On Friday I presented to the Bar Association of San Francisco at a continuing legal education session about surrogacy. I presented about international surrogacy from an Australian perspective. My paper is here:
The dozen eggs in the international
ART rules basket- a view from Down Under
San Francisco Bar Association
2 October, 2015
Stephen Page [1]
“Governments
don’t play God. Governments shouldn’t tell us when to have children.”[2]
“Your role and my role are completely different. A
judge’s role is to enforce the law. A lawyer has a duty to their client. It is
therefore the lawyer’s role to act in the best interests of the client. It is
therefore the lawyer’s role to test the law, find the
loopholes and weaknesses and steer the client through
them. This is a positive outcome for society.” [3]
Rule 1: Don’t believe everything you read on the internet.
“It seems clear that prohibition of surrogacy does not
work and in Australia, most States approach this difficult policy issue by way
of regulation. Such regulation is difficult in a globalised world where travel
from continent to continent is no longer difficult. Added to this, in some
parts of the western world, there is wealth to the extent that funding of
surrogacy (whether commercial or altruistic) is easily achieved…
Modern science and medical skill surrounding the
creation of life are now well ahead of legal, social and legislative policy. In
Australia the creation of effective policy will be difficult particularly on a
State by State basis. These policy issues probably need to be dealt with on a
national, whole of continent consistent basis, including having regard to
Australia’s international treaty obligations.”[4]
“There are many and varied paths to parenthood. Where
the path involves an international surrogacy
arrangement, it is long and difficult. As this case demonstrates, the
commissioning parents’ goal of the safe arrival of a longed for child often
results in them overlooking or underestimating the legal issues involved. From
the children’s perspective at least, in the pursuit of parenthood, it is
important that the commissioning parents and those who assist them give proper
regard to ensuring that parental status is possible once the children are
born.”[5]
“The starting point, however, is to make clear from
the Court’s perspective that this is an area where the Court has some disquiet.
It is well known in the community that there are babies brought to various
places around the world in international baby selling and trafficking. It is
also said – and I think I can take judicial notice of this from some of the
literature that I have read – those sorts of criminal elements involve the
trafficker declaring themselves as the biological parent of a child and having
the birth mother refuting or rejecting any involvement in the child’s life. It
may not be prevalent in Australia, but it is known in other parts of the world.
A second reason why this Court needs to be cautious
and scrutinise these arrangements carefully is the philosophical argument that
children who are born to women under these circumstances can be seen to be
either abandoned by their birth mothers or indeed crassly sold by their birth
mothers. The Court is rarely given any information about the circumstances
under which the child might otherwise live if it did not move from the birth
mother to people such as the present applicants.
I know nothing about the financial circumstances that
the mother in this particular case may have had arising out of this contractual
arrangement. I do not know whether S Agency is an organisation profiting from
the poverty and the problems that women in countries such as India and Thailand
might face. That is not in any way to suggest that the applicants are anything
other than responsible and very dedicated parents for the child. I stress again
that the Court is raising these issues because it is concerned that it needs to
be satisfied that this child is not caught in that web of horror and intrigue.”[6]
My father, who was a very cynical man, used to say to me jokingly that
if something were in the newspaper then it must be true. He frequently said to me that it was good to
look at things with a sceptical eye to judge whether in fact what might be said
might be the truth.
Unfortunately what I’m often seeing are intended parents who have
entered into a surrogacy arrangement somewhere and realised that they are in a
mess, usually when the surrogate is pregnant. They often end up there by having
read something on the internet, believing it all to be true.
It sounds really basic, but it is absolutely essential that any intended
parents (or for that matter surrogate or her partner or donor) contemplating
entering into a surrogacy arrangement of some kind get good legal advice from all the places involved before wandering down the garden path of
a surrogacy arrangement.
It is much easier to plan for matters than to try and dig clients out
and save them. Recently I was lucky enough to attend the first regional meeting
of the LGBT Family Law Institute outside the US. It was in London. A colleague
described the role of an ART lawyer in a surrogacy arrangement as filling one
of three descriptions:
·
Hopefully, the
planner- to set the scene for the clients, and make sure all goes through
smoothly;
·
Sometimes the
pilot- for when the clients know precisely where they want to go, and want to
get their as quickly as possible; but
·
Too often, the
janitor- getting called in after everything has gone wrong and having to clean
up the mess.
I think it is imperative upon those of us who engage in the practice of fertility
law, particularly international surrogacy, that we publicise issues of concern
and emphasise repeatedly that those contemplating surrogacy ought to get legal
advice before they start the process – not advice from their friends or the
people they have talked to on the internet or other intended parents who have
avoided going to lawyers. It may be that
their friends were very fortunate and had a dream run by somehow walking
through a minefield and avoiding stepping on any of the mines. However if they get stuck then they’ll get
stuck big time.
Example of avoiding trouble
Tony and Julie looked online and found a great surrogacy agency in the
Ukraine- the Make a Baby Charitable Foundation Inc. After many discussions with
the agency, they decided to undertake surrogacy there. They were told by the
website that the surrogacy arrangement was non-commercial, and that the
surrogate would be looked after. When I checked the documentation, it was
clearly a commercial arrangement (a criminal offence in Queensland). It was
also mandatory for the surrogate to have a C-section. I also advised against
going to the Ukraine due to the poor security situation there, which might
deteriorate over the 18-24 months of any surrogacy. Tony and Julie were
undecided, feeling as though they were obliged to sign up with the agency. The
following morning, Julie phoned my office- saying that they were not going to
the Ukraine in light of my advice, and the downing of MH17 overnight.
Example of what not to do
Amit and Nalini are an Indian Australian couple who live in New South
Wales. Surrogacy is their only
option. There are no Indian donors in
Australia so they decide to undertake commercial surrogacy in India. They look it up online and discover that
there is a wonderful doctor in India who can help them. They pay him A$20,000, roughly equivalent to
US$20,000 and think they have got a bargain.
The doctor is insistent that there is no paperwork between them and the
surrogate. The doctor tells them that
the surrogate must be anonymous as must the egg donor. They never meet the surrogate. The surrogate is pregnant but then has a
miscarriage.
A second surrogate is engaged.
Again there is no paperwork.
There is one document referring to IVF, which the doctor has re-written
to refer to surrogacy. The doctor has
backdated the document to overcome legal hurdles in New South Wales. Unbeknownst to them Amit and Nalini have
committed a criminal offence in New South Wales punishable by up to 3 years
imprisonment as to the surrogacy and potentially a 15 year jail term in
relation to the commercial trade in eggs.
They have blundered into this arrangement out of ignorance.
To increase the chances of the second surrogate (assuming that there is
in fact a second surrogate, again anonymous and with a lack of paperwork) to
become pregnant, the doctor implants 6 embryos.
There is no discussion with the intended parents as to the possible
consequences as to the surrogate’s or children’s health. The surrogate is pregnant, apparently, with
one baby. The intended parents knew
nothing about selective reduction until
after I raised it.
A lack of paper work means that there may be difficulties for the
intended parents to prove that there has been a surrogacy arrangement to
satisfy Australian migration officials, in order to convince them that it isn’t
a child trafficking case and it doesn’t fall foul of the Hague Convention on
child abduction or the Hague Inter Country Adoption Convention.
At the time of writing, I do not know if the child will be able to come
to Australia.
Going to India- with a twist
It is legal to undertake non-commercial surrogacy overseas for residents
of every Australian State and Territory.
However, it may not be practical to do so. Clients of mine who were
Indian-Australians wanted to undertake altruistic surrogacy in India with a
close relative. It would appear that because Indian practice (and the approach
of the Australian Department of Immigration and Border Protection) is heavily
tilted towards commercial surrogacy in India, undertaking non-commercial
surrogacy there can be extremely difficult.
Rule 2: What is legal there may result in jail here.
This applies both ways, see Rule 1.
There is a common misconception that because commercial surrogacy, for
example, is legal in California therefore it is legal in Australia.
To give examples of this problem:
· in three of five jurisdictions in Australia it is an
offence to enter into a commercial surrogacy
arrangement overseas. It is also arguable at least that it might be illegal in a fourth
jurisdiction. Through garbled wording, it now appears
to be illegal to undertake surrogacy of any kind overseas for people from South Australia, unless that
State’s Attorney-General has approved the arrangement.
The requirements for guidelines for such approvals are not known.
· in seven out of eight jurisdictions in Australia it is
a criminal offence to enter into a
commercial surrogacy arrangement in Australia.
· in all Australian jurisdictions it is a criminal
offence, punishable by up to 15 years imprisonment, to engage in the commercial
trade in eggs, sperm or embryos.
· in several jurisdictions the offence of entering into
the commercial trade of eggs, sperm and embryos may also apply
outside the jurisdiction so that someone from New South Wales, Queensland or
Western Australia, for example, may unintentionally commit the offence while
having gone to an egg donor agency overseas. In other jurisdictions such as Victoria, it
is not a criminal offence overseas.
All parties involved in a surrogacy arrangement need to know before the
arrangement commences as to the lie of the land with the law and practice in
all relevant jurisdictions. What may be
perfectly acceptable practice, indeed industry best practice in one
jurisdiction may be a criminal offence somewhere else.
Example
Fred and Ethel live in Sydney.
They were born in Sydney. Due to
their international careers, they have left Sydney and moved to New York. They contemplate undertaking surrogacy in
California. Although they own a property
in New York in reality they don’t live there.
Their lifestyles are so busy they live as nomads throughout the
world. They contemplate moving to
London.
Thankfully, they haven’t entered into a surrogacy arrangement yet. While Queensland, New South Wales and the
Australian Capital Territory make it a criminal offence to enter into a
commercial surrogacy arrangement overseas, the scope of the New South Wales
legislation is the broadest because it covers not only those who are ordinarily resident in New South Wales
but also those who are domiciled in
New South Wales. Australian law
recognises both domicile of origin and domicile of choice. Domicile of choice overrides domicile of
origin unless there is no domicile of choice, in which the reversion is to
domicile of origin.
[South Australia has passed laws to make it mandatory for those going
overseas for surrogacy to obtain the permission of that State’s
Attorney-General.]
Fred and Ethel are currently domiciled in New South Wales by birth. If they enter into a commercial surrogacy
arrangement whilst living as nomads somewhere in the world then they may have
committed an offence in New South Wales! If they later come to New South Wales,
for example returning for the family Christmas then bizarrely they could be
prosecuted there. The offence may be
prosecuted on indictment, an effect of which means that there is no time limit
for prosecution.
