Marra v. Comm'r of Corr., 166 A.3d 678, 174 Conn. App. 440 (2017)

July 4, 2017 · Connecticut Appellate Court · AC 38033
166 A.3d 678, 174 Conn. App. 440

Thomas MARRA
v.
COMMISSIONER OF CORRECTION

AC 38033

Appellate Court of Connecticut.

Argued January 17, 2017
Officially released July 4, 2017

Cheryl A. Juniewic, assigned counsel, for the appellant (petitioner).

Emily D. Trudeau, assistant state's attorney, with whom, on the brief, was John C. Smriga, state's attorney, for the appellee (respondent).

Keller, Prescott and Harper, Js.

PRESCOTT, J.

*442The petitioner, Thomas Marra, appeals from the judgment of the habeas court dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus.1 On appeal, the petitioner claims that the habeas court improperly dismissed his eighteen count petition, which alleged claims of ineffective assistance of counsel against his prior habeas attorneys, because the court improperly (1) relied on a decision of the prior habeas court deeming his withdrawal of that action as being "with prejudice" and (2) concluded that the deliberate bypass doctrine barred his action. We conclude that only the form of the habeas court's judgment is improper and, accordingly, reverse the judgment on that limited ground.

The record reveals the following relevant facts and procedural history of this habeas appeal, which derives from two separate criminal cases and their subsequent posttrial proceedings. With regard to the first case (Noel case), the petitioner was found guilty, following a jury trial, of one count of conspiracy to commit kidnapping in the first degree in violation of General Statutes §§ 53a-48 and 53a-92(a)(2)(A), two counts of attempted kidnapping *681in the first degree in violation of *443General Statutes §§ 53a-49 and 53a-92, one count of arson in the second degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-112(a)(1)(B), two counts of larceny in the second degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-123(a)(1), and one count of accessory to kidnapping in the first degree in violation of General Statutes §§ 53a-8 and 53a-92(a)(2)(A). State v. Marra , 215 Conn. 716, 718-19, 579 A.2d 9 (1990). He was subsequently sentenced to sixty-five years of incarceration. Id., at 719, 579 A.2d 9.

The relevant facts underlying the Noel case are discussed at length in our Supreme Court's opinion affirming that judgment. They may be summarized as follows.

Sometime during 1981, the petitioner began operating a criminal enterprise that involved selling stolen automobiles to J. W. Ownby, who lived in Kansas City, Missouri. Id., at 720, 579 A.2d 9. In 1982, the petitioner hired Richard Noel, the victim, to drive the stolen automobiles to Ownby, and Ownby and Noel developed a friendly relationship. Id. In 1983, Ownby terminated almost all of his dealings with the petitioner and began dealing primarily with Noel. Id. The petitioner became "aggravated" with the situation, and his relationships with both men deteriorated. Id.

In November, 1983, during the course of a police investigation into auto theft in the Bridgeport area, Noel implicated the petitioner in statements to the police, and the petitioner later became aware of Noel's conversations with the police. Id., at 721, 579 A.2d 9. On January 23, 1984, a neighbor of Noel "awoke at approximately 2 a.m. to the sound of a male voice, coming from outside, screaming: 'No, no!' "; observed two men quickly carrying the limp body of another man, presumably Noel, by his arms and legs down the sidewalk toward a parked van in which they tossed him; and, later that morning, "observed a large puddle of blood near the door of the *444building, a clump of dark brown hair near the puddle, blood splattered from the puddle over to the place where the van had been parked, and a set of keys." Id., at 722-23, 579 A.2d 9. The petitioner later burned the van, and he and his associates dumped a barrel, presumably containing Noel's body, into the harbor in Stratford. See id., at 723-24, 579 A.2d 9.

Subsequently, the petitioner enlisted some of his associates to participate in a scheme to steal money from Noel's bank account, which continued until the bank closed the account in March, 1984. See id., at 724-25, 579 A.2d 9. In addition, the petitioner filed a lawsuit to collect on a promissory note in the amount of $18,000 on which Noel appeared as the maker and the petitioner as the payee; that suit resulted in a judgment in favor of the petitioner. Id., at 725, 579 A.2d 9.

As previously indicated, the petitioner appealed from his judgment of conviction, and our Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the trial court. See id., at 739, 579 A.2d 9. Thereafter, the petitioner filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel in the Noel case, and the habeas court, Bishop, J. , dismissed the petition and denied the petition for certification to appeal. Marra v. Commissioner of Correction , 51 Conn.App. 305, 305, 721 A.2d 1237 (1998), cert. denied, 247 Conn. 961, 723 A.2d 816 (1999). The petitioner subsequently appealed the habeas court's decision to this court, and this court dismissed the appeal. See id., at 310, 721 A.2d 1237.

