People of Michigan v. Kenneth Michael Nordstrom
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
Date FiledMay 26, 2026
Docket375550
StatusPublished
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Full 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
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, FOR PUBLICATION
May 26, 2026
Plaintiff-Appellee, 9:43 AM
v No. 375550
Oakland Circuit Court
KENNETH MICHAEL NORDSTROM, LC No. 2024-290515-FH
Defendant-Appellant.
Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and GARRETT and MARIANI, JJ.
RIORDAN, P.J. (concurring in part and dissent in part).
Defendant appeals by leave granted1 the trial court’s order denying his motion to dismiss
and quash the felony information charging four felonies—resisting or obstructing a police officer
causing serious impairment, MCL 750.81d(3); malicious destruction of police property, MCL
750.377b; resisting or obstructing a police officer, MCL 750.81d(1); and assaulting a medical
technician, MCL 750.81d(1). On appeal, defendant asserts that the trial court erred by denying his
motion because he could legally resist an unlawful arrest under People v Moreno, 491 Mich 38;
814 NW2d 624 (2012), which requires dismissing, at a minimum, the charge of resisting or
obstructing a police officer under MCL 750.81d(1).
The majority agrees with defendant, concluding that his initial detention was unlawful
under Terry v Ohio, 392 US 1; 88 S Ct 1868; 20 L Ed 2d 889 (1968), and its progeny, thereby
entitling him to resist that unlawful temporary detention. However, for the reasons set forth, I
question whether a private citizen has the right to resist a temporary detention regardless of
whether that detention satisfies the Terry standard. It seems that our appellate courts might be
losing the plot by assuming, with little or no rigorous consideration, that such a right exists, to the
clear detriment of public safety and those police officers charged with ensuring that safety.
1
People v Nordstrom, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered June 16, 2025 (Docket
No. 375550).
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In any event, I conclude that the officers’ initial detention of defendant did satisfy the Terry
standard, so the charge of resisting or obstructing a police officer under MCL 750.81d(1) should
not be dismissed regardless of whether a Terry analysis governs this case. Accordingly, I would
affirm the trial court in its entirety.2
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Police officers from the Wixom Police Department were dispatched to investigate an
intoxicated male who, according to a 911 call, was harassing women and creating a public
disturbance at an apartment complex. The officers arrived at the described location and
approached defendant. Defendant matched the suspect’s description given by the 911 caller, and
he appeared intoxicated. However, he was not engaged in unlawful conduct at that time. After
defendant identified himself following several requests to do so, the officers detained him for
possibly disturbing the peace and to investigate further. As part of their investigation, officers
planned to contact the 911 caller and ask for a written statement. At that point, defendant resisted
the officers’ attempts to detain him by twisting and turning, despite several orders to comply in
the officers’ attempt to place him in their patrol vehicle. At some point after the initial encounter,
an officer spoke with the 911 caller and confirmed the original allegations made in the original
phone call. Defendant was then arrested and transported to the police department for disturbing
the peace, a 90-day misdemeanor.
After resisting being searched during booking, defendant was placed in a holding cell.
Once the cell door closed, defendant produced money that he still possessed. The officers entered
the cell to retrieve it, but defendant started another fight with the officers. During this encounter,
defendant bit an officer’s left hand and caused the officer to suffer a broken arm. Additionally,
police equipment was broken. Finally, while being transported to the hospital for medical
attention, defendant bit a paramedic’s forearm.
The district court bound defendant over as charged despite defendant’s argument that he
lawfully resisted an unlawful arrest because his arrest for disturbing the peace, a 90-day
misdemeanor, was committed outside the officers’ presence. The district court found that
defendant was lawfully detained during the officers’ investigation and “things unraveled from
there.” In the trial court, defendant moved to dismiss and quash the felony information, arguing
that the district court erroneously bound him over because he was entitled to resist an unlawful
arrest. The prosecution responded that the arrest was lawful because it was objectively reasonable.
