The following opinions were filed January 12, 1927:
Rosenberry, J.The primary question raised in this case is the validity of sec. 85.15, sub. (3), Statutes of 1925. That section provides:
“The use and operation by a nonresident of a motor vehicle over the highways of Wisconsin shall be deemed an appointment by such nonresident of the secretary of state to be his true and lawful attorney upon whom may be served all legal processes in any action or proceeding against him, growing out of such use or operation resulting in damage or loss to person or property, and said use or operation shall, be a signification of his agreement that any such process ágainst him which is so served shall be of the same legal *149force and validity as if served on him personally. Service of such process shall be made by serving a copy upon the secretary of state or by filing such copy in his office, together with a fee of two dollars, and such service shall be sufficient service upon the said nonresident; provided, that notice of such service and a copy of the process are within ten days thereafter sent by mail by the plaintiff to the defendant, at his last known address, and that the plaintiff’s affidavit of compliance herewith is appended to the summons. The court in which the action is pending may order such continuances as may be necessary to afford the defendant reasonable opportunity to defend the action, not exceeding ninety days from the date of the filing of the action in such court. The fee of two dollars paid by the plaintiff to the secretary of state at the time of the service shall be taxed in his costs if he prevails in the suit. The secretary of state shall keep a record of all such processes which shall show the day and hour of service.”
The statute is assailed upon the ground that it violates the doctrine laid down in Pennoyer v. Neff (1877), 95 U. S. 714, because it enables a resident of the state of Wisconsin to secure a valid personal service upon a person residing and remaining beyond the territorial limits of the state of Wisconsin; second, that if it be held valid in other respects it is discriminatory, in that it denies to nonresidents upon whom service has been made under the statute the equal protection of the laws, in that it limits the time during which continuances may be granted to ninety days from the date of the filing of the action in the court in which it is begun, whereas resident litigants are not so limited, their right to a continuance resting solely in the discretion of the court.
We shall dispose of the second proposition first. It seems quite clear that the provision of the statute limiting continuance to ninety days cannot stand. It is discriminatory and denies to nonresidents rights and privileges enjoyed by residents under the same or similar circumstances upon no other ground than that they are nonresidents. The courts of Wis*150consin having once obtained jurisdiction of the person of a nonresident defendant, we perceive no reason why his right to a continuance should rest upon different grounds than the rights of residents. It must be held invalid. Ballard v. Hunter (1907), 204 U. S. 241, 27 Sup. Ct. 261. However, if that clause be stricken out, what remains makes a consistent workable scheme for carrying out the principal legislative purpose. The ninety-days provision cannot be considered as an inducement’ for the enactment of the remainder of the statute, and the provision must be held separable and the remainder of the act may stand provided it is in other respects a valid enactment. Lynch v. Steamer Economy, 27 Wis. 69; State ex rel. Williams v. Sawyer County, 140 Wis. 634, 123 N. W. 248.
It is argued with much skill and persuasiveness that the statute is in violation of constitutional' limitations as laid down in Pennoyer v. Neff, supra. It is there said:
“Where the entire object of the action is to determine the personal rights and obligations of the defendants, that is, where the suit is merely in personam, constructive service in this form upon a nonresident is ineffectual for any purpose. Process from the tribunals of one state cannot run into another state, and summon parties there domiciled to leave its territory and respond to proceedings against them. Publication of process or notice within the state where the tribunal sits cannot create any greater obligation upon the nonresident to appear. Process sent to him out of the state, and process published within it, are equally unavailing in proceedings to establish his personal liability.”
It is argued that this proposition is further supported by Flexner v. Farson (1918), 248 U. S. 289, 39 Sup. Ct. 97. In that case a personal judgment was rendered in Kentucky against two nonresident partners doing business in that state. Service of process was not made upon them personally but upon an agent in charge of their business in Kentucky, in accordance with the terms of a statute permitting such service. It was argued by counsel for the plaintiff in that case that *151defendants, by voluntarily coming within the state to do business, consented to be bound by service made in accordance with the provisions of the Kentucky statutes. The court said:
“It is argued that the pleas tacitly admit that Washington Flexner was agent of the firm at the time of the transaction sued upon in Kentucky, and the Kentucky statute is construed as purporting to make him agent to receive service in suits arising out of the business done in that state. On this construction it is said that the defendants, by doing business in the state, consented to be bound by the service prescribed. The analogy of suits against insurance companies based upon such service is invoked. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Asso. v. Phelps, 190 U. S. 147, 23 Sup. Ct. 707, 47 L. Ed. 987. But the consent that is said to be implied in such cases is a mere fiction, founded upon the accepted doctrine that the states could exclude foreign corporations altogether, and therefore could establish this obligation as á condition to letting them in. Lafayette Ins. Co. v. French, 18 How. 404, 15 L. Ed. 451; Pennsylvania F. Ins. Co. v. Gold Issue M. & M. Co. 243 U. S. 93, 96, 37 Sup. Ct. 344, 61 L. Ed. 610, 616. The state had no power to exclude the defendants, and on that ground, without going farther, the supreme court of Illinois rightly held that the analogy failed, and that the Kentucky judgment was void.” See, also, Baker v. Baker, Eccles & Co. 242 U. S. 394, 37 Sup. Ct. 152.
