We need not inquire whether the defendant’s plea of
nolo contendere
would be admissible evidence against Kim in a suit between him and some other party than the state. In a suit brought against him by his lessor for selling intoxicating liquor in violation of covenant, the plaintiff would not be bound by the defendant’s acquittal in a criminal prosecution for the same act. In this. case, the parties are the. same as in the case in which the judgment was rendered; and the decisive thing is not the former plea, but the former judgment. The judgment recovered by the state is not a compromise in the sense of being something less than a conviction. It could have been rendered on no other
*433
ground than the defendant’s guilt. It would be invalid if the. record showed that he was not guilty, or that the question of his guilt had not been determined against him by plea or by proof. His plea was an implied confession of the offence charged. His guilt was a “necessary legal inference from the implied confession.”
Com.
v. Horton,
Exceptions overruled.