At the motion hearing, the trial court denied the motion, finding that the arrest was objectively
reasonable. Defendant filed an interlocutory application for leave to appeal, which this Court
2
To be precise, while I disagree with the majority that the charge of resisting or obstructing a
police officer under MCL 750.81d(1) should be dismissed, I agree with the majority that the
remaining three charges should not be dismissed. Thus, I concur with the majority as to those
three charges but dissent from the majority as to the charge of resisting or obstructing a police
officer under MCL 750.81d(1).
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granted. People v Nordstrom, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered June 16, 2025
(Docket No. 375550).
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review a trial court’s decision on a motion to dismiss charges against a defendant for
an abuse of discretion.” People v Nicholson, 297 Mich App 191, 196; 822 NW2d 284 (2012). “A
trial court may be said to have abused its discretion only when its decision falls outside the range
of principled outcomes.” Id. This Court reviews questions of law de novo. People v Norwood,
303 Mich App 466, 469; 843 NW2d 775 (2013).
III. DISCUSSION
The function of a preliminary examination is “to determine whether a felony was
committed and whether there is probable cause to believe the defendant committed it.” People v
Yost, 468 Mich 122, 125-126; 659 NW2d 604 (2003). Evidence must be presented at the
preliminary examination “from which at least an inference may be drawn establishing the elements
of the crime charged . . . .” Id. at 126. Probable cause is “less rigorous than the guilt-beyond-a-
reasonable-doubt standard of proof,” and it only “requires a quantum of evidence sufficient to
cause a person of ordinary prudence and caution to conscientiously entertain a reasonable belief
of the accused’s guilt.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted). “The district court abuses its
discretion by binding over a defendant when the prosecution has failed to present sufficient
evidence to support each element of the charged offense.” People v Simon, 339 Mich App 568,
580; 984 NW2d 800 (2021).
On appeal, defendant argues that the prosecution failed to sufficiently establish the
elements of resisting or obstructing a police officer under MCL 750.81d(1), which is the charged
offense arising from his refusal to submit to his initial temporary detention.3 The elements of this
offense are “(1) the defendant assaulted, battered, wounded, resisted, obstructed, opposed, or
endangered a police officer, and (2) the defendant knew or had reason to know that the person that
the defendant assaulted, battered, wounded, resisted, obstructed, opposed, or endangered was a
police officer performing his or her duties.” People v Quinn, 305 Mich App 484, 491; 853 NW2d
383 (2014) (quotation marks and citation omitted). Additionally, MCL 750.81d does not “modify
the traditional common-law rule that a person may resist an unlawful arrest.” People v Moreno,
491 Mich 38, 41; 814 NW2d 624 (2012). Thus, as a third element of resisting or obstructing a
police officer under MCL 750.81d(1), the prosecution must prove that “the officers’ actions were
lawful.” Id. at 51.
Defendant does not dispute that the prosecution established probable cause for the first two
elements of resisting or obstructing a police officer, contrary to MCL 750.81d(1).4 Rather,
3
As the majority correctly notes, defendant “has abandoned any claim in this appeal that he is
entitled to the dismissal” of the remaining three charges.
4
As to the first element, testimony established that defendant resisted being detained despite
several orders to remain still. As to the second element, defendant knew or had reason to know
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defendant argues that the prosecution failed to establish the additional third element of the crime,
i.e., that the officers acted lawfully when they initially detained him. In this regard, our Supreme
Court held in Moreno that “MCL 750.81d [does not] abrogate[] the common-law right to resist
illegal police conduct, including unlawful arrests and unlawful entries into constitutionally
protected areas.” Moreno, 491 Mich at 41. The Court reasoned that “[t]he prior resisting-arrest
statute, MCL 750.479 as enacted by 1931 PA 328,” did not preclude the common-law defense that
a private citizen may resist an unlawful arrest, so the current version of MCL 750.81d similarly
does not preclude that common-law defense. Id. at 49. Further, with regard to the scope of the
common-law defense itself, the Court cited People v Krum, 374 Mich 356; 132 NW2d 69 (1965),
People v Clements, 68 Mich 655; 36 NW 792 (1888), and People v MacLeod, 254 Mich App 222;
656 NW2d 844 (2002), for the proposition that “the right to resist unlawful arrests, and other
unlawful invasions of private rights, is well established in our state’s common law.” Id. at 46-47.
