By pleading dated April 12, 1996, the respondent has filed a Motion for Summary Judgment which claims, inter alia, that the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction.
The underlying facts are not in dispute. The petitioner was sentenced pursuant to a mittimus issued by the Superior Court, Judicial District of Hartford, on March 30, 1989 to a term of confinement of twenty (20) years for the crime of Manslaughter in the First Degree, in violation of Connecticut General Statute §
The parties also agree that the petitioner served 433 days in presentence confinement. The respondent does not dispute the petitioner's claim that, as of December 15, 1995, the petitioner had earned 433 days as pretrial confinement time, 144 days as jail good time credit, 876 days as statutory good time, 238 days as seven day job credit time, and that he had actually served 2342 days in post conviction confinement. Nor does the Commissioner contest the petitioner's claim that the aggregation of these days totals 4033 days. The court notes that as a matter of mathematical calculation, 4033 days is more than one half the petitioner' s total sentence of 20 years. CT Page 4291
The respondent claims that the petitioner is only entitled to have, as credit toward his sentence for purposes of determining parole eligibility, the 433 days he served in pretrial confinement. Thus, it is the Commissioner's view that the petitioner's parole eligibility date should be calculated by adding the number of his pretrial confinement days to the number of post conviction days he has actually served and that the petitioner is eligible for parole consideration only once that number equals one half of his twenty year sentence. By the Commissioner's calculation, the petitioner's earliest parole eligibility date is January 22, 1998.
The respondent argues that C.G.S. §
The petitioner, on the other hand, cites Seno v. Commissioner
for the proposition that his good time credits must be subtracted from the calculation of his sentence. cf.
The respondent also argues that the court should not reach the merits of the petitioner's claim because the petitioner does CT Page 4292 not raise an issue justiciable in habeas jurisdiction. The court agrees.
The court's determination does not flow from an indifference to the petitioner's claim but rather from it's understanding of the parameters of habeas jurisdiction and its belief that the integrity of the Great Writ will more likely be preserved if habeas relief is limited to its historical purpose of testing the legality of detention. Our Appellate Court has previously stated that ". . . There is no warrant in either the statute or the writ for its use to invoke judicial determination of questions which could not affect the lawfulness of the custody and detention, and no suggestion of such a use has been found in the commentaries on the English common law. (Citations omitted)" Vincenzo v. Warden,
Bishop, J.
