Swb v. Kjp

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 2026
Docket375010
StatusUnpublished

This text of Swb v. Kjp (Swb v. Kjp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swb v. Kjp, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

SWB, UNPUBLISHED March 13, 2026 Petitioner-Appellee, 10:57 AM

v No. 375010 Washtenaw Circuit Court KJP, LC No. 24-002429-PH

Respondent-Appellant.

Before: WALLACE, P.J., and GARRETT and ACKERMAN, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondent, KJP, appeals the trial court’s issuance of a personal protection order (PPO) to petitioner, SWB, on February 5, 2025 following a hearing on that date, and the subsequent denial of respondent’s timely motion for reconsideration. On appeal, respondent contends the trial court: (1) abused its discretion in denying its authority to consider respondent’s motion for reconsideration of the issuance of the PPO; (2) violated respondent’s right to due process in permitting petitioner to amend the allegations supporting his petition at the MCR 3.705 hearing; and (3) abused its discretion by granting a PPO where petitioner did not allege facts that constitute “stalking” as defined by MCL 750.411h. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Petitioner brought the present action for the issuance of a personal protection order (PPO), via a November 27, 2024 ex parte petition alleging that:

 on October 1, 2024, respondent, as one of a group of anti-landlord activists at an Ypsilanti City Council meeting, “repeatedly body slammed [p]etitioner[,] attempting to block his path” to exit the meeting;

 on October 30, 2024, respondent led approximately 20 people to petitioner’s residence where they then destroyed his children’s Halloween pumpkins and threw toilet paper, eggs and tomatoes and other vegetables and launched bottle rockets at the home for more than 10 minutes; and

-1-  on November 26, 2024, petitioner saw respondent twice while he was driving in a remote area.

On November 27, 2024, the trial court entered an order denying the ex parte PPO, finding the petition lacked sufficient facts demonstrating that “immediate and irreparable injury will occur because of the delay for notice of hearing or that notice itself will precipitate adverse action before an ex parte order can issue.” The order advised petitioner of his right to a hearing on his petition within 21 days.

A hearing ultimately took place on February 5, 2025. In his testimony, petitioner stated that his first public interaction with respondent was on October 1, 2024, when he attended an Ypsilanti City Council meeting. According to petitioner, a number of anti-landlord activists attended this meeting, and respondent was a major instigator of that group’s disrespectful, hostile, screaming and yelling conduct. Respondent screamed and yelled at petitioner that he evicted respondent at one point, that he was not part of the community, was a scumbag, and screamed “murderer” at him multiple times. Petitioner testified that this conduct embarrassed him, that these activists hyped each other up and got so unruly that “it became a dangerous scene, and the police had to be called,” and the mayor terminated the city council meeting and kicked everyone out of city hall. According to petitioner, the only person that ended up being physically restrained by the police was respondent because respondent refused to leave the council chamber and continued yelling and screaming. Petitioner testified that the city manager recognized the crowd was so hostile toward him that he could not safely exit like everyone else and took petitioner to a back exit in the basement of city hall so he could “escape this hostile mob.” These events caused petitioner to feel “frightened” and that he was “definitely in danger,” because there were “at least 20 very hostile, angry, super hyped up people ready to physically attack me as soon as I left city hall,” which is why the police responded and detained respondent.

Petitioner then testified that the next time he encountered respondent was at an October 15, 2024 Ypsilanti City Council meeting. Respondent’s counsel objected to any testimony regarding events occurring on October 15, 2024, because the petition for PPO makes no allegations pertaining to that date. Notably, petitioner acknowledged that his petition listed the wrong date and that respondent’s offensive physical contact with him and attempt to block his exit alleged therein actually occurred at the October 15, 2024 Ypsilanti City Council meeting, rather than on October 1, 2024. Respondent’s counsel objected to such “new allegations” (i.e., changing the date respondent physically contacted and obstructed petitioner from October 1, 2024 to October 15, 2024), claiming a violation of due process, where respondent thereby was deprived of the opportunity to speak with potential witnesses who were at the October 15, 2024 Ypsilanti City Council meeting. The trial court overruled the objection, noting that such notice is necessary in criminal proceedings, but not in a non-emergency PPO hearing, and that respondent’s due process right would be satisfied by respondent’s counsel’s ability to cross-examine the petitioner regarding the events of October 15, 2024.

Petitioner testified that at the October 15, 2024 city council meeting, the “angry mob” of anti-landlord activists came with musical instruments (mostly drums and drumsticks) and for approximately three hours they “physically beat on city hall to intimidate the people that were inside the meeting.” He testified that “[i]t was truly terrifying,” and that it was his impression that respondent, who was present, was the ringleader of the group. When he tried to leave the meeting,

-2- respondent physically impeded, “bang[ed]” into him, and blocked him from leaving. Petitioner was then assisted by some police officers to exit the meeting. Once he exited city hall with a police officer, “at least 25 people tried to attack me,” including respondent, who threw a full Mountain Dew bottle at him, and petitioner and the police officer retreated back to city hall and they were eventually able to leave the area in a police car, with the activists surrounding and rocking the car, trying to overturn it. Petitioner described these events as “scary,” “terrifying,” and testified that “I felt like I was being terrorized.”

As to the allegations regarding the events of October 30, 2024, petitioner testified that he observed

25 masked attackers on my front lawn . . . . They threw more than 150 eggs, tomatoes, pumpkins, celery, apples, toilet paper, used -- used kitty litter at the front of my house. And I can see that they were carrying weapons. They had baseball bats, they had long pipes. They were chanting, screaming . . . “f*ck [petitioner].”

Petitioner checked on his minor children to make sure they were safe, his wife called the police, and he was standing inside his front door and was going to step outside to try to engage the individuals, when they began shooting “fireworks or some sort of explosion devices at me and at my house.” He then went back into his house, called the police again, and the people dissipated into the neighborhood shortly thereafter.

While petitioner testified that he saw respondent in the crowd and recognized respondent screaming “f*ck [petitioner]” just as respondent had done at the city council meeting, respondent contrarily testified that respondent was at home with two children that entire night.

Petitioner likewise described the events of October 30th event as “terrorizing,” “the worst thing that ever happened to me,” “[m]y family was in grave danger and I . . . felt in grave danger,” and since that event he: replaced his car because people were following him, hired “security people,” and moved because of these threats to him and his family’s safety.

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Bluebook (online)
Swb v. Kjp, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swb-v-kjp-michctapp-2026.