The issue before us in the instant case, as framed by the prosecution and the majority, is
whether the officers’ initial temporary detention of defendant was justified under the principles
articulated in Terry.5 I question this framing of the issue. As explained, the holding in Moreno
was that the Legislature, by enacting MCL 750.81d and its predecessor statute, did not “abrogate[]
the common-law right to resist illegal police conduct, including unlawful arrests and unlawful
entries into constitutionally protected areas.” Moreno, 491 Mich at 41. And, Moreno apparently
assessed the common law of our state as it existed in 1931, when the original predecessor statute
to MCL 750.81d was enacted. See id. at 49. In other words, Moreno reasoned that the common
law, as it existed in 1931, provided for a right to resist an unlawful arrest, and when the Legislature
enacted the original resisting-arrest statute in 1931, it did not intend to abrogate that common-law
right. See id. Thus, the common-law right to resist an unlawful arrest continued to remain
effective throughout the subsequent amendments of that statute, including the most recent version
before us today. Id. See also People v Riddle, 467 Mich 116, 126; 649 NW2d 30 (2002)
(“[B]ecause our Legislature has not acted to change the law of self-defense since it enacted the
first Penal Code in 1846, we are proscribed from expanding or contracting the defense as it existed
at common law. We therefore apply the common law as it was understood when the crime of
murder was codified to clarify the concepts of retreat and the castle doctrine.”) (footnote omitted).
Consequently, our task in this case arguably should be, consistent with Moreno and other cases
such as Riddle, whether the common law in 1931 allowed a private citizen to resist an unlawful
temporary detention or, in other words, a Terry stop. Moreno directs us to assess the early common
that the individuals engaging with him were police officers because both individuals were dressed
in police uniforms.
5
I agree with the majority that the officers could not lawfully arrest defendant for disturbing the
peace when they initially encountered him because that offense did not occur in the officers’
presence. See MCL 764.15(1)(d), MCL 750.170, and MCL 750.504. The closer question is
whether the officers’ lawfully detained defendant on a temporary basis under Terry, as the
prosecution now argues.
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law of our state with regard to the type of police conduct that occurred here to determine whether
a private citizen had a common-law defense to resisting such conduct.6
I do not dispute, as Moreno explained, that the early common law of our state provided that
a private citizen had a right to resist an unlawful arrest, i.e., a detention of an indefinite time, or an
unlawful writ of garnishment. See Krum, 374 Mich at 361 (“While one may use such reasonable
force as is necessary to prevent an illegal attachment and to resist an illegal arrest, the basis for
such preventive or resistive action is the illegality of an officer’s action, to which defendant
immediately reacts.”) (internal citations omitted). See also John Bad Elk v United States, 177 US
529, 534; 20 S Ct 729; 44 L Ed 874 (1900) (“At common law, if a party resisted arrest by an officer
without warrant and who had no right to arrest him, and if in the course of that resistance the officer
was killed, the offense of the party resisting arrest would be reduced from what would have been
murder if the officer had had the right to arrest, to manslaughter.”).7 However, it is certainly
debatable whether the common-law right to resist an unlawful arrest extended to the right to resist
a temporary detention.
