This is a petition for habeas corpus brought by two brothers convicted after a jury trial of first and second degree murder, respectively, in the Massachusetts Superior Court. Following conviction, they moved for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. The trial court’s denial of these motions was affirmed on appeal,
Commonwealth
v.
Grace
(1976), Mass.,
Taking a leaf from defendants’ book, and perhaps more adhering to it than, in their extensive brief, do they, we state first what is nоt involved. No error is alleged in the original trial; no collateral claim is made with respect to that trial, such as the use of perjured testimony, comрare, e.
g., Mooney v. Holohan,
1935,
So far as this appeal is concerned, the motions were based upon the testimony, produced orally in the superior court, of four witnesses, who defendants assert were “classically unavailable” at the trial. The victim had been shot in a scuffle outside of *880 a bar at about 11:45 p. m., in front of fifteen to twenty people. As a result of information from the viсtim’s cousin, one Baker, the police shortly arrested one of the defendants and the other, learning that the police were seeking him, surrendered the next morning. Defendants, and two others, were indicted; the latter two ultimately receiving directed acquittals. A fifth individual, Bowen, was charged, but probable causе was not found.
At the trial, Baker, and another, identified defendants. Defendants testified that they were not present at the scene, and produced some fiftеen witnesses who placed them elsewhere. No one who had been present at the shooting testified for defendants. Defendants proffered on thеir motions for new trials four witnesses who testified that they had been present, and that defendants had not been. After the hearing, the superior court made findings, and concluded as follows:
“In so far as it is a question of the credibility of the proffered testimony of the above witnesses, I find that much of it is contradictory and that thеir proffered testimony is neither reliable nor credible.
“After a review of all the testimony contained in the transcript of the trial, I find that there is nothing in the ‘newly disсovered’ evidence which would be anything more than cumulative, and I find that its absence at the trial did not in all likelihood make any difference in the jury’s verdict. I аm not convinced that justice either was not, or may not have been, done at the trial.”
On appeal, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court accepted, inter alia, the superior court’s conclusion that much of the proffered evidence was “cumulative,”
Commonwealth v. Grace,
Defendants produced others, but thе four alleged eye-witnesses on which they presently rely are Metts, Bowen, Arnum, and Gerald Ribeiro. Defendants knew, before trial, of what Metts would testify to. She absented herself voluntarily, for personal reasons, although defendants had requested her to be a witness. This was also the situation as to Bowen, who had already been dismissed from this affair, but who had other difficulties with the law. Arnum was a co-defendant, who refused to testify. Finally, although defendants constantly speak of four “new” еye-witnesses, Ribeiro was under summons, and available, and was not called, a decision of counsel which defendants, correctly, do not criticize.
To some degree, the extent of which we need not determine, there is a difference between when a state court may choose to grant a new trial in a case such as this where no state misconduct is present, and when a federal court, in a habeas proceeding, would feel obliged to requirе it to do so. There also appear to be differences between the circuits as to when the latter circumstances should arise.
Compare Anderson v. Maggio,
5 Cir., 1977,
Defendants seek to obscure this stark fact by meticulous dissection and criticism of the state court opinions, much of which criticisms, even оn defendants’ demanding standards, we could not accept. For example, defendants’ repeated insistence that the state courts misconstrued thе
*881
nature of the proffered new evidence as cumulative only, and rejected their motions on that ground alone, is not supported by a close rеading of the opinions. As the Supreme Judicial Court noted, the trial court found the evidence not only cumulative, but also “unreliable, contradictory and not credible.”
While the federal courts have jurisdiction on a petition for habeas corpus to review state court denials of motions for a new trial,
Sawyer v. Mullaney,
1 Cir., 1975,
Affirmed.
Notes
Nor are we impressed with defendants’ emphasis on a difference in kind between eye-witness and alibi testimony. There may, or may not, be a psychological difference between testimony of an eye-witness at the scene that defendants were not there, and a witness who testifies affirmatively to seeing them somewhere else, but which testimony has the greater weight must depend upon individual circumstances.
