OPINION
This case presents an appeal from the order dismissing appellant’s petition for post-conviction relief.
Dismissal of the petition is affirmed.
Appellant was convicted by a jury of armed robbery and assault with intent to commit murder in the first degree with bodily injury and found to be an habitual criminal. He was sentenced to 30 years as a Range I offender on the assault convic
Appellant asserts ineffective assistance of counsel in violation of the state and federal constitutions as grounds for relief. He does not attack the competency of counsel nor their diligence but contends that the court’s refusal to grant his motion for a continuance filed four days before trial deprived him of effective assistance of counsel.
Immediately following his arrest in Junе 1983 appellant employed an attorney whom he discharged on October 27, four days before the date set for trial. The extent of the attorney’s preparation of appellant’s case is not reflected by the record. However, the record shows that he filed a discovery motion, reviewed statements made by appellant and his co-defendants, discussed the case with his client and negotiated a proposed plea bargain of 50 years.
On the same date appellant discharged counsel he employed other counsel and filed a motion for substitution of cоunsel, which stated that appellant “voluntarily and knowledgeably terminated the services of his prior attorney only four (4) days before trial for his own personal reasons.” On the same date appellant applied to the court for a continuance, on the ground that counsel did not have suffiсient time to prepare the case for trial. The court, sitting by designation following appellant’s motion to recuse, stated that counsel first emрloyed was “competent”, that there was nothing before the court to indicate he was not prepared for trial, that appellant’s rights had bеen fully protected, that the “burden of this problem lies with the defendant”, and that the case would not be continued unless prior counsel stated to the court that he was not prepared for trial.
Newly employed counsel, an experienced trial lawyer and a young associate, worked diligently from Thursday, the date of their employment, to Monday when the trial began. They reviewed the court file, they inspected the scene of the crime and they discussed the case with the district attorney general. From discussions with their client, who was not unfamiliar with the judicial process, counsel understood his view оf the facts and the case. They concluded that appellant did not have an insanity or alibi defense. They made the decision not to request а severance. They researched the habitual criminal charge and, at the appropriate time, moved that the charge be dismissed. One оf appellant’s attorneys discussed the case with prior counsel who stated “the state’s got enough on their side to show that he is guilty ...” Counsel reviewed stаtements made by all those charged in the crime including appellant, which indicated that he was a substantial participant in the robbery. They, in consultаtion with appellant, made the decision that he should not testify. They argued to the jury and prepared requested instructions which presented appellant’s theory of the case, that he was guilty only of being an accessory after the fact. The record shows that counsel presented no еvidence on behalf of appellant but contested the state’s case vigorously.
Appellant contends that, since trial counsel were nоt successful in obtaining a continuance and because they did not interview all the witnesses, move to suppress appellant’s incriminating statement, сall as a witness one of the participants and file a motion to sever, he has been denied effective assistance of counsel.
Protection of an accused’s right to effective assistance of counsel does not require that his attorney’s every act or omission claimed tо be deficient be examined in isolation. The issue is whether considering the case as a whole, including performance by the accused, counsel provided reasonable professional assistance.
Strickland v. Washington,
The United States Supreme Court stated in
Strickland,
“if it is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on the ground of lack of sufficient prejudice, which we expect will often be so, that course should be followed.”
Supra
Defense counsel, though burdened by limited time, fulfilled their role in the adversary process as anticipated by the federal and state constitutions. Appellant has failed to carry the burden of proving that counsels’ performance was such as to undermine confidence in the outcomе of the trial.
Strickland v. Washington, supra; State v. Matson,
The evidence does not preponderate against the lower court’s judgment that appellant was not denied effective assistance of counsel and the judgment is affirmed.
State v. Bishop,
