The plaintiffs herein have brought this action for a declaratory judgment to determine whether a tax-formula provision adopted by the defendant common council of the city of Danbury on April 18, 1974, under the consolidation ordinance of the city is valid and binding. The defendants have filed a motion for summary judgment on the ground that the issues raised are already res judicata as a result of a Superior Court decision inPelc v. Danbury.1 The defendants argue that the complaint in the instant case is substantially the same as in the Pelc case and that all the material issues of fact and law are identical in the two cases. They further claim that the Pelc case was prosecuted as a class action under §
The decision herein must rest on the applicability of the doctrine of res judicata. As is pointed out in Corey v. Avco-Lycoming Division,
The focal question, therefore, is whether the decision in the Superior Court case relied on, Pelc
v. Danbury, constituted a valid and final judgment. That decision was appealed to our Supreme Court.Pelc v. Danbury,
The principle of res judicata does not control the question whether the judgment pleaded in bar is in fact a legal and final judgment. State v. Langley,
This court deems itself bound to follow the clear directive of the decision of our Supreme Court in *Page 359 Pelc v. Danbury,
Motion for summary judgment denied.