The seminal case regarding the common-law right to resist an unlawful arrest is The Queen
v Tooley, 92 Eng Rep 349 (1710), in which the King’s Bench recognized that right, characterizing
an unlawful arrest as an attempt to “be imprisoned upon an unlawful authority.” Tooley, 92 Eng
Rep at 352. More recently, in State v Valentine, 132 Wash 2d 1; 935 P2d 1294 (1997), the Supreme
Court of Washington examined Tooley in detail and explained its legal reasoning and basis:
The important point to note is that Tooley is not about Mistress Anne
Dekins’s right to resist her unlawful arrest. It is about the right of others, strangers,
to resist her unlawful arrest. The “provocation” the Tooley court spoke of was not
the provocation of Mistress Dekins. It was the provocation of the three strangers
at seeing someone unlawfully imprisoned, and whether that provocation provided
sufficient reason to reduce their conviction from murder to manslaughter.
Nevertheless, the Tooley rule has come down to us as a rule permitting an arrestee
to use the necessary force (but no more) to resist an unlawful arrest.
To understand why an unlawful arrest was such a great provocation as to
affect “all people out of compassion,” it is necessary to look at the historical
evidence of the state of English prisons in the eighteenth century.
. . . English Prisons. Professor Sam Bass Warner of Harvard Law School was
instrumental in the 1940’s in setting forth the historical background leading to the
6
Another possible interpretation of Moreno, albeit less likely in my view, is that Moreno assessed
the common law as it currently exists. However, as I am unaware of any modification of the
common law with regard to resisting unlawful police conduct in recent decades, the analysis is the
same.
7
Moreover, while not directly mentioned by Moreno, our state’s early common law also arguably
provided that a private citizen had a right to resist unlawful police intrusions into the home. See
People v De Meaux, 194 Mich 18, 28; 160 NW 634 (1916).
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abandonment of the Tooley rule in the majority of states. “The Tooley rule
developed when long imprisonment, often without the opportunity of bail, goal
[sic] fever, physical torture, and other great dangers were to be apprehended from
arrest, whether legal or illegal.”
***
. . . As one commentator put it, “Where imprisonment was often the equivalent of
a death sentence, or at least, a living death, one can understand why men resisted
unlawful arrest.” One can also understand why, as the Tooley court said, an
unlawful arrest was a great provocation affecting “all people out of compassion.”
The common law rule set out in Tooley plainly resulted from conditions that no
longer exist. [Id. at 13-15 (cleaned up).]
Thus, as the Supreme Court of Washington explained, the primary basis, if not the
exclusive basis, for the common-law rule regarding the right to resist an unlawful arrest was that
a private citizen had a right to resist unlawful imprisonment in light of the deplorable conditions
of English prisons and the absence of procedural mechanisms, such as bail and appointed counsel,
that currently protect incarcerated individuals. See id. at 13-16.
Plainly, an unlawful temporary detention—what we now might refer to as an unlawful
Terry stop, or something similar—is a far cry from the unlawful arrest contemplated by Tooley.
Indeed, subsequent American cases such as Bad Elk typically use the term “arrest,” not a broader
term such as “detention.” See, e.g., Bad Elk, 177 US at 534. Therefore, I have some doubt that
our state’s early common law provided any right to resist unlawful temporary detentions,
notwithstanding that it did provide a right to resist unlawful arrests.8
8
The Supreme Court of Virginia recognized the longstanding common-law rule that “a citizen
generally is permitted to use reasonable force to resist an illegal arrest” but declined to extend that
rule to an “illegal detention,” stating that “the law of this Commonwealth, including the common
law of England . . . does not provide a basis for recognizing a common law right to use force to
resist an illegal detention. In the absence of authority requiring such a right, we perceive no reason
for enlarging, by judicial decision, the scope of the common law on this subject.” Commonwealth
v Hill, 264 Va 541, 546; 570 SE2d 805 (2002). Similarly, the Supreme Court of Louisiana also
declined to extend the common-law rule to “temporary detentions,” reasoning that “[e]xtending
the rule that a citizen may resist an unlawful arrest to an unlawful stop-and-frisk would belie the
paramount purpose of ensuring officer safety by encouraging the use of force on police officers.”
