The only variance between the indictment and the proof was the absence of evidence tending to sustain the allegation of a prior conviction. Omitting this allegation, the indictment charged an offence which was sustained by the evidence. The allegations were several; sufficient being proved to establish an offence alleged in the indictment, the respondent was properly convicted of the offence proved.
State
v.
Small,
64 N. H. 491, 492;
State
v.
Thornton,
63 N. H. 114, 115;
State
v.
Webster,
39 N. H. 96;
State
v.
Dorr,
The amount of liquors on hand, thе place, the defendant’s store for the sale of goods, the action of the clerk when he saw the officers, the payment of a tax as a retail dealer, which was not required if the liquors were kept only for use in compоunding medicines (R. S. U. S., s. 3246), are facts tending to establish that the liquors found were not kept merely for the defendant’s personal use or solely for compounding medicines (P. S., c. 135, s. 9), but were kept for sale. The motions to quash the indictment and to direct a verdict for the defendant were properly denied.
The only exception remaining which it is necessary to consider is that taken to the admission in evidence of the fact that May 15, 1899, the defendant pleaded nolo contendere to a charge of kеeping spirit for sale at the same place. Proof that the respondent has previously committed or been charged with the commission of a *437 crime similar to that for which he is on trial is not evidence of his guilt of the crime in question. State v. Lapage, 57 N. H. 245. But thе fact that the evidence discloses the commission of other crimes does not render it incompetent if it has some tendency to prove a material fact in issue. State v. Palmer, 65 N. H. 216, 218.
The intent with which the spirituous liquors found upon the defendant’s premises were there kept was a material question at the trial. Any evidence otherwise competent having probative force upon this issue was relevant. “ Where there is a question whether a particular act was done, the еxistence of any course of business according to which it naturally would have been done is a relevant fact.”
Hall
v.
Brown,
58 N. H. 93, 96. Evidence that the respondent kept ale for sale in his house at a certain time is competent on the questiоn whether spirit kept there then was kept for sale.
State
v.
Gorman,
58 N. H. 77. Evidence of prior sales to others is competent on the question whether the respondent sold to A.
State
v.
Welch,
64 N. H. 525;
State
v.
Shaw,
58 N. H. 73. Upon the trial of a complaint for keeping spirituous liquors with intent to sell thе same, evidence of sales of other spirituous liquors at the same place is competent.
State
v.
Raymond,
In Philpot v. State, 65 N. H. 250, the defendant had been released upon a suspended sentence, upon condition that he should not engage in the illegal business of selling liquor, of which he had been convicted, and it was held upon the authorities above cited that his conviction upon a plea of nolo contendere to an indictment charging the illegal beeping of liquor for sale, at a time subsequent to his fоrmer sentence, was evidence from which his non-performance of the condition could be inferred. If this conclusion can be sustained upon the ground upon which it was apparently placed, it is decisive upon the present question. Read in the light of the authorities cited, to which reference has been made, the decision seems to have been placed upon the ground that from the conviction upon the plea of nolo the inference may bе drawn that the defendant would not have pleaded nolo and suffered a judgment of conviction unless he had in fact been guilty; and hence the decision appears to construe this plea as an admission of the truth of the facts charged for other purposes than the case in which it was made. In the case at bar, evidence that upon some date other than the day in question, considered not too remote by the trial court, the defendant kept the same or similar liquors at the same place, with guilty intent, would be competent as tending to prove the liquors then there were so kept. An admission by the defendant of the intent with which he kept such liquors at the prior date would be evidence against him. In this
*438
сase there was no evidence of a judgment of conviction against the defendant if one was had, and the only question is whether the plea of'
nolo
is an admission of the truth of the facts charged. That it is, appears to have been assumed without examination by the court in
Philpot
v.
State.
So far as the proceedings upon the indictment itself, and the results dependent upon the judgment which follow from a conviction, a plea of
nolo contendere
has the same legal effect as a plea of guilty.
State
v.
Fagan,
64 N. H. 431;
United States
v.
Hartwell,
3 Clif. 221;
Commonwealth
v.
Horton,
There is no evidence that any meaning is now attached to the entries “guilty,” or that the defendant “will not contend with the state,” differing from those described by Hawkins and CHitty. Modern cases attach the same meaning.
Commonwealth
v.
Horton,
If Laltose were sued for damages under the statute (P. S., C. 112, ss. 31, 32), it is clear according to the authorities that evi *440 dence of Ms plea of nolo to' a complaint for selling the liquor wMeh caused the damage would be no more competent than his conviction upon a plea of not guilty to the same complaint. If the plea is not cоmpetent between different parties because it is only a limited admission of the charge, the admission is not made unlimited by a change of parties. The admission must be one tiling or the other when made. Its character at the time determines its meaning, not the use attempted to be afterward made of it. It cannot mean one thing m a subsequent civil suit for damages, and another thmg in a subsequent proceeding by the state. The competency of an admission does not depend upon its being made to a party to the suit. If it were an unlimited admission, it would be evidence against the defendant in all subsequent controversies. It is settled by the authorities that it is not. Therefore, there being no ground for an estoppel, the plеa can have no greater effect in a proceeding to wMch the state is a party than in a civil suit, and it is therefore inadmissible against the defendant. If it is claimed that it is improbable that a party would plead nolo and submit to punishment unless conscious of guilt, the argument is no more than can be made in favor of the admission of any proposition for compromise, “ because such offers are more apt to be made in cases in which the party making them is conscious that the cause of Ms adversary is well-founded than in the opposite cases.” Rideout v. Newton, 17 N. H. 71, 73; Colburn v. Groton, 66 N. H. 151.
An adjudication of the defendant’s intent in May, 1899, upon a plea of not guilty, by a judgment of conviction, might render the fact res judieata and the judgment admissible upon that ground (Winnipiseogee etc. Co. v. Laconia, 68 N. H. 284); and it may be that, upon judgment of conviction upon a plea of nolo contendere, the facts charged in the indictment would also become res judicata between the same parties so as to be proved by the judgment (State v. Collins, 68 N. H. 299, 302), though the question is at least debatable. The present case, however, presents no opportunity for determining whether the conclusion in Philpot v. State can be sustained upon the latter ground, or of considering either question. The plea of nolo can be sustained as evidence in this case only upon the ground that it was an unlimited admission of ' the facts charged in the indictment. The investigation shows that, contrary to the apparent assumption in Philpot v. State, such is not the effect or meaning of the plea. That decision, therefore, cannot be now followed. The error vitiates the verdict, for the evidence had a plain tendency to prejudice the defendant; and although the remaining evidence has been found sufficient to authorize a finding of an intent to sell, such fact is neither con *441 ceded nor conclusively proved by the other evidence in the case. Cutler v. Railroad, 69 N. H. 641, 642. The verdict therefore must be set aside.
The first two exceptions considered are overruled; the third is sustained.
Verdict set aside.
