Moye v. Commissioner of Correction , 168 Conn. App. 207 ( 2016 )


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    JOHN MOYE v. COMMISSIONER OF CORRECTION
    (AC 37234)
    DiPentima, C. J., and Keller and Prescott, Js.
    Argued April 11—officially released September 13, 2016
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of
    Tolland, Fuger, J.)
    April E. Brodeur, assigned counsel, for the appel-
    lant (petitioner).
    Emily D. Trudeau, deputy assistant state’s attorney,
    with whom, on the brief, was John C. Smriga, state’s
    attorney, for the appellee (respondent).
    Opinion
    PRESCOTT, J. The petitioner, John Moye, appeals
    following the denial of his petition for certification to
    appeal from the judgment of the habeas court denying
    his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. On appeal, the
    petitioner claims that the court abused its discretion
    by denying his petition for certification to appeal, and
    improperly (1) determined that his criminal trial coun-
    sel had not provided ineffective assistance by failing to
    request a sequestration order, (2) violated his right to
    due process by failing to review all of the evidence
    admitted at the habeas trial, and (3) refused to issue
    a capias for an absentee witness.1 Having thoroughly
    reviewed the record, we conclude that the habeas court
    properly denied the petition for certification to appeal.
    Accordingly, we dismiss the appeal.
    The following facts, as set forth by this court on
    direct appeal or as found by the habeas court, and
    procedural history are relevant to this appeal. ‘‘On the
    evening of April 30, 2005, after Clarence Jones, the
    victim, asked him for a ride, Jerry Booker picked up
    Jones, Roderick Coleman and the [petitioner]. The
    group briefly stopped at Booker’s house in West Haven
    and then proceeded to the Ebony Lounge in New Haven.
    Coleman and the [petitioner] went inside for approxi-
    mately fifteen minutes, while Booker and the victim
    waited in the car. When Coleman and the [petitioner]
    returned to the car, Coleman asked Booker to drive to
    the Pleasant Moments Cafe in Bridgeport, where his
    girlfriend worked as a dancer.
    ‘‘Upon arriving at Pleasant Moments Cafe, Booker,
    Coleman and the victim entered the club while the
    [petitioner] stayed in the car. The three men who went
    inside the club were searched for weapons before they
    were allowed to enter. When Pleasant Moments Cafe
    closed for the night, Booker, Coleman and the victim
    emerged from the club with Tamara Wilson, Coleman’s
    girlfriend, Tawana Little and a third woman by the name
    of Jada. They all got into Booker’s car. Booker was the
    driver, the victim and Jada rode in the front passenger
    seat, the [petitioner] sat behind Booker, Little was
    seated next to him, and Wilson sat on Coleman’s lap
    behind the front passenger’s seat.
    ‘‘Booker next drove to a nearby gasoline station.
    Booker, the victim and Jada got out of the car and
    entered the gasoline station. With the two men and Jada
    out of the car, the [petitioner] began telling the other
    passengers about his belief that Booker and the victim
    planned to rob him. He said that he was going to ‘act
    up.’ Those who went into the gasoline station returned
    to the car, and the group left the gasoline station to
    drop off Jada.
    ‘‘As Booker was driving to Jada’s house, his cellular
    telephone rang. He answered the telephone and handed
    it to the victim when he realized that it was the victim’s
    mother calling. Then a loud bang came from the back-
    seat. The victim’s mother heard someone say: ‘Call 911.
    He’s been shot.’ The [petitioner], holding a gun, ordered
    everyone to get out of the car. Booker and Jada got
    out of the car, the [petitioner] got into the driver’s seat,
    pushed the victim’s body out of the car and drove away.
    ‘‘After driving a short distance, the [petitioner]
    stopped the car, wiped down the steering wheel and
    car handles, and exited the car with Little, Wilson and
    Coleman. The group got into a taxicab and went to
    Little’s house in New Haven. Once at Little’s house, the
    [petitioner] again told the others that he believed that
    he was going to be robbed and that was why he shot
    the victim. He told Little that he had tried to shoot the
    victim in the face and also told Little and Wilson that
    they should ‘take it to the grave.’
    ‘‘The [petitioner] was arrested on May 20, 2005. He
    was found in a house in Stamford, lying across the
    seats of several chairs under a dining room table. The
    [petitioner] was charged with murder, carrying a pistol
    without a permit and criminal possession of a pistol.
    He was found guilty of murder and carrying a pistol
    without a permit, and entered an Alford2 plea with
    regard to the criminal possession of a pistol charge.’’
    (Footnote added.) State v. Moye, 
    119 Conn. App. 143
    ,
    146–47, 
    986 A.2d 1134
    , cert. denied, 
    297 Conn. 907
    , 
    995 A.2d 638
    (2010).
    The petitioner appealed to this court from the judg-
    ment of conviction. On direct appeal, ‘‘[he claimed]
    that (1) there was insufficient evidence to support his
    conviction of murder, (2) the [trial] court improperly
    instructed the jury on the murder charge, (3) the prose-
    cutor committed reversible impropriety during the
    [petitioner’s] testimony and (4) the court improperly
    canvassed the [petitioner] with regard to his Alford plea
    to the charge of criminal possession of a pistol. We
    [affirmed] the [petitioner’s] conviction of murder and
    carrying a pistol without a permit. We reverse[d], how-
    ever, [his] conviction of criminal possession of a pistol.’’
    
    Id., 145–46. Following
    this court’s decision on direct appeal, the
    petitioner filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
    In his third amended petition, the petitioner claimed
    that his trial counsel, Gary A. Mastronardi, rendered
    ineffective assistance by failing (1) to request a seques-
    tration order for witnesses, (2) to object to certain testi-
    mony by the state’s firearms examiner, and (3) to file
    a motion in limine to preclude testimony from the vic-
    tim’s mother.3
    In regard to his claim that Mastronardi rendered inef-
    fective assistance by failing to request a sequestration
    order, the petitioner alleged that if Mastronardi had
    requested a sequestration order, the state’s witnesses,
    specifically, the eyewitnesses to the shooting and the
    victim’s mother, would not have been able to corrobo-
    rate falsely each other’s testimony. According to the
    petitioner, because Mastronardi did not request a
    sequestration order that prohibited the state’s witnesses
    from discussing their testimony, they were able to dis-
    cuss and conform their testimony prior to testifying.
    As proof that the state’s witnesses had discussed and
    tailored their testimony, the petitioner emphasized the
    testimony of Wilson, who, at the criminal trial, testified
    that she had ‘‘just found out [that the victim] was on
    the phone with his mother [at the time he was shot]. I
    didn’t know that at the time . . . .’’ (Emphasis added.)
    Subsequent to Wilson’s testimony at the criminal trial,
    the victim’s mother testified that at the time that the
    victim was shot, she was on the telephone with him.
    According to the petitioner, the victim’s mother and
    Wilson discussed their testimony prior to either testi-
    fying in order to conform their testimony and, thus,
    falsely corroborate each other, which would not have
    occurred if Mastronardi had requested a sequestra-
    tion order.
    On July 28, 2014, the court, Fuger, J., held a habeas
    trial, which lasted less than one full day. At the start of
    the habeas trial, both parties offered and had admitted
    without objection all of their exhibits. Following the
    admission of both parties’ exhibits, the petitioner testi-
    fied on his own behalf and then offered the testimony
    of Mastronardi. After Mastronardi’s testimony, the peti-
    tioner requested that the court issue a capias for Wilson,
    who had not appeared at the habeas trial, although the
    petitioner had attempted to subpoena her. The court
    declined to do so. Both parties then rested and pro-
    ceeded to make closing arguments. Immediately follow-
    ing closing arguments, the court issued an oral decision
    from the bench denying the petition.
    The court began its oral decision, the transcript of
    which it later signed and filed with the clerk of the
    trial court,4 by stating that it had ‘‘read the petitioner’s
    pretrial brief. I have not read all of the transcripts that
    have been provided. I don’t know that it is necessary
    to do so.’’ The court then determined, inter alia, that
    the petitioner had not established that Mastronardi’s
    failure to request a sequestration order constituted defi-
    cient performance. The court also found that the peti-
    tioner had failed to establish that he was prejudiced by
    Mastronardi’s actions, in accordance with Strickland
    v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d
    674 (1984).
    On August 5, 2014, the petitioner sought certification
    to appeal to this court, which the habeas court denied.
    This appeal followed. Additional facts will be set forth
    as necessary.
    Prior to addressing the petitioner’s claims on appeal,
    we set forth the applicable standard of review. ‘‘Faced
    with a habeas court’s denial of a petition for certifica-
    tion to appeal, a petitioner can obtain appellate review
    of the dismissal of his petition for habeas corpus only
    by satisfying the two-pronged test enunciated by our
    Supreme Court in Simms v. Warden, 
    229 Conn. 178
    ,
    