With regard to the second case (Palmieri case), the petitioner was convicted, following a jury trial, of murder in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54a(a) and sentenced to sixty years of incarceration.

*682State v. Marra , 222 Conn. 506, 508, 610 A.2d 1113 (1992). The relevant facts underlying the Palmieri case were set *445forth in our Supreme Court's opinion affirming that judgment as well.

"On February 6, 1984, the [petitioner] asked [Nicholas] Byers to drive the fifteen year old victim, another associate of the [petitioner], to the [petitioner's] house later that day. At the same time, the [petitioner] asked [Frank] Spetrino [an associate of his] if he would help him put the victim in a barrel. That evening, Byers drove the victim [Alex Palmieri], Spetrino and Tamara Thiel, the victim's girlfriend, to the [petitioner's] house. The [petitioner], the victim, Byers and Spetrino entered the [petitioner's] garage, while Thiel remained in the car.

"In the garage, the [petitioner] and the victim argued about the [petitioner's] desire that the victim leave Connecticut and reside for a time in Italy, and the victim's refusal to do so. When the matter was not resolved to the [petitioner's] satisfaction, he handed Spetrino an aluminum baseball bat and told Spetrino not to let the victim leave the garage. Thereafter, as the group began to exit the garage, Spetrino struck the victim in the head with the bat. After Spetrino had hit the victim from one to three times, the [petitioner] said, 'Let's get him in the refrigerator.' Spetrino then began to drag the victim toward a refrigerator that was located inside the [petitioner]' s garage. As he was being dragged, the victim began to speak incoherently, and the [petitioner] said, 'Shut up Alex. You didn't go to Italy.' When the victim failed to quiet down, the [petitioner] struck him on the head with the bat numerous times. The additional blows made the victim bleed heavily and caused some of his brain tissue to protrude from his skull. The [petitioner], Byers and Spetrino then placed the victim into a large refrigerator, and the [petitioner] closed and padlocked the door. The men then loaded the refrigerator into the back of a rented van, and the [petitioner] and Spetrino drove the van to a parking area near the Pequonnock River, where the river empties into the *446harbor in downtown Bridgeport. After making several holes in the refrigerator with an axe so that it would sink, the [petitioner] and Spetrino slid the refrigerator into the water and it floated away. Although a police dive team searched the harbor for the victim's body and the refrigerator for a period of five months, the divers could locate neither. The victim has not been seen or heard from by his family or friends since February 6, 1984." Id., at 508-10, 610 A.2d 1113.

The petitioner appealed from the judgment of conviction, and our Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the trial court. See id., at 539, 610 A.2d 1113. Thereafter, on November 25, 1993, the petitioner filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel in the Palmieri case, and the habeas court, Zarella, J. , dismissed the petition. On appeal, this court affirmed the habeas court's dismissal.2

*447*683Marra v. Commissioner , 56 Conn.App. 907, 743 A.2d 1165, cert. denied, 252 Conn. 949, 747 A.2d 525 (2000).

Subsequently, the petitioner filed two additional habeas actions alleging ineffective assistance of his prior habeas counsel in both the Noel and Palmieri cases. Those two actions eventually were consolidated under docket number CV-05-4000275 (CV-05). As discussed in the habeas court's memorandum of decision in the present case, the petitioner's habeas trial in the CV-05 action "was first scheduled to begin in February 2010. At the request of the petitioner, trial was postponed to ... August, 2010. For unknown reasons, the trial was again rescheduled to ... October 4, 2011. The petitioner again requested a postponement and the case was reassigned a 'hard' and firm trial start date of October 23, 2012, [with] Judge Pavia presiding.

"However, the day before trial was to begin, the petitioner executed a withdrawal of the habeas action on October 22, 2012. The petitioner signed the withdrawal form as [did] counsel. Despite the withdrawal filing, Judge Pavia required the petitioner and counsel to appear before her on October 23, 2012. Judge Pavia and [the] respondent's counsel both expressed their readiness to proceed with the habeas trial, but [the] petitioner's counsel reiterated the petitioner's desire to withdraw the case.

