The facts necessary for an understanding of our decision may be set forth in abbreviated and simplified form. The plaintiffs in the instant action for a declaratory judgment had been made defendants in a pending action which was instituted by some of the present defendants. The pending action, in essence, sought an accounting, the imposition of a constructive trust, and damages from the present plaintiffs as the executrices, trustees and distributees under the will of Franklin Starr Jerome. In the pending action, it was alleged that Jerome, during his lifetime, individually and as a trustee of trusts created under the will of George E. Matthies, wrongfully appropriated to his own *425 use funds of these trusts and of Delaware and Connecticut corporations in which the trusts had an interest. The plaintiffs in the pending action included the present trustees of certain of the trusts, which may be referred to as the Matthies trusts, and also the Seymour Manufacturing Company, a Connecticut corporation.
The present plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment as to certain issues in the pending action. These issues are, in effect, whether a receiver or trustee appointed by the chancery courts of Delaware is the only person entitled to bring such an action as the pending one, as far as the assets of the Delaware corporations are concerned, and whether the plaintiff trustees in the pending action had been legally appointed, so as to be entitled, as trustees, to maintain that action. Another claim for a declaratory judgment was conditioned on the rendition of a declaratory judgment adverse to the present plaintiffs on one or both of the foregoing issues. If the plaintiffs are not entitled to a declaratory judgment on those issues, this claim need not be considered. In a final claim for relief, a temporary injunction was sought against the prosecution of the pending action until the final determination of this declaratory judgment action.
The court refused to grant a temporary injunction and thereafter sustained demurrers interposed by the defendants. On the plaintiffs’ failure to plead over, judgment was rendered for the defendants. From this judgment the plaintiffs have appealed. The basic question to be determined is whether the court was in error in sustaining the demurrers. The plaintiffs incorporated, as exhibit A in their complaint, the complaint in the pending action and also, as exhibit B, a settlement agree
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ment between certain of the present defendants which purported to assign the Jerome claims to trusts administered by the plaintiff trustees in the pending action. The two exhibits became part of the complaint in this action; Practice Book §41; and must be so treated in the determination of the demurrers.
Utley
v.
Nolan,
As in the case of complaints in general, a complaint in a declaratory judgment action must contain allegations sufficient to show that the plaintiff is entitled to the declaratory judgment sought, under § 52-29 of the General Statutes as implemented by Practice Book §§ 276 and 277.
Lipson
v.
Bennett,
The fundamental question presented here is one of alternative remedies.
1
This question must be determined, on attack by demurrer, on the basis of the allegations of the complaint.
Wexler Construction Co.
v.
Housing Authority,
The instant action seeks much more than a determination of the effect, as res judicata, of a judgment in another action, as was the case in
Connecticut Savings Bank
v.
First National Bank & Trust Co.,
supra, 405. Indeed, it goes far beyond any mere claim for a declaratory judgment determining some question connected with, or growing out of, another action. See cases such as
Lloyd
v.
Weir,
The general rule is given in an annotation in
As pointed out in cases such as
Connecticut Savings Bank
v.
First National Bank & Trust Co.,
The plaintiffs claim that the court could reasonably conclude that the issues presented in this case should be tried separately from other issues in the pending action, and that the court could, in the exercise of a sound discretion, entertain an action for a declaratory judgment to determine the merits of the issues here presented. The basis of this claim is that these issues could not be effectively adjudicated in the pending action prior to trial on the merits, and that to hear all the issues together would unduly complicate and prolong the trial of the pending action.
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The court in the pending action could, if the present plaintiffs show that it is desirable so to do, and properly raise the two issues in their pleadings (General Statutes §52-93), sever these issues and dispose of them first. General Statutes § 52-205; Practice Book § 145. Indeed, if the plaintiffs’ claims regarding the dispositive character of these issues are sound, and a severance is obtained, the plaintiffs could appeal from an adverse judgment on these issues prior to a trial or adjudication of the other issues in the case. Practice Book §380. Especially in the light of this available procedure, the complaint clearly lacks allegations of exceptional circumstances on which the court could, in the exercise of a sound discretion, entertain the instant action for a declaratory judgment. See
Lipson
v.
Bennett,
Each of the defendants, by demurrer, has attacked the complaint on the ground discussed. The court was not in error in sustaining each of the demurrers. Whether the defendants could have raised the same claims in any other manner, as by a plea in abatement on the ground of another action pending, is a matter not before us. See cases such as
Phillips
v.
Moeller,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“[Practice Book] Sec. 277. conditions [to rendition of declaratory judgments]. The superior court and the court of common pleas will not render declaratory judgments: . . . (e) where the court shall be of the opinion that the parties should be left to seek redress by some other form of procedure . . . .”