If Fred and Ethel reside in New York then they need to get advice from a
New York lawyer as well as an Australian and Californian lawyer. If they move to England they need to get
advice there first before making the move.
It is possible to register overseas child orders under the Family Law Act 1975(Cth). Section 70G
provides:
“The
regulations may make provision for and in relation to the registration in courts
in Australia of overseas child orders, other than excluded orders.”
The Family Law Regulations 1984 (Cth)
allow for orders made in prescribed
overseas jurisdictions, primarily the United States, to be registered under
the Family Law Act, which then have
the effect by virtue of sections 70H and 70J of the Act as if they were made by
the overseas court under Part VII of the Family
Law Act. Three US jurisdictions are not captured: from recollection
Missouri, North Dakota and another. California and all adjoining states are
prescribed.
Anecdotal evidence exists that it is not possible to register a
surrogacy order made in the United States in Australia because such an order
involves the termination of parental rights, an order that is not otherwise
possible under Part VII of the Family Law
Act. An order terminating parental rights is to the Australian public
benefit, because it terminates rights of custody under the Hague Abduction Convention. The existence of such an order is
considered by the Department of Immigration and Border Protection when
considering citizenship of the child. Such an order also ought be determinative
in Australia of parentage.
Example
Reuben and Jack undertake commercial surrogacy in California. They are
Australian. A child is carried by a gestational surrogate. The child is
genetically that of Reuben and an egg donor. The surrogate and her husband have
no genetic relationship with the child. The surrogate is paid a fee. Prior to
the birth of the child, the surrogate and her husband consent to an order being
made in the Superior Court of California at Los Angeles granting custody to
Reuben and Jack, naming Reuben and Jack as the parents, and terminating the
parental rights of the surrogate and her husband. The surrogate and her husband
were represented in those proceedings. Reuben and Jack are then named on the
birth certificate as the parents.
Armed with that order, Reuben and Jack seek to register the order with
the Family Court. Registration is refused because, they are told by a
Registrar, as the Family Court does not have the power under Part VII of the
Family Law Act to terminate parental rights, then the order is not capable of
being registered.
However, a recent Family Court decision has indicated that it may be
possible to register overseas surrogacy orders under this section.[7]
I am currently in the process of seeking to test the waters and am
seeking to register orders on behalf of several clients.
Rule 3: You say tomato…
Probably one of the easiest overcome issues, but nevertheless
frustrating ones, is that of language. I am not talking of accents! I am
talking about jargon. When your counterpart or client is not an English speaker
then things become even more interesting. Patience is a virtue.
Examples of language differences-
from within Australia
You may call them
|
I call them
|
Others call them
|
Or…
|
Or even
|
IP’s
|
Intended
parents
|
Commissioning
parents
|
Substitute
parents
|
Parents
|
Bio and
non-bio dad
|
Intended
parents
|
Commissioning
parents
|
Substitute
parents
|
Father and
parent
|
Bio and non-bio
mum
|
Intended
parents
|
Commissioning
parents
|
Substitute
parents
|
Mother and
parent; mother and co-parent
|
Surrogate
|
Surrogate
|
Surrogate
mother
|
Birth mother
|
Mother
|
Surrogate’s
husband
|
Surrogate’s
husband
|
Birth father
|
Birth parent
|
Father
|
Surrogacy agreement
|
Surrogacy
arrangement
|
Surrogacy
arrangement
|
Registered
surrogacy agreement
|
Substitute
parent agreement
|
Rule 4: Citizenship and residence are not the same.
As Oscar Wilde once said: “When
you assume you make an ass out of u and me.”
Always ask about citizenship. Failure to do might mean a notification to
your professional indemnity insurer! Often citizenship and residence are the
same, but sometimes they are not. This
necessarily adds to complications.
Example
Georgina lives in England. She is
single and an Australian. She wants to
have a baby via surrogacy in India (before the changes occurred in 2012) and,
have the baby live with her in England but to ensure that the baby has
Australian citizenship. Georgina is
ultimately successful in her quest but in the process engaged the following:
·
lawyer,
surrogacy agent and surrogacy agency in India
·
Surrogacy
lawyer and migration agent in Australia
·
Surrogacy
lawyer and migration lawyer in England
Example
Lucy and Ricky live in Singapore. Lucy is Italian. Ricky holds Australian UK citizenship. They wish to undertake surrogacy in
India. They have heard that it’s pretty
straight forward.
On 9 July 2012 the Indian government issued a decree specifying that
intended parents needed to obtain a surrogacy visa. In order to be eligible they needed to be
married for 2 years and surrogacy needed to be legal in their country. Ricky comes from New South Wales. Lucy and Ricky live permanently in Singapore
so the issue of domicile[8] in New South Wales doesn’t arise. The Indian government requires a letter from
the country of the applicant for the medical visa to say that surrogacy is
legal.
Is the relevant country for Ricky and Lucy Singapore, Italy, the United
Kingdom or Australia? Singapore won’t
write the letter. The UK will write a
letter. Italy almost certainly won’t
write the letter. Australia will write
the letter. If Ricky is considered to be
“ordinarily resident” in Queensland,
New South Wales or the Australian Capital Territory, or domiciled in New South
Wales, then he will not be eligible under Australian rules. Ricky and Lucy are obtaining advice from an
Indian Surrogacy lawyer and a Singaporean lawyer[9].
Example
Sara and Bruce decide to have a baby
via surrogacy. They live in Australia. Their good friend Stephanie agrees to be
the surrogate. Stephanie is married to Robert. Sara and Bruce assumed that the
child, when born in Australia, would automatically have Australian citizenship.
Not so. Sara is a New Zealand citizen, and Bruce is from Zimbabwe. Sara and
Bruce needed special advice about the issue of citizenship of the child when
born prior to the surrogacy arrangement being signed up- or the child might
have to leave Australia as a non-citizen. Special clauses are added to the
surrogacy arrangement to cover any contingencies.
Rule 5: No one may know what happens there (or here).
All too often clients assume that the answer must be known and it must
be obvious. Because surrogacy is so new
in many parts of the world or so few lawyers if any are undertaking surrogacy
work, often it is impossible to determine what is the state of law. Sometimes
the state of practice is opposite that of the state of law- and often what is
to happen is not known.
Example
Australia has decided on a harmonised “system” of surrogacy essentially allowing for non-commercial (or altruistic as it is called
in Australia) surrogacy to take place.
One might think that there would be a seamless system. This would be a terrible mistake. Australia’s two biggest cities are Sydney and
Melbourne each with a population of about 4 million. If intended parents live in Sydney, New South
Wales, but the proposed surrogate and her husband live in Melbourne, Victoria,
then under the Australian rules it will be a New South Wales surrogacy
arrangement. One imagines that when
politicians legislated to allow surrogacy that the aim of the exercise was not
only to legalise and regulate surrogacy but also to allow the intended parents
to be recognised as the parents of the child.
That is true for those born in Victoria through a surrogacy arrangement
– but only if the surrogacy arrangement is a Victorian surrogacy
arrangement. If the surrogacy
arrangement is a New South Wales surrogacy arrangement a parentage order is
then obtained in the Supreme Court of NSW.
To then change the birth register in Victoria it is necessary to then also obtain a registration order from the
County Court of Victoria.
Example
Clients of mine were the first to obtain a Queensland parentage order
which took effect with the NSW Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages. The
NSW legislation quite clearly allows interstate parentage orders to take
effect. That may be, but instead of a relatively quick process, the process
took 5 months, because officials did not know what to do.
Example
Joe and Margaret, the intended parents, live in Melbourne. Margaret’s
sister, Hilda, lives in Adelaide. She is to be the surrogate. If the child is
born in Adelaide, South Australia, following the making of orders in Victoria,
a new birth register entry is opened in Victoria. The South Australian entry is
then closed off. Once that entry is closed off, the Victorian entry is altered
to reflect the orders.
Example
Matt and Sue want to have a baby. Sue’s sister Robin wants to be the
surrogate. Robin is married to Tom. It seems a pretty straightforward
arrangement, a family arrangement. Matt and Sue live in New Zealand. They wish
to undertake treatment in California. Robin and Tom live in South Australia,
where the baby is to be born. Parentage orders can only be obtained in South
Australia if the fertility treatment occurs there and if the intended parents
live there. It is illegal to enter into a surrogacy contract in South
Australia. I drafted a surrogacy arrangement for signing by all concerned, so
that Robin is not prevented from obtaining post-conception medical treatment in
South Australia. A lawyer for the medical indemnity insurer sought assurance
that their client, an obstetrician, could treat Robin as his patient because
the surrogacy arrangement was not one that would allow the making of a
parentage order, i.e., it was non-compliant. I had to explain that the
surrogacy arrangement, by not being a contract, was legal- and treatment could
therefore occur.
A constant problem that I am striking is as to the state of law in other
countries and trying to find lawyers who know anything about surrogacy law in
those countries. Despite my best efforts
I’ve not yet had responses from possible lawyers who can advise about surrogacy
in most of Asia. Lawyers there simply
don’t want to touch it.
It is essential that we try and arm our clients with as much information
as possible so that they can make an informed decision. This often will need to
be with obvious disclaimers by us about our lack of knowledge.
I see that as also essential that given that surrogacy is so new in so
many parts of the world that we try and engage and network with other lawyers and
professionals in those countries so that there is a system of knowledge about
surrogacy and the laws concerning surrogacy throughout the world.
Example: the differing views of one
judge
Justice Ryan in Ellison and
Karnchanit [2012] FamCA 602 held that the Family Law Act (federal legislation) overrode the Status of Children Act (Qld) in finding
that Mr Ellison was the father of the child. Her Honour found that he was a
parent under the Family Law Act,
although not a parent under the Status of
Children Act.
Nine months later in Mason and
Mason [2013] FamCA 424, Ryan J changed her mind! Her Honour found that the Family Law Act did not override the
State Status of Children Acts[10],
but formed one statutory scheme. Her Honour said[11]:
“Notwithstanding my decision in
Ellison & Anor & Karnchanit …, I now have reservations about the
correctness of what was said in relation to the availability of the general
parenting presumptions in relation to children born through a surrogacy
arrangement.”