*448"Judge Pavia canvassed the petitioner on the record regarding his decision to withdraw the case and relinquish his opportunity to prove his allegations against previous habeas counsel. The judge recounted the lengthy procedural history and the fact that the trial had been postponed multiple times. Judge Pavia warned the petitioner that attempts to refile would be met with opposition by the respondent [Commissioner of Correction] and that such refiling might be dismissed summarily because of the withdrawal.

"The judge ascertained that the petitioner's decision to terminate the litigation was made after consultation with counsel and without coercion of any sort and was a product of the petitioner's free will. The petitioner acknowledged the judge's admonitions but still wished to withdraw his case."

Judge Pavia deemed the withdrawal to *684be with prejudice,3 stating: "For what it's worth, I am going to just put this on the record. I understand that there's an issue in terms of whether or not this is with prejudice or without prejudice. And while there may not be any case law that addresses the issue of prejudice in such a matter, I do want to place some things on the record for the next judge if in fact this issue ever is addressed again.

"As indicated, we are here today for the first day of trial. This trial date was set many months ago. We were accommodating a request, a special request, which came in from Rockville to accommodate the [petitioner] because he had some serious health concerns and we wanted to be able to accommodate his needs so that *449he was able to attend the trial in the best manner that he possibly could. And so this court agreed to take the case.

"The case is not necessarily a short habeas petition and did need at least a week to two weeks of trial time, as I was told from counsel. And on several occasions, we cleared our matters here in this court where we only have a single trial judge to be able to accommodate the petitioner's matter. In addition, we had addressed the idea of depositions taking place before the trial began, specifically the deposition of Attorney [Frank] Riccio, who is one of the main [witnesses with respect to the] claims of ineffectiveness in terms of the petitioner's habeas petition. That deposition was scheduled and rescheduled on several occasions.

"I know that the state is-or the respondent is indicating that they're not going to ponder as to why the deposition did not go forward, but I think it's worth noting for the record that it was not the respondent who was not available. It was also not the deponent who was not available, but for one reason or another, the matter was called off. So it was not the respondent calling it off, it was not the deponent calling it off. And I think that matter will probably become more developed as time goes on.

"This court has not only set aside the time in terms of trial, but the clerk gave up her time by way of setting afternoons, and even met with the attorneys and marked all the exhibits for this matter so that we'd be ready to go in an effective way today. The ... respondent is ready to begin, and has, according to ... much discussion in chambers, been actively pursuing their readiness for this trial for some time and are prepared to go forward today. The court is ready to go forward today.

*450"I note the withdrawal of the action after a full canvass of the matter and the ramifications of that canvass. And to the extent that this matter can be deemed to be with prejudice, it would be this court's opinion that it should be."

On November 14, 2012, that is, less than one month after he withdrew the CV-05 action before Judge Pavia, the petitioner filed the present habeas action.4 In his fifth *685amended petition dated March 26, 2015,5 the petitioner alleged in eighteen counts that his prior habeas attorneys in both the Noel and Palmieri cases rendered ineffective assistance of counsel. More specifically, the petitioner alleges, inter alia, that the petitioner's prior habeas counsel in the Noel case, Attorney Raymond Rigat, did not adequately challenge the effectiveness of the petitioner's appellate counsel, Attorney Timothy Pothin, and his trial counsel, Attorney Riccio; and that the petitioner's prior habeas counsel in the Palmieri case, Attorney Thomas Conroy, failed to adequately challenge the effectiveness of the petitioner's trial counsel in that case, Attorney Riccio. In his return,6 the *451respondent pleaded the special defenses of procedural default, deliberate bypass, res judicata,7 and laches.8

The habeas court, Sferrazza, J. , was scheduled to begin trial on the petitioner's claims on May 4, 2015. That day, however, prior to hearing evidence, Attorney Fox stated that the parties were in agreement that "it would be simpler for [the court] to ... decide whether [it] would want to rule on [the special defense] issues ... if [the respondent] prevails, the trial is not going forward, so it would make sense to deal with them now. "Judge Sferrazza agreed, and the parties presented evidence, which included the testimony of the petitioner, on the limited issues posed by the respondent's special defenses. Later that day, Judge Sferrazza orally ruled that the petitioner's action was dismissed.

In his written memorandum of decision dated May 7, 2015, Judge Sferrazza made the following findings: "[T]he petitioner testified that his decision to withdraw the case and his responses to Judge Pavia were clouded by the effects of illness and/or medication. The court finds this testimony unworthy of belief. He signed the withdrawal form on October 22 , 2012, after discussions with counsel. His replies to Judge Pavia the next day were cogent and belie his assertion of diminished comprehension.