State v Sims, 851 So2d 1039, 1046 (La, 2003), superseded by statute as stated in State v Manuel,
946 So2d 245 (La Ct App, 2006). The Supreme Court of Louisiana added that “[t]he courts of
other states which continue to recognize a citizen’s right to resist forcefully an unlawful arrest have
arrived at similar conclusions.” Id. at 1047.
Simply put, my research suggests that Michigan is an extreme outlier in treating the common-law
right to resist unlawful arrests as necessarily including, with little to no reasoned analysis on the
question, the right to resist unlawful temporary detentions, and by continuing to retain that right.
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To be clear, it is not my intention to resolve that question today, as it has not been argued
by the parties. Nor do I particularly fault the majority for immediately conducting a Terry analysis
without assessing the early common law of our state, as such an approach is suggested by People
v Trapp, 335 Mich App 141; 966 NW2d 420 (2020), and People v Prude, 513 Mich 377; 15 NW3d
249 (2024).9 Indeed, I acknowledge that Moreno occasionally uses broad language to characterize
its decision as going beyond unlawful arrests alone. See, e.g., Moreno, 491 Mich at 58 (stating
that the Legislature did not “intend[] to abrogate the common-law right to resist unlawful arrests
or other unlawful invasions of private rights”). Thus, post-Moreno cases may be correct to
understand Moreno as broadly holding that any unlawful police conduct may be resisted under our
state’s early common law. However, as explained herein, I believe that this matter deserves far
more careful consideration than has been given by our courts to date.10
In any event, turning to the question raised by the prosecution and addressed by the
majority, assuming that a Terry analysis governs this case, I would conclude that the officers’
temporary detention of defendant here satisfies Terry. “Both the United States Constitution and
the Michigan Constitution guarantee the right of persons to be secure against unreasonable
searches and seizures.” People v Pagano, 507 Mich 26, 31-32; 967 NW2d 590 (2021).
“Generally, seizures are reasonable for purposes of the Fourth Amendment only if based on
probable cause.” People v Lewis, 251 Mich App 58, 69; 649 NW2d 792 (2002) (citations omitted).
However, under the Fourth Amendment, “a police officer may in appropriate circumstances and
9
Trapp, in my view, correctly identified the proper analysis for these circumstances, stating that
“Terry stops were unknown to the common law, of course. As Moreno instructs, the common law
focused on ‘invasions of privacy’ rather than technical distinctions between arrests and other forms
of seizure. . . . [T]he common-law right to resist the unlawful taking of one’s property also
encompasses the right to resist the unlawful taking of one’s liberty.” Trapp, 335 Mich App at 164-
165. While I may not agree with Trapp’s ultimate conclusion that the common law provided for
a right to resist unlawful temporary detentions, as its analysis of the early common law arguably
was superficial, I readily agree with its framing of the issue.
Prude, in contrast, simply conducted a Terry analysis without any consideration of the common
law whatsoever. Possibly, our Supreme Court did so because the parties did not dispute that a
Terry analysis alone governed the case, see id. at 393, and the case was decided without the benefit
of briefing or oral argument, see id. at 394 n 4 (VIVIANO, J., dissenting).
10
If, as I suggest herein, there is no common-law right to resist an unlawful temporary detention,
it follows that a defendant, such as the one before us, who resists an unlawful Terry stop is guilty,
at least under a probable-cause standard, of violating MCL 750.81d(1). At that point, once the
defendant resists, officers have probable cause to arrest the defendant for violating MCL
750.81d(1). In such circumstances, the arrest may only be characterized as “illegal” in an indirect,
attenuated, or derivative sense. As the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has
explained, “[w]e have been cited no authority, and have found none, that permits resistance to an
arrest that is unlawful only in this derivative sense.” United States v Moore, 483 F2d 1361, 1365
(CA 9, 1973) (upholding a conviction for assaulting a federal officer in the course of his official
duties, 18 USC 111, where the arrest was the fruit of an unlawful search of the appellant’s
belongings).
