1. It is no longer open to question that States have the right, by resorting to the legal fiction that nonresidents using their highways impliedly consent to the appointment, to declare by statute under the general police power that some State officer shall be the agent of the nonresident for
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service upon him in actions arising out of his use of their highways. Hess v. Pawloski,
Concededly, our question is not constitutionality but compliance; yet it becomes necessary to construe Code Arm. § 68-802 in the light of constitutional due process requirements in order to reach a decision as to whether it will permit a plaintiff to prosecute an action against a defendant under the nonresident motorist law and obtain a judgment entitled to full faith and credit among the other States by means of which he can levy upon and seize the defendant’s property, without giving the defendant any notice of the pendency of the action, by the device *283 of an allegation in the petition that the defendant’s address is unknown to him.
The statute is in derogation of the common law, and must be strictly construed and fully complied with before a court of a state other than that of the defendant’s residence may obtain jurisdiction of his person.
Stone v. Sinkfield,
As to service on nonresidents, the “reasonable probability” rule seems to have been universally adopted, although the strictness with which it is enforced may vary. Jurisdiction rests upon the assumption that, in the absence of a contrary assertion
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by the defendant, he received notice of the action and an opportunity to defend. Tennant v. Farm Bureau Mut. Auto Ins. Co.,
This court has the duty of giving
Code Arm.
§ 68-802 a strict construction, having regard for the requirements of due process, and of declaring insufficient any purported service or notice not measuring up to those requirements. Cf.
Allied Finance Co. v. Prosser,
It follows that, so far as the statutes pertaining to notice of service on nonresident motorists are concerned, there is some difference existing among the other 49 states both as to what provisions for notice must be made, and as to what attempts to carry out those provisions must be shown. In some states actual notice is essential. In most, the reasonable probability rule is followed. In all, the burden is on the plaintiff to show that a diligent effort has been made to locate the defendant (as, for example, a recent amendment to the Virginia law provides that the plaintiff will be excused from giving notice only where he files an affidavit that the defendant’s address is unknown and cannot be ascertained.) If we construe Code Ann. § 68-802 to mean that there is no burden at all on the plaintiff to ascertain the defendant’s whereabouts, and leave it merely to chance and his conscience whether he provide an address for service of notice or not, it cannot be said that there is any reasonable probability that the defendant in such cases would be informed of the action against him and thus have an opportunity to defend. Such a construction contravenes the minimum requirements of due process as established by the courts of this State and of the other states. In the present case the plaintiff alleged that the defendant lives in Pennington County, South Dakota. We do not know whether a letter mailed merely to that address would reach him, but neither do we know that it is impossible for the plaintiff, with this information at hand, to obtain a more specific mailing address. We are convinced, however, that to construe this statute so as to relieve the plaintiff from any responsibility for obtaining a proper residence address would deny to such defendant that notice and opportunity to be heard which is the basic requirement of due process.
*287 The trial court erred in overruling the motion to dismiss on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction of the defendant.
Judgment reversed.