"His counsel, on October 23, 2012, revealed that the reason for the withdrawal was predicated on counsel's inability to arrange to depose Attorney Riccio, who was seriously ill around that date. Habeas counsel feared that Attorney Riccio might be unable to testify as to *452his version of events at the habeas trial because of his deteriorating health. He died a few months later in 2013. *686"Habeas counsel's explanation for withdrawal on the eve of trial was due to a lack of confidence in proving the habeas on a habeas case if the trial proceeded. Attorney Wallace remarked, 'The fact that [Attorney Riccio] is our main witness, that that-without his testimony, this trial would go nowhere ' ....

"It must be noted that the petitioner chose to terminate the case rather than request additional time to secure whatever useful information Attorney Riccio might possess. Recall that Attorney Riccio had testified at the earlier habeas trials .... Presumably, he was available for discussion with new habeas counsel during the seven year period between January, 2005, when the previous habeas on a habeas case was filed, and October, 2012.... As mentioned above, the habeas trial was twice postponed at the petitioner's behest." (Citation omitted; emphasis in original.)

Ultimately, Judge Sferrazza concluded that "Judge Pavia's canvass made abundantly clear that [the petitioner's] decision to terminate his case was, indeed, his decision, made knowingly and without force or pressure. A petitioner ought not be permitted to withdraw a habeas case at the moment of trial simply based on fear of failure if the trial were to proceed, without incurring the consequence of finality." (Emphasis in original.) He then concluded that the deliberate bypass doctrine applied and dismissed the petition due to a lack of subject matter jurisdiction. This appeal followed.

We begin by setting forth the applicable standard of review. "The conclusions reached by the trial court in its decision to dismiss [a] habeas petition are matters of law, subject to plenary review.... [When] the legal conclusions of the court are challenged, [the reviewing court] must determine whether they are legally and *453logically correct ... and whether they find support in the facts that appear in the record.... To the extent that factual findings are challenged, this court cannot disturb the underlying facts found by the habeas court unless they are clearly erroneous ...." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Diaz v. Commissioner of Correction , 157 Conn.App. 701, 704, 117 A.3d 1003, cert. granted in part, 318 Conn. 903, 122 A.3d 632 (2015).

I

The petitioner first claims on appeal that, in determining that the prior habeas action was withdrawn with prejudice, Judge Sferrazza improperly gave preclusive effect to the prior ruling of Judge Pavia in the CV-05 action, which the petitioner claims was improper because no hearing on the merits had commenced pursuant to General Statutes § 52-80 as interpreted by Kendall v. Commissioner of Correction , 162 Conn.App. 23, 130 A.3d 268 (2015). In response, the respondent contends that the previous ruling in the CV-05 action was permissible because Kendall is distinguishable from the present case, and "any mechanical application of § 52-80 to permit the petitioner to deliberately forgo pursuit of his known claims, only to reassert them years later when all of the available evidence is more stale and some of the most critical evidence ... is now forever unavailable, would completely ignore the concerns for finality reflected in our habeas jurisprudence, be irreconcilable with the policies behind our habeas rules of procedural default, and completely turn on their head the equitable principles that serve as the foundation for habeas corpus relief." We conclude that Judge Sferrazza did not impermissibly rely on Judge Pavia's prior ruling but, rather, made his own independent ruling, and, on the merits, we agree with the respondent.

*687As an initial matter, we address the faulty premise upon which the petitioner's first claim rests, i.e., that *454Judge Sferrazza's dismissal was predicated solely on Judge Pavia's prior ruling. Having thoroughly reviewed Judge Sferrazza's memorandum of decision, we construe his ruling to be an independent determination that the petitioner's conduct in the previous CV-05 proceeding constituted a withdrawal with prejudice. More specifically, we conclude that although Judge Sferrazza relied upon the factual findings of Judge Pavia with respect to the CV-05 action, he did not treat Judge Pavia's legal conclusions as res judicata9 on the issue of whether the petitioner's withdrawal should be deemed to be with prejudice.

We, therefore, turn to whether Judge Sferrazza correctly determined that this habeas action could not be maintained in light of the petitioner's conduct in the prior proceeding. We conclude that Judge Sferrazza properly determined that the petitioner could not maintain the present action because his withdrawal of the CV-05 action should, under the circumstances, be deemed to be with prejudice.