I detail the decision in Mason and
Mason below.
Rule 6: In different parts of the same country, different rules might
apply.
You saw my examples above about New South Wales and Victoria, New South
Wales and Queensland, and South Australia and Victoria.
There is an assumption by many in Australia that the only place that
undertakes surrogacy in the United States is California. There is also a common assumption in
Australia that the rules throughout the United States are the same.
There is also a common assumption in both the US and Australia that
surrogacy rules throughout Australia are the same. To give you an idea of the complexities in
Australia:
· We have nine systems of law concerning surrogacy,
namely at the Federal level
(Commonwealth) and in the eight States and Territories;
· The Northern Territory has no laws concerning
surrogacy, which has the bizarre effect that to all intents and purposes
surrogacy can’t be practised there and Territorians must go interstate or
overseas. There are currently moves in the Territory for there to be a Surrogacy Act, but any regulation is
likely to be some way off.
· Queensland and New South Wales, ACT, Tasmania and
South Australia have a model involving legal advice and counselling;
· Victoria and Western Australia each have a State
regulator requiring pre-approval before the surrogacy arrangement can proceed;
· To be an approved surrogacy arrangement in ACT,
Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia the medical treatment must
occur in that jurisdiction. There is no such requirement in Queensland, New
South Wales or Tasmania;
· In Tasmania, with an exception
for the best interests of the child (determined by a judge after the baby is born), all parties to the surrogacy arrangement
must reside in Tasmania;
· The intended parents must reside in Western Australia,
South Australia, Victoria and the ACT before the surrogacy arrangement
commences. They can reside in New South
Wales or Queensland until later, which can have an impact on overseas intended
parents who are Australian expatriates;
· Singles need not apply in the ACT or South Australia. Same sex couples need not apply in South
Australia. Single men and gay couples
need not apply in Western Australia, but for some reason single women and
lesbian couples are okay.
My triumph: world first case
concerning conception
In 2012 I obtained a decision from a Queensland judge which is the first
case in the world in which conception has been defined[12].
Conception was defined by Judge Clare, SC as the time of pregnancy. Her Honour
stated:
“The meaning of the term “conceived” as used in s 22(2) (e) (iv) [ of
the Surrogacy Act] is critical to the court’s jurisdiction in this case. This is because the embryo was created years
before the surrogacy arrangement, then frozen and not implanted in the uterus
until months after the written arrangement was settled. The question now is whether the reference to
pre conception as the cut off point in s 22(2)(e)(iv) means before the creation
of the embryo or simply any time before the transformation of the embryo into a
pregnancy. If it were an earlier point
in time, the court would have no power to make a parentage order for [the
child].
What does “conceived” mean?
The Act offers no definition. It seems this is the first time a court has
been asked to interpret s22 (2) (e) (iv).
Nonetheless, the answer seems obvious.
Whatever approach to statutory interpretation is applied, whether it be
to view “conceive” as a technical term, or it its everyday meaning, or the
meaning that best advances the purposes of the Act, the result is the
same. The point of conceiving a child is
the commencement of the pregnancy, which involves an active process within a
woman’s body.
The everyday meaning
The phrase “conceived a child” is in
common usage. It is commonly understood
to refer to an actual pregnancy.
One must examine the context of the
provision[1]. This is a provision about
surrogacy. As expressed in s.5, the
purpose of the Act is to safeguard the interests of the child and regulate
surrogacy agreements. There is an
underlying intention to protect the birth mother from duress to surrender her
child. Such issues only emerge after a
pregnancy occurs. The Act applies to all
forms of conception. The use of in vitro
fertilisation is now widespread. In my
experience when lay people talk about IVF treatments they tend to reserve the
term “conceive” for the circumstance where an embryo actually takes to the
uterus and the woman succeeds in becoming pregnant as distinct from the
procedure of implantation. I am satisfied
that in the ordinary everyday language of the community, the term “conceive a
child” means more than what can be achieved in a test tube and refers to the
commencement of a pregnancy in a woman’s body.
This is consistent with the current editions of both the Oxford English
dictionary and the Macquarie Dictionary.
They define “conceive” as, inter alia. “to become pregnant”. The former publication also defines
“conceived”, the adjective, as “brought into embryonic existence in the
womb”.
To construe the cut off point in s
22 (2) (e) (iv) as the point of pregnancy (and therefore after fertilisation)
is also consistent with the definition of “surrogacy arrangement” in s 7 of the
Act.
The (intended mother’s) eggs were
fertilised and preserved before she underwent the emergency procedure that
saved her life but left her unable to carry her own children. This was before the Surrogacy Act had come
into existence. It was therefore
impossible for her to enter into an arrangement under the Act before the
embryos were created. The same situation
is readily foreseeable for any woman undergoing emergency procedures even after
the commencement of the Act. A woman
desirous of having a baby, would little hope of securing a compliant surrogacy
arrangement in advance of an emergency hysterectomy, given the requirements for
the identification of a willing surrogate, proper counselling and legal advice
with time to reflect on all of the implications. The Act is intended to help such people in
genuine need of surrogacy. Therefore to interpret the preconception condition
as a condition to be satisfied before fertilisation would not only be contrary
to the ordinary language of the provisions, it would frustrate the underlying
intention of the Act. There is no reason
to reach beyond the common language for the interpretation of s 22 (2) (e)
(iv).
The expert evidence
The Court has an affidavit from Dr
Nasser an obstetrician and gynaecologist involved in the case, as well as
various definitions from medical dictionaries.
Of course the construction of the statute is a matter for the court, not
doctors, but the expert evidence of the biological processes is relevant to
that task. According to Dr Nasser:
“The creation of the embryos in 2008
was an act of fertilization.
Fertilization is a step on the path way to conception. Many eggs fertilize but many fewer
pregnancies are conceived. The act of
conception or the act of conceiving the pregnancy was the actual embryo
transfer and the subsequent implantation of that embryo into the uterus of [the
birth mother] over the next couple of days with the eventual positive pregnancy
test approximately two weeks after …July 2011… The act of conceiving in this
case is viewed as the act of achieving a pregnancy. Therefore, I view the conception of [the
child] as occurring from the embryo transfer on … July 2011.”Dr Nasser’s
professional distinction between the processes of fertilisation and conception
is consistent with the common understanding of what it means to conceive a
child. The same can be said of the
preponderance of definitions from the medical dictionaries cited. Despite
extensive research, the parties have found only one case in which the meaning
of conception was considered. This is
the English case of R (John Smeaton on behalf of the Society for the Protection
of Unborn children) v the Secretary of State for Health.[2] It was about the morning after pill and
therefore considered conception through sexual intercourse rather than
scientific intervention.”
The three models of surrogacy regulation in Australia
There is little commonality as to regulation of surrogacy in Australia.
There appears to be little if any recognition that other parties may be outside
State boundaries, and little commonality of approach. The best that can be said
is that the then Standing Committee of Attorneys-General came to draft
guidelines as to surrogacy. These guidelines have never been finalised, and nor
have the laws been harmonised. A statutory body, the Family Law Council, has
recommended that there be changes, but as yet the Commonwealth government is to
respond to the recommendations[13].
There are three models of surrogacy regulation throughout Australia:
Model 1: No laws: NT
The Northern Territory has no laws about surrogacy. This means that it
is legal to engage in surrogacy in the Northern Territory. In reality, all that
is available is:
• Traditional, altruistic surrogacy
• Traditional, commercial surrogacy
As there are no laws, there is no ability to obtain a parentage order.
This then impacts on any potential surrogates who live in the Northern
Territory when the intended parents live interstate: if the surrogate gives
birth in the Northern Territory, then a parentage order made interstate will
not be able to name the intended parents as the parents of the child, as there
is no ability to alter the birth register.
For the same reason, namely the inability to obtain an order, the only
IVF clinic will not provide surrogacy services. Because of licensing
requirements the clinic cannot offer commercial surrogacy services.
Example
Benny and Belinda live in Cairns, Queensland. They need to undertake
surrogacy. Belinda’s sister, Bella, lives in Darwin. Bella offers to be their
surrogate. Bella operates her own business. If Bella gives birth in Darwin,
Northern Territory, Benny and Belinda
cannot ever be named as parents on the birth certificate. The ability to
privately adopt in Queensland is highly circumscribed. If Bella travels to
Queensland to give birth, this might have a devastating effect on her business.
Example
Jack and Marjory wish to undertake surrogacy. They live in Darwin. They
are both in secure employment. They would prefer to undertake altruistic
surrogacy. Given the barriers facing them, they either have a choice of moving
interstate or undertaking surrogacy overseas. They choose to undertake
commercial surrogacy overseas.
Model 2: Light regulation:
Qld/NSW/ACT/SA/Tas
The key feature about this model is the need to have a surrogacy
arrangement. The arrangement is not required to be in writing, but if not obtained,
doctors will not treat and courts will not make parentage orders.
The common feature is that there is mandatory counselling and legal
advice before the surrogacy arrangement is signed.
Queensland requires counselling beforehand, and an independent
assessment after.
NSW, when it followed the Queensland model, requires this
too, but also requires relinquishment counselling of the surrogate and her
partner after having given over the child. In practice there appears to be
little benefit in relinquishment counselling, as any issues that might be
raised there can be adequately raised in initial counselling, in the obtaining
of legal advice and in the report process.
ACT requires counselling and assessment from an
independent counsellor which can have occurred before or after the surrogacy
arrangement is entered into.
SA is similar to Queensland, but before the surrogacy arrangement is
signed up, there must be a counsellor who makes an assessment of the
suitability of the surrogate (it is not said how this will be achieved, nor
whether the intended parents are to be counselled at this point) and more
counselling, from different counsellors of the intended parents and the surrogate
and her partner. (The parties see their
counsellors.)
Tasmania largely follows on the Queensland model, with some
additions from SA and NSW. While a
magistrate can order an independent report, the requirement is that a counsellor
see the parties before the process.
My views as to best practice:
·
Have one
counsellor undertake pre-signing counselling for all parties, who provides a
written report to the IVF clinic, which is also made available to the parties,
and if the matter proceeds to court, to the court. It is essential in my view
for issues of difference to be sorted out in counselling, and that the parties
although they have different perspectives have a common shared vision for the
child and the surrogacy arrangement. It is my view that the South Australian
model potentially hampers this process at commencement.