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in an appropriate manner approach a person for purposes of investigating possibly criminal
behavior even though there is no probable cause to make an arrest.” Terry, 392 US at 22. “Under
this doctrine, if a police officer has a reasonable, articulable suspicion to believe a person has
committed or is committing a crime given the totality of the circumstances, the officer may briefly
stop that person for further investigation.” People v Barbarich, 291 Mich App 468, 473; 807
NW2d 56 (2011). “Moreover, under Terry, a police officer may approach and temporarily detain
a person for the purpose of investigating possible criminal behavior even if probable cause does
not exist to arrest the person.” Id. “When a court is called upon to determine whether a defendant’s
Fourth Amendment rights have been violated in the context of a Terry stop, it should view the
totality of the circumstances in light of commonsense judgments and inferences about human
behavior, and should be careful not to apply overly technical reviews of a police officer’s
assessment of whether criminal activity is afoot.” Id. at 474 (citations omitted).
Here, the record shows that defendant was lawfully detained pursuant to Terry when
officers attempted to temporarily place handcuffs on him and seat him in the patrol car. Both
officers testified at the preliminary examination that defendant was detained essentially for
disturbing the peace while they investigated the dispatch call they had received. Detaining a
suspect with handcuffs does not automatically turn a Terry stop into a de facto arrest. See People
v Maggit, 319 Mich App 675, 692; 903 NW2d 868 (2017). Similarly, “detention in a police cruiser
does not automatically transform a Terry stop into an arrest.” Houston v Clark Co Sheriff Deputy
John Does 1-5, 174 F3d 809, 815 (CA 6, 1999).
More importantly, the record shows that this temporary detention was appropriate under
the circumstances. Defendant was intoxicated, generally uncooperative, and had allegedly
harassed women and engaged in overall disruptive conduct. These facts provided the officers with
reasonable and articulable suspicion to detain defendant, pending an investigation into the
dispatch. As to the nature of the detention, these facts also indicate defendant’s possibly dangerous
and unpredictable character, justified the officers’ decision to handcuff and place defendant in the
patrol car. Therefore, because the officers’ detention was justified under the circumstances, once
defendant physically interfered with this lawful detention, probable cause existed to arrest
defendant for resisting or obstructing a police officer under MCL 750.81d, thus rendering the
officers’ arrest of defendant lawful. See Moreno, 491 Mich at 41.
Further, although the officers testified that defendant was arrested for disturbing the peace,
an arrest is lawful even if the officers did not identify the correct legal basis for the arrest at the
time. See People v Cipriano, 431 Mich 315, 342; 429 NW2d 781 (1988). So, notwithstanding
that defendant did not commit an arrestable crime in the officers’ presence before he resisted and
obstructed the officers’ orders, once he resisted the temporary detention, probable cause existed to
justify his arrest. Therefore, even if the officers did not originally articulate the correct legal basis
for the arrest, the arrest was legal, and the trial court’s decision to deny defendant’s motion was
not erroneous or otherwise an abuse of discretion. By the same measure, the district court’s
decision to bind defendant over to the trial court was not erroneous or otherwise an abuse of
discretion.
IV. CONCLUSION
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It may or may not be the case that the common law of our state provided for, or currently
provides for, the right to resist unlawful temporary detentions akin to those discussed in Terry.
But, regardless of the answer to this question—one that I do not purport to reach today—I strongly
suspect that we will find this answer in cases actually discussing the relevant common law, such
as Tooley and Bad Elk, and not the modern Fourth Amendment caselaw considered by the majority
here. I urge the bench and bar to appropriately consider this matter.
Regardless, assuming that a Terry analysis governs this case, I respectfully disagree with
the majority that the officers’ initial temporary detention of defendant did not satisfy Terry.
Therefore, I would affirm the trial court in its entirety.
/s/ Michael J. Riordan
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