    640 A.2d 601
    (1994), and adopted in Simms v. Warden,
    
    230 Conn. 608
    , 612, 
    646 A.2d 126
    (1994). First, he must
    demonstrate that the denial of his petition for certifica-
    tion constituted an abuse of discretion. . . . Second,
    if the petitioner can show an abuse of discretion, he
    must then prove that the decision of the habeas court
    should be reversed on the merits. . . .
    ‘‘To prove an abuse of discretion, the petitioner must
    demonstrate that the [resolution of the underlying claim
    involves issues that] are debatable among jurists of
    reason; that a court could resolve the issues [in a differ-
    ent manner]; or that the questions are adequate to
    deserve encouragement to proceed further.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Riddick v. Commissioner of
    Correction, 
    113 Conn. App. 456
    , 459, 
    966 A.2d 762
    ,
    appeal dismissed, 
    301 Conn. 51
    , 
    19 A.3d 174
    (2011).
    ‘‘In determining whether the habeas court abused its
    discretion in denying the petitioner’s request for certifi-
    cation, we necessarily must consider the merits of the
    petitioner’s underlying claims to determine whether the
    habeas court reasonably determined that the petition-
    er’s appeal was frivolous.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Taft v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    159 Conn. App. 537
    , 544, 
    124 A.3d 1
    , cert. denied, 
    320 Conn. 910
    , 
    128 A.3d 954
    (2015).
    I
    The petitioner first claims that the court improperly
    determined that Mastronardi had not rendered ineffec-
    tive assistance by failing to request a sequestration
    order. Specifically, the petitioner alleges that Mastro-
    nardi’s failure to request a sequestration order consti-
    tuted deficient performance because his conduct was
    not reasonable given the importance of eyewitness testi-
    mony in this case. We are not persuaded.
    The following additional facts and procedural history
    are relevant to this claim. At the underlying criminal
    trial, neither Mastronardi nor the state requested a
    sequestration order. Wilson, who was in the vehicle
    with the petitioner at the time that the victim was shot,
    testified at the criminal trial. During cross-examination,
    Mastronardi asked Wilson if the victim was on a cellular
    phone at the time of the incident. Wilson responded:
    ‘‘From my knowledge, I just found out he was on the
    phone with his mother. I didn’t know that at the time
    cause he had drugs and I wasn’t all in his face. So, I
    didn’t know what he was doing at that time. I just know
    he was sitting there.’’ Mastronardi had Wilson’s entire
    response stricken from the record as unresponsive, and
    the jury was instructed to disregard Wilson’s statement.
    The following colloquy then ensued between Wilson
    and Mastronardi:
    ‘‘Q. You never told the police about [the victim] being
    on a cell phone?
    ‘‘A. No. . . .
    ‘‘Q. You just told the jury a few minutes ago that you
    found out that [the victim] was on a cell phone. Is that
    right? . . . Yes or no.
    ‘‘A. Yes.
    ‘‘Q. And you found that out from [whom]? The pros-
    ecutor?
    ‘‘A. No. I’d rather not say. It don’t matter.
    ‘‘Q. Well, somebody had to tell you something like
    that? . . .
    ‘‘A. I’m not sure. I don’t remember.’’
    Two days later, the victim’s mother testified at the
    criminal trial. She testified that she was speaking to
    her son on the telephone at the time he was shot. She
    did not hear a gunshot, but she did hear someone say
    that he had been shot and to call 911.
    At the habeas trial, the petitioner argued that Mastro-
    nardi should have requested a sequestration order
    because the state’s case relied heavily on eyewitness
    testimony. According to the petitioner, if Mastronardi
    had requested such an order, the state’s witnesses
    would not have been allowed to speak with each other
    prior to testifying, and, therefore, Wilson never would
    have learned that the victim was on the telephone with
    his mother at the time he was shot. Because Wilson
    heard and repeated this information to the jury, the
    petitioner contended that she bolstered the credibility
    of the testimony of the victim’s mother. The petitioner
    further contended that if the state’s witnesses had tai-
    lored their testimony regarding whether the victim was
    on the telephone at the time he was shot, they may
    have discussed and tailored their testimony concerning
    other events.
    In support of this claim, at the habeas trial, the peti-
    tioner offered the testimony of Mastronardi. Mastro-
    nardi could not recall whether he had any concerns
    about the eyewitnesses overhearing or discussing out-
    side of court each other’s testimony at the criminal trial.
    He also had no recollection concerning why he did not
    request a sequestration order in this case. Nor could
    he recall whether any of the witnesses were present in
    the courtroom prior to their own testimony. Mastro-
    nardi did recall, however, that he had cross-examined
    Wilson regarding from whom she had heard that the
    victim was on the telephone with his mother at the
    time he was shot, and that she did not have personal
    knowledge of the victim being on the telephone with
    his mother at the time of the shooting. Mastronardi
    believed that he had discredited her testimony and pre-
    sented to the jury that her testimony had been influ-
    enced by other witnesses or the prosecutor.
    The habeas court determined that Mastronardi’s per-
    formance was not deficient, and, even if it was deficient,
    the petitioner was not prejudiced by his actions: ‘‘[The
    court does not] find that the failure to seek a sequestra-
    tion order is in and of itself deficient performance on
    the part of a trial defense counsel. . . . [Even] assum-
    ing that that was deficient performance—and I’m not
    making that finding; I’m assuming it for the purpose of
    argument—I don’t see that it generated any prejudice
    toward [the petitioner].’’
    The following legal principles guide our analysis of
    this claim. ‘‘In Strickland v. Washington, [supra, 
    466 U.S. 687
    ], the United States Supreme Court established
    that for a petitioner to prevail on a claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel, he must show that counsel’s
    assistance was so defective as to require reversal of
    [the] conviction. . . . That requires the petitioner to
    show (1) that counsel’s performance was deficient and
    (2) that the deficient performance prejudiced the
    defense. . . . Unless a [petitioner] makes both show-
    ings, it cannot be said that the conviction . . . resulted
    from a breakdown in the adversary process that renders
    the result unreliable. . . .
    ‘‘To prove that his counsel’s performance was defi-
    cient, the petitioner must demonstrate that trial coun-
    sel’s representation fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness. . . . Competent representation is not
    to be equated with perfection. The constitution guaran-
    tees only a fair trial and a competent attorney; it does
    not ensure that every conceivable constitutional claim
    will be recognized and raised. . . . A fair assessment
    of attorney performance requires that every effort be
    made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to
    reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s challenged
    conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s
    perspective at the time. Because of the difficulties inher-
    ent in making the evaluation, a court must indulge a
    strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within
    the wide range of reasonable professional assistance;
    that is, the [petitioner] must overcome the presumption
    that, under the circumstances, the challenged action
    might be considered sound trial strategy. . . . [C]oun-
    sel is strongly presumed to have rendered adequate
    assistance and made all significant decisions in the exer-
    cise of reasonable professional judgment.’’ (Citations
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Toccaline
    v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    80 Conn. App. 792
    ,
    798–99, 
    837 A.2d 849
    , cert. denied, 
    268 Conn. 907
    , 
    845 A.2d 413
    , cert. denied sub nom. Toccaline v. Lantz, 
    543 U.S. 854
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 301
    , 
    160 L. Ed. 2d 90
    (2004).
    Pursuant to General Statutes § 54-85a, ‘‘[i]n any crimi-
    nal prosecution, the court, upon motion of the state or
    the defendant, shall cause any witness to be sequestered
    during the hearing on any issue or motion or any part
    of the trial of such prosecution in which he is not testi-
    fying.’’ ‘‘Either party may invoke the court’s authority
    to issue a sequestration order during any portion of the
    trial; the court lacks discretion to deny such a request.’’
    State v. Morgan, 
    70 Conn. App. 255
    , 277, 
    797 A.2d 616
    ,
    cert. denied, 
    261 Conn. 919
    , 
    806 A.2d 1056
    (2002). ‘‘[A]
    sequestration order merely prohibits a sequestered wit-
    ness from being in the courtroom when he is not testi-
    fying.’’ State v. Williams, 
    169 Conn. 322
    , 331, 
    363 A.2d 72
    (1975). ‘‘[A]t the request of counsel, the court, in its
    discretion, [also may] order that the testimony of any
    witness should not be discussed with any other past
    or prospective witness.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) 
    Id. ‘‘Sequestration serves
    a broad purpose. It is a proce-
    dural device that serves to prevent witnesses from tai-
    loring their testimony to that of earlier witnesses; it
    aids in detecting testimony that is less than candid and
    assures that witnesses testify on the basis of their own
    knowledge. . . . In essence, it helps to ensure that the
    trial is fair.’’ (Citations omitted.) State v. Robinson, 
    230 Conn. 591
    , 600, 
    646 A.2d 118
    (1994).
    In Toccaline v. Commissioner of 
    Correction, supra
    ,
    
