delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is аn appeal from a final decree of the Supreme Court of the State of Washington refusing a writ of prohibition to prevent the further prosecution of an action pending in the Superior Court of Spokane County.
Bond & Goodwin & Tucker, a Delaware corporation, qualified in 1926 to do business in the State of Washington, pursuant" to the aрplicable statute. 1 One Duncan Shaw of Seattle, was appointed resident agent for the acceptance of service of process, as the law required, to 1929 the company withdrew from the State, ceased to transact business there, and filed formal notice of withdrawal with the Secretary of State. The сorporation was dissolved in accordance with the laws of Delaware, but the appointment of Shaw as statutory agent was never revoked. In 1929 he removеd to California. In 1932 one Monroe commenced a civil action in the Superior Court, naming Bond & Goodwin & Tucker as one of the defendants, and instructed the sheriff to serve thе summons and complaint upon the Secretary of -State. The return and proof of service show that this was done by handing the papers to an assistant Secretary. Neither the summons and complaint nor any copy of them, nor any notice touching the-same, were forwarded to Bond & Goodwin & Tucker by the Secretary of State or аnyone else. No other form of service was made.
*363 The appellant appeared specially and moved to quash the service. The motion was оverruled. Thereupon application was made to the Supreme Court of the State for a writ of prohibition. The present appeal is from, the judgment refusing the writ.
The appellant urges that the statute denies the due process and equal protection guaranteed by the FourT teenth Amendment. The first contention rests upоn the fact that substituted service upon the Secretary of State is validated without any requirement that he shall give the defendant notice of the pendency of the action; the second is bottomed upon the circumstance that a different procedure requiring the Secretary of State to send notice to defendаnts is prescribed as respects suits against domestic corporations having no office within the State, and foreign insurance companies.
The statute requires a foreign corporation to appoint and register a resident agent empowered to accept service of process in any action оr suit pertaining to the property, business or transactions of shch corporation within the State. The agent may be changed by filing with the Secretary of State a new аppointment. The portion of the. Act which gives rise to the present controversy is:
. . in the event such foreign corporation shall withdraw from this state and ceasе to transact business therein it shall continue to keep and maintain such agent within this state upon whom service of process, pleadings and papers may be made, until the statute of limitations shall have run against anyone bringing an action against said corporation, which accrued prior to its withdrawal from this state. In case sаid corporation shall revoke the authority of its designated agent after its withdrawal from this state and prior to the time when the.statutes of limitations would have run against сauses of action accruing against it, then in that event service of process, pleadings and papers in such actions may be made upon the sécre *364 dary of state of the state of Washington, and the same shall be held as due and sufficient service-upon such corporation.”
We are told that when the appellant appointed Shaw and registered him as its agent to accept service, it had complied with all conditions requisite to its lawful transaction of business within the Statе; that the provision for another sort of substituted service in the event of Shaw's removal from the State, or the revocation of his appointment without registration • of another agent, is pérmissible only if it requires notice to the defendant; that by qualifying as a foreign corporation appellant did not; consent to the. arbitrary and unсonstitutional condition that it might be cast in judgment without notice of suit. .We think, however, that the position is unsound.
The State need not have admitted the corporation to do business within its borders.
Bank of Augusta
v.
Earle,
It has- repeatedly been said that qualification ot a foreign corporation in accordance with the statutes permitting its entry into the State constitutes an assent on its
*365
part to all the reasonable conditions imposed.
Lafayette Insurance Co.
v.
French, supra,
408;
St. Clair
v.
Cox, supra,
356;
Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co.
v.
Spratley,
The power of the State altogether to . exclude the corporation, and the consequent ability to condition its entrance into the State, distinguishes this case from those involving substituted service upon individuals,
Flexner
v.
Farson,
Appellant suggests that it was denied due process because the Act' demands service upon the Secretary of State, whereas the summons аnd complaint were handed to an assistant Secretary. The State court has held the service, sufficient since the assistant Secretary In contemplation of . law was . the Secretary. This construction of the statute raises no federal question..
. Complaint ris made because other legislation- validates substituted service оn domestic corporations having no office in-.Washington, and on foreign insurance compa-' pies registered to do business therein, only-if the Secretary of Stаte sends notice to the defendant. It is said that a failure to make similar provision with respect to other foreign corporations deprives the appеllant' of the equal protection of the laws. The contention is without merit. TJie-législature was entitled to classify .corporations in this respect, and a mere difference in the method of prescribing how substituted service should be accomplished works no unjust or unequal treatment of the appellant. Compare
National Union Fire Ins. Co.
v.
Wanberg,
The judgment is
Affirmed.
Notes
Section 3854, Remington’s- Compiled Statutes, 1922..
