RONALD R. SPRADLING, Movant-Appellant v. STATE OF MISSOURI, Respondent-Respondent

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 2025
DocketSD38432
StatusPublished

This text of RONALD R. SPRADLING, Movant-Appellant v. STATE OF MISSOURI, Respondent-Respondent (RONALD R. SPRADLING, Movant-Appellant v. STATE OF MISSOURI, Respondent-Respondent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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RONALD R. SPRADLING, Movant-Appellant v. STATE OF MISSOURI, Respondent-Respondent, (Mo. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Missouri Court of Appeals Southern District

In Division RONALD R. SPRADLING, ) ) Movant-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. SD38432 ) STATE OF MISSOURI, ) Filed: February 26, 2025 ) Respondent-Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HICKORY COUNTY

The Honorable James A. Hackett, Judge

AFFIRMED

Ronald R. Spradling (“Spradling”) appeals the Circuit Court of Hickory County,

Missouri’s (“motion court’s”) denial of his Rule 29.15 motion for post-conviction relief

following an evidentiary hearing. In his underlying criminal case, a jury found Spradling

guilty of two counts of second-degree kidnapping, two counts of armed criminal action,

one count of unlawful use of a weapon, and one count of unlawful possession of a

firearm. See sections 565.120, 571.015, 571.030, and 571.070, respectively. 1 In two

points relied on, Spradling claims he was denied effective assistance of counsel because

1 All rule references are to Missouri Court Rules (2025), and all references to statutes are to RSMo 2016, unless otherwise indicated.

1 he was prejudiced by counsel’s failure to request the appropriate self-defense instruction

including forcible felony language (Point I) and by counsel’s failure to object to the

State’s improper questioning regarding witness credibility (Point II). Finding no merit to

either point, we affirm the motion court’s denial of postconviction relief.

Factual Background and Procedural History

Trial and Direct Appeal Proceedings

Victim A.M. (“A.M.”) met Spradling through a work contact, and, prior to the

incident in question, had done small jobs for him: mowed his yard, cleaned his gutters,

and drove him to an appointment at a pain clinic. A.M. was in a romantic relationship

with Victim W.M. (“W.M.”). At trial, A.M. and W.M. gave a drastically different

account of the events in question from that of Spradling. A.M. and W.M. testified to the

following:

A few days prior to September 21, 2017, Spradling contacted A.M. via text

message and said he wanted her to come over to his house. Spradling refused to tell

A.M. exactly what he wanted to discuss, but said it was a personal matter. Spradling had

previously reached out to A.M. in order to set up a pain clinic appointment, but she told

him she was busy and they would discuss it the next time she was in the area. A.M. and

W.M. went to Spradling’s home on September 21, 2017. Spradling was outside when

they arrived and he invited them into the house; they entered the house through the

garage into the living room. While in the living room, they discussed how they would get

Spradling to the pain doctor because A.M.’s car was having issues. A.M. eventually got

up to go to the bathroom, and told W.M. that they should get a movie case similar to one

in Spradling’s home for their house. Spradling responded by asking A.M. and W.M. to

2 go to his bedroom to look at “Indian statues.” A.M. and W.M. went into the back

bedroom; Spradling followed them and closed the door. Spradling pulled out a gun and

asked them to get on the bed, and told them he had a “proposition” for them. Spradling

insisted that he was “not playing” and told them he would kill them if they failed to

comply.

A.M. reached up and grabbed Spradling’s hands to point the gun away from

herself and W.M. The gun fired once into the ceiling; A.M. and Spradling continued to

wrestle for the gun, heading towards the door of the bedroom. During the struggle,

another shot went off towards the floor. Spradling began biting A.M., and W.M. started

hitting Spradling on the head with a lamp to divert his attention. A.M. then noticed the

magazine had fallen out of the gun, after which she told W.M. to break the window and

get help. W.M. broke the window with the lamp and ran to get help. While A.M. was

waiting for help to arrive, Spradling hit her in the face at least twice. Eventually, A.M.

dove out the broken window and ran to her car. Police arrived shortly thereafter. After

their escape through the window, A.M. and W.M. were treated in an ambulance nearby

and transported to the hospital.

At trial, Spradling’s testimony constructed an entirely different sequence of

events. Spradling testified as follows:

The week before his doctor’s appointment in September 2017, Spradling texted

A.M. to see if she could take him to another medical procedure. A.M. did not

immediately respond. Later that week, on the morning of September 21, 2017, Spradling

was woken up by a phone call from A.M. stating that she was coming over to say “hi[.]”

Spradling stated he had concerns that A.M. had previously stolen from him, as some

3 jewelry in his bedroom was missing. He was also concerned that A.M. had been

searching for his pain medication.

Upon their arrival, A.M. told Spradling that she wanted two of his pain pills in

exchange for taking him to the pain clinic. Spradling declined, and told her he had said

he would pay her $15 to take him to the pain clinic. A.M. then increased her demand to

four pills. A.M. got up to use the restroom and upon passing his movie case, A.M. told

W.M. that Spradling’s “DVD shelves would look real good in [her] bedroom.” While

A.M. was using the bathroom, W.M. looked around Spradling’s coffee table, Spradling

suspected, for his pain pills. Spradling was concerned that A.M. and W.M. were going to

rob him, and became worried for his safety.

Spradling grabbed his gun from his shelf and asked A.M. and W.M. to go to his

bedroom to see “statues.” He planned to confront them about the missing jewelry and the

pills when they arrived in the bedroom. When they entered the bedroom, he pulled the

gun out and instructed A.M. and W.M. to sit on the bed; Spradling stated that he did not

intend to use the firearm, but wanted to scare and dissuade A.M. and W.M. from robbing

him. When Spradling asked A.M. where his missing jewelry was, she grabbed his gun.

Spradling believed the gun went off during the struggle between him and A.M. when

A.M. hit the safety. During the struggle, the magazine of the gun fell onto the floor.

W.M. then hit Spradling in the head with a lamp and her fist several times; this led to an

injury on his finger, bleeding from his head, and “floaters” in his vision. Spradling was

left in a daze. Spradling eventually realized that A.M. and W.M. left “out the window”

when he saw glass all over the bed and the floor.

4 When police arrived, they set up a perimeter around Spradling’s house. An

officer called Spradling on the phone and asked him to exit the house, but Spradling

refused and told him he was going to finish a cigarette in his bedroom. Spradling then

told the officer that it was “pretty obvious what [Spradling] was going to do.” The

officer spoke to Spradling a few more times, and Spradling repeated the same statements.

A Missouri Highway Patrol SWAT team with a negotiator arrived and took over the

situation. Spradling left the house after talking to the negotiator for several hours and

was subsequently taken into custody. Later, local police executed a search warrant for

Spradling’s house, where they found a 9mm handgun with two magazines in his kitchen

and two bullet holes along with two spent 9mm shell casings in his bedroom.

Spradling claimed at trial that he did not immediately surrender to the police

because he was confused as to who had done something wrong, and was disoriented from

his injuries.

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RONALD R. SPRADLING, Movant-Appellant v. STATE OF MISSOURI, Respondent-Respondent, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronald-r-spradling-movant-appellant-v-state-of-missouri-moctapp-2025.