    80 Conn. App. 804
    ,5 this court held that a defense coun-
    sel’s decision whether to request a sequestration order
    is a matter of trial strategy, and that under the facts of
    the case, defense counsel’s trial strategy was reason-
    able: ‘‘The uncontradicted testimony of [defense coun-
    sel] was that the decision not to press for the
    sequestration of witnesses reflected the consensus he
    and the petitioner had reached . . . . [I]t is well estab-
    lished that a habeas court cannot in hindsight second-
    guess an attorney’s trial strategy. . . . The court
    should not have found for the petitioner on that ground,
    as the evidence adduced at the habeas hearing did not
    overcome the strong presumption that counsel’s actions
    represented sound trial strategy.’’ (Citation omitted.)
    
    Id., 804–805. In
    the present case, the petitioner bore the burden
    of presenting sufficient evidence to establish that Mas-
    tronardi’s actions constituted deficient performance.
    See Morales v. Commissioner of Correction, 99 Conn.
    App. 506, 509, 
    914 A.2d 602
    (in habeas action, burden
    of proof on petitioner), cert. denied, 
    282 Conn. 906
    , 
    920 A.2d 308
    (2007). The record is silent regarding why
    Mastronardi did not request a sequestration order. He
    could not recall why he did not request that the wit-
    nesses be sequestered. Thus, we do not know whether
    Mastronardi made a conscious decision not to request
    that the witnesses be sequestered. The decision, how-
    ever, regarding whether to request a sequestration order
    is a matter of trial strategy, and the petitioner has not
    argued otherwise. Because the decision to request a
    sequestration order is a matter of trial strategy, the
    petitioner was required to demonstrate that Mastro-
    nardi’s failure to request a sequestration order was
    unreasonable in order to satisfy his burden of proof
    and overcome the strong presumption that counsel’s
    conduct regarding matters of trial strategy is rea-
    sonable.6
    This case is unlike Holloway v. Commissioner of
    Correction, 
    145 Conn. App. 353
    , 367, 
    77 A.3d 777
    (2013),
    in which we held that certain failures by criminal trial
    counsel, whether motivated by strategy or not, will
    always constitute deficient performance in light of the
    fundamental right at stake. In Holloway, this court held
    that defense counsel’s failure to object to the trial
    court’s jury instruction, which omitted an explanation
    of an essential element of an offense with which the
    petitioner had been charged, constituted deficient per-
    formance because ‘‘[r]egardless of counsel’s particular
    trial strategy on behalf of his client, he simply has no
    excuse not to insist that the jury be properly instructed
    on each essential element of every charged offense
    . . . .’’ 
    Id., 366–67. The
    right to sequestration of wit-
    nesses, however, is not of such magnitude that a court
    will presume that, in the words of Holloway, ‘‘there is
    no conceivable tactical justification for defense coun-
    sel’’ to decide to forgo the right. 
    Id., 367. Indeed,
    in
    any given case, there may well be valid and significant
    strategic reasons to decide not to seek sequestration
    of witnesses. See Toccaline v. Commissioner of Correc-
    