·
There ought to
be a post-birth independent assessment much like a family report, so that the
court can be assured that the orders it makes are in the best interests of the
child.
·
The practice of
one of the pioneers of surrogacy in Australia, the Canberra Fertility Clinic is
the ideal as to counselling: namely
after initial counselling, that there be counselling between the key parties
(typically the intended mother and the surrogate) at:
• 3 months pregnant
• 6 months pregnant
• 3 months post-birth
I am of the view that it is essential that any possible difficulties are
likely to be ironed out through counselling. Given that it is likely that the
surrogate and her partner will play a part in the child’s life for the rest of
their lives, a smooth start for that child’s life is essential. I don’t believe
that this process of extra counselling on the Canberra model needs to be part
of regulation, but part of best practice standards adopted by, say, the
Australia and New Zealand Infertility Counsellors Association (ANZICA).
Model 3 Heavier regulation: Vic and WA
Both Victoria and WA have a State regulator. The perception of intended
parents is that the system is very slow, costly, and invasive. I am told that
the process to obtain approval from the Patient Review Panel in Victoria takes
about 2 months, but I have had clients who spent 18 months going through the
bureaucracy of their IVF clinic before treatment could commence. They gave up,
and decided to go overseas instead.
The most damning words about what has happened in Western Australia were
those of the Tasmanian Leader of Government Business in the Legislative
Council, Mr Farrell, when rejecting the Western Australian model as a model for
Tasmanian laws on surrogacy:
“I have been provided with a report that shows that
when debating the surrogacy reforms in Western Australia the Attorney-General
stated there were between 40 and 50 couples awaiting the passing of surrogacy
legislation and that the government anticipated approximately 25 applications
per year for parentage orders. After the
legislation was passed it was nearly two years before any applications were
received by the approval body. By
November 2010, two applications for surrogacy had been approved and a further
one was under consideration. The author
of the report surveyed those people who had identified as wishing to utilise
surrogacy but who had not done so.
Overwhelmingly, the response was that the people simply could not meet
the requirements of the legislation. Of
those surveyed the majority were still intending to pursue surrogacy but
outside the parameters of the legislation.
The result of this is that there will continue to be children being
raised by people who do not have legal parentage of them. As I outlined earlier, this is not in the
best interests of the child.”
One might think that with heavy regulation and pre-approval that a
written surrogacy arrangement is required. I recently was involved in a case
from Victoria where the parties had obtained approval, and then had the child,
without there being a written surrogacy arrangement! Not surprisingly, without
ideas being reduced to writing, the parties fell out- with the surrogate and
the intended parents having differing expectations about the surrogate’s role[14].
Example
Barney and Betty are married. Betty lives in Brisbane. Barney works on a
fly in fly out basis in the vast iron ore mines in Western Australia. He works
3 weeks on, and one week off. On his week off, Barney returns to Brisbane. Is
Barney “ordinarily resident” in Queensland or Western Australia? Barney may or may not be ordinarily resident
in Queensland or Western Australia and therefore may be unable to access
surrogacy in either place. Betty because she is resident in Queensland, can
only undertake surrogacy in Queensland. Barney may be unable to access
surrogacy in WA, and will have to show that he is resident in Queensland. If
they wish to undertake surrogacy in India, Betty cannot as she is resident in
Queensland.
Example
Bill and Ben live at Griffith Street, Coolangatta, on Queensland’s
fabulous Gold Coast. Griffith Street
forms the border between Coolangatta (Queensland) and its twin town, Tweeds
Heads (New South Wales). Bill and Ben are a gay couple. They wish to undertake
surrogacy. Fearful of the Queensland government’s views about gay men
undertaking surrogacy, they undertake commercial surrogacy overseas. Bill and
Ben have committed offences in Queensland of entering into a commercial
surrogacy arrangement, and of making payment under a commercial surrogacy
arrangement. By the time they bring the baby home, they cannot be prosecuted
for the entering into a commercial surrogacy arrangement offence, as the time
limit has expired. However, they are liable to up to 3 years imprisonment for
the offence of making payment under a commercial surrogacy arrangement, for
which they could be prosecuted for up to a year after payment, i.e., when their
child is a year old.
By contrast, Bill and Ben move to live on the other side of Griffith
Street, this time in Griffith Street, Tweed Heads, New South Wales. The offence
in NSW is entering into the commercial surrogacy arrangement, which includes
undertaking commercial surrogacy overseas. They have not been prosecuted. Their
son is by now 16. During a show and tell, he tells the class that his dads paid
for commercial surrogacy overseas. Another class member goes home and tells his
dad of what happened in the classroom. That dad complains to police. Bill and
Ben are prosecuted for the offence of entering into a commercial surrogacy
arrangement- for which there is no time limit in NSW.
Example
Michael and John live in London. They both come from South Australia.
John’s sister Judy has offered to be their surrogate. Judy lives in South
Australia. At first blush, a surrogacy arrangement could not occur: the Family Relationships Act (SA) requires
the intended parents to be married or in a heterosexual de facto relationship.
It also requires the intended parents to be domiciled in South Australia. To
achieve a surrogacy, surrogacy would need to occur in NSW or Queensland,
provided that:
o Judy was prepared to
travel to Sydney or Brisbane for treatment. The effects of the Family
Relationships Act mean that treatment for surrogacy in South Australia has to occur in South
Australia, and it is unlikely that a South Australian
IVF clinic that offers surrogacy
services would offer treatment.
o Michael and John move to
live in Queensland or NSW. It is a requirement under
those States’ Surrogacy Acts, the
most liberal on this point, that they have
to reside in those States only at the
time of the hearing of the application for
a parentage order.
Example of absurdity
Fred and Ethel are high school teachers in the NSW school system. They
live and work in Albury. They wish to undertake commercial surrogacy overseas.
To do so in NSW they run the gauntlet of a triple penalty: not only possible
conviction, but loss of jobs in the public service and deregistration as
teachers.
They make a decision. They rent a house in Wodonga, about 15 minutes
away. They remain employed as NSW high school teachers and commute between
Wodonga and Albury. After moving, and now being ordinarily resident in
Victoria, they enter into a commercial surrogacy arrangement in Nepal. It is
legal for them to do so.
Example of absurdity
Although surrogacy was legal in NSW it was not legislated for. It was
not possible to obtain parentage orders. In 2010, then NSW Attorney-General
John Hatzistergos announced that NSW would have laws based on the Queensland
model.
One would think that this would involve copying the drafting of the
Queensland legislation. It didn’t. No apparent thought was given to those who
live across State borders. One might have thought that this was obvious, given
that IVF clinics on the Gold Coast are the only clinics providing services to
the far north coast of NSW. No, it was not to be.
Mike and Tyson live in Queensland. They want to undertake surrogacy.
Mike’s friend Polly living in NSW offers to be the surrogate. When I looked at
the equivalent section of the NSW Bill to that in the Queensland Act covering
allowable expenses, it appeared to be comparing chalk with cheese. I could not
tell whether they were the same or different. The drafting was quite different.
It was important to know: otherwise the surrogate might be inadvertently
committing a serious criminal offence in NSW by entering into a commercial
surrogacy arrangement. Two paralegals in my office were given the task of
reading the two provisions side by side. The verdict: they were the same!
Mike, Tyson and Polly’s children are born in NSW. Because Mike and Tyson
live in Queensland they must apply for a parentage order in Queensland. The
judge questions why the application is brought there, until it is pointed out
that they cannot bring an application in NSW and must bring the application in
Queensland, in accordance with the scheme. A parentage order is obtained. It is
forwarded to the NSW Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages in accordance
with the procedure outlined by that office. It is the first interstate matter
before the NSW Registry. It took 5 months to have the children’s birth register
altered! This is despite NSW laws specifically providing for alteration of
birth records resulting from interstate parentage orders. By contrast,
processing time for a parentage order made in the Children’s Court of
Queensland by the Registry in Queensland is 2 to 3 days!
The officer of the Registry suggested to me:
¬ The order
should have been made by the Supreme Court of NSW. I pointed out that the Supreme Court could not
do so as the intended parents reside in Queensland.
¬ The order
should have been transmitted to the NSW Registry by the Queensland Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages. It was
pointed out by me that the view
of the Qld Registrar was that because the children were not born in Queensland, the Queensland
Registrar has no interest in them and will therefore
not transmit.
¬ The order
should have been transmitted by the Children’s Court as the official could not be satisfied that the order was
made by the court. I pointed out that the
court does not transmit orders
as a matter of practice; In any Case the Registry
had the duplicate sealed order!
¬ The order should
have been sent to the Supreme Court of NSW for transmission.
I pointed out that that court would not want the matter as it lacked jurisdiction.
¬ The matter
should be dealt with in Queensland because it was akin to adoption. I pointed out that it was
surrogacy, not adoption, and that there was specific
NSW legislation on point.
In my view surrogates are amazing people. They are prepared to risk
their lives to enable others to achieve the joy of parentage. In my view they
ought to be cherished. South Australia and Victoria apparently gave little
thought about how to protect them.
Example : NSW and Queensland
Roger and Venus live in NSW. They are the intended parents. Rod and
Yvonne live in Queensland. Yvonne is the surrogate. The child is born in
Queensland, and therefore the birth is registered in Queensland. Because Roger
and Venus live in NSW, they must necessarily make a parentage order application
in NSW. The application is heard in the NSW Supreme Court, but is dealt with on
the papers, in accordance with the process of the adoption list of that court.
The result? The order refers to adoption, even though it is a surrogacy case.
If the matter had been heard in open court, this might have been avoided. It is
the second or third interstate matter to be processed by the Queensland
Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages. The Registrar proposes to deal with the
alteration of the birth record as an adoption matter because of the word
“adoption” on the order. The previous matter, also marked “adoption” from a NSW
Supreme Court parentage order, has resulted in the birth record being sealed,
to the potential detriment of the child. The same sealing would not occur in a
surrogacy case. The Supreme Court ultimately removes the word “adoption” from
the form of order, allowing the alteration of the register to recognise a
parentage order.
Example: Going overseas
In addition to any laws within Australia, overseas laws or practices may
directly impact. An example is of those couples who choose to go to India.
Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory have specific
bans on undertaking commercial surrogacy overseas. India requires those
attending India for surrogacy to come from jurisdictions where surrogacy is
legal. India since setting out these requirements has allowed couples from
those three jurisdictions, then banned them (allowing couples from the other 5
Australian jurisdictions), then banned all Australian intended couples (in
about October 2014), and now on an extremely limited basis to allows those from
the 5 jurisdictions to again undertake surrogacy in India.
Example: Going overseas
Those parties from New South Wales who go overseas for surrogacy and
then go to the Family Court, should expect, as seen in Ellison and Karnchanit, that
the Family Court will require the appointment of an independent children’s
lawyer, and that they will not be recognised as the parents of the child, as
seen in Mason and Mason.
For those in Victoria, the expectation is that an independent children’s
lawyer will not be appointed.[15]
For those from Victoria, and potentially also South Australia, Tasmania
and the Northern Territory[16], those who go overseas for commercial
surrogacy may be recognised as parents, The New South Wales approach was
rejected in a recent case, as Victoria does not have laws banning Victorian
residents undertaking commercial surrogacy overseas. New South Wales,
Queensland and the Australian Capital Territory have such laws.
In Green-Wilson and Bishop [2014] FamCA 1031, a Victorian couple
undertook surrogacy in India. Twins were born. Johns J held that the genetic
father was a parent as a matter of law. His Honour rejected[17]
the approach by Ryan J in Mason and Mason:
“In circumstances where the state
legislation is silent with respect to the determination
of parentage of children born of commercial surrogacy procedures (which are not prohibited in Victoria), I am
satisfied that it is appropriate
to make a declaration with respect to a child born of such procedures who is now living in Victoria.
To do otherwise would be to elevate
public policy considerations (as to the efficacy or otherwise of commercial surrogacy arrangements)
above a consideration of the welfare of
children born of such arrangements. In my view, the interests of the child must outweigh such public policy
considerations.”
Rule 7: Children have a right to know who they are, and where they come
from.
“Every child shall have, without any discrimination as
to race, colour, sex, language, religion, national or social origin, property
or birth, the right to such measures of protection as are required by his
status as a minor, on the part of his family, society and the State.”[18]
“It is important to remember, when looking at
surrogacy from a legal point of view, that each surrogacy arrangement involves
real people with real emotions. Most important of all is the child, who must be
assured of their safety, citizenship and identity.”[19]
I believe that it is the right of every child to know where they’ve come
from, and that this is a fundamental human right.
In our country there was a shameful practice which peaked in the 1960’s
and 1970’s and which has resulted in apologies from State governments and the
Federal government. It was the removal
of children from their mothers, typically single women, at birth or within a
couple of days of birth to be adopted by “good
families”. This was often undertaken
by religious organisations with the best intentions. It copied a practice that was undertaken for
many decades when children were forcibly removed from indigenous mothers and
adopted out to “deserving”
couples. We are still dealing with the
ramifications of those policies today.
What has been obvious in listening to the stories of those who were
adopted is that often they don’t know who they are or where they came from.
I recall many years ago acting for a husband in a Family Court custody
dispute. The husband and wife had three
children aged 5, 7 and 8. The dispute
was bitter. The key event that led to
the breakdown of the marriage and the bitterness of the dispute occurred many
years before the marriage. It was the
night before the future wife’s 21st birthday. On that night her mother called her in and
said: “Darling, there’s something we need
to tell you.” The 21 year old sat
down and was told, for the first time, that she was adopted. She was devastated and from that point on
when her parents had told her such a fundamental lie she was never able to
trust anyone ever again. That pattern of
behaviour ultimately led to the breakdown of the marriage and no doubt lifelong
impact on their children and probably their grandchildren.
It is essential in my view that intended parents are honest with their
children about where they came from. It
is essential that they identify for their children that there was a magical
woman who was a surrogate. The ideal
outcome is to have an ongoing relationship with the surrogate. I am extremely concerned about the model that
is being adopted by many Westerners, but particularly by many Australians going
to Thailand and India. I call this model
the set and forget model. If they meet
the surrogate it is only briefly. Often
the surrogate does not speak English and after the transaction is done she goes
back to her own village never to be seen from again.
What will happen to this child later on when he or she wants to find out
who the magical woman was who carried him or her for the first critical 9
months and without whom he or she would not be in existence?
I am also deeply troubled that in some jurisdictions, particularly in
India there is an insistence on anonymity of donors. Australia has pursued a model, after rigorous
inquiry, of donors either being known or open identification once the child
turns 18, giving the child the option of having on going contact. What if as a matter of practice the child
doesn’t have that choice and can never know who was genetically the parent and
may never know their full family medical history?
I have recently been told that in some clinics in India that there is a
mixing of eggs, a lack of paperwork, and that the donor that the parties think
that they are getting is not the donor who provided the gametes. Incidentally,
I have also learnt that in some clinics it is not uncommon practice for
multiple embryos to be implanted, to guarantee a result. Of course this places
the surrogate’s life potentially at risk.
In order to guarantee a result, this necessarily involves selective
reduction. Because only so many eggs are produced by donors, this means that it
may not be uncommon for eggs from different donors to be implanted into the
same surrogate. While intended parents believe that they are getting twins, and
the sperm may be from the same intended parent, the maternal DNA might be
unalike.
Passports
As of 22 April, 2013, Passports Australia has required intended parents
ensure that they secure the signature of any person who has parental
responsibility for a child so that a passport issue for a child . Passports
Australia has in turn defined the person who has parental responsibility as the
surrogate. What Passports Australia has not said is that if the surrogate were
in a de facto relationship or married at the time of conception, then the
consent of her partner or husband is also required.
Be that as it may, in the set and forget model of surrogacy seen in
India and Thailand in particular, this issue may increasingly cause intended
parents grief when children’s passports need to be renewed every 5 years. It
may prove impossible to locate, let alone obtain the consent of the surrogate
and her husband/partner to a new passport issuing.
Before 22 April, 2013, Passports Australia did not need the written
consent of the surrogate and her husband/partner to the issue of the birth
certificate. Therefore passports have issued for children where that consent
was not required, but when a renewal of that passport is sought, the consent of
the surrogate (and her husband/partner) will be required.
Recently I have managed to persuade Passports Australia to issue
passports for clients who have US orders, without the need of obtaining the
consent of the surrogate.
Re Evelyn[20]- the nightmare
case
Mr and Mrs Q were a childless couple living in Queensland. Dr and Mrs S
were friends of theirs, living in South Australia. As is typical with an
altruistic surrogacy arrangement, Mrs S offered to Mr and Mrs Q to be a
surrogate. At the time, altruistic surrogacy was illegal in both Queensland and
South Australia.
It would appear that neither Mr and Mrs Q or Dr and Mrs S had
counselling or legal advice before embarking on the surrogacy journey.
It was a traditional surrogacy: Mr Q’s sperm and Mrs S’s egg. Following
the birth of the child, and the handing over of the child to Mr and Mrs S,
about 3 weeks after the child’s birth Dr and Mrs S went to visit the Q’s. Dr
and Mrs S then took the baby, Evelyn. They had the right to do so- they were,
then and now, under the law that is common throughout Australia, the parents of
the child.
The matter was litigated bitterly in the Family Court. In today’s money
it is fair to estimate given the intensity of the litigation that each of the
Q’s and the S’s would have spent well in excess of A$100,000, may be as much as
A$300,000.
Evelyn was ordered to live with the S’s. Almost certainly there would
have been an extraordinary lasting bitterness in the litigation- for both the
S’s and the Q’s. It was a dramatic demonstration of how not to undertake
surrogacy.
Rule 8: A birth certificate may not make you a parent.
You may be a parent for some purposes but not others. It seems like a remarkable proposition, but
some laws may recognise you as a parent in your home jurisdiction but other
laws do not as I have illustrated above under Rule 6. It can be extremely distressing to clients to
hear that their home country recognises them as parents only for some purposes
and not others.
It is an absurdity worthy of Sir Humphrey Appleby[21]
that s.69R of the Family Law Act 1975
(Cth) states the possibility of
recognising overseas birth certificates, but no overseas jurisdictions are
prescribed! Intended parents are stunned to learn that their name on the birth
certificate is not, on the face of it, recognised in Australia.
However, as they are keen to point out, that same birth certificate is
recognised by the local school, Medicare and Centrelink[22]
offices as to parentage and identity for the child. As they have pointed out to
me, it enables the payment of money to them on the basis of parenthood by the
same Government that says that they are not parents!
The impact of the failure to prescribe any jurisdiction is also felt at
the State level, as part of the statutory scheme, for example, section 25 of
the Status of Children Act 1978 (Qld).
It seems extraordinary that no jurisdiction in the world, such as California or
the UK, for example, is recognised in Australia.
Australia has a schizoid way of saying who is a “parent”.
In essence, there are three ways to say who is a “parent”:
• Birth
• Genetics
• Intent
Australia, confusingly, has chosen all three! It has done so this way:
·
Under the Status of Children legislation in
each State and Territory (which cover parenting presumptions), adopted by the Family Law Act, the approach has been
that of defining by birth. That definition in turn has in part made its way to
the Australian Citizenship Act. This
has been the approach taken in most Family Court cases concerning overseas surrogacy.
·
The approach of
the Department of Immigration and Border Protection, the body which administers the Australian Citizenship Act, which has largely relied on genetics.
·
The approach of
two recent court decisions, which have relied on intent, and the reality of who
was parenting the child concerned.
Therefore, a person might be recognised as a parent of a child for the
purposes of citizenship, but because that person was not the birth parent of
the child or married to or a partner of a birth parent of the child, is not a
parent for State law purposes, and may not be a parent under the Family Law Act.
It is obvious that there may be a difference between a parent as a
matter of law and a parent as a matter of genetics. If a child
is born to an Australian citizen who is a parent then by virtue of the Australian
Citizenship Act 1997(Cth), the child is taken to have acquired Australian
citizenship by descent. If a child is
born overseas where the child has been conceived naturally, there is no
question who is the parent and who is the child. Genetics apply.
Stepping on mines: the Dudley’s (or
Dennis’s)
Mr and Mrs Dudley (or Dennis )-
same couple, different names used in different decisions in the Family Court,
were a Queensland couple who undertook commercial surrogacy in Thailand, after
10 years of trying to become parents.
Their plan was to have two children. Two embryos comprising the
husband’s sperm and from the eggs of anonymous donors were created. One embryo
was implanted in one surrogate. Twins were conceived. The other embryo was
implanted in another surrogate. One child was conceived.
