Leach, J.
¶ 1 Kung Da Chang and Michelle Chen appeal a trial court order allowing Shanghai Commercial Bank (Bank) to enforce a Hong Kong trial court judgment against their marital community. By statute, the Hong Kong judgment can be enforced to the same extent as a judgment rendered in Washington.
¶ 2 This is the second appeal arising from the trial court's recognition of a Hong Kong trial court judgment against Chang. This court recounted the facts underlying the Hong Kong action in an unpublished opinion in the first appeal.
¶ 3 Chang signed five documents with Shanghai Commercial Bank in March and April 2008. Those documents together created a credit agreement allowing Chang and his father to borrow money from the Bank. The Bank sent the documents to Chang at his father's Shanghai address. Chang's father mailed them to Chang in Seattle. Chang then signed the documents and returned them to his father in Shanghai.
¶ 4 In Hong Kong Action 806, the Bank obtained a money judgment against Chang for his unpaid debt under the credit agreement.
¶ 5 Chang and Chen have resided in Washington since before they married in 1994. Chen did not sign any of the five documents and was not aware Chang made the credit agreement. She was not a party to the Hong Kong lawsuit.
¶ 6 In June 2012, the Bank filed a petition under Washington's Uniform Foreign-Country Money Judgments Recognition Act
¶ 7 In August 2015, the trial court granted the Bank summary judgment on the rest of its request. It determined that Hong Kong law applied and thus allowed the Bank to collect its judgment from Chang and Chen's marital property. It later denied Chang's motion for reconsideration. Chang appeals.
¶ 8 We review the trial court's summary
¶ 9 When one spouse, acting alone, incurs a debt, collection presents two distinct questions: What is the character of the debt, separate or community, and what property is available to satisfy it?
¶ 10 Washington has adopted the Uniform Act. The act provides that Washington courts "shall recognize a foreign-country judgment" for money damages that is "final, conclusive, and enforceable" where rendered, unless one or more of the mandatory or discretionary grounds for nonrecognition applies.
¶ 11 Under the Uniform Act, Chang may assert any defenses against enforcement of the Hong Kong judgment that he could assert against a Washington judgment. RCW 6.40A.060(2) provides that a recognized "foreign-country judgment is ... [e]nforceable in the same manner and to the same extent as a judgment rendered in this state." The legislature included RCW 6.40A.060(2) in the 2009 legislation adopting the updated Uniform Act. The drafters of that model legislation explained in their comments that, "once recognized, the foreign-country judgment has the same effect and is subject to the same procedures, defenses and proceedings ... of a comparable court in the forum state, and can be enforced or satisfied in the same manner as such a judgment of the forum state."
¶ 12 When a spouse is not a party in a Washington lawsuit, that spouse can choose to wait and intervene at the time of execution to prove that the judgment cannot be collected from the marital community.
¶ 13 To decide the reach of the Hong Kong judgment, we must examine the underlying facts, as we would for a judgment rendered in Washington. Here, Chang claims that because he did not incur the debt for the benefit of his marital community, the Bank cannot enforce that debt against the community's assets.
¶ 14 Our conflict of laws analysis asks which jurisdiction "has the most significant relationship to the transaction and the parties under" seven principles:
¶ 15 When applying these principles, Washington courts consider five types of contact: the places of contracting, negotiation, and performance; the location of the subject matter of the contract; and "the domicil, residence, nationality, place of incorporation and place of business of the parties."
¶ 16 Here, weighing these factors "according to their relative importance with respect to the particular issue"
¶ 17 We look to the underlying transaction in performing this analysis.
¶ 18 The parties' reasonable expectations favor Hong Kong law. Chang asserts that Washington residents have a reasonable expectation that Washington law will apply to enforcement of contracts they sign. But Chang knew he was dealing with a Bank in Shanghai and that the documents included Hong Kong choice-of-law provisions. Conversely, the record contains no indication that the Bank knew it was dealing with Washington residents; the documents Chang signed were all addressed to his father's residence in Shanghai and he returned them to his father, not the Bank, after signing. Chang's father and his advisors used the borrowed money in Hong Kong to pay debt incurred there and having no connection to Washington.
¶ 19 The relative interests and policies of Washington and Hong Kong also favor Hong Kong. Chang asserts that Washington's policy is to shield community property from collection for a judgment arising from one spouse's debt obligations. "Washington has a general interest in protection of marital communities from the entirely separate debts of one spouse."
¶ 20 On the other hand, Hong Kong, like Colorado in
¶ 21 Weighing the competing policies of Washington and Hong Kong, the justified expectations of Chang, Chen, and the Bank, and the five types of contacts, we conclude that Hong Kong has the most significant relationship to the issue here.
¶ 22 Hong Kong law about the scope of collection presents an issue of "fact" that the trial court decided.
¶ 23 Applying Hong Kong law, then, we find that the same property that would be subject to payment of the judgment in Hong Kong, including Chang and Chen's community property, is subject to payment of the debt in Washington to the same extent, even if the property is characterized as "community" under Washington law.
¶ 24 Because we affirm the trial court judgment by applying Washington conflict of law principles, we do not decide if Chang, through the credit agreement's choice-of-law provision, could bind Chen to Hong Kong law without her knowledge.
¶ 25 Because Hong Kong law has the most significant relationship to Chang's agreement with the Bank, and Hong Kong law allows collection of the judgment from property that, in Washington, belongs to Chang and Chen's marital community, we affirm.
WE CONCUR:
Verellen, J.
Appelwick, J.