Opinion
The petitioner, Wilton Carraway, appeals from the judgment of the habeas court denying his amended petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
The following facts and procedural history are relevant to the petitioner’s claims on appeal. During the early morning hours of September 21, 2006, the petitioner discovered his former girlfriend, Jessica Balisсi-ano, with Brendan Connolly in the backseat of Connolly’s car, in a parking lot behind Quinn’s Tavern in Southington.
Despite his injuries, Connolly was able to drive his own car home. Family members took him to Bradley Memorial Hospital. Computed tomography (CT) scans showed that Connolly had sustained a skull fracture and an epidural hematoma. An X ray revealed a broken nose. He told doctors that his injuries were caused by blows from a crowbar or a similar metal object. A few hours later, Connolly was taken by ambulance to New Britain General Hospital, where he was admitted to the intensive care unit. After a period of observation and additional CT scans, Connolly was discharged at аround noon on September 22,2006. He returned to the hospital on September 25, 2006, for a follow-up CT scan.
The petitioner was arrested and charged with one count each of assault in the first degree, assault in the third degree, kidnapping in the first degree, and unlawful restraint in the first degree, and two counts of breach of the peace in the second degree. He initially retained attorney Paul Carty to defend him, but fired Carty after they “couldn’t agree [on] things.” On the recommendation of a friend, the petitioner hired attorney William J. Watson. According to the petitioner, he was adamant from the outset of the case that he wanted to go to trial. He wanted to present his side of the story, which was, essentially, that he had engaged in a fist fight with Connolly to defend Balisciano, and that he had not struck Connolly with a crowbar or tire iron. At that point, the state was offering a twenty-year prison sentence, execution suspended after ten years, if the petitioner would plead guilty to assault in the first degree in violation of § 53a-59 (a) (1).
Watson hired a private investigator to determine whether Balisciano would be a cooperative and credible
Watson communicated the details of this new offer to the petitioner in a letter and in a meeting at his office. Watson’s letter explained that at a court hearing on March 11, 2008, the “accept or reject date,” the petitioner would need to decide whether to accept the offer. If he rejected it, Watson informed him that the case would be placed on the trial list and that all offers would be withdrawn. Watson also outlined all of the other charges in the state’s informatiоn, and the potential term of incarceration associated with each. According to Watson’s calculations, the petitioner faced a maximum sentence of sixty-one years of incarceration if convicted on all charges. The petitioner decided to reject the offer and to proceed to trial.
On March 11, 2008, the petitioner appeared in court. After he expressed his intention to reject the offer, the prosecutor stated on the record that if the case went to trial, he would amend the information to charge the petitioner with attempt to commit murder and that he would proceed also on the kidnapping charge related to the petitioner’s alleged abduction of Balisciano. The prosecutor told the court that he believed that Balis-ciano’s sworn statement to the Southington police “would still hold sway with the jury” despite her subsequent sympathetic communications with the petitioner. Watson asked the court if he could discuss the matter with the petitioner during the lunch recess, before the pending offer was rejected irretrievably. When Watson
During the plea canvass, the court reviewed with the petitioner the elements of § 53a-59 (a) (1) that the state would have been required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt if he had chosen to exercise his right to a trial. The court specifically explained: “A dangerous instrument means any instrument which under the circumstances in which it is used is capable of causing serious physical injury. . . . [Sjerious physical injury means physical injury which creates a substantial risk of death or serious impairment of health or the loss or impairment of any function of a bodily organ.” The court further stated that the allegations with respect to Connolly’s injuries were that he had “lost consciousness, had bleeding in the brain and had a fracture, all of which [constitute] serious physical injury.” The court asked the petitioner if he understood the elements of the crime to which he was entering a plea; the petitioner indicated that he did. Before the plea canvass concluded, the prosecutor informed the court that he was not sure if Connolly actually had lost consciousness, although he was certain that Connolly had sustained a fractured skull and bleeding on the brain. The plea was accepted by the court, and the case was continued for sentencing.
Prior to the sentencing hearing, the petitioner filed a motion to withdraw his plea, pursuant to Practice Book § 39-27, on the ground that his plea had been rendered involuntary by Watson’s ineffective assistance.
At the habeas trial, the petitioner testified that he had decided whether to accept the plea deal under the erroneous assumption—allegedly advanced by the state and not refuted by Carty and Watson—that Connolly had been in a coma and hospitalized for four days. The petitioner stated that he had asked to see Connolly’s medical records before the hearing on the plea offer, but that Watson was unable to locate them. He further averred that he did not know the actual length of Connolly’s hospitalization until he reviewed the relevant medical records with his habeas counsel. If he had known that Connolly’s injuries were less severe than he had thought, the рetitioner testified, he would have insisted on going to trial. The petitioner further stated that he would have pursued this course despite the fact that at trial the state could have pursued additional charges related to the alleged kidnapping and assault of Balisciano.
The petitioner also called as a witness Barbara Levin, a legal nurse consultant and a clinical scholar of the
Watson was the sole witness for the respondent, the commissioner of correction. He testified that, with respect to the strength of the state’s case against the petitioner, Connolly was consistent in his accusations: “He had indicated that he had been pulled out of the motor vehicle by [the petitioner] and subsequently assaulted with a metal object . . . .”