With their three children, the husband and wife then applied for
parentage orders in the Family Court. When they came before Justice Stevenson,
her Honour made a parentage order in their favour for one child. When they came
before Justice Watts concerning the twins, his Honour made a parenting order
regarding the twins and referred them to the Queensland Director of Public
Prosecutions for prosecution.
A different approach as to referral to the DPP was taken by other
judges, for example:
• Justice Stevenson in the earlier
decision.
• Re
Mark (2004) - where Justice Brown declined to refer.
• Lowe
and Barry (2011) where Justice
Benjamin did not refer.
• Ellison
and Karnchanit (2012) where Justice
Ryan did not refer.
Justice Watts referred because he believed, probably correctly, that
there had been an offence committed under the then Surrogate Parenthood Act 1988 (Qld). However, at the time of the
referral, the time for prosecution had passed. The children were born in August
2009. The time of the referral was 30 June 2011. Almost two years had passed.
Prosecution in Queensland for the relevant offences had to be commenced within
1 year of the commission of the offence.
The husband and wife were not prosecuted.
On the same day, Justice Watts referred another Queensland couple to the
DPP for possible prosecution. They were well and truly inside the limitation
period. They were not prosecuted either.
To rely on legislation as to parenting presumptions that did not
contemplate international surrogacy arrangements, has resulted in what appears
to be more and more difficult reasoning.
In Ellison and Karnchanit, for
example:
• Mr Ellison, who was the genetic
father of the child, and named on the Thai
birth certificate, was not recognised by that process as the father;
• He was recognised as the father
following the discovery that at the time
of conception the surrogate was not in living in a de facto relationship;
• It is unclear who might have been the
mother- whether it was the intended
mother, Ms Solano, the birth mother Ms Karnchanit, or the anonymous egg donor. In any event,
Ms Solano was not recognised as the
mother, even though this was no doubt her and Mr Ellison’s intent when entering into the
surrogacy contract.
Three of the difficulties of defining a parent by birth (and thereby
excluding the intended parents) are that:
·
The person who
had always intended to be parent, was the driving force to ensure the child’s
creation, and parents the child on a daily basis may never be recognised at law
as a parent (and therefore the child is never recognised at law as that
person’s child, with potential adverse impact on the child’s psycho-social
development);
·
The need to
obtain the consent of the birth parent every time the child’s passport needs to
be renewed;
·
The risk that
children may unintentionally be disinherited.
A parent by genetics: the usual
approach taken by the Department of Immigration and Border Protection
I understand that the approach taken by the Department varies from
country to country and specifically:
·
In India the
approach of the Department is to insist that there is a genetic connection.
·
In Thailand the approach of the
Department is to insist on a genetic connection.
·
For those intended parents going to
the United States the approach appears to depend
on the officer of the Department. Some are insistent on DNA testing. Others are satisfied with the making of
custody orders, consistent with
H v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (see below for discussion of this case).
The formal position of the Department is as follows:
“A parent-child relationship is a question of fact to be determined by
the department with regard to all the
relevant circumstances.
In
the majority of surrogacy arrangements, at least one of the intended parents is also a biological parent of
the child. Normally, the biological parentage
can be readily determined through medical records and/or DNA testing. Provided that DNA testing is
carried out to approved standards the result
of DNA testing is given substantial weight when determining if a person is a parent of another person.
See:
Fact Sheet 23 – DNA Testing
Where
there is no biological connection between an Australian citizen who is the intended parent and the child born
through an international surrogacy arrangement,
or where such a biological connection
has not been satisfactorily
established, it is necessary for an Australian citizen to provide other evidence to demonstrate that the Australian
citizen was in fact the parent of the
child at the time of the child's birth. The type of evidence that would support such a claim is likely
to require greater scrutiny and verification
than DNA evidence. Consequently, an application based on such evidence may take significantly longer to
decide.
Evidence
that the parent-child relationship existed at the time of the child's birth may include, but is not limited to:
·
A formal surrogacy agreement entered into before the
child was conceived
·
Lawful transfer of parental rights in the country in
which the surrogacy was carried out to the Australian citizen before or at time
of the child's birth
·
Evidence that the Australian citizen's inclusion as a
parent on the birth certificate was done with that parent's prior consent
·
Evidence that the Australian citizen was involved in
providing care for the unborn child and/or the mother during the pregnancy, for
example, emotional, domestic or financial support and making arrangements for
the birth and prenatal and postnatal care
·
Evidence that the child was acknowledged socially from
or before birth as the Australian
citizen's child, for example, where the child was presented within the
Australian citizen's family and social groups as being the Australian citizen's
child.
·
Evidence that the Australian citizen treated the child
as his or her own from some point in time after birth would not by itself be
evidence that the Australian citizen was the child's parent at time of birth,
but it would lend weight to evidence of the types previously listed.”
A parent by intent: H v. Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship (2010)
The Federal Court rejected the approach taken by the Department of
Immigration and Citizenship. The
Department argued that the relevant test for who is a parent and who is a child under the Australian Citizenship Act was determined by genetics or determined
by the relevant definitions under the Family
Law Act.
In two cases decided side by side (neither of which was a surrogacy
case) the Federal Court determined that with the poor drafting of “parent” and “child” under the Australian
Citizenship Act, who was the “parent” would be determined by fact in each
case, but appears clear to say demonstrated intent.
The Full Court of the Federal Court held:
“Today, the
fundamental consideration in acquiring citizenship is the strength of the
connection between a person and Australia; it is this which provides the basis
for the ‘common bond’ mentioned in the preamble. Within this framework, there is, however,
little contextual support for the proposition of the word ‘parent’ has some
restrictive meaning, signifying only a biological parent, as opposed to a
parent, whoever that may be, within ordinary meaning of the word. Biological parentage can scarcely be the sine
qua non of a meaningful connection to the Australian community…..Bearing this
in mind, the more rational approach is not to attribute some technical meaning
to the word ‘parent’ in s16(2), but instead to attribute to the word its
ordinary meaning as evident in ordinary contemporary English usage.”
The Court went on to say:
“There is
nothing in the legislative object, the legislative text, or the legislative
structure of the Citizenship Act that requires the Court to conclude that, in
the specific context of the s16(2), has the meaning it bears in ordinary
contemporary English usage. Indeed
legislative history confirms that this approach is most in keeping with the
development of citizenship legislation over time and with the spirit and
intendment of the current Citizenship Act.
No sound reason has been advanced to warrant a more limited reading of
the word.
The word
‘parent’ is an everyday word in the English language, expressive of both the
status and the relationship to another.
Today, in the Citizenship Act it self-recognizes, not all parents become
parents in the same way….This is not to say that parents do not share common
characteristics; an everyday use of the
word indicates that they do.
Being a parent
within the ordinary meaning of the word may depend on various factors,
including social, legal and biological.
Once, in the case of an illegitimate child, biological connection was
not enough; Today, biological connection
in specific incidences may not be enough………. Perhaps in a typical case, almost
all the relevant considerations, whether biological, legal, or social will
point to the same person as being ‘the parents’ of a person. Typically, parentage is not just a matter of
biology but of intense commitment to another, expressed by acknowledging that
other person is one’s own and treating him or her as one’s own.
The ordinary
meaning of the word ‘parent’ is, however, clearly a question of fact, as is the
question of whether a particular person qualifies as a parent within that
ordinary meaning, implying s16(2)(a) the Tribunal is bound to determine whether
or not, at the time of the applicant’s birth, he or she had a citizen
parent. In deciding whether a person can
be property described as the applicant’s parent, the Tribunal is obliged to
consider the evidence before it, including evidence as to the supposed parents’
conduct before and at the time of birth and evidence as to the conduct of any
other person who may be supposed to have had some relevant knowledge. Evidence as to conduct after the birth may be
relevant as confirming that parentage at the time of birth. For example, evidence that a person
acknowledges the applicant as his own before and at the time of birth and,
thereafter treated the applicant as his own, may justify a finding of that
person as a parent of the applicant within the ordinary meaning of the word
‘parent’ at the time of the birth…….
We can discern
no relevant justification for holding…….that a person can only be a ‘parent’
within the meaning of s16(2) where it can be established that he or she has a
relevant link to the applicant. If the
Minister’s arguments in this case were accepted, a person could be treated as a
citizen from birth and believe himself to be a citizen, only to find years
later, based on a DNA test undertaken for other reason, that under the law he
is not and never was a citizen……….As a practical matter, we do not consider
that Parliament would have intended the likely unfortunately results of the
Minister’s construction……….The practical effect of this construction would be
to accord the science of genetics a status Parliament has not given it.”(emphasis
added)
Significantly, the court found that:
·
An Australian
man who met a Chinese woman on the internet when she was pregnant to a Chinese
man, and agreed to marry her, have his name on the birth certificate as the
father of the child and raise the child as his own, was a parent. On this point
the court took a similar approach to the US Supreme Court; and
·
An Australian
man who for 30 years had believed he was the father of a child, but was not,
but had acknowledged paternity, brought the child into his family including
paying child support, and he and his wife and children visited the child, was
also a parent.
The significance of the case is:
o It sets the benchmark for who is or
who is not a parent of a child for the purposes of the Australian Citizenship Act;
o It sets out clearly that proscriptive
definitions of who is or who is not a parent
can fail because they do not take into
account unusual or unexpected
cases.
In neither case was there any DNA link between the two men and their
children. Neither did the Family Law Act
definitions apply.
Clearly, if an intended parent enters into a surrogacy arrangement with
the intention of raising a child of their own (even if they do not supply their
own DNA) then they may well be a parent having
regard to the facts of the case as decided in H.
This approach was similarly accepted in Re Blake [2013] FCWA 1, where the Family Court of Western Australia
noted that if the birth definition of who is a parent were adopted, under that
State’s Artificial Conception Act 1985
(WA), then neither of the intended parents would be recognised as parents, but
instead looked to the intention of those concerned, or as her Honour referred
to it, the reality- who was parenting the children.
Rule 9: You may be a parent for some purposes but not others.
Why are custody orders needed for Australians going to the US, but not
in India?
Each overseas country has its own procedures. Officers of the Department of Immigration and
Border Protection wish to ensure, as part of Australia’s international
obligations, as Australia is a signatory to both the Hague Inter-Country Adoption Convention and the Hague Abduction Convention, that
children born through surrogacy arrangements aren’t children who have been
improperly abducted, sold or adopted in the overseas jurisdiction.
