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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> W, Re (Rev 1) [2013] EWHC 3570 (Fam) (09 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2013/3570.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3570 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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W, Re |
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Ms Melanie Carew (instructed by Cafcass Legal as Advocate to the Court)
Hearing dates: 9th October 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Theis DBE:
Background
(1) To CSP a total of $22,000 (for 'compensation for administrative and coordination services' $20,000 plus an additional fee for international intended parents of $2,000).
(2) To DP the total sum (other than for expenses reasonably incurred) of $38,500, paid by way of staged payments during the pregnancy with the final payments made just after the birth. There were other payments for specified expenses which are not caught by s 54 (8) Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (HFEA 2008). For example, the monthly allowance of $200 (total $1,800), payments for housekeeping (total $2040) and counselling (total $5,375).
In addition, the applicants describe in their statement a number of one off voluntary gifts they made to DP and her family, which included a stay in a hotel, totalling $2,093. These were entirely voluntary gestures made by the applicants and are not, in the circumstances of this case, caught by s 54 (8).
The applicants were responsible for the cost of all the medical procedures.
'[KL and MW] complied with Nevada law and did not 'compensate' the gestational carrier, DP. Rather, they reimbursed her for her living expenses.'
It was clear the court in Nevada had the gestational surrogacy agreement when it made the order. The gestational agreement contained the following provision at paragraph 20 in the section 'Entitlement to Payment'
'..payments to Surrogate and her Husband...constitute a reasonable amount to reimburse Surrogate for all discomfort, pain, suffering and inconvenience, for pre-pregnancy and pre-birth child support expenses and post birth expenses including reasonable and necessary living expenses, and for all Surrogate and her Husband's foreseen and unforeseen losses, costs and expenses incurred in carrying out their obligations in this Agreement. It is expressly understood and agreed that Intended Parents' payment of fees and expenses...on behalf of Surrogate shall in no way be construed as a fee for termination of Surrogate's parental rights or a payment in exchange for surrender of a Child...Additionally, no payments shall be construed as compensation for services and all Parties agree that all payments are to be construed as reimbursements and/.or payments for expenses.
In recognition of the Intended Parents' obligations set forth under Californian law, to support this Child from