The court addressed only the prejudice prong and appliеd the rule enunciated in Copas v. Commissioner of Correction,
Applying this standard, the court observed that, even if the state had failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the petitioner had struck Connolly with a dangerous instrument, the petitioner had admitted that he had assaulted Connolly, fracturing his skull and nose and causing a subdural hematoma. Given this concession, the court found that “[t]he petitioner may very well have been convicted of assault [in the first degree] under a different subsection, such as § 53a-59 (a) (3) . . . or assault [in the] second or third degree.” The court further noted that any expert medical testimony regarding the cause of Connolly’s injuries could have
On appeal, the petitioner does not claim that the habeas court erred by applying the wrong prejudice standard. Instead, he argues that the court erred in its application of the facts to the Copas standard.
“[W]hether the court applied the correсt legal standard is a question of law subject to plenary review. . . . When an incorrect legal standard is applied, the appropriate remedy is to reverse the judgment of the trial court and to remand the matter for further proceedings.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Deroy v. Estate of Baron,
As with other ineffective assistance claims, the two part standard articulated in Strickland v. Washington,
The prejudice inquiry in claims arising from counsel’s advice during the plea process differs from the analysis of claims following conviction after trial.
The prejudice analysis formulated in Hill was discussed, at some length, in Copas v. Commissioner of Correction, supra,
The Hill court, however, did not hold that the prejudice analysis—i.e., a determination of whether the petitioner would have insisted on going to trial—should be reduced to a comparison between the sentence imposed pursuant to a plea bargain with the likely outcome of a trial.
Notwithstanding the relevance of the projected outcome at a trial that included undiscovered evidence or an overlooked defense, such a prediction is not disposi-tive in resolving an ineffective assistance claim of this kind. If it were, there would be no need to consider whether the defendant would have insisted on a trial; see Hill v. Lockhart, supra,
The petitioner’s claims are, essentially, that Watson failed to uncover the true extent of Connolly’s injuries and to engage an expert who could have furthered the petitioner’s “defense” to the charge that he had assaulted Connolly with a dangerous instrument. The petitioner testified that, had he known that Connolly’s period of hospitalization was less than he had thought and that Connolly had not in fact been comatоse, or that an expert could have supported his version of events, he would have insisted on going to trial. The court evaluated these ineffective assistance claims by considering whether the difference in the severity of Connolly’s injuries or the engagement of a medical expert likely would have led to a lesser sentence at trial. The court did not make any findings with respect to whether Watson would have changed his plea advice if he had been cognizant of the actual extent of Connolly’s injuries or if he had considered the desirability of utilizing an expert
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The habeas court granted the petition for certification to appeal from the judgment denying the amended petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
General Statutes § 53a-59 (a) provides in relevant part: “A person is guilty of assault in the first degree when: (1) With intent to cause serious physical injury to another person, he causes such injury to such person or to a third person by means of a deadly weapon or a dangerous instrument . . . .”
Although the petitioner and Balisciano had apparently ended their relationship at the time of the assault, the petitioner was still living at Balis-ciano’s home.
Watson did not represent the petitioner with respect to the motion to withdraw.
The amended habeas petition was in two counts: ineffective assistance of counsel and violation of due process. The court dismissed the due process count because it was “entirely duplicative of the ineffective assistance allegations of the first count . . . .” The petitioner does not challenge that ruling on appeal.
Watson also testified that, in an interview conducted by a private investigator engaged by his predecessor Attorney Carty, the petitioner had admitted to threatening Connolly with a fireplace pоker that was later recovered by the police from the petitioner’s vehicle.
The court did not analyze the performance prong of the petitioner’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
In the petitioner’s appellate brief, he makes the related claim that if Watson had not performed deficiently, the prosecutor or the court might have suggested a more favorable plea agreement. This issue was not alleged in the operative habeas petition and, accordingly, was not considered by the habeas court. We therefore decline to address it. See State v. Outing,
Despite our determination that the court applied the incorrect standard for establishing prejudice, we note that it acted in accordance with existing precedent. In addition, although we are ordinarily bound by Supreme Court precedent; see Hopkins v. Commissioner of Correction,
Under Strickland, in order to demonstrate prejudice following a conviction after trial, “[t]he defendant must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Strickland v. Washington, supra,
Indeed, determining whether a hypothetical trial would have resulted in a lesser sentence for the petitioner will likely entail even more speculation than evaluating how the predicted outcome would have informed the petitioner’s and his counsel’s decision-making process with respect to the plea.
The respondent’s position in Brown v. Commissioner of Correction, Docket No. SC 18859, is consistent with the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals’ statement in Miller regarding the relevance of the petitioner’s likely prospects at trial. In his appellate brief, the respondent states: “The question of whether the petitioner would have achieved a more favorable outcome at trial is a consideration in examining the credibility of the petitioner’s claim that he would have insisted on going to trial.”
In many situations, the analysis appropriately should consider whether, with the information or analysis that should have informed counsel’s advice, counsel would have changed his or her advice, and, if so, with what degree of urgency.
