In a
recent decision, three judges of the Family Court have ruled that an Australian
couple who went lawfully overseas for surrogacy are not the parents of the
child that was conceived and born through surrogacy.
The
impact of the decision is that many intended parents who go overseas for
surrogacy are NOT the parents of their children. A possible impact is that
children may not be able to obtain citizenship.
It is an outrage that we now likely have thousands of children who live in Australia whose parents conceived them through surrogacy overseas who do not have a legal parent/child relationship – which could lead to the disinheritance of the children concerned as well as other significant unintended impacts.
It is an outrage that we now likely have thousands of children who live in Australia whose parents conceived them through surrogacy overseas who do not have a legal parent/child relationship – which could lead to the disinheritance of the children concerned as well as other significant unintended impacts.
This
surely was not and should not be the intention of Parliament.
It is an
absurdity to say that we now do not know who the child's parents are. A
child ordinarily has one or two parents. What is clear is that the intended
parents are unlikely to be the parents. The court did not then say who the
parents of the child were. It is unclear if the surrogate and her partner are
the child's parents as a matter of Australian law- although not recognised as
the child's parents under Indian law.
Where
does this leave the child?
The trial
judge, Justice Berman, called for urgent legislative change. Now, two years
since his call for change, nothing has happened.
This
child- and the thousands of children born overseas through surrogacy-
deserves, in accordance with Australia's international obligations under the
International Convention on the Rights of the Child, to have his identity
protected- including the parent-child relationship that in reality he or she
has with Mr and Mrs Bernieres. Children should not be left hanging about,
waiting to discover who are or are not their legal parents.
The case
In the
case, called
Bernieres and Dhopal, Mr and
Mrs Bernieres had a child through surrogacy in India. They first went before Justice David Berman
of the Family Court seeking orders that they had parental responsibility for
the child and that the child live with them – and declarations or findings
under the Family Law Act that they
were the child’s parents.
His
Honour made the orders that they had parental responsibility and that the child
live with them, but declined to make the parentage declaration.
Mr
Bernieres was the biological father of the child. An egg donor was the biological mother.
The
couple, who lived in Victoria, had not undertaken surrogacy in compliance with
the law of Victoria :
·
Because
the surrogacy was commercial, as oppose to altruistic;
·
Was not
commissioned with the assistance of a Victorian registered ART provider;
·
The
procedure was not carried out in Victoria.
Therefore,
according to Justice Berman, section 60HB of the Family Law Act did not apply to the case. Section 60HB provides:
“(1) If a court has made an order under a prescribed law of the State
or Territory to the effect that:
(a)
A child is the child of one or
more persons; or
(b)
Each of one or more persons is a
parent of a child;
then, for the purposes of this Act, the child is the
child of each of those persons.
(2) In this section: “this
Act” includes:
(a)
The standard Rules of Court; and
(b)
The related Federal Circuit Court
Rules.”
Furthermore,
Mr and Mrs Bernieres sought a declaration under section 69VA of the Family Law Act that they were the
parents of the child. His Honour was of the view that he could not
do so because that section was not a “stand
alone power but rather requires ‘parentage’ of a child to be an issue in
proceedings in respect to another matter”.
His Honour further went to say that the Family Court despite being a
superior court of record, did not have an inherent power to grant a parentage
declaration “other than those authorised
by the Act and its inherent power extends only to administer justice and
prevent abuse of process”.
His
Honour noted that the circumstances surrounding the birth of the child were “not dealt with directly either by the
relevant state legislation or by reference to section 60HB” and that this
may be unsatisfactory. However “the definition of a parent should [not] be
extrapolated because of a legislative vacuum.” He went on to say that the category of
persons who satisfy the definition of parent while not necessary closed
pursuant to section 60H of the Family Law
Act and section 60HB “any perceived
hiatus is a matter for legislation and not judicial interpretation”. Therefore as the Victorian legislation did
not provide for the circumstances of the child’s birth, Mr and Mrs Bernieres
were not the parents of the child for the purposes of Victorian law. His Honour said that he could “well understand the dismay of [Mr and Mrs
Bernieres] that they are not able to secure for all purposes that which they
fervently seek namely, recognition and a declaration of parentage”. His Honour therefore noted the need for “urgent legislative change”.
Quite
simply, since that decision by his Honour two years ago in September 2015,
there has been no legislative change nor any proposed legislative change.
The Full Court decision
The Full
Court was comprised of Chief Justice Diana Bryant, Justice Stephen Strickland
and Justice Judy Ryan.
Their
Honours accepted the approach taken by Chief Judge Thackray in Farnell and Chambua (the Baby Gammy
case) that sections 60H and 60HB of the Family
Law Act overrode the general parenting presumption under the Family Law Act.