    tion, supra
    , 
    80 Conn. App. 804
    –805.
    Accordingly, the petitioner in this case was required
    to establish that Mastronardi’s performance was defi-
    cient by overcoming the presumption that counsel’s
    conduct was reasonable. As the habeas court noted,
    ‘‘the quality of the evidence presented to [the habeas
    court] in connection with this habeas corpus petition
    [was] not very good as far as establishing the elements
    that need to be established to grant the petition.’’ The
    record contains no evidence from which the habeas
    court or this court could determine whether Mastro-
    nardi’s conduct was reasonable. It is true that, in Franko
    v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    165 Conn. App. 505
    ,
    520,     A.3d       (2016), this court held that we ‘‘may
    look to the record of the criminal trial as circumstantial
    evidence of trial counsel’s strategy.’’ In Franko, defense
    counsel did not testify at the habeas trial; 
    id., 515; but
    this court determined that his closing argument at the
    criminal trial constituted evidence of his strategy for
    not requesting a jury instruction on a lesser included
    offense. 
    Id., 517–18. The
    record in this case, however,
    contains little or no circumstantial evidence from which
    the habeas court could have divined Mastronardi’s rea-
    son(s) to forgo sequestration or from which the habeas
    court could have concluded that Mastronardi’s failure
    to seek sequestration was simply negligence or inadver-
    tence. On this record, we decline to speculate as to
    why sequestration was not sought.
    Absent any evidence regarding the basis for Mastro-
    nardi’s failure to request a sequestration order, we are
    guided by the ‘‘strong presumption that counsel’s con-
    duct falls within the wide range of reasonable profes-
    sional assistance . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Toccaline v. Commissioner of 
    Correction, supra
    , 
    80 Conn. App. 799
    . Because the petitioner failed
    to adduce sufficient evidence at the habeas trial to
    overcome this strong presumption and satisfy his bur-
    den of proof, the court properly determined that he did
    not establish that Mastronardi’s failure to request a
    sequestration order constituted deficient performance.
    Even if we assume for purposes of argument that
    Mastronardi’s performance was deficient, we also con-
    clude that the petitioner failed to establish that he was
    prejudiced by Mastronardi’s failure to request seques-
    tration. The petitioner argues that he was prejudiced
    because prior to testifying, Wilson spoke to another
    witness and learned information of which she had no
    personal knowledge—that the victim had been on the
    telephone with his mother when he was shot. Thus,
    according to the petitioner, Wilson’s testimony falsely
    bolstered the credibility of the testimony of the victim’s
    mother. The petitioner also argues that if Wilson col-
    luded with another witness, it is possible that other
    witnesses colluded, and, therefore, it is impossible to
    know which portions of the testimony from the state’s
    witnesses were accurate. We are not persuaded.
    ‘‘With respect to the prejudice component of the
    Strickland test, the petitioner must demonstrate that
    counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive the defen-
    dant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable. . . .
    It is not enough for the [petitioner] to show that the
    errors had some conceivable effect on the outcome of
    the proceedings. . . . Rather, [t]he [petitioner] 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 con-
    fidence in the outcome. . . . When a [petitioner] chal-
    lenges a conviction, the question is whether there is
    a reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the
    factfinder would have had a reasonable doubt respect-
    ing guilt.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) 
    Id. The court
    properly determined that the petitioner had
    not established that he was prejudiced by Mastronardi’s
    conduct for two reasons. First, the only portion of the
    criminal trial transcript that the petitioner relies on as
    proof that the witnesses discussed and tailored their
    testimony is Wilson’s testimony that she had learned
    recently about the victim being on the telephone with
    his mother at the time he was shot. This testimony,
    however, was stricken from the record, and the jury
    was instructed to disregard it. Unless proven otherwise,
    this court will presume that the jury acted lawfully and
    in accordance with the instructions given by the habeas
    court. See State v. Santiago, 
    269 Conn. 726
    , 762, 
    850 A.2d 199
    (2004) (‘‘[i]n the absence of a showing that
    the jury failed or declined to follow the court’s instruc-
    tions, we presume that it heeded them’’ [internal quota-
    tion marks omitted]). Therefore, the petitioner has
    failed to establish that any discussion between Wilson
    and another witness, assuming that such a discussion
    had occurred, prejudiced the outcome of his trial.
    Second, the remaining argument set forth by the peti-
    tioner concerning prejudice is grounded in mere specu-
    lation. He contends that ‘‘[t]here is no telling what other
    information may have shaped the testimony of wit-
    nesses that would have been prevented by a sequestra-
    tion order.’’ The petitioner does not, however, cite to
    any portion of the criminal trial transcript or offer the
    testimony of witnesses to establish that witnesses dis-
    cussed their testimony with one another. ‘‘It is well
    established that, in a claim of ineffective assistance
    of counsel, [m]ere conjecture and speculation are not
    enough to support a showing of prejudice.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Elsey v. Commissioner of
    Correction, 
    126 Conn. App. 144
    , 166, 
    10 A.3d 578
    , cert.
    denied, 
    300 Conn. 922
    , 
    14 A.3d 1007
    (2011). Accordingly,
    the habeas court properly determined that the peti-
    tioner had failed to establish prejudice.
    In sum, the habeas court properly determined that the
    petitioner did not establish that Mastronardi’s failure
    to request a sequestration order constituted deficient
    performance. On the basis of this record, this claim is
    not debatable among jurists of reason, a court could
    not resolve the issue in a different manner, and the
    question does not deserve encouragement to proceed
    further. Accordingly, we conclude that the court did
    not abuse its discretion by denying the petition for
    certification to appeal as to this claim.
    II
    The petitioner next claims that the court violated his
    right to due process by rejecting his claims of ineffective
    assistance of counsel without reviewing all of the exhib-
    its admitted into evidence. Specifically, the petitioner
    contends that the court could not have determined
    whether he was prejudiced by Mastronardi’s actions,
    which must be viewed in the context of the entire crimi-
    nal trial, without reviewing all the transcripts from the
    underlying criminal trial. See Strickland v. 
    Washington, supra
    , 
    466 U.S. 695
    (‘‘[i]n making [the prejudice] deter-
    mination, a court hearing an ineffectiveness claim must
    consider the totality of the evidence before the judge
    or jury’’).
    The respondent, the Commissioner of Correction,
    contends that this claim is unpreserved and that the
    petitioner is not entitled to have it reviewed pursuant
    to State v. Golding, 
    213 Conn. 233
    , 239–40, 
    567 A.2d 823
    (1989); see In re Yasiel R., 
    317 Conn. 773
    , 781, 
    120 A.3d 1188
    (2015) (modifying third condition of Gold-
    ing); because the claim is not constitutional in nature.
    Alternatively, the respondent contends that even if this
    claim is preserved or reviewable pursuant to Golding,
    the court was not required to review every page of the
    trial transcripts in order to evaluate and dispose of the
    petitioner’s claims. Although we agree with the peti-
    tioner that this claim is sufficiently preserved, we are
    not persuaded that the court failed to consider the rele-
    vant evidence in reaching its determination that the
    petitioner did not establish that Mastronardi’s failure
    to request a sequestration order constituted deficient
    performance. Accordingly, we conclude that the court
    did not abuse its discretion by denying the petition for
    certification to appeal as to this claim.
    As an initial matter, we address whether this claim
    is preserved. The petitioner did not object to the court’s
    statement that it did not read all of the transcripts,
    which was made as part of the court’s oral decision.
    The respondent argues that because the petitioner did
    not object to this statement at the habeas trial, this claim
    is not preserved. In response, the petitioner argues that
    this claim is preserved because he was not required to
    object to the statement and this claim was asserted in
    his petition for certification to appeal. We agree with
    the petitioner that he was not required to object to the
    court’s statement, which was part of its oral decision,
    in order to preserve this claim for appeal.
    An oral decision is the equivalent of a written memo-
    randum of decision. See Practice Book § 64-1. If the
    court’s decision in this case had been written, rather
    than oral, there would have been no opportunity for
    the petitioner to voice an objection to the statement,
    unless he did so in a motion seeking reconsideration
    or reargument. We generally do not require such a pro-
    cedure in order to preserve a claim of this nature for
    appellate review. See State v. Paul B., 
    315 Conn. 19
    , 34
    n.5, 
    105 A.3d 130
    (2014) (defendant not required to
    file motion for reconsideration to preserve claim that
    appellate court in its written memorandum of decision
    improperly construed his claim); see also Practice Book
    §§ 61-10 (b) and 66-5; Solomon v. Aberman, 
    196 Conn. 359
    , 376, 
    493 A.2d 193
    (1985) (although motion for artic-
    ulation or rectification may be necessary to correct
    ambiguous or incorrect statement in written memoran-
    dum of decision, no requirement to do so in order to
    preserve claim for appeal). We will not require a party
    to take additional steps to preserve a claim simply
    because the court’s decision was oral, not written. We
    have found no authority, nor has the respondent cited
    any, requiring that a litigant object to statements made
    by a court while rendering an oral decision in order to
    preserve a claim.
    To hold otherwise would require a party to interrupt
    the court while it rendered its oral decision every time
    the court stated something with which a party did not
    agree. Such a rule would be unwise and unwieldy.
    Accordingly, the petitioner was not required to object
    to the statement at issue in order to preserve this claim,
    and, therefore, we conclude that this claim is preserved.
    Having determined that this claim is preserved, the
    following additional facts are relevant to our review.
    Prior to the start of the habeas trial, the petitioner filed
    a brief. In the portion of the pretrial brief regarding his
    claim that Mastronardi rendered ineffective assistance
    of counsel by failing to request a sequestration order,
    the petitioner cited to the relevant portions of the under-
    lying criminal trial transcript and to the written state-
    ment that Wilson had given to the police. The petitioner
    attached to his pretrial brief the cited portions of the
    criminal trial transcript. Included in the attached por-
    tions of the criminal trial transcript were Wilson’s testi-
    mony that she recently had discovered that the victim
    was on the telephone with his mother at the time he
    was shot, Mastronardi’s cross-examination of Wilson
    regarding this topic, and a portion of the testimony of
    the victim’s mother. Also attached to the pretrial brief
    was the written statement that Wilson had given to the
    police following the shooting.
    At the start of the habeas trial, both parties offered
    and had admitted without objection all of their exhibits.
    The petitioner offered and had admitted nineteen exhib-
    its into evidence, eight of which were select portions7
    of the transcript from the underlying criminal trial. Of
    the nineteen exhibits that the petitioner offered into
    evidence, only four of the exhibits had not been
    attached to his pretrial brief: (1) the criminal trial tran-
    script of closing argument, (2) the criminal trial tran-
    script of the court’s instructions to the jury, (3) the
    criminal trial transcript of the jury’s return of its verdict
    and the petitioner’s subsequent Alford plea, and (4) the
    sentencing transcript.
    The respondent offered and had admitted into evi-
    dence nine exhibits. The first five exhibits were the
    transcripts from the five days of the criminal trial during
    which evidence was presented to the jury. The sixth
    exhibit was the criminal trial transcript of closing argu-
    ment. The seventh exhibit was the criminal trial tran-
    script of the court’s instructions to the jury. The eighth
    exhibit was the criminal trial transcript of the jury’s
    return of the verdict and the petitioner’s subsequent
    Alford plea. The final exhibit was the sentencing tran-
    script.
    Following the admission of both parties’ exhibits, the
    petitioner testified on his own behalf. After he finished
    testifying, the petitioner informed the court that Mastro-
    nardi was not available to testify until after 2 o’clock
    in the afternoon. The court then stood in recess until
    Mastronardi was present. After the recess, Mastronardi,
    who was subpoenaed by the petitioner, testified. Both
    parties then rested. Without any further recess, the par-
    ties proceeded to make closing arguments.
    Immediately following closing argument, the court
    issued its oral decision: ‘‘I’m going to deny the petition
    for a writ of habeas corpus. I’ve read the petitioner’s
    pretrial brief. I have not read all of the transcripts that
    have been provided. I don’t know that it is necessary
    to do so. There have been references to those—to what
    has taken place.
    ‘‘The first comment I would make is that the quality
    of the evidence presented to this court in connection
    with this habeas corpus petition is not very good as far
    as establishing the elements that need to be established
    to grant the petition. . . .
    ‘‘[T]he court finds that the overwhelming majority—
    if not the entirety—of [the petitioner’s] testimony is not
    worthy of much credit, which then leaves us with [the
    testimony of Mastronardi], who . . . may have pro-
    vided a little bit of insight into why he did what he did
    during trial, adequately . . . [explained] his actions
    during the trial.
    ‘‘Now, when I look specifically at the items that are
    listed as the basis for a finding that [Mastronardi] was
    ineffective, the first one is the failure to seek sequestra-
    tion. I cannot find that the failure to seek a sequestration
    order is in and of itself deficient performance on the
    part of a trial defense counsel.
    ‘‘Apparently, by his testimony and the transcript,
    [Mastronardi] did not seek a sequestration order. Now,
    in this case, assuming that that was deficient perfor-
    mance—and I’m not making that finding; I’m assuming
    it for the purpose of argument—I don’t see that it gener-
    ated any prejudice toward [the petitioner].’’ (Empha-
    sis added.)
    The following legal principles guide our review of
    this claim. ‘‘[T]he trier [of fact] is bound to consider
    all the evidence which has been admitted, as far as
    admissible, for all the purposes for which it was offered
    and claimed. . . . [W]e are not justified in finding error
    upon pure assumptions as to what the court may have
    done. . . . We cannot assume that the court’s conclu-
    sions were reached without due weight having been
    given to the evidence presented and the facts found.
    . . . Unless the contrary appears, this court will assume
    that the court acted properly.’’ (Citations omitted; inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) Giamattei v. DiCerbo,
    