India is not a signatory to the Hague
Abduction Convention, but the United States is. Because the United States is a signatory to
the Abduction Convention, the best
practice is to have court orders in place to overcome issues to do with the Abduction Convention.
One feature of Ellison and
Karnchanit is that the Australian intended parents simply did not know the
marital status of the surrogate. If the surrogate had been married, her husband
could quite properly make complaint to Thai authorities that his child, who was
habitually resident in Thailand at the time of birth, had been removed from
Thailand without his consent, prompting action under the Abduction Convention.
Example:
Bill and Joe Bloggs undertake surrogacy through the You Beauty Rippa
Surrogacy Agency in Kerala which specialises in surrogacies for
Australians. The surrogate is implanted
with an embryo comprised of Bill’s sperm and the egg of an anonymous Caucasian
donor. When the child is born it is
clearly not Caucasian. Despite the terms
of the surrogacy agreement, the surrogate did not stop having sex with her
husband. The child was found to be
genetically the child of the surrogate and her husband.
The Department would not ordinarily
consider Bill and Joe to be “parents” of the child if they are not genetically
related to the child. However despite
everything that had occurred, they decided to raise the child as their own then
within the meaning of H v Minister for
Immigration and Citizenship, it is likely that they would be the “parents”
of the “child” who would be entitled to Australian citizenship by descent. It is unlikely that the Department would
accept that the child is an Australian citizen.
Example:
Bruce and Matt are a gay couple who have undertaken surrogacy with the
Ripsnorter Surrogacy Agency in Bangkok.
Bruce is an Australian citizen.
Matt is not. Each supply a sample
of sperm at the request of the agency, for testing purposes. It is determined that Bruce has the best
quality sperm. He is to be the
father. The child is conceived and
born. Bruce is named on the Thai birth
certificate as dad. The application for
Australian citizenship is made with Bruce as the father. At the request of the Department the DNA test
is undertaken. This demonstrates that
Bruce is not the father. Subsequent
tests determine that Matt is the father.
Under the approach taken by the Department, it is unlikely that the
Department would accept the child as being an Australian citizen. Under the test in H v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Bruce would be
considered to be the parent of the child.
It is of great surprise to intended parents to be told that although in
the overseas jurisdiction they were recognised as parents, for example on the
birth certificate, surrogacy contract or in the court order, that they might be
recognised under the Australian
Citizenship Act as parents, that the overseas birth certificate is
disregarded for these purposes (such as seen in Ellison and Karnchanit), and that for parenting presumptions under
State and Territory laws (with now the possible exception of Western Australia
given the decision in Re Blake, and
for Victoria, South Australia, the Northern Territory and Tasmania following
the decision in Green-Wilson and Bishop, discussed
above) they are not parents.
If the labyrinth were not difficult enough, it is possible that if the
surrogate were single that the intended parents (or at least the genetic
father) is a parent under Australian law.
They wonder, quite rightly, how they could be parents for some purposes
of Australian law, and not others.
Not being a “parent” generally
makes little practical difference by the time intended parents seek advice, as:
o The child is probably already an Australian
citizen;
o The child as a citizen is entitled to
a Medicare card, and with the birth certificate
Centrelink benefits can be claimed, and the child can be enrolled at school;
o Arriving at accident and emergency at
2am with the child in tow, the parents
are not going to be asked about the legality of parenthood More likely they will
be asked to fill out a form, and for Medicare and health insurance details.
The differences come later on:
·
If the intended
parents separate, there may then be argument about whether or not they were a
“couple”. If the court forms the view that they were not, then that may prevent
the non-biological parent having a relationship with the child.
·
The theoretical
difference that they are not viewed as “parents” in the eyes of the State, at
least for some purposes.
·
Sooner or later
it might be argued that child support is not payable .
·
That the child
may be accidentally disinherited, due to a lack of a (or poorly drawn) will of
the parent.
Two recent decisions have thrown the
matter into stark relief
Case 1: Mason and Mason
The significance of Mason &
Mason [2013][23]
is that Ryan J changed her mind from her previous decision in Ellison & Karnchanit [2012] to a
position where she believed that State legislation concerning parenting
presumptions was the legislation that concerned who was a parent, determining
that the applicant was not a “parent”.
Her Honour noted that the Commonwealth Parliament sought to adopt the
same scheme that operates in the States and Territories:
“namely a scheme for the declaration of parentage and,
for children born or a surrogacy arrangement, the transfer of parentage in
accordance with an order made by the Supreme Court of NSW.”
Her Honour did not deal with the approach taken by Justice Crisford in Blake & Anor [2013] FCWA 1 where her
Honour dealt with the “reality” and looked at in effect the intention of the
parties as to who was to be the parent.
If Justice Ryan had adopted the approach taken by Justice Crisford then
in my view she would have found that the applicant was a “parent”.
Of concern are the facts contained in paragraph 4 of the judgment:
“The contract
provided that the total compensation Rs 2,25,000 (Rupees two Lakhs twenty five thousand[24])
or a vaginal birth or Rs 2,60,000[25]
(Rupees two Lakhs sixty thousand)
if the mother had a caesarean delivery. It is not necessary to summarise the
entire agreement but it should not pass without comment that the provisions
which limit the birth mother’s ability to manage her health during the
pregnancy and make decisions about delivery of her babies, are troubling. It is
also troubling that this 29 page document is written in English. It is signed
by the applicant and, because she is illiterate in English and Hindi, the
mother’s attestation is her thumb print. There is nothing in the document which
suggests that before the birth mother signed it that it was read and translated to her.”
I also note paragraphs 67 to 69 of her Honour’s judgment:
67. “As to the children being born from a
surrogacy arrangement by mothers they
are unlikely to know, the family consultant said that at some point in the children’s lives, they
may have “an intense, emotional identity crisis
about this aspect of their lives”. She went on to say:
31. ... Borrowed from the discourse about
adoption, the twins may potentially
face a more complicated task of making sense of their place in the world because they have grown up in a
family whose parents faces do not look like
theirs and without experiencing their “mother”, and her culture. There may be times in [the children’s]
lives when they will be pre-occupied with this task.
They may seek contact with their mothers at significant life cycle transitions. It is also possible that
it may never be an issue for the twins.
32. The adoption discourse suggests that, of
those who make enquiries about their
adoption and have difficulties when adjusting to the news, these emotional difficulties are often a result of
pre-existing psychological vulnerabilities
and where there were already troubled family dynamics within the adoptive family. [The applicant]
and [the respondent’s] declaration at this point
of openness may be a protective factor for the twins alongside the development of secure and healthy parent-child
relationships. In addition to this,
the parents have actively sought out other families in similar positions, and if these friendship groups can be
continued, there may be some benefit to the
twins in connecting to other children in the same position.
33. Another argument proffered in the
discourse on parentage is that a child’s
genetic identity forms part of a child’s history. There may be medical advantages in the children knowing their
parentage. The donor mother and [the
birth mother] and their families will, apparently, be unlikely and/or unable to seek out [the children]. There
may be significant class issues separating
the families which may well be apparent to the children as they explore their Indian backgrounds
further. The twins may realize that their mothers
and any half siblings experienced life very differently to them. Again, this is an issue that the parents can
assist the children to understand and deal with.
(family consultant’s report dated 6 June 2012)
68. As to the ultimate issue, the family
consultant strongly recommended that
the applicant and respondent be awarded equal shared parental responsibility and that the children
reside with them. She was as certain and comfortable
as one can be about predicting the
future that the children “will thrive”
in the care of the applicant and respondent. In short, she gave a glowing report about them which brims
with optimism for their and the children’s
future together.
69. Her opinion accords with my own
assessment. I am strongly satisfied that
the applicant and respondent are astute to the challenges that lie ahead and as well-equipped as anybody could
be to meet them.”
Case 2: Groth & Banks [2013][26]
Four days after Mason was
delivered, Cronin J determined as a matter of statutory drafting that the
Family Law Act envisages that there are two biological parents of a child and
that unless there is a displacement under the Family Law Act a sperm donor can be a parent. His Honour determined that a known sperm
donor to a single woman was a parent. Neither Case, Mason nor Groth and Banks
referenced the other.[27]
His Honour was of the view that the provisions of the Family Law Act overrode the relevant
Victorian legislation that declared that the sperm donor was not a parent. Therefore his Honour did not consider the
consent form signed by the sperm donor in which he acknowledged that he was
only a donor and not a parent. (because it was signed under State, not Federal,
it was therefore irrelevant).
This decision has sent a shockwave through IVF clinics as it clearly
states that known donors in certain circumstances are no longer donors but are
parents and that as a result may have rights and responsibilities under the Family Law Act, have a liability to pay
child support and their child may have a right of inheritance.
His Honour stated[28]:
“In Re Mark: An
Application Relating to Parental Responsibilities [2003] FamCA 822; (2003) 179
FLR 248; (2003) 31 Fam LR 162; (2003) FLC 93-173, Brown J considered the
differing positions of a sperm donor who was unknown or anonymous, and a donor
who had entered the process with the intention of fathering a particular child.
Her Honour held that a person in the latter position was rightly considered a
“parent” for the purposes of the Act. If this were not the case, there would be
no need for legislation such as the Status of Children Act 1974 (Vic) to remove
the rights and responsibilities that might otherwise attach to anonymous or
unknown donors.
Brown J
reproduced the Oxford English Dictionary definition of a parent, being “a
person who has begotten or borne a child”, which was also relied upon in Tobin.
In Re Mark, the man had donated his genetic material with the express intention
of fathering a child he would parent. Moreover, her Honour found at [59],[t]he
fact the ovum was fertilised by a medical procedure, as opposed to
fertilisation in utero through sexual intercourse, is irrelevant to either his
parental role or the genetic make-up of [the child].
The applicant
here submits that the same course should be taken in this case. His argument is
that the course of conduct leading to the conception of the child is clearly distinguishable
from a donor who does not wish to have an involvement in the child’s life.
Concerns of public policy, such as those raised by Guest J in Re: Patrick (An Application
Concerning Contact) [2002] FamCA 193 at [298] that unknown sperm donors could
be considered “parents” under such an interpretation become irrelevant because the Act does not impose
obligations on an unknown person who has donated biological material.