Furthermore,
their Honours agreed with the tentative position taken by Justice Ryan in Mason and Mason (2013) where her Honour
said in effect that there is a scheme between State and Federal law as to who
is and who is not a parent and that therefore a person is or is not a parent
determined by State and Territory status of children legislation.
Therefore,
the approach taken by Justice Johns in Green-Wilson
and Bishop that someone is a parent under general provisions of the Family Law Act even if not a parent
under the equivalent Status of Children
Act is the wrong approach.
Their
Honours went on to note that section 60H(1) by which the birth mother and de
facto partner or husband are the parents of a child conceived through
artificial conception procedure, did not apply to surrogacy situations:
“On
its plain meaning, if section 60H(1) is applied to a surrogacy arrangement…it
results in the birth mother and her husband or partner being the parents, and
the child not being the child of any person who provided genetic material. Thus, neither of the commissioning parties
can be the parents of the child under this subsection, and it is clearly
designed to cover conventional artificial conception arrangements where the
birth mother and her partner are to be the parents of the child.”
Their
Honours did not consider sections 60H(2) and (3) of the Family Law Act. As their
Honours noted “judicial opinion is
divided as to whether those subsections impliedly exclude” any donor or
genetic material from recognition as a parent.
If the
approach taken by Justice Ryan in Mason
and Mason were correct, then on the face of it a donor would not be a
parent under those sections. However, in
the decision of Groth and Banks, a
known donor could be a parent. The parentage of known donors is therefore still
unclear.
Whilst it
might be thought that section 60HB only applies to domestic surrogacy
arrangements, their Honours said:
“Thus,
it is plain that s60HB now specifically addresses the position of children born
under surrogacy arrangements, leaving s60H to address the status of
children born by means of conventional artificial conception procedures. Further, the plain intention of section 60HB
is to leave to each of the States and Territories to regulate the status of
children born under surrogacy arrangements, and for that to be recognised for
the purposes of the Act. In other words, section 60HB covers that
field, leaving, as we say, section 60H to address conventional artificial
conception procedures.”
As their
Honours said:
“The
unfortunate result of that conclusion is that the parentage of the child here
is in doubt. There is no order made
under the relevant State legislation (and nor could there be…).
There
is no question that the father is the child’s biological father, but that does
not translate into him being a parent for the purposes of the Act. Further, the mother is not even the
biological mother, and thus is even less likely to be the “legal parent”.
Because
of the effect of section 60HB (and perhaps section 60H) therefore a parentage
declaration could not be made.
Mr and
Mrs Bernieres sought to have the child considered to be a “child of the marriage” but from similar reasoning the Full Court
found that the child was not a child of the marriage, in part because of the
specific provision namely section 60HB.
Effect of the decision
It has
been estimated that approximately 250 children a year are born to Australian
intended parents via overseas surrogacy arrangements. It is clear now that because of this
decision, many Australian intended parents are not the parents of any child born overseas through surrogacy. It is really irrelevant as to whether the
surrogacy is commercial or altruistic.
Because the Family Court referred to the relevant State legislation
(which is fairly consistent on this point), the effect is clear – intended
parents are not parents of children
born through surrogacy overseas. It
seems clear that earlier decisions that have said otherwise under the Family Law Act were incorrectly decided.
Will there be any impact on citizenship?
It is
unclear as to what impact there will be on the citizenship of children
conceived in the future through international surrogacy. The Department of Immigration has taken the
view that section 60HB of the Family Law
Act applies only to domestic surrogacy arrangements and not international
surrogacy arrangements. This is
important because section 8 of the Australian
Citizenship Act says that where a person has been conceived through an
artificial conception procedure, who is a parent for the purposes of Australian
citizenship is determined by sections 60H and 60HB. If the Department of Immigration and Border
Protection takes the view, consistent with the Family Court, that section 60HB
of the Family Law Act covers the
field – then many children born outside Australia through surrogacy (with
limited exceptions) would not be recognised as the child of a parent for the
purposes of Australian citizenship.
Therefore the child would not be entitled to Australian citizenship and
would therefore not be entitled to live in Australia.
For quite
some time the Immigration Department has said that section 60HB does not apply
to international surrogacy arrangements, in which case the usual test as to who
is a parent, of who in society generally someone as a parent. This is consistent with the decision in H v. Minister for Immigration (2010), a
Federal Court decision – which was quite clear in saying it didn’t apply to
surrogacy.
For quite
some time now there has been a variance of opinion by judges of the Family
Court as to whether some is or is not a parent when they have undertaken
overseas surrogacy. The Immigration
Department has largely ignored the approaches taken by Family Court
judges. Whether it does so now may have
significant impact on any Australian who wishes to undertake surrogacy
overseas.
Are there any exceptions to the ruling as to who is
a parent under the Family Law Act?