    135 Conn. 159
    , 162, 
    62 A.2d 519
    (1948); Riddick v. Com-
    missioner of 
    Correction, supra
    , 
    113 Conn. App. 465
    (‘‘generally [a] judge is presumed to have performed
    his duty properly unless the contrary appears’’ [internal
    quotation marks omitted]). ‘‘[I]f . . . [a] statement [by
    the court may] suggest that the court did not consider
    [certain] testimony, we . . . are entitled to presume
    that the trial court acted properly and considered all
    the evidence. . . . There is, of course, no presumption
    of error.’’ (Citations omitted.) Solomon v. 
    Aberman, supra
    , 
    196 Conn. 375
    –76.8
    The issue of whether the habeas court must read
    every word of the underlying criminal trial transcript
    has been addressed previously by this court. In Evans
    v. Warden, 
    29 Conn. App. 274
    , 276–77, 
    613 A.2d 327
    (1992), the petitioner alleged that his criminal appellate
    counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
    raise a sufficiency of the evidence claim on direct
    appeal. At the habeas trial, the habeas court stated that
    ‘‘I really don’t think that I have any cause whatsoever
    to review the transcripts [of the underlying criminal
    trial],’’ and then denied the petition for a writ of habeas
    corpus. 
    Id., 276 n.1.
    On appeal, this court held that the
    habeas court abused its discretion by failing to read
    the trial transcript because ‘‘[a] full and fair review of
    the petitioner’s claim that . . . appellate counsel pro-
    vided ineffective assistance in failing to include a suffi-
    ciency of the evidence claim in his direct appeal
    required the habeas court to read the trial transcript.’’
    
    Id., 278. Since
    Evans, this court has clarified that Evans does
    not stand for the proposition that ‘‘a new hearing is
    [always] warranted [if] the habeas court does not review
    all of the evidence. . . . Although we recognize that
    the habeas court must consider all of the evidence
    admitted for all the purposes it is offered and claimed
    . . . we also recognize that the court is not obligated
    to review evidence that is not relevant to any issue
    under consideration.’’ (Citation omitted.) Hull v. War-
    den, 
    32 Conn. App. 170
    , 177, 
    628 A.2d 32
    , cert. denied,
    
