delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thomas Murphy and Vincent Murphy were tried for maintaining a nuisance in violation of Section 21, Title II of the National Prohibition Act, (October 28, 1919, c. 85; 41 St. 305, 314,) and were acquitted. Subsequently the United States brought a suit in equity to abate the same alleged nuisance under § 22 of the same Title. At the trial the defendants proved their former acquittal and *631 moved that the bill be dismissed. The District Court denied the motion and entered a decree abating the nuisance and enjoining the defendants from occupying or using the premises for one year. The defendants appealed; The Circuit Court of Appeals certified to this Court the question whether the former acquittal is a bar.
By § 21 any room, house, or place where intoxicating liquor is manufactured, sold, or kept in violation of the statute is declared to be a common nuisance, and maintaining it is made a misdemeanor punishable by fine, imprisonment, or both. Then follows the section under which the defendants now are sued, authorizing a suit in' equity for an. injunction against the nuisance as defined. A temporary writ restraining the continuance of it until the conclusion of the trial is to be issued if it is made to appear to the satisfaction of the court or judge in vacation that such nuisance exists. It is not necessary for the court to find that the. property was being unlawfully used at the time of the hearing, but on finding that the material allegations of the petition are true, the court ‘ shall order ’ that no liquor shall bq manufactured, sold, or stored, &c., in the place; and upon judgment that the nuisance be abated, * may order ’ that the place shall not be occupied or used for one year thereafter, but may permit it to be occupied if the owner or occupant gives a bond for not less than $500 nor more than $1,000, that intoxicating liquor will not thereafter be manufactured, sold, or kept, &c., therein, &c.
The appellants say that an additional penalty is imposed by § 22, and that after they have been acquitted of the crime they cannot be punished for it in a second proceeding.
Coffey
v.
United States,
If we are right as to the purpose of § 22 the decree in the present case did not impose a punishment for the crime from which the appellants were acquitted by the former judgment. That it did impose a punishment is the only ground on which the former judgment would be a bar. For although the parties to theUwo cases are the same, the judgment in the criminal case does not make the issues in the present one
res judicata,
as is sufficiently explained in
Stone
v.
United States,
Answer: No.
