Defendant was convicted of second-degree murder in 1983, and after that conviction was affirmed in this Court, 1 he moved pursuant to V.R.Cr.P. 33 for a new trial on grounds of newly discovered evidence. He now appeals the denial of that motion, and we once again affirm.
Timothy O’Neal was murdered during the night of April 8, 1982, after he had been expelled from a bar in the company of defendant and a companion. Defendant was charged with the crime. At the trial, which ended in conviction on March 23, 1983, a witness, Daniel Tobler, identified defendant as having been near the murder scene with the victim and a third person. Earlier, in a deposition, Tobler denied that he could identify defendant. However, between the deposition and the trial, Tobler stated in writing that he was able to identify defendant as present at the scene and that his earlier statement had been induced by receipt of a threatening note, which he presumed had been sent to discourage him from testifying.
Defendant failed to cross-examine the witness at trial about the conflicting deposition statement. He claims that he refrained from cross-examination because he feared the State might then have used the existence of the note to rehabilitate Tobler’s testi *338 mony, and also because he feared the jury might believe that defendant had written the note. He further claims that after the trial he learned from two people, both of whom testified at the hearing on the new trial motion, that the note was not genuine. Defendant’s former girlfriend, whose identity was known at the time of trial, Molly Collins, testified that she had seen the note and recognized it to be in Tobler’s handwriting. Christine Suarez, whose identity defendant claims was not known at the time of trial, also testified that she saw the note and that it was in Tobler’s handwriting.
Arguing that he would have cross-examined Tobler, a key prosecution witness, had he known of evidence that the note had not been genuine, defendant moved for a new trial. The trial court denied the motion, concluding that defendant failed to meet the standard for a new trial on grounds of newly discovered evidence enunciated in
State
v.
Smith,
To warrant a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence, defendant must meet five requirements: (1) it must appear that the new evidence would probably change the result upon retrial; (2) the new evidence must have been discovered subsequent to trial; (3) the evidence could not have been discovered earlier by the exercise of due diligence; (4) the evidence is material; and (5) the evidence is not merely cumulative or impeaching.
Id.
at 131,
Disposition of a motion for a new trial is a matter within the discretion of the trial court, and its decision will not be overturned unless its discretion was abused or withheld. See
State
v.
Potter,
There are ample grounds in this case for the trial court to conclude that a different result was not probable as a result of the new evidence. Tobler was one witness of many. See
State
v.
Miller,
Defendant argues that the trial court’s analysis of the evidence intruded on the proper function of the jury. Our new trial test, however, clearly requires the trial court to evaluate the quality of the evidence that is alleged to be newly discovered. See
State
v.
Barrett,
Affirmed.
Notes
State
v.
Miller,
The court first concluded that the motion for a new trial had not been timely filed but reached the merits in the alternative. We conclude that the motion had been filed within the prescribed time but sustain the trial court on its decision on the merits. Consequently, the court’s conclusion on timeliness was harmless error and need not be further explored.
In his initial brief, defendant argued that the lower court was improperly constituted to decide the new trial motion because only one assistant judge sat. However, he withdrew this claim in his reply brief, and we do not consider it.