    227 Conn. 920
    , 
    632 A.2d 691
    (1993). Additionally,
    ‘‘[a]lthough a habeas court is obligated to give careful
    consideration to all the evidence . . . it does not have
    to read the full text of every exhibit.’’ (Citations omitted;
    emphasis in original.) 
    Id., 178. In
    Hull, this court emphasized that the extent that
    the criminal trial transcript must be reviewed by the
    habeas court depends upon the nature and scope of
    the particular claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
    The petitioner in Hull had alleged that his criminal trial
    counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
    object to certain testimony. 
    Id., 173. The
    habeas court
    determined that trial counsel’s conduct was not defi-
    cient, and, thus, did not reach the prejudice prong of
    Strickland. 
    Id., 174–75. The
    habeas court further stated
    that it did not review certain exhibits admitted at the
    habeas trial because it did not consider them necessary
    to its decision. 
    Id., 176–77. On
    appeal, this court, in reaching its decision, distin-
    guished between the claim at issue in Hull and the
    claim at issue in Evans. In Evans, the petitioner’s
    habeas claim had implicated the sufficiency of the evi-
    dence presented at the criminal trial, which ‘‘require[s]
    the reviewing court to construe all of the evidence pre-
    sented at trial.’’ 
    Id., 177. Thus,
    the habeas court’s refusal
    to review any, let alone all, of the criminal trial tran-
    script required a new hearing. By contrast, in Hull, ‘‘the
    petitioner’s claims [were] exceedingly narrow in scope
    and concerned solely with the testimony of [certain
    witnesses]. This [was] particularly true because the
    habeas court . . . concluded that . . . the petitioner’s
    counsel was not ineffective for failing to object to [cer-
    tain testimony, and, thus], had no need to proceed to
    the second prong of the Strickland test concerning
    the potentially broader issue of prejudice.’’ 
    Id., 178. Accordingly,
    this court concluded that the habeas court
    did not abuse its discretion by not reviewing the entire
    trial transcript because ‘‘the habeas court reviewed the
    parties’ pretrial briefs, heard substantial testimony and
    argument at the hearing, read the transcripts of [the
    testimony of the witness at issue], and was properly
    satisfied that . . . a review of the entire trial transcript
    . . . would [not] have been of any additional bene-
    fit.’’ 
    Id. Likewise, in
    Rivera v. Commissioner of Correction,
    
    51 Conn. App. 336
    , 338, 
    721 A.2d 918
    (1998), this court
    held that the habeas court, in determining whether trial
    counsel rendered ineffective assistance, did not abuse
    its discretion by reading only the portions of the crimi-
    nal trial transcript that counsel specifically referenced,
    although the entire criminal trial transcript had been
    admitted into evidence.9 In so doing, this court empha-
    sized that the habeas court had reviewed the portions
    of the criminal trial transcript that the petitioner identi-
    fied at the habeas trial as relevant to his claims, and,
    on appeal, the petitioner ‘‘was unable to articulate in
    his brief or at oral argument any reason why the habeas
    court was required to read the entire transcript in light
    of his discrete, particularized claims of ineffective assis-
    tance of counsel [none of which implicated the suffi-
    ciency of the evidence admitted at the criminal
    trial].’’ 
    Id. In the
    present case, the petitioner claims that Mastro-
    nardi rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
    request a sequestration order. In deciding this claim,
    as Hull and Rivera make clear, the extent to which the
    court was required to review the criminal trial transcript
    in this case was dependent upon the particular claim
    made and on which prong of Strickland the court based
    its determination. The petitioner’s claim, unlike the
    claim in Evans, does not implicate the sufficiency of
    the evidence admitted at the underlying criminal trial;
    rather, his claim focuses on the testimony of particular
    witnesses. Additionally, similar to Hull, the habeas
    court found that the petitioner had failed to establish
    that Mastronardi’s performance was deficient. Although
    the habeas court did address the prejudice prong, it
    was not required to do so, and, thus, it was not required
    to review the entire criminal trial transcript.10 See Hull
    v. 
    Warden, supra
    , 
    32 Conn. App. 177
    .
    Additionally, in deciding this claim, it is important to
    note that the habeas court did not state, as occurred
    in Evans, that it had not reviewed any of the criminal
    trial transcripts, but, rather, stated that it did not read
    all of the transcripts provided. It is unclear from that
    statement which portions of the criminal trial transcript
    the court did read. As a result, we must presume that
    the court acted properly and decline to interpret the
    court’s statement to mean that it did not review all the
    relevant transcripts. Such a presumption is particularly
    apt in light of the petitioner’s pretrial brief specifying
    which portions of the criminal trial transcript were rele-
    vant and the admission into evidence of irrelevant por-
    tions of the transcript, such as the transcripts of the
    jury’s return of the verdict and the sentencing.
    Moreover, the habeas court did state that it had
    reviewed the petitioner’s pretrial brief. In his pretrial
    brief, the petitioner referred the court to specific, rele-
    vant portions of the criminal trial transcript, which he
    attached to the pretrial brief. The portions of the crimi-
    nal trial transcript attached to the pretrial brief were
    contained in the transcripts that the court subsequently
    admitted into evidence at the habeas trial. Although the
    petitioner also offered and had admitted four other
    portions of the criminal trial transcript at the habeas
    trial, he has not articulated what significance these por-
    tions have to his particularized claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel. To the extent that the habeas
    court did not review all the portions of the criminal
    trial transcript admitted into evidence at the habeas
    trial by the parties, the petitioner has failed to explain
    why the habeas court was required to read the entire
    transcript in light of his particular claim of deficient
    performance. Absent the petitioner identifying those
    portions of the transcript that (1) would have altered
    the court’s determination and (2) the court failed to
    read, this court is guided by the presumption that the
    habeas court acted properly and considered all the rele-
    vant evidence. See Solomon v. 
    Aberman, supra
    , 
    196 Conn. 376
    .
    In rejecting the petitioner’s claim, we caution habeas
    courts to avoid making ambiguous statements, like the
    one made by the court here. ‘‘A [trier of fact] is bound
    to consider all the evidence which has been admitted,
    as far as admissible, for all the purposes for which it
    was offered and claimed. . . . [This principle is] fully
    applicable in habeas corpus trials.’’ (Citations omitted;
    emphasis altered; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Evans v. 
    Warden, supra
    , 
    29 Conn. App. 277
    . ‘‘Just as a
    jury should give careful consideration to all the evi-
    dence in a case, so too should a habeas court give
    careful consideration to all the evidence . . . .’’ (Cita-
    tion omitted.) 
    Id., 278. If
    a habeas court concludes that
    it is not necessary to review certain exhibits in light of
    the manner in which it has disposed of the claims, it
    should endeavor to explain what it has not reviewed
    and why it is not necessary to do so. A court should
    strive to avoid leaving litigants with the impression that
    it has failed to discharge its duty or somehow acted
    unlawfully. Public confidence in our justice system is
    undermined if parties perceive that a court has not met
    its obligation to provide them with a full and fair review
    of their claims. We caution courts not to abrogate their
    duty to review the evidence admitted at trial or to give
    litigants the erroneous impression that they have
    done so.
    In sum, we are not persuaded that the habeas court
    failed to consider all of the evidence pertaining to the
    issue of whether Mastronardi’s failure to request a
    sequestration order constituted deficient performance.
    Because we are convinced on this record, and in light
    of the particular manner in which the court disposed
    of the petitioner’s claim, that this claim is not debatable
    among jurists of reason, a court could not resolve the
    issue in a different manner, and the question does not
    deserve encouragement to proceed further, we con-
    clude that the habeas court did not abuse its discretion
    by denying certification to appeal as to this claim.
    III
    Finally, the petitioner claims that the court improp-
    erly refused to issue a capias for a witness who failed
    to appear to testify at the habeas trial. Specifically, the
    petitioner contends that the court improperly deter-
    mined that it did not have the authority to issue a capias
    for the witness because the subpoena issued by the
    petitioner failed to conform to the statutory require-
    ments of General Statutes § 52-143.11 In response, the
    respondent argues that the court correctly determined
    that it could not issue a capias for the missing witness
    because the subpoena (1) was not personally served
    on her and was simply left at her abode, and (2) did
    not include either statutorily required language or pay-
    ment of the witness fee. On the record before us, we
    are not persuaded by the petitioner’s claim.
    The following additional facts and procedural history
    are relevant to this claim. Prior to the start of the habeas
    trial, the petitioner sought to subpoena Wilson to offer
    testimony related to his claim that Mastronardi pro-
    vided ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to ask
    the criminal trial court for an order of sequestration.
    The subpoena commanded that Wilson appear in court
    on the date of the habeas trial. The subpoena further
    notified Wilson that should she not appear in court on
    the day and at the time stated, ‘‘the court may order
    that you be arrested. Also, if one day’s attendance and
    traveling fees have been paid to you and you do not
    come to court and testify, without reasonable excuse,
    you will be fined not more than [$25] . . . .’’ The sub-
    poena was not accompanied by payment for attendance
    and travel expenses.
    On July 24, 2014, a person indifferent to the action
    was given the subpoena to serve it on Wilson. Such
    person left the subpoena at Wilson’s last usual place of
    abode, but did not make personal contact with Wilson.
    Thus, the subpoena was not left in Wilson’s physical
    presence, nor was its contents read aloud to her. Wilson
    subsequently failed to appear in court in response to
    the subpoena.
    At the habeas trial, after offering the testimony of
    the petitioner and Mastronardi, the petitioner’s counsel
    stated that the only further evidence she had was the
    testimony of Wilson, who had failed to appear. The
    petitioner requested that the court issue a capias in
    accordance with § 52-143 (e). The respondent objected,
    arguing that for a capias warrant to issue, in-hand ser-
    vice of the subpoena was required. The petitioner
    responded that in-hand service was not necessary
    because he could establish that Wilson had actual notice
    of the subpoena through a copy of an electronic voice
    mail from Wilson acknowledging that ‘‘she [had]
    received [the subpoena], and she knows she needs to
    be in court.’’ The petitioner did not request that an
    audio recording of the voice mail be marked for identifi-
    cation in order to make it part of the record on appeal.12
    The court also noted that the petitioner had failed to
    tender travel and witness fees or to include statutorily
    required language in the subpoena. The court concluded
    that it was not authorized to issue a capias.
    ‘‘The issuance of a capias is not mandatory, and lies
    within the discretion of the trial court. . . . If, how-
    ever, a witness is not warranted in refusing to honor a
    subpoena and his absence will cause a miscarriage of
    justice, the court should issue a capias. . . . [If, how-
    ever] the court never exercised any discretion because
    it believed its authority to do so was lacking [our review
    is plenary]. It is clear that the court [has] the power, if
    the witness had actually been served [properly with the
    subpoena] and refused to appear, to issue a capias.’’
    (Citations omitted.) State v. Burrows, 
    5 Conn. App. 556
    ,
    558–59, 
    500 A.2d 970
    (1985), cert. denied, 
    199 Conn. 806
    , 
    508 A.2d 33
    (1986); see State v. Maldonado, 
    193 Conn. 350
    , 360 n.6, 
    478 A.2d 581
    (1984) (‘‘[u]pon proof
    that a witness has been served with notice to appear,
    the trial court has authority to issue a capias to compel
    his or her attendance’’); Housing Authority v. DeRoche,
    
