after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error prosecutes the present writ of error to review and reverse this decision of the Supreme Court of Georgia, claiming that in its rendition a right, privilege or immunity secured to him under the Constitution and laws of the United States, specially set up and insisted on, was denied. The particular right claimed to have been denied is the alleged exemption from indictment and trial except for the-specific offences on which he had been surrendered.
The question presented for our consideration and determination is whether the Constitution and laws of the United States impose any such limitation or restriction upon the power and authority of a State to indict and try persons charged with offences against its laws, who are brought within its jurisdiction under interstate rendition proceedings. While cases involving questions of international extradition and interstate rendition of fugitives from justice have frequently been before this court for decision, this court has not .passed upon the precise point here .presented. The second clause of Section 2, Article 4 of the Constitution of the United States declares that “a person charged in any State .with treason, felony or other crime, who shall flee from justice and be found in another State, shall, on demand of the executive authority of the State from which he fled, be delivered up, to be removed to the State having jurisdiction of the crime.” To carry this provision into effect Congress passed the act of February 12, 1793, 1 Stat. 392, c. 7, the first and second sections of which have been re-enacted and embodied in sections 5278 and‘5279 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, prescribing the methods of procedure on the part of *541 the State demanding the surrender of the fugitive, and providing that “it shall be the duty of the executive authority of the State or Territory to which such person has fled to cause him to be arrested and secured, and cause notice of the arrest to be given to the executive authority making such demand, or to the agent of such authority appointed to receive the fugitive, and to cause the fugitive to be delivered to such agent when he shall appear,” and providing further that the agent “so appointed, who shall receive the fugitive into his custody, shall be empowered to transport him to the State or Territory from which he has fled.”
Upon these provisions of the organic and statutory law of the United States rest exclusively the right of one State to demand, and the obligation of the other State upon which the demand is made to surrender, a fugitive from justice. Now, the proposition advanced on behalf of the plaintiff in error in support of the federal right claimed to have been denied him is, that, inasmuch as interstate rendition can only be effected when the person demanded as a fugitive from justice is duly charged with some particular offence, or offences, his surrender -upon such demand carries with it the implied condition that he is to be tried
alone
for the designated crime, and that in respect to all offences other than those specified in the demand for his surrender, he has the same right of exemption as a fugitive from justice extradited from a foreign nation. This proposition assumes, as is broadly claimed, that the States of the Union are independent governments, having the full prerogatives and powers of nations, except what have been" conferred upon the general government, and not’only have-the right to grant, but do, in fact, afford to all persons within their boundaries ah asylum as broad and secure as that which independent nations extend over their citizens and inhabitants. .Having reached,’upon this assumption or by this process of reasoning, the conclusion that the same rule should be rec-. ognized and applied in interstate rendition as in foreign extradition of fugitives from justice, the decision of this court in
United States
v. Rauscher,
The case of
United States
v.
Rauscher,
In the case of
Mahon
v.
Justice,
If a fugitive may be kidnapped or unlawfully abducted from the State or country of refuge, and be, thereafter, tried in the State to which he is forcibly carried, without violating any right or immunity secured to him by the Constitution and laws of the United State's, it is difficult to understand upon what sound principle can be rested the denial 'of a State’s authority or jurisdiction to try him for another or different offence than that for which he was surrendered. If the fugitive be regarded ■ as not lawfully within the limits of the State in respect to any other crime than the one on which his surrender was effected, still that fact does not defeat the jurisdiction of its courts to try Mm for other offences, any more than if' he "had been brought within such jurisdiction forcibly and without any legal process whatever.
We are not called upon in the present case to consider what, if any, authority the surrendering State has over the subject of the fugitive’s rendition, beyond ascertaining that he is charged with crime in the State from which he has fled, nor whether the States have any jurisdiction to legislate upon the subject, and we express no opinion on these questions. To apply the rule of international or foreign extradition, as announced in
United States
v. Rauscher,
There are decisions in the state courts and in some of the lower federal courts which have applied tbe rule laid down in United States v. Rauscher, supra, to interstate rendition of fugitives under the Constitution and laws of the United States, but in. our opinion they do not rest upon sound principle, and are not supported by the weight of judicial authority.
The cases holding the other and sounder view, that a fugitive from justice surrendered by one State upon the demand of another, is not protected from prosecution for offences other than that for which he was rendered up, but may, after being restored to the demanding State, be lawfully tried and punished for any and all crimes committed within its territorial jurisdiction, either before or after extradition, are the following:
In re Noyes, 11
Albany L. J. 407;
Ham
v.
The State,
[Texas,] 4 Tex. App. 645;
State ex rel. Brown v. Stewart,
60 Wisconsin, 587;
Post
v.
Cross,
These authorities are followed by the Supreme Court of Georgia in the clear opinión pronounced by Lumpkin, Justice, in the present case.
The highest courts of the two States immediately or more directly interested in the case under consideration hold the same rule on this subject.', The plaintiff in error does not bear in his person the alleged sovereignty of the State of New York, from which he was remanded, Dow's Case, 18 Penn. St. 37, but if he did, that State properly recognizes the jurisdiction of the State of Georgia to try and punish him for any and all crimes committed within its territory. But aside from this, it would be a useless and idle procedure to. require the State having custody of the alleged criminal to return him to the State by which he was rendered up in order to go through the formality of again demanding his extradition for the new or additional offences on which it desired to prosecute him. The Constitution and laws of the United States impose no *547 such condition or requirement upon the State. Our conclusion is that, upon a fugitive’s surrender to the State demanding his return in pursuance of national law, he may be tried in the State to which he is returned for any other offence than that specified in the requisition for his rendition, and that in so trying him against his objection no right, privilege or immunity secured to him by the Constitution and laws of the United States is thereby denied.
' It follows, therefore, that the judgment in the present case should be
Affirmed.
