The learned district court rendered its judgment with obvious reluctance. That reluctance appears both in its opinion and in the colloquies. It felt itself bound, however, by the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of Coffey v. United States,
We think that the particular facts of the principal case give us the necessary loophole and in so thinking we must disagree with the learned distriсt judge. The action is a libel for forfeiture. The chattel to be punished is a Dodge automobile. Its crime, or so it is charged, is that of acting as convoy for another car engaged in the illicit transportation of alcohol. The Dodge was driven by one Palermo. That gentleman was indicted and tried for his role as “convoy officer”. A jury expressed their belief in his innocence. Encоuraged perhaps thereby a defense of the car is made. That defense is partly factual and partly legal. It consists оf a reliance first on the absence of untaxed spirits in the car and second on the acquittal of the driver Palermo. The defense is entered, as it must be, by the person claiming ownership of the accused chattel. This person is the wife of the acquittеd driver. The government denies the wife’s ownership and ascribes it to her husband. The jury has voted in favor of forfeiture.
The traditional "day in court” affords a hearing. The limitation of that day to one day, so to speak, affords protection from harassment. So the сourts recognize the need for preventing successive litigations of the same issue between the same parties. They havе embodied that need in two doctrines, former jeopardy, 3 and res judicata. They are mutually inclusive in some instances and mutually exclusive in others. As the maxim indicates, the plea of double jeopardy requires an offence identical in law and fact. We need not concern ourselves here with various complications that have surrounded this question of identity. 4 It is clear that *554 where there is no such identity a defеndant may still suffer harassment from the attempted retrial of an issue vital to the state’s case already decided adversely tо it. It is here that the plea of res judicata supplements that of former jeopardy. 5 Of course, double jeopardy cоvers conviction as well as acquittal.
The application of these general ideas to the case of a criminal prosecution followed by a civil suit has not been easy. Its difficulty has been enhanced by considerable confusion in the authorities. There has been a tendency to vacillate between jeopardy and judicata, between the charactеr of the charge and the character of the proof. Some cases emphasize the remedial nature of the second action. Murphy v. United States,
As we have said, the Coffey case has not been expressly overruled. It is neverthеless left in a tenuous position. A prior conviction has been held not to bar forfeiture, Various Articles of Personal Propеrty v. United States,
The judgment of the District Court is reversed.
Notes
Criminal Daw — Acquittal on Charge of Maintaining Nuisance is No Bar to Subsequent Suit in Equity to Abate Same Nuisance, 13 Virginia Daw Review 410; Multiple Punishment Under the Double Jeopardy Rule, 31 Columbia Dаw Review 291; Prior Conviction as a Bar to a Civil Suit to Collect a Penalty, 40 Yale Daw Journal 1319 (note); Criminal Daw — Former Jeopardy — Conviction for False Return of Income No Bar to Civil Action for Penalty, 47 Harvard Daw Review 1438; McDaren, Res Judicata in Criminal Cases, 10 Washington Daw Rеview 198; Statutory Penalties — A Degal Hybrid, 51 Harvard Daw Review 1092; Internal Revenue — Former Jeopardy' — Acquittal in Criminal Prosecution as a Bar to Suit for Fraud Penalty, 22 Minnesota Daw Review 1054; Constitutional DawDouble Jeopardy — Acquittal in Prior Criminal Prosecution as Bar to Action for Penalties Based in Fraud, 37 Michigan Daw Review 647; Res Judicata as a Plea in Bar in Criminal Prosecutions, 25 Virginia Daw Review 839 (note).
Stone v. United States,
Nemo debet bis puniri pro uno delicto.
The cases are collected in Multiple Punishment Under the Double Jeopardy Rule, 31 Columbia Daw Review 291, above cited; Prior Conviction as a Bаr to a Civil Suit to Collect a Penalty, 40 Yale Daw Journal 1319, 1821 (note;, above cited.
Res Judicata as a Plea in Bar in Criminal Prosecutions, 25 Virginia Law Review 839, 840 (note), above cited.
“Moreover, depositions may be introduced in evidence, notwithstanding the Sixth Amendment which would entitle the defendant to be confronted with the witnesses against him, if the suit were a criminal one, United States v. Zucker,
In Coffey v. United States,
