State v. Spencer
State v. Spencer
Opinion of the Court
Introduction
In 1999, Frederick Spencer ("Appellant") was found guilty by a City of St. Louis jury of forcible rape and forcible sodomy. Appellant was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment on six total counts and has fully served his time. Appellant filed a motion under § 547.037
Appellant appeals both denials by *479the motion court.
Factual and Procedural Background
In August 1999, a St. Louis jury convicted Appellant of three counts of forcible rape and three counts of forcible sodomy against two victims. One of the victims, A.G., presented with DNA evidence at the hospital on the night of the alleged attack. The hospital tested the samples and could not confirm or deny Appellant's DNA. No further testing was ordered or completed by the prosecution or Appellant before trial. Appellant was convicted of six counts at trial: four counts involving victim M.M. and two counts involving victim A.G. The DNA evidence relates to one count of forcible rape involving A.G. and does not relate to the other A.G. count or any of the M.M. counts. This Court affirmed Appellant's conviction on direct appeal. State v. Spencer ,
With seven years left in his sentence, Appellant filed motions to retest the DNA samples under § 547.035. In 2007, Appellant filed his first § 547 motion which the motion court denied because Appellant failed to show why the DNA was not tested prior to or during trial as required by *480§ 547.035.2 (3) subsection (c).
Unrelated to Appellant's § 547.035 motions, the City of St. Louis retested the DNA sample from Appellant's case.
In January 2018, Appellant filed a fourth § 547 motion under § 547.037 and, in the alternative, for Rule 91 habeas relief from the original trial court judgment. In March 2018, the motion court denied Appellant's § 547 claim and denied a writ for habeas relief. This appeal follows.
Standard of Review
We review the denial of a motion for post-conviction DNA under § 547.037 to determine if the motion court's findings of fact and conclusions of law are clearly erroneous. Weeks v. State ,
Before reaching the merits of Appellant's second point, this Court must determine, sua sponte , if it has appellate jurisdiction. Frey v. Gabel ,
Discussion
I. Point I: Section 547.037
Appellant must meet the requirements of § 547.037 to file a successful motion. Section 547.037.1 reads, in relevant part: "If testing ordered pursuant to section 547.035 demonstrates a person's innocence of the crime for which the person is in custody , a motion for release may be filed in the sentencing court." (emphasis added). Construction of a statute is purely a question of law. Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. Director of Revenue ,
*481We must look to the statute for the requirements and apply them to the record on appeal. The role of courts is to ascertain the intent of the legislature from the language in a statute and give effect to that intent if possible. Abrams v. Ohio Pacific Exp. ,
We must give the requirements under § 547.037 their plain, ordinary meaning. The statute requires testing "ordered pursuant to" § 547.035 for the crime "for which the person is in custody". "Ordered pursuant to" means testing ordered according to the specific statute, in this case, § 547.035. At no point has testing under § 547.035 been ordered in Appellant's case. "For which the person is in custody" means this statute applies to individuals currently in state custody. When this § 547.037 motion was filed, Appellant had been out of state custody for over three years. After review of the record and consideration of the plain and ordinary meaning of subsection (1) of § 547.037, the requirements for the statute are clear. Appellant fails to meet two of the requirements of § 547.037. Therefore, the motion court did not clearly err in the findings of fact or conclusions of law in denying Appellant's motion. The first point is denied.
II. Point II: Rule 91
Before considering Appellant's habeas corpus appeal, we must determine if we have appellate jurisdiction for such a claim. Even if neither party raises the question of jurisdiction, we must determine, sua sponte , if jurisdiction lies with this Court. Comm. For Educ. Equal. v. State ,
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, the motion court's denial of Appellant's motion under § 547.037 is affirmed, and we dismiss the appeal of the habeas corpus proceeding.
Robert G. Dowd, Jr., J. and Mary K. Hoff, J. concur.
All statutory citations are to RSMo. (2016) unless otherwise indicated.
All rule citations are to the Missouri Supreme Court Rules (2018) unless otherwise indicated.
Appellant appears pro se. Pro se appellants are held to the same standards as attorneys. Covington v. Better Business Bureau ,
Appellant received two concurrent five year sentences for forcible rape and forcible sodomy involving victim, A.G, a 16 year-old. Appellant received two ten year sentences for two forcible rape and two forcible sodomy counts involving a second victim, M.M., to run concurrently with one another but consecutively to the five year sentences.
Section 547.035. "2. The motion must allege facts under oath demonstrating that: ...
(3) The evidence was not previously tested by the movant because:
(a) The technology for the testing was not reasonably available to the movant at the time of the trial;
(b) Neither the movant nor his or her trial counsel was aware of the existence of the evidence at the time of trial; or
(c) The evidence was otherwise unavailable to both the movant and movant's trial counsel at the time of trial; and ...".
Section 547.037 does not provide relief using testing conducted outside of § 547.035.
There is a statutory exception to this rule which applies to habeas proceedings involving child custody which cannot be applied here. See § 512.025.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.