We should find it very difficult to answer the arguments of plaintiff’s counsel here were it not for Hendrick v. Maryland, 235 U. S. 610, 35 Sup. Ct. 140, and Kane v. New Jersey (1916), 242 U. S. 160, 37 Sup. Ct 30. The New Jersey automobile law of 1908 provided in substance that no person, whether a resident or nonresident of the state, should drive an automobile upon a public highway unless he had been licensed so to do and the automobile had been registered under the statute; and also that a nonresident owner should appoint the secretary of state his attorney upon whom process may be served “in any action or legal proceeding caused by the operation of his registered motor vehicle within that *152state against such owner.” The statute fixed the driver’s license fee for cars of less than thirty horse power at $2 and more than thirty horse power at $4. It fixed the registration fee at $3 for cars of not more than ten horse power; $5 for those from eleven to twenty-nine horse power, and $10 for those of thirty or greater horse power. The proceeds of the license fees were applied first to the maintenance of the motor vehicle department and then to the improvement of highways. Penalties were prescribed for using the public highways without complying with the statute. Kane, a resident of New York, had been duly licensed as a driver under the laws of both New York and New Jersey; he had registered his car in New York but not in New Jersey; he had not filed'with the secretary of state of New Jersey the prescribed instrument appointing that official his attorney upon whom process might be served. When arrested he was on his-way from New York to Pennsylvania. Kane contended that the statute was invalid as to him, a nonresident, because it violated the constitution and laws of the United States regulating interstate commerce and also because it violated the Fourteenth amendment. Both contentions were overruled, he was convicted, and the conviction affirmed. See Kane v. State, 81 N. J. L. 594, 80 Atl. 453, L. R. A. 1917 B, 553. Kane having been arrested within the state of New Jersey, the question presented here was not before the court in that case. The court held that under Hendrick v. Maryland, 235 U. S. 610, 35 Sup. Ct. 140, the power of a state to regulate the use of motor vehicles on its highways extended to nonresident as well as resident motorists; that it includes the right to exact compensation for special facilities afforded as well as reasonable provisions to insure safety. Speaking of reciprocal .legislation, the court said:
“But it is not an essential of valid regulation. Absence of it does not involve discrimination against nonresidents; *153for any resident similarly situated would be subjected to the same imposition.”
The court quoted with approval the following conclusion from Hendrick v. Maryland, supra:
“In the absence of national legislation covering the subject, a state may rightfully prescribe uniform regulations necessary for public safety and order in respect to the operation upon its highways of all motor vehicles — those moving in interstate commerce as well as others.”
And it was further held that the fact that the prescribed fee produced an amount largely in excess of the cost of administering the law, and was therefore a revenue act, did not make it invalid. It is established that a state may, in the exercise of its constitutional power, stop a foreign motorist at its boundaries and require him, as a condition of operating his motor vehicle upon the highways of the state, to pay a reasonable license fee, and as to controversies arising out of the operation of his motor vehicle within the state consent to be sued in the licensing state. While Flexner v. Farson, supra, holds that implied consent is based upon the power of the state to exclude and that without such power the fiction of consent cannot be indulged, we do not think it was intended by that decision to limit or overrule another line of cases in which it was held that power to regulate may also be a basis of jurisdiction over a nonresident, as held in Kane v. New Jersey. See Davis v. Farmers Co-operative E. Co. (1923), 262 U. S. 312, 316, 43 Sup. Ct. 556. The statute under consideration in Flexner v. Farson was not designed to regulate or affect the conduct of a nonresident. It made the mere presence of an agent in the state transacting business a basis of jurisdiction.