Section 52-80 provides in relevant part: "The plaintiff may withdraw any action ... before the commencement of a hearing on the merits thereof. After the commencement of a hearing on an issue of fact in any such action, the plaintiff may withdraw such action ... only by leave of court for cause shown." "The term 'with prejudice' means '[w]ith loss of all rights; in a way that finally disposes of a party's claim and bars any future action on that claim ....' "

*455Mozell v. Commissioner of Correction , 147 Conn.App. 748, 756, 83 A.3d 1174, cert. denied, 311 Conn. 928, 86 A.3d 1057 (2014). "The disposition of withdrawal with prejudice exists within Connecticut jurisprudence.... Indeed, the disposition of withdrawal with prejudice is a logically compelling disposition in some circumstances. A plaintiff is generally empowered, though not without limitation, to withdraw a complaint before commencement of a hearing on the merits.... A plaintiff is not entitled to withdraw a complaint without consequence at such hearing." (Citations omitted.) Id., at 757, 83 A.3d 1174. "The decision by a habeas court to condition a withdrawal of a habeas petition on that withdrawal being 'with prejudice' is, when authorized, a decision left to that court's discretion." Kendall v. Commissioner of Correction , supra, 162 Conn.App. at 28, 130 A.3d 268, citing Mozell v. Commissioner of Correction , supra, at 759-60, 83 A.3d 1174.

As previously mentioned, the petitioner cites to Kendall v. Commissioner of Correction , supra, 162 Conn.App. at 23, 130 A.3d 268, as support for his argument that the withdrawal of the CV-05 action cannot properly be labelled "with prejudice" because a hearing on the merits had not yet commenced at the time he requested it. In Kendall , which was decided several months after Judge Sferrazza dismissed the petition in the present case, the petitioner wished to withdraw his habeas petition without prejudice after the court had taken the bench for his scheduled habeas trial but before any evidence or arguments concerning the merits of the case had been presented. Id., at 26-27, 130 A.3d 268. The habeas court would not permit him to do *688so on the ground that his "habeas hearing [had] commenced for purposes of [General Statutes] § 52-80 when the court took the bench to hear evidence on the date and time assigned." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., at 28, 130 A.3d 268. On appeal, we reversed the judgment of the habeas court, concluding that "no hearing on the merits can be said to have commenced within the meaning of the statute at the time the petitioner *456stated that he wished to withdraw his petition and the court ruled that it would allow a withdrawal only with prejudice."10 Id., at 48, 51, 130 A.3d 268.

Significantly, however, the court in Kendall recognized that in certain circumstances, a withdrawal of a petition prior to the commencement of a hearing on the merits could be deemed to be with prejudice: " '[A] plaintiff is generally empowered, though not without limitation , to withdraw a complaint before commencement of a hearing on the merits ....' " (Emphasis added.) Id., at 29, 130 A.3d 268, quoting Mozell v. Commissioner of Correction , supra, 147 Conn.App. at 757, 83 A.3d 1174. Moreover, this court, in Kendall , was careful to make clear that the only question it was asked to resolve in that case was whether a hearing on the merits had commenced for purposes of applying § 52-80. Kendall v. Commissioner of Correction , supra, 162 Conn.App. at 29, 130 A.3d 268 ("[n]either party disputes that § 52-80 applies to habeas actions or that, under the appropriate circumstances, a habeas court can order that a withdrawal of a habeas petition be with prejudice; rather, the primary point of contention concerns whether the habeas court properly determined that the petitioner could not withdraw his petition without prejudice because a hearing on the merits had commenced"). Accordingly, as neither party here *457disputes that a hearing on the merits had not yet commenced at the time the petitioner requested a withdrawal of his CV-05 action, Kendall does not resolve the question before this court.

One year after Kendall was decided, this court decided Palumbo v. Barbadimos , 163 Conn.App. 100, 134 A.3d 696 (2016).11 Palumbo stands for the principle that although the party initiating an action generally enjoys a right to withdraw litigation unilaterally prior to a hearing on the merits, a later filing of an identical case by that party can be deemed an abuse of that right if it constitutes "procedural chicanery," that is, it "offends the orderly and due administration of justice" and is intended "to avoid the consequences of [his or] her [previous] waiver."

*689Id., at 103-104, 134 A.3d 696. The defendant in Palumbo sought to have a civil action restored to the docket, because the plaintiff had previously withdrawn that original action and filed a second, identical action to avoid a bench trial that was the consequence of the plaintiff having missed the deadline for claiming the action to the jury trial list. Id., at 102, 134 A.3d 696. We agreed with the defendant that his motion to restore the original action to the docket should have been granted, holding that "the broad authority granted to a [party] pursuant to § 52-80 to unilaterally withdraw an action prior to a hearing on the merits does not automatically extend to [that party] the additional right to commence an essentially identical action following that withdrawal if the primary purpose for doing so is to undermine an order of the court rendered in the prior litigation ...." Id., at 115, 134 A.3d 696.

