RCW 4.92.020
Service of summons and complaint in such actions shall be served in the manner prescribed by law upon the attorney general, or by leaving the summons and complaint in the office of the attorney general with an assistant attorney general.
The State of Washington, like any other entity, is subject to the laws enacted by the legislature, signed by the governor, and not held unconstitutional by the courts. This is, in fact, one of the aspects of the American legal system which has made our nation unique in the world. The King (the state) is subject to and bound by his (its) own rules and laws.
This RCW is short, clear, and succinct. Still, it is important to parse it out and examine each constituent part. Service of a summons, and associated documents, is obtained in one of two ways.
First – Service can be obtained by presentation to the attorney general. There is no limitation on when or where this can be accomplished.
Second – Service can be obtained by presentation to an assistant attorney general (also known as an AAG). Although there is no time limitation as to when service may be accomplished in this manner there is a location requirement. If served in this manner the service must take place in the office of the attorney general.
The second method is definitely the most common and will now be discussed in greater detail.
The attorney general has offices spread all around the state. Each of them is an “office of the attorney general.” Any and all of these offices qualify under RCW 4.92.020 as an appropriate location to serve the state by leaving the documents with an AAG.
The phrase “with an assistant attorney general” is vital to this statute. The courts have clearly ruled that the service documents must be presented to an AAG. Do not leave the documents with anyone other than an AAG. Do not leave them with a secretary, an assistant of any kind, an office manager, etc., (not even the governor should he or she happen to be available) regardless of what that person may say about their status to receive process. One of the more common things to hear is something along the lines of “I’m authorized to accept.” Your question should be “Authorized by whom?” The statute and several court rulings, make it clear that the only persons “authorized” to accept are the AAG’s.
Departments of the State
It is not unusual to receive an assignment which includes an instruction to serve a summons on a department or agency of the state. For example, you may be instructed to serve the Department of Social and Health Services or the Department of Revenue or any one of the multitude of arms of the state. It is also not unusual for the client to fail to give any specific instruction on how to accomplish this service. “You figure it out” is not unusual to hear.
The issue is that departments and agencies are not independent entities. They have no existence separate from the State of Washington. They are not like counties, cities, or even cemetery districts which do have a separate existence. Therefore it is not possible to serve them because they do not exist other than as a constituent part of the state.
So you are not actually serving the department or agency. You are serving the State of Washington and you follow the methods described above to accomplish that service.
For example, if you are instructed to serve the Washington State Patrol you do not seek out the Chief of the Patrol but instead go to a local office of the AG and present the summons to an AAG.
Service Instructions Summary
Present documents to:
Who | When & Where | |
1. | The attorney general | Anytime Anywhere |
2. | An assistant attorney general | Anytime but must occur in an office of the attorney general. Such offices exist in many cities around the state. |
NOTE: Do not leave with office staff or anyone else. It must be presented to the AG or an AAG.
NOTE: Extreme caution should be used if someone, not fitting these descriptions, says they have been “authorized” to accept service.