    112 Conn. App. 355
    , 371 n.9, 
    962 A.2d 904
    (2009) (same).
    Section 52-143 (e) sets forth, in relevant part, the
    requirements that must be met for the court to be
    authorized to issue a capias: ‘‘[I]f any other person upon
    whom a subpoena is served to appear and testify in a
    cause pending before any court . . . fails to appear
    and testify, without reasonable excuse, he shall be fined
    . . . and the court or judge, on proof of the service of
    a subpoena . . . and the tender of such fees, may issue
    a capias directed to some proper officer to arrest the
    witness and bring him before the court to testify.’’
    (Emphasis added.)
    Section 52-143 (e) does not, by its terms, require in-
    hand service of the subpoena. This court has interpreted
    the phrase ‘‘person upon whom a subpoena is served’’
    to ‘‘not require physical acceptance of [the subpoena],
    if the person is given notice of it and its contents.’’
    (Emphasis added.) State v. 
    Burrows, supra
    , 5 Conn.
    App. 559. Thus, abode service of the subpoena autho-
    rizes the court to issue a capias only if the party
    requesting the capias establishes that the absentee wit-
    ness received the subpoena and knows of the contents
    of the subpoena. See State v. Frye, 
    182 Conn. 476
    , 483,
    
    438 A.2d 735
    (1980) (leaving subpoena with witness’
    wife at his abode without proof that witness knew con-
    tents of subpoena, although he confirmed by telephone
    that he had received it, was not adequate service under
    § 52-143).
    To the extent that this court must examine the record
    to determine whether the habeas court properly found
    that an absentee witness was not served properly, ‘‘[t]he
    duty to provide this court with a record adequate for
    review rests with the appellant. . . . Conclusions of
    the trial court cannot be reviewed where the appellant
    fails to establish through an adequate record that the
    trial court incorrectly applied the law or could not rea-
    sonably have concluded as it did . . . .’’ (Internal quo-
    tation marks omitted.) Finan v. Finan, 
    287 Conn. 491
    ,
    495, 
    949 A.2d 468
    (2008).
    A party may establish an adequate record for appeal
    by making an offer of proof or marking an exhibit for
    identification. ‘‘As a general matter, a trial court should
    always allow a party to make an offer of proof and
    mark an item as an exhibit for identification, for both
    practices generally are necessary to preserving the trial
    record for appellate review. . . . [I]f necessary [to
    properly preserve a claim for appellate review], the
    appellant . . . must make an offer of proof or offer
    an exhibit for identification . . . .’’ (Citations omitted;
    emphasis omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Filippelli v. Saint Mary’s Hospital, 
    319 Conn. 113
    , 150–
    51, 
    124 A.3d 501
    (2015); see Finan v. 
    Finan, supra
    , 
    287 Conn. 495
    (‘‘[t]he purpose of marking an exhibit for
    identification is to preserve it as part of the record and
    to provide an appellate court with a basis for review’’
    [internal quotation marks omitted]).
    A proper offer of proof requires the proffering party
    to disclose on the record the substance of the proffered
    evidence. State v. Conrod, 
    198 Conn. 592
    , 597, 
    504 A.2d 494
    (1986). The court will not speculate as to the possi-
    ble substance of excluded evidence in the absence of
    a proper offer of proof. 
    Id., 598. Such
    an offer may be
    made by (1) presenting the substance of the evidence
    or testimony to the court outside the presence of the
    jury or (2) a good faith representation by counsel as to
    the contents of the evidence or testimony. See State
    v. Barnes, 
    232 Conn. 740
    , 747, 
    657 A.2d 611
    (1995).
    Additionally, the record independently may be adequate
    to establish the substance of the exhibit, if its content
    is read into the record. Filippelli v. Saint Mary’s Hospi-
    
