Citation Numbers: 443 Mass. 1016, 823 N.E.2d 1247, 2005 Mass. LEXIS 102
Filed Date: 3/16/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
Prior to filing the present petition, the petitioner filed a habeas corpus petition in the Superior Court. In the proceeding on that petition, the petitioner advanced substantially the same arguments and sought the same or similar relief as before this court. Indeed, the gravamen of the present petition is that the Superior Court judge erred in dismissing the petition that the petitioner filed in that court.
Moreover, even if we were to construe the petition before us as seeking a writ of habeas corpus, the single justice properly could have denied relief because the petitioner failed to establish that he is “eligible for immediate release from the respondents’ custody.” Hennessy v. Superintendent, Mass.
Judgment affirmed.
The petitioner’s notice of appeal characterized the single justice’s judgment as denying relief from an interlocutory ruling on May 2, 2001, and from a petition for habeas corpus denied on August 25, 2000, by a Superior Court judge. The propriety of the Superior Court judge’s action was the subject of Pridgett, petitioner, 57 Mass. App. Ct. 1114 (2003).
The Appeals Court’s docket reflects the filing of a “notice of appeal” more than thirty-five days after that court’s decision, and seven days after rescript had issued to the Superior Court. A copy of that document was not included in the materials before the single justice and we have no way of gouging whether it was intended to be an application for further appellate review.
To the extent the petitioner sought an order compelling the Superior Court judge to enter a particular order, the single justice properly denied the petition. Relief in the nature of mandamus “will not issue to direct a judicial officer to make a particular decision or to review, or reverse, a decision made by a judicial officer on an issue properly before him or her.” Callahan v. Superior Court, 410 Mass. 1001, 1001 (1991).
Although the petitioner sought oral argument and a hearing on the petition, and filed a petition in the county court for a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum to that end, he was not entitled to such a hearing. See Ye v. Commonwealth, 441 Mass. 1010, 1011 n.1 (2004).