*458We recognize that, in the present case, the consequence of the petitioner's withdrawal of his previous CV-05 action is that he is now precluded from raising the CV-05 habeas claims entirely, a harsher result than that occasioned in Palumbo . In the present case, however, the petitioner's waiver of his right to go forward with the habeas trial in the CV-05 case was made expressly and on the record before Judge Pavia, as opposed to in Palumbo , where the plaintiff's waiver of his right to a jury trial was done by operation of statute once he missed the deadline for claiming the action to a jury trial list. See General Statutes § 51-239b. As Judge Sferrazza highlighted in his memorandum of decision, the petitioner here "participated personally in the decision to withdraw the previous habeas matter the day before trial was to begin. He signed the form on October 22, 2012, after consultation with his lawyer. Judge Pavia's canvass made abundantly clear that his decision to terminate his case was, indeed, his decision, made knowingly and without force or pressure." (Emphasis in original.) To the extent that the petitioner believed it was improper for Judge Pavia to canvass him and to enter the withdrawal with prejudice, he could have appealed her decision,12 rather than file a second, identical habeas petition.

Additionally, in relying on Judge Pavia's prior findings and the record in that proceeding,13 Judge Sferrazza *459found that "[h]abeas counsel's explanation for withdrawal [of the CV-05 action] on the eve of trial was due to a lack of confidence in proving the habeas on a habeas case if the trial proceeded. Attorney Wallace remarked, 'The fact that [Attorney Riccio] is our main witness, that that-without his *690testimony, this trial would go nowhere .' " (Emphasis in original.) Judge Sferrazza also stated that Attorney Riccio presumably was "available for discussion with new habeas counsel during the seven year period between January, 2005, when the [CV-05] habeas on a habeas case was filed, and October, 2012 [when the withdrawal of that action occurred]," and that "[a]ny lack of preparedness was attributable to the petitioner rather than the respondent or the court." Judge Sferrazza did not find that the petitioner's previous withdrawal was due to the petitioner's own health problems, and he found that the petitioner lacked credibility when he testified before the court.14

Ultimately, Judge Sferrazza considered the procedural posture of this case to implicate the doctrine of deliberate bypass,15 noting that the petitioner chose to *460terminate the CV-05 case rather than request additional time to secure whatever useful information Attorney Riccio could have provided as evidence. The argument could also be made that the court's disposition falls more neatly under other doctrines such as waiver or abuse of the writ.16 Regardless of the label, the effect is the same. Judge Sferrazza's independent *691determination that the petitioner's conduct in the previous CV-05 proceeding constituted a withdrawal with prejudice was legally correct, despite the fact that a hearing on the merits had not yet commenced, because the petitioner engaged in "procedural chicanery" by filing the present *461petition in an attempt to undermine the order of the court in the CV-05 action. As previously discussed, we have considered such gamesmanship to be a limitation on the general rule that a party has a right to withdraw litigation unilaterally prior to a hearing on the merits. See Palumbo v. Barbadimos , supra, 163 Conn.App. at 103-104, 134 A.3d 696.

II

The petitioner next claims on appeal that Judge Sferrazza improperly applied the doctrine of deliberate bypass.17 Although the basis of Judge Sferrazza's reliance upon the deliberate bypass doctrine is less than clear, we conclude that it is unnecessary to reach the respondent's second claim because of our prior conclusion that the petitioner's withdrawal of his CV-05 petition was with prejudice. Because we conclude that the withdrawal was with prejudice, the petitioner is barred from raising identical claims in the present petition. See Mozell v. Commissioner of Correction , supra, 147 Conn.App. at 756, 83 A.3d 1174. Accordingly, it would serve no practical purpose to analyze whether Judge Sferrazza's reliance on the deliberate bypass doctrine was appropriate under the circumstances of this case.

Finally, we note that Judge Sferrazza's determination that the prior action should be deemed to be withdrawn with prejudice does not implicate the subject matter jurisdiction of the court over this petition. Accordingly, he should have denied, rather than dismissed, the petition, and the form of the judgment is thus improper.

The form of the judgment is improper; the judgment dismissing the petition for habeas corpus is reversed, *462and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment denying the petition for a writ of habeas corpus.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.