Yes,
there would appear to be four exceptions in which someone can still be a parent
under the Family Law Act when
surrogacy is undertaken overseas.
Exception 1 – comity cases
If
someone is living overseas and has undertaken surrogacy lawfully there, and is
recognised as a parent there, then the general parenting presumptions under the
Family Law Act do not apply and
that person should be recognised as a parent under the Family Law Act: Justice Ryan in Carlton and Bissett (2013).
Exception 2 – a second parent adoption
Now we
come to the truly Kafkaesque situation where a biological parent may not be a
parent but the second (either biological or non-biological) parent will be a
parent under Australian law. In some
parts of the United States, surrogacy is governed by post birth parenting
orders, typically granting custody to one of the intended parents, then
terminating the parental rights of the surrogate and her partner, and then a
second order making the other intended parent a parent. This second order is typically a second
parent adoption order (sometimes called a stepparent adoption order).
It is
unclear from the decision in Bernieres and Dhopal whether the first
parent will be recognised as a parent under Australian law. After all, they won’t have complied with
relevant State and Territory status of children legislation. Whether the overseas order concerning the
first parent will be recognised is uncertain.
However,
it would appear reasonably clear that the second parent adoption order which
recognises the second parent as a parent of the child, would recognise that
person as a parent under the Family Law
Act. Why this is so is fairly
technical. One of the definitions of “child” under section 4 of the Family Law Act (the definition section)
says:
“(a) In Part VII [that part of the Family Law Act that deals with
children and parental responsibility]
includes an adopted child and a stillborn child; and
(b) In Subdivision E of
Division 6 of that Part [the part of the Family Law Act that deals with
taking children overseas improperly],
means a person who is under 18 (including a person who is an adopted child).”
Further,
under that section “parent” is
defined as:
“When
used in Part VIII in relation to a child who has been adopted, means an
adoptive parent of the child.”
Furthermore,
where there might be legitimate concern about whether the adoption needs to
have occurred in Australia or needs to have occurred in accordance with example
with the Hague Intercountry Adoption Convention, the definition of “adopted” in that section is much wider:
“In
relation to a child, means adopted under the law of any place (whether in or
out of Australia) relating to the adoption of children.”
Exception 3 – registration of US
surrogacy orders
It is
possible in limited circumstances (and has occurred twice) where US surrogacy
orders are able to be registered under the Family
Law Act. In those cases, the order
of the US court that declares the intended parents to be the parents of the
child will therefore make the parents under Australian law, if the order is
registered, the parents of the child in Australia.
In the
two decisions, Justice Forrest of the Family Court made plain the Court’s
reluctance to register US surrogacy orders when there has been commercial
surrogacy. This may be a very limited
option.
Exception 4 – South Australia
Under the
Family Relationships Act 1975 (SA)
those intending to undertake surrogacy overseas from South Australia can obtain
the approval of the South Australian Attorney-General before undergoing their
journey. The South Australian Attorney
General in turn has to be guided by the State
Framework for Altruistic Surrogacy and the Family Relationships Regulations – neither of which at this stage
have been written even though the law has been in place since July 2015.
If a couple (and it would only
apply to couples) is able to obtain the Attorney-General’s consent, and they
then pursue surrogacy successfully overseas, they can be recognised under South
Australian law as the parents by obtaining a parentage declaration in the Youth
Court of South Australia (which would therefore be sufficient for the purposes
of section 60HB of the Family Law Act.
Historical impact of not being a parent
Before
the decision in Bernieres and Dhopal,
very few intended parents would go to the Family Court seeking orders declaring
them to be the parents of children born overseas through surrogacy. The reasons were simple:
·
It costs
approximately $20,000 to bring such an application and depending on which part
of Australia they are in, might take 6 months to resolve. If they were seen as
breaking the law, the judge might refer them to authorities for investigation
of commission of a criminal offence;
·
Chances
were the Court would not make a declaration of parentage in their favour;
·
Given
changes to passport rules in 2015, for those who underwent surrogacy in the US
or Canada, then they may not need the surrogate’s written consent to any
passport for the child;
·
There are
usually no real impediments to the child obtaining citizenship, Medicare
entitlement, Centrelink entitlements, going to hospital or the doctor or being
enrolled in childcare or school;
·
There
were issues in relation to wills and inheritances, superannuation and child
support issues. However, intact families
generally (aside from planning their Wills) did not have an obvious imperative
to go to Court to seek a declaration or orders concerning their child.
The
unknown factor as a result of this decision is the approach that will be taken
by the Department of Immigration.
The call
by Justice Berman for urgent legislative change is an obvious one. The sooner it happens, the better.
I'll be discussing this case further in a free webinar I'm speaking in this Saturday. All welcome!
I'll be discussing this case further in a free webinar I'm speaking in this Saturday. All welcome!
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