    tal, supra
    , 
    319 Conn. 151
    .
    In the present case, the petitioner failed to make a
    sufficient offer of proof that Wilson received the sub-
    poena and knew its contents. The petitioner could have
    made a proper offer of proof in two ways: (1) he could
    have had a copy of the voice mail marked for identifica-
    tion or (2) he could have described the voice mail’s
    contents adequately to make clear that it established
    that Wilson had actual notice of its content. The peti-
    tioner’s counsel did not have a copy of the voice mail
    marked as an exhibit for identification, and her descrip-
    tion of its content was so vague that it failed to establish
    that Wilson had actual notice of the subpoena’s content.
    Although the petitioner’s counsel stated that the voice
    mail established that Wilson received the subpoena and
    knew that she needed to be in court, counsel did not
    state whether the voice mail established that Wilson
    knew the particular contents of the subpoena, such as
    the date and time that she was required to appear in
    court. The petitioner’s counsel admitted at oral argu-
    ment to this court that her description of the voice
    mail’s content was minimal. Without including a copy
    of the voice mail as part of the record or describing
    the voice mail’s contents in sufficient detail, we only
    can speculate as to the contents of the voice mail, which
    we will not do. See Daigle v. Metropolitan Property &
    Casualty Ins. Co., 
    257 Conn. 359
    , 364–65, 
    777 A.2d 681
    (2001) (‘‘[The role of an appellate court] is not to divine
    the possibilities, but to review the claims and exhibits
    presented to the trial court. In the present case, the
    record is deficient [because] we are left to speculate as
    to the factual predicates for [the plaintiff’s] argument.’’).
    Accordingly, the record is insufficient to review
    whether Wilson properly was served and whether the
    court improperly declined to issue a capias. Thus, the
    claim is not debatable among jurists of reason, a court
    could not resolve the issue in a different manner, and
    the question does not deserve encouragement to pro-
    ceed further. The court did not abuse its discretion by
    denying the petition for certification to appeal as to
    this claim.
    The appeal is dismissed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    For ease of discussion, we have addressed the petitioner’s claims in a
    different order than presented in his brief on appeal.
    2
    See North Carolina v. Alford, 
    400 U.S. 25
    , 37, 
    91 S. Ct. 160
    , 
    27 L. Ed. 2d 162
    (1970).
    3
    In this appeal, the petitioner does not challenge the habeas court’s deter-
    mination that he had not established ineffective assistance of counsel with
    respect to his claims that Mastronardi failed to object to certain testimony
    by the state’s firearms examiner, and to file a motion in limine to preclude
    testimony from the victim’s mother. Accordingly, we deem any such
    claims abandoned.
    4
    Practice Book § 64-1 (a) provides in relevant part: ‘‘The trial court shall
    state its decision either orally or in writing . . . . If oral, the decision shall
    be recorded by a court reporter, and, if there is an appeal, the trial court
    shall create a memorandum of decision for use in the appeal by ordering
    a transcript of the portion of the proceedings in which it stated its oral
    decision. The transcript of the decision shall be signed by the trial judge
    and filed with the clerk of the trial court. . . .’’
    5
    In Toccaline, the petitioner claimed that his criminal defense counsel
    had rendered ineffective assistance by failing to request a sequestration
    order. ‘‘At the criminal trial, [defense counsel] moved to sequester all the
    witnesses prior to the beginning of evidence with the exception of the
    petitioner’s wife. In response, the trial court indicated that if a sequestration
    order were to be granted, it would include all potential witnesses, including
    the petitioner’s wife. Confronted with those alternatives, [defense counsel]
    and the petitioner conferred and mutually decided not to pursue the seques-
    tration motion so that the petitioner’s wife could be present at the trial.’’
    (Footnote omitted.) Toccaline v. Commissioner of 
    Correction, supra
    , 
    80 Conn. App. 804
    .
    6
    After conducting a nationwide search, we have failed to find a single
    case in which a court has determined that defense counsel’s failure to
    request a sequestration order constituted deficient performance. See, e.g.,
    Cannon v. Mullin, 
    383 F.3d 1152
    , 1166 (10th Cir. 2004) (failure to request
    sequestration order did not constitute deficient performance), cert. denied,
    
    544 U.S. 928
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 1664
    , 
    161 L. Ed. 2d 491
    (2005); State v. Scott, 
    829 S.W.2d 120
    , 123 (Mo. App. 1992) (same); Garcia v. State, 
    678 N.W.2d 568
    ,
    573–74 (N.D. 2004) (same).
    7
    The exhibits included (1) the transcript of closing argument, (2) the
    transcript of the court’s instructions to the jury, (3) the transcript of the
    jury’s return of its verdict and the petitioner’s plea under North Carolina
    v. Alford, 
    400 U.S. 25
    , 37, 
    91 S. Ct. 160
    , 
    27 L. Ed. 2d 162
    (1970), (4) the
    transcript of the sentencing, (5) a two page excerpt of the transcript of
    Booker’s testimony, (6) a nine page excerpt from the transcript of Wilson’s
    testimony, (7) an eight page excerpt from the transcript of an expert witness’
    testimony concerning firearms, and (8) a thirty-two page excerpt from the
    transcript of the testimony of the victim’s mother.
    8
    In Solomon v. 
    Aberman, supra
    , 
    196 Conn. 375
    , the trial court in its
    memorandum of decision stated that only two trustees testified at trial,
    although four trustees actually had testified. The petitioners also had offered
    and had admitted a portion of the deposition testimony of a fifth trustee.
    
    Id., 375–76 and
    376 n.13. On appeal, our Supreme Court stated that it would
    not presume that the trial court had not considered all of the relevant
    evidence on the basis of the trial court’s statement, especially in light of
    the strong presumption that the court acted properly. 
    Id., 375–76. 9
         We note that Evans, Hull, and Rivera were not cited by either the
    petitioner or the respondent in their appellate briefs.
    10
    Even if the habeas court had relied solely on the prejudice prong, it
    was not required to review every word of the criminal trial transcript. The
    criminal trial court struck from the record, and instructed the jury to ignore,
    Wilson’s testimony that she recently had learned that the victim was on
    the telephone with his mother at the time of the shooting. Additionally,
    Mastronardi later cross-examined Wilson on this topic. The habeas court
    was aware of these facts because they were included in the portions of the
    criminal trial transcript attached to the petitioner’s pretrial brief, which the
    habeas court read. Accordingly, the habeas court was not required to review
    the remainder of the criminal trial transcript because the portions of the
    transcript that the habeas court did read established that any harm caused
    by Mastronardi’s conduct was cured by the trial court’s instructions to the
    jury and Mastronardi’s cross-examination of Wilson.
    11
    General Statutes § 52-143 provides in relevant part: ‘‘(a) Subpoenas for
    witnesses shall be signed by the clerk of the court or a commissioner of
    the Superior Court and shall be served by an officer, [or] indifferent person
    . . . . The subpoena shall be served not less than eighteen hours prior to
    the time designated for the person summoned to appear, unless the court
    orders otherwise. . . .
    (e) If any person summoned by the state, or by the Attorney General or
    an assistant attorney general, or by any public defender or assistant public
    defender acting in his official capacity, by a subpoena containing the state-
    ment as provided in subsection (d) of this section, or if any other person
    upon whom a subpoena is served to appear and testify in a cause pending
    before any court and to whom one day’s attendance and fees for traveling
    to court have been tendered, fails to appear and testify, without reasonable
    excuse, he shall be fined not more than twenty-five dollars and pay all
    damages to the party aggrieved; and the court or judge, on proof of the
    service of a subpoena containing the statement as provided in subsection
    (d) of this section, or on proof of the service of a subpoena and the tender
    of such fees, may issue a capias directed to some proper officer to arrest
    the witness and bring him before the court to testify. . . .’’
    12
    We note that the petitioner alleged during oral argument to this court
    that the habeas court refused to listen to the voice mail on two occasions.
    The record, however, does not support this contention. The petitioner never
    requested that the habeas court listen to the voice mail or that it mark
    the voice mail as an exhibit. Furthermore, the petitioner admitted at oral
    argument to this court that his habeas counsel did not discuss the contents
    of the voice mail in any depth at the habeas trial.