Thus, the
interpretation of “parent” in the Act allows each case to be determined on its
particular facts.
The fact that a
child has two parents who are her or his biological progenitors permeates the
language of the Act. The whole Commonwealth statutory concept as outlined in
the Part VII of the Act is one in which biology is the determining factor unless
specifically excluded by law. I return to those exclusions below.
Part VII of the
Act contains multiple references to the parents of the child as “either” or
“both”. These can be found at s 60B(1)(a), 60B(2)(a) and (b), 60CC(2)(a), 60CC(3)(d)(i),
61C(2), 65C(a), 66B(2), 66F(1) and 69C(2). The logical presumption which
follows is that the legislature envisaged two parents when dealing with parental
responsibility under the Act.
The applicant
fits that presumption in the Act of who is a parent. He is the biological progenitor
and one of two people who set about a course of conduct with the intention of
fathering a child. On the face of the language in the Act and the facts here, a
logical conclusion would be that the applicant is the parent of the child. If
one turns to the sections of the Act that displace biological progenitors as
parents, little changes.”
Going back to my earlier analysis, there are three ways of saying who is
a parent:
• By genetics;
• By birth; or
• By intention.
The approach taken by his Honour was by genetics, but also one might
think intention. The basis on which the
applicant was determined to be a parent relied on genetics. Nevertheless his Honour distinguished between
known and anonymous donors. It is my
view that if a genetics based approach were to be taken then the intention of
the donor is irrelevant. Following the
analysis to conclusion, anonymous donors to single women would be considered to
be parents because each man is the biological
progenitor of the child.
What this case illustrates as does Blake
and Mason & Mason is that
consideration should be given in determining who is a parent under a surrogacy
ART arrangement the test ought to be
intention of the parties involved.
The impact of this case from an international point of view is that
there might be a benefit in a surrogate for Australian intended parents being
single. Each case will however depend on its own facts.
Rule 10: There is insurance and there is insurance
Travel agents are insistent that when Australians travel to one country
in the world they must have travel insurance. That one country is the one with
the world’s most expensive health system- the US of course.
Insurance is one of those tricky things that need to be covered for
those undertaking surrogacy. Something might go wrong. South Australia, as I
set out above, in effect makes it a criminal offence to provide life insurance
for the surrogate. Victoria is unclear and at face value appears to do
likewise, but the regulator has stepped in and said that it is entirely
appropriate to provide for life, disability and health insurance for the
surrogate.
Australia has a mixed form of medicine. Part of our system is met by the
taxpayer, via Medicare (for all Australians) and part of it is met privately,
through health insurance.
When a child is born in Australia through surrogacy, the child is an
Australian citizen and entitled to Medicare (provided by the taxpayer) from
birth. If the surrogate is not an Australian citizen or permanent resident
giving birth in Australia, the child may not then be entitled to Medicare, but
once the parentage order is made in favour of an Australian citizen or
citizens, then by combination of the relevant State Surrogacy Act, the Federal Family
Law Act, and the Australian
Citizenship Act, the child then becomes an Australian citizen and is
entitled to Medicare.
Australians living outside Australia may or may not be entitled to
Medicare in Australia, depending on how long they have lived overseas. As with
all insurance matters, this is a matter that ought to be planned for before the
surrogacy arrangement is entered into, not afterwards.
Disability and life insurances are provided privately.
The number one stumbling block for Australians undertaking surrogacy in
the US is that of cost. The single biggest factor in that cost is health
insurance and medical cost.
Rule 11: A lawyer in one place may
be useless somewhere else.
In July 2010 after 20 odd hours of travel I arrived in Memphis from Brisbane. Within a few hours of getting out of the
plane, I was walking down Beale Street.
I am a keen photographer. I was
approached by a teenage girl wearing what appeared to be two tea towels which I
then recognised were skimpy items of clothing. She asked if I were the official
photographer for Beale Street. I said
that I was a tourist from Australia. To my complete bemusement, she insisted
that I take her photograph and those of her friends.
After the photos were taken, this girl asked me what I did for a
living. I said that I was a lawyer. She then said “Can you help me? I’m in trouble with the county? I might go to jail.”
I protested that I was from Australia and that I was not a local lawyer. Her friend said: “No Lurline he ain’t a local.
You need a local lawyer.”
What Lurline’s friend understood but many intended parents don’t
understand and indeed some lawyers undertaking surrogacy work clearly don’t
understand is that the law is different in different places. Therefore if there
is a matter which touches different jurisdictions then advice should be
obtained from lawyers in that jurisdiction.
Example of what not to do
Fred and Wilma live in New South Wales.
Barney and Betty live in Vermont.
Betty is to be Fred and Wilma’s surrogate. Betty is Wilma’s sister. Because Fred and Wilma live in New South
Wales the surrogacy arrangement will necessarily be a New South Wales surrogacy
arrangement. The intention is for Betty
to give birth in New South Wales.
Fred and Wilma saw a relative who is a lawyer for the purposes of legal
advice. She had not undertaken surrogacy
work previously. They then drafted a
surrogacy arrangement which they had coddled together from the internet. It was awful drafting. My instructions were terminated after I
insisted that the surrogacy arrangement be redrafted and that Barney and Betty
get advice from lawyers who are familiar with the law in Vermont and New
Hampshire (as they wanted to give birth if necessary in New Hampshire out of
the two) in case for medical reasons Betty couldn’t travel and would have to
give birth in the United States. I
wanted to make sure that the surrogacy arrangement could comply with the law in
those jurisdictions. Perversely, if the
child were born in New South Wales then a parentage order could be obtained in
New South Wales and Fred and Wilma would be shown ultimately as the parents of
the child. If the child were born in
Vermont or New Hampshire assuming it was possible to engage in surrogacy and that
a custody order could be obtained then as a matter of then Fred and Wilma would
be the parents for the purposes of Australian citizenship and would be parents
in that US jurisdiction but it is questionable as to whether they would be
parents for other purposes under Australian law. Same DNA.
Same parties. Different
jurisdictions. Different outcome.
Rule 12: Lawyers and other
professionals should work as a team.
Rule 2 stated that what is legal there may result in jail here. It is essential so far as possible that
lawyers are able to work as a team so that, as far as possible the clients are
able to have a seamless approach. If
there is a network with a surrogacy agency and with doctors and other
associated professionals, all the better.
I say “so far as is possible”
because for my clients undertaking commercial surrogacy overseas who ordinarily
reside in Queensland, New South Wales, the ACT or are domiciled in New South
Wales, I can’t encourage them or facilitate them to commit the act of
commercial surrogacy. The relevant
jargon in Queensland is aid, abet, counsel, procure or conspire with and the
relevant jargon in New South Wales is to induce or conspire with. As an officer of the court I am obliged to
remind my clients that what they are proposing to do is illegal and that I must
to everything as a lawyer to discourage them from doing so. I also do not want to commit an offence!
My number one gripe with international surrogacy matters is being kept
out of the loop. The number one complaint I have received from clients about international
matters is that the process is not seamless- that different people do different
things for different parts of the journey, but no one follows them through all
the way, to make sure that each part goes smoothly. By far the easiest way to
ensure that the process is as seamless as possible is to be included in
communications. Just because I’m a
lawyer in another jurisdiction doesn’t mean I’m an idiot or a yokel. The easiest way to include me in
communications is to cc any email to me and to have systems in place in your
office to ensure that occurs. I will
extend the same courtesy.
The cost to a client of the lawyers doing so is minimal but the benefit
is that the client hopefully will not fall between the cracks; issues will be
identified and dealt with quickly and efficiently, and that above all the
client will feel that they are being looked after (which they are) and that
they are not a number (they are not).
The essence as to how I undertake business is that subject to my
professional duties, particularly the duty to my client, I believe that the
essence in doing business is having long-term trusting relationships with
others. This means we can refer work to
and from each other and also mean that we can trust each other to get the
result right.
Several years ago, I heard Dr Kim Bergman from Growing Generations speak
of the mantra which is required for a successful surrogacy arrangement. I would say that it’s the essence also of a
relationship between lawyers and others involved in a successful surrogacy
arrangement:
1. Mutual respect
2. Communication
3. Flexibility.
Stephen Page
Harrington Family Lawyers
25 September, 2015
Australian
Divorce Blog http://australiandivorce.blogspot.com
Australian Gay
and Lesbian Law Blog http://lgbtlawblog.blogspot.com
Australian
Surrogacy and Adoption Blog http://surrogacyandadoption.blogspot.com
1 Stephen Page is an IAML fellow from Brisbane,
Australia. He is a partner of Harrington Family Lawyers, and was admitted as a solicitor in 1987 (Qld),
1989 (High Court of Australia) and barrister and solicitor (South Australia)
2013. He is an international representative of the ART Committee of the
American Bar Association, is the first international fellow of the American
Academy of Assisted Reproductive Technology Attorneys (AAARTA) and chairs the
Surrogacy Australia legal committee.
Stephen in November 2014 obtained parentage orders in Qld, NSW, Vic and
SA. In 2012 he appeared for the surrogate in a case which set a worldwide
precedent – that conception is at pregnancy, not fertilisation.
[2] Statements by a client to the writer, 2012 and 2013.
The client was the surrogate for her daughter.
[3] . Private statement by a judge to the
author in 2015. When the judge originally said that the roles of a judge and a
lawyer were different, I disagreed, saying that we had both sworn an oath of
office.
[10] And by way of
contrast see the decision of Groth and
Banks, referred to below, which was delivered 4 days later.
[13] Although the House of Representatives, Social Policy
and Legal Affairs Committee has recommended an inquiry into surrogacy.
[14] I might add that I was not involved in the initial
process, but commenced acting when court proceedings were about to be filed.
[16] WA residents are already recognised as parents
following the decision in Re Blake
[2013] FCWA 1
[19] Chief Federal Magistrate Pascoe, speech viewed at http://www.federalcircuitcourt.gov.au/pubs/docs/Speech%20-%20Pascoe%20-%20LawAsia%20-%202011.pdf
on 28/4/13
[21]From the BBC’s Yes Minister. A triumph of bureaucratic obfuscation.
[27] And it speaks aas to the global nature of surrogacy that after the
parties in Mson & Mason obtained orders in the family Court of Australia in
Sydney, they all moved to England and obtained surrogacy orders there. The orders in Australia were apparently not
fully recognized in England.




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