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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> A & B (Children) (Surrogacy: Parental orders: time limits) [2015] EWHC 911 (Fam) (01 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2015/911.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 911 (Fam) |
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(Sitting in the HIGH COURT FAMILY DIVISION)
IN THE MATTER OF THE HUMAN FERTILISATION AND EMBRYOLOGY ACT 2008 (Section 54)
AND IN THE MATTER OF A (A Boy) (Born 12th October 2006) & B (A Girl) (Born 27th April 2009) (By their Children's Guardian)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
D & G | Applicants | |
and | ||
ED & DD | 1st & 2nd Respondents | |
and | ||
A & B (By their children's guardian) |
3rd & 4th Respondents |
____________________
Ms Penny Logan (of Cafcass Legal) for the 3rd & 4th Respondents
The 1st and 2nd Respondents did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date: 14th January 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Ms Justice Russell DBE:
Introduction
Summary
Background
These proceedings
Law
(8) The court must be satisfied that no money or other benefit (other than for expenses reasonably incurred) has been given or received by either of the applicants for or in consideration of-
(a) the making of the order,
(b) any agreement required by subsection (6) above,
(c) the handing over of the child to the applicants, or
(d) the making of any arrangements with a view to the making of the order,
Unless authorised by the court.
"In relation to the public policy issues, the cases in effect suggest (and I agree) that the court poses itself three questions:
was the sum paid disproportionate to reasonable expenses?
were the applicants acting in good faith and without 'moral taint' in their dealings with the surrogate mother?
were the applicants' party to any attempt to defraud the authorities?"
"What has changed, however, is that welfare is no longer merely the court's first consideration but becomes its paramount consideration. The effect of that must be to weight the balance between public policy considerations and welfare (as considered in Re X and Y) decisively in favour of welfare. It must follow that it will only be in the clearest case of the abuse of public policy that the court will be able to withhold an order if otherwise welfare considerations support its making... I think it important to emphasise that, notwithstanding the paramountcy of welfare, the court should continue carefully to scrutinise applications for authorisation under Section 54(8) with a view to policing the public policy matters identified in Re S (supra) and that it should be known that that will be so."
Welfare: the court's paramount consideration
Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or in the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of crime and disorder, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.
Section 54(3): whether the parental orders can be made out of time
"[55] Can Parliament really have intended that the gate should be barred forever if the application for a parental order is lodged even one day late? I cannot think so. Parliament has not explained its thinking, but given the transcendental importance of a parental order, with its consequences stretching many, many decades into the future, can it sensibly be thought that Parliament intended the difference between six months and six months and one day to be determinative and one day's delay to be fatal? I assume that Parliament intended a sensible result. Given the subject matter, given the consequences for the commissioning parents, never mind those for the child, to construe section 54(3) as barring forever an application made just one day late is not, in my judgment, sensible. It is the very antithesis of sensible; it is almost nonsensical. It is, after all, easy to imagine far from fanciful circumstances in which the application arrives too late: the solicitor misunderstands section 54(3) and excludes the day on which the child was born from his calculation of when time runs out; the solicitor's legal executive is delayed by a broken down train or a traffic jam and arrives at the court office just after it has closed; on the way to their solicitor's office to give instructions the commissioning parents are involved in a car crash that leaves them both in a coma from which they recover only after the six-month period has elapsed. Why should they be barred? Even more to the point, why should the wholly innocent child is barred by such mishap? Let it be assumed, though in truth, and with all respect to her, this is little more than speculation, that the underlying policy is that identified by Eleanor King J in JP v LP and others [2014] EWHC 595 (Fam), namely to provide for the speedy consensual regularisation of the legal parental status of a child's carers following a birth resulting from a surrogacy arrangement; that policy surely does not require section 54(3) to be read as meaning that any delay, however trivial, is to be fatal. One can see why Eleanor King J was concerned that there should not be what she referred to as delay over "a protracted period", but that is a different point.
[56] I have considered whether the result at which I have arrived is somehow precluded by the linguistic structure of section 54 , which provides that "the court may make an order … if … the [relevant] conditions are satisfied." I do not think so. Slavish submission to such a narrow and pedantic reading would simply not give effect to any result that Parliament can sensibly be taken to have intended.
[57] I conclude, therefore, that section 54(3) does not have the effect of preventing the court making an order merely because the application is made after the expiration of the six month period."
"In one sense [two years and two months] is a long time, both in absolute terms and when compared with the statutory time limit of six months. And it is a very long time indeed compared with the matter of a few days that were fatal to the appellant in Adesina v Nursing and Midwifery Council [2013] EWCA Civ 818, [2013] 1 WLR 3156. But principle demands that I have regard to the statutory subject matter, the background, and the potential impact on the parties if I allow section 54(3) to bar the application. I repeat in this context what I have already said in paragraphs 54-56 above. There are, without labouring the point, three aspects of a parental order which very obviously and very fundamentally distinguish it from the kind of case which the court was concerned with in Adesina. The first is that a parental order goes not to just status but to identity as a human being. The second is that the court is looking, indeed is required by statute to look, to a future stretching many, many decades into the future. The third is that the court is concerned not just with the impact on the applicant whose default in meeting the time limit is being scrutinised but also with the impact on the innocent child, whose welfare is the court's paramount concern. In these circumstances the court is entitled, indeed in my judgment it is bound, to adopt a more liberal and relaxed approach than was appropriate in Adesina. After all, as Maurice Kay LJ recognised in Adesina, what the court is required to do, albeit it is required to do no more, is to secure compliance with the Convention. I would not be doing that if I were to deny the commissioning parents and X access to the court."
"I intend to lay down no principle beyond that which appears from the authorities. Every case will, to a greater or lesser degree, be fact specific. In the circumstances of this case the application should be allowed to proceed. No one – not the surrogate parents, not the commissioning parents, not the child – will suffer any prejudice if the application is allowed to proceed. On the other hand, the commissioning parents and the child stand to suffer immense and irremediable prejudice if the application is halted in its tracks."
Parental orders or adoption
"The Government recognised that in surrogacy cases, where the gametes of either one or both of the commissioning couple had been used to bring about the pregnancy, the resulting child would be the genetic child of one or both of the commissioning couple. Because of this genetic link, and provided that the welfare of the child was foremost in any decision made about the child, the Government did not feel that the full range of assessments and checks necessary to adopt a child were appropriate."
A person who is the subject of a parental order is to be treated in law as if born as the child of the persons who obtained the order.
A person who is the subject of a parental order is the legitimate child of the persons who obtained the order and is to be treated as the child of the relationship of those persons.
A person who is the subject of a parental order is to be treated in law as not being the child of any person other than the persons who obtained the order.
Conclusions