(c). the injunction automatically extended for three years from the date of service because there were no further court orders revoking or modifying the injunction: Allen requested a hearing on May 26, 2016. Because the request was made more than ten days after service of the injunction, the burden shifted to Allen “to show good cause why the civil stalking injunction should be dissolved or modified.” See [Utah Code Ann.] § 77-3a-101(10). The matter was set for a one-day bench trial, but Allen’s attorney moved to continue the hearing for additional discovery. For reasons not clear from the record, no hearing was ever held. No court orders were entered revoking or modifying the injunction.

Id.; see also id. at 743 (holding that Mr. Allen was “on notice that he was required to obey the court order until May 13, 2019”). B. Case No. 171402280: Prosecution and Plea for July 2017 Incident Mr. Allen later faced multiple prosecutions and orders to show cause stemming from allegations that he had violated the stalking injunction. First, Mr. Allen was criminally charged with violating the injunction in July 2017. See State v. Allen, Case No. 171402280 (4th Dist. Ct.); (Case Dkt. in Case No. 171402280, ECF No. 1-7-at 26). He pled “no contest” to that charge under the terms of a plea-in-abeyance agreement. During that plea hearing, Allen claimed that he “wasn’t aware there … was an injunction in place” because his “former counsel … had a mental breakdown and failed to provide that documentation to [him].” But he admitted, as the factual basis for the plea, that the State could likely prove that “with the stalking injunction in place [he] sent a package to the protected party which was in violation of that.” As a condition of the plea in abeyance, the court ordered Allen not to contact Koehler for one year. Allen testified that he complied with the terms of his plea agreement and the criminal case was dismissed prior to December 2018.

Koehler, 466 P.3d at 741. The docket reflects that the charges against Mr. Allen were dismissed with prejudice. (ECF No. 1-7 at 20.) C. Case No. 160400655 (Part II): Contempt Order for December 2018 Incident Then, on December 21, 2018, Mr. Allen contacted Ms. Koehler in an email that stated, in part, “Why you have despised me and ruined my hope for happiness, unknown, but I do desire peace between our hearts … if you are willing.” Koehler, 466 P.3d at 741. Ms. Koehler then

moved for an order to show cause (in Case No. 160400655, the case in which she had originally obtained the injunction) why Mr. Allen should not be held in contempt for contacting her in contravention of the stalking injunction. Id. At the hearing on the motion, Allen testified that he had been served with the injunction in 2016 but had asked his attorney to request a hearing, believing that the injunction would last only until a hearing was held. According to Allen, his attorney later informed him that the hearing was canceled because the case had been dismissed. Allen testified that, after speaking with his attorney, he believed the injunction was no longer in effect, but he admitted that he had never received any official court documents suggesting that the injunction had been dismissed or modified in any way.

Allen also claimed that he did not recall emailing Koehler on December 21, 2018. He testified that, on December 21, he had taken both Unisom, an over-the counter sleep aid, and trazodone, a medication that had been prescribed to Allen to treat insomnia. Allen testified that he “woke up some 24 hours later” and recalled “[a]bsolutely nothing” from the time period during which the email was sent.

Id. at 741–42. The district court found that Mr. Allen was in contempt of the stalking injunction and Mr. Allen appealed. Id. at 742. The Utah Court of Appeals agreed with the district court that Mr. Allen knew about the stalking injunction and knew that he was required to obey the injunction until May 13, 2019: Even assuming that Allen’s attorney later misinformed him that the case had been dismissed, the injunction specified that “[n]o one except the court can change” the order and Allen admitted that he never received any official communication from the court relieving him of the responsibility to comply. Id. at 743. The Court of Appeals was similarly unpersuaded by Mr. Allen’s argument that he believed the only order prohibiting him from contacting Ms.

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Mark Stewart Allen v. Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; The Honorable Tony Graf; Shawn Minter, Fourth Judicial District Clerk of Court; Chris Palmer, Security Director for the Utah Administrative Office of the Courts; and Does 1–20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-stewart-allen-v-utah-administrative-office-of-the-courts-the-utd-2026.