This appeal from the denial of a Post-Conviction Petition presents a pair of interrelated allegations. Appellant alleges that his trial counsel was incompetent and that, as a result of this incompetence, evidence favorable to Appellant was not brought forward at trial. Thus, in essence Appellant is saying that newly discovered evidence exists which requires a new trial.
We begin by noting that Appellant, convicted of second degree murder, took an appeal to this court.
Jones
v.
State
(1970),
The substance of the first witness’s testimony was that the decedent had at times prior to the shooting carried a pistol in her purse. Further, the second witness attempted to give hearsay evidence impeaching the eye-witness’s trial testimony. But the only issue in dispute is the element of malice.
Jones, swpra.
Appellant admitted the shooting.
Jones, supra.
Malice may be inferred from the use of a deadly weapon.
Brown
v.
State
(1969),
In order to warrant a new trial newly discovered evidence (even if we should consider this as such) must be more than mere impeaching evidence; it must be non-cumulative; it must be credible and competent and it must have the probability of producing a different result at a new trial.
Emerson
v.
State
(1972),
We are left with this failure to seek a continuance as the ground for the incompetency of counsel allegation. Such an isolated occurrence, even without possible
bona fide
explanations, is not conduct shocking to the conscience of a court or conduct making a mockery of the trial.
Blackburn
v.
State
(1973),
. Judgment affirmed.
Note.—Reported at