May a state provide that the voluntary entrance upon the highways of the state by a foreign motorist with his motor vehicle shall operate as a constructive consent to be sued within the state and to an appointment of the secretary of *154state as his attorney in fact upon whom service may be made in controversies arising out of the operation of his motor vehicle within the state? The supreme judicial court of Massachusetts, having under consideration a somewhat similar statute, reached the conclusion’ that a state might enact such a law and that it violated none of the constitutional guaranties. We shall not elaborate upon the reasons given by the Massachusetts court for its conclusion, in which we concur. Pawloski v. Hess, 250 Mass. 22, 144 N. E. 760, 35 A. L. R. 945. See, also, an interesting and helpful analysis of the cases by A. W. Scott, 39 Harvard Law Review, 563, under the title “Jurisdiction Over Nonresident Motorists.”
While the decision in the Massachusetts case rests upon the implied consent of the motorist, we see no reason why it may not, as Mr. Scott suggests, be supported upon another theory. In Smolik v. Philadelphia & R. C. & I. Co. 222 Fed. 148, Judge Learned Hand, in speaking of implied consent by a foreign corporation, said:
“When it is said that a foreign corporation will be taken to have consented to the appointment of an agent to accept service, the court does not mean that as a fact it has consented at all, because the corporation does not in fact consent; but the court, for purposes of justice, treats it as if it had. It is true that the consequences so imputed to it lie within its own control, since it need not do business within the state, but that is not equivalent to a consent; actually it might have •refused to appoint, and yet its refusal would make no difference. The court, in the interests of justice, imputes results to the voluntary act of doing business within the foreign state, quite independently of any intent.”
It is frequently said in the cases following Flexner v. Farson that the power of the state to impute legal consequences to an intentional act which the nonresident_ actor did not intend it should have, rests upon the power to prohibit entirely the doing of the act. This statement seems rather broader than the cases warrant.
*155In International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky, 234 U. S. 579, 34 Sup. Ct. 944, it was held that a foreign corporation doing a strictly interstate business and which could not for that reason be prohibited from coming within the state, nevertheless by the transaction of such interstate business was doing business within the state and was therefore subject to the jurisdiction of the state. The right of a nonresident motorist to drive an automobile on the highways of Wisconsin is afforded no higher or greater constitutional protection than is the right of a foreign corporation to transact interstate business within the state of Kentucky. If the doing of business in the one case may subject the foreign corporation to the laws of the state by way of substituted service where there has in fact been no consent, we perceive no reason why the driving of an automobile by a nonresident upon the highways of the licensing state may not have a like consequence. In International Harvester Co. v. Kentucky there was a substituted service. The company had expressly revoked the authority it had theretofore conferred upon a resident of that state to receive service and had limited itself to the transaction of a strictly interstate business; yet because it was doing business — interstate business within the state — the state of Kentucky could designate the person acting for the corporation and engaged in carrying on its interstate business as a proper person upon whom service might be made, and service made in accordance therewith was held valid. See International Harvester Co. v. Comm. (1912), 147 Ky. 655, 145 S. W. 393.
If the state may designate a person who falls within certain categories, but has in fact no authority from his principal to receive service, as a proper person upon whom service may be made, we see no reason why it may not likewise designate a publjc official as such person. The defendant no more consents in the one case than in the other. The statute does not attempt to provide a method for securing jurisdic*156tion over the person of the defendant in respect to controversies other than those which arise out of the operation of the automobile within the state. While it is true that constitutional rights may not be subordinated to administrative convenience, we perceive no just reason why a nonresident coming within the state, using the special facilities provided by the state and afforded the protection of its laws, may not be subjected to the jurisdiction of the state in respect to acts done by him in violation of its law and be compelled to respond in damages for wrongs done its citizens while within the state in the operation of his automobile.
But it is argued that if the Massachusetts act be valid, sec. 85.15, sub. (3), is still invalid because it charges the secretary of state with no responsibility for conveying to the defendant whose agent he is, any knowledge or information as to the service of process upon him. The provisions of the Massachusetts statute in that respect were as follows:
“Service of such process shall be made by leaving a copy of the process with a fee of two dollars in the hands of the registrar, or in his office, and such service shall be sufficient service upon the said nonresident; provided, that notice of such service and a copy of the process are forthwith sent by registered mail by the plaintiff to the defendant, and the defendant’s return receipt and the plaintiff’s affidavit of cpm-pliance herewith are appended to the writ and entered with the declaration.”
