Defendant Knapp was the proprietor' of a bowling alley in the city of Cherokee, and his co-defendant was the owner of the building in which the alley was conducted. It is claimed that Knapp, in his said place of business, kept for sale and sold intoxicating liquors, contrary to law. The owner was made a party, and she is charged with having had knowledge, at all times, of the matters complained of. After a trial on the merits, the court found the place to be a nuisance, for that intoxicating liquors w.ere sold and kept for sale therein, and a decree was entered, abating the nuisance, ordering the building closed for the period of one year, and taxing the costs, as well as an attorney’s fee, to the defendants'.
This is quite a different proposition from the one now under consideration. The one we have here is this: Should an order for the destruction of the liquors, made by a justice, and the appeal of that proceeding to the district court, be held to abate an action brought in equity to have the premises declared to be a nuisance, because of the sale, or the keeping .therein for sale, of intoxicating liquor, contrary to law? We think this question is answered by Sanders v. State, 2 Iowa 230, wherein it is held that a personal conviction for the crime of selling liquor, is not a bar to the destruction of the liquors under a search warrant. Moreover, the defendants might have been enjoined in this ease, because of having kept for sale, or sold, other intoxicating liquors than those taken under the search warrant. Moreover, the action pending was not between the same parties, nor were the. issues tendered necessarily the same.' This action is a civil one, to enjoin a nuisance, and the search-warrant proceeding was a criminal, or quasi criminal, one; and the general rule is that, because of diversity of parties and objects, the pendency of one cannot be pleaded in abatement of the other. Barton v. Faherty, 3 G. Gr. 327. Again, the relief sought in a prior action must, in general, be substantially the same as that sought in the subsequent suit, in
4 The decree should be modified to the extent of taxing the costs to defendant Knapp alone, and in other respects it is affirmed. — Modified and Affirmed.