The Wisconsin statute provides:
“Service of such process shall be made by serving a copy upon the secretary of state or by filing such copy in his office, together with a fee of two dollars, and such service shall be sufficient service upon the said nonresident; provided, that notice of such service and a copy of the process are within ten days thereafter sent by mail by the plaintiff to the defendant, at his last known address, and that the plaintiff’s affidavit of compliance herewith is appended to the summons,”
*157(We regard the service by the plaintiff upon the defendant of a copy of the summons and complaint in the state of Illinois, such service not being required by the statute, as a fact that has no legal consequence so far as the present controversy is concerned.)
Whether a law which made no provision for giving the defendant actual notice as distinguished from the notice which he receives by substituted service upon his representative would be so little calculated to apprise the defendant of the true state of affairs as to be on that áccount unreasonable and void, we are not called upon to determine. While the power to regulate the conduct of the foreign motorist may constitutionally be made the basis of acquiring jurisdiction over his person, the law as a whole must be one reasonably calculated to give the defendant notice that the jurisdiction of a court of the licensing state has been invoked. In the case of foreign corporations, service on a duly authorized representative is service upon the principal, and if made in accordance with the law is legally equivalent to personal service upon the defendant.
In Flexner v. Parson, supra, it is held that the fiction of consent cannot be invoked as against an individual because the state has no power to prohibit the individual from coming within its jurisdiction. But as already intimated, power to prohibit is not the sole basis of jurisdiction. Power to regulate is a basis of jurisdiction of equal dignity, and if as an incident to the exercise of that power the licensing state requires the foreign motorist to submit himself to the jurisdiction of the state and provides for service upon him in a manner reasonably calculated to bring home to him notice of the pendency of the suit, the regulation is reasonable and valid. Kane v. New Jersey, supra. .
The law as enacted is calculated to give the defendant adequate notice of the pendency of the proceeding. We *158know of nothing more likely to apprise the defendant of the pendency of the action than the mailing of a copy of the summons and. complaint to his last known address. This must mean not his last address known to the plaintiff, but .plaintiff is required to ascertain at his peril the last known address of the defendant as a matter of fact, and his failure to do so will amount to a failure to comply with the statute and render the service invalid.
On behalf of the respondent it is argued that the appearance before the master in the state of Illinois amounted to a general appearance in the action and a waiver by petitioner of his right to object to the jurisdiction of the court. Petitioner came before the master in response to a subpoena which he was bound to obey. The tribunal in which he appeared had no jurisdiction to do anything else than to proceed to take the deposition of the witness. Appearance in such a tribunal under such circumstances cannot amount to a general appearance. The appearance must be in the action, and it may be by entry of record, by motion, plea or answer filed, by the making of a stipulation therein, and no doubt in other ways. Here the appearance was not in the action and did not amount to a general appearance. White v. White, 66 W. Va. 79, 66 S. E. 2, 24 L. R. A. n. s. 1279; Bents v. Eubanks, 32 Kan. 321, 4 Pac. 269.
The proceeding in the tribunal in Illinois derived its vitality and force not from'the laws of Wisconsin but from the laws of the state of Illinois. As a matter of courtesy one jurisdiction lends its aid to the other in securing the testimony of a witness for use in the courts of the state where the action is pending. No action was then pending in the state of Illinois, and -the tribunal of Illinois had no jurisdiction to determine whether ornot an action had been properly instituted in Wisconsin under the laws of that state. No such question was presented to it and no such question could be presented to it under the circumstances of this case. *159There was therefore no tribunal in the state of Illinois to which the defendant could submit himself so as to give a court of the state of Wisconsin jurisdiction o-ver his person.
We conclude, therefore, that the provision of sec.. 85.15, sub. (3), limiting continuance to ninety days, is discriminatory and for that reason invalid; that the invalid part is separable and that the remainder of the act can stand if otherwise valid; that the state has power to regulate the conduct of a foreign motorist using the highways of the state of Wisconsin, and as a proper part of- such regulation may prescribe that service may be made upon him in controversies arising out of his operation of his motor vehicle within the state of Wisconsin by serving process upon the secretary of state; that the statute is well calculated' to give actual notice to the defendant and afford him full opportunity to be heard in his defense; that the appearance of the petitioner and his attorneys before the master in-chancery in the state of Illinois did not amoynt to a general appearance- in the action.
By the Court. — The motion for the issuance of a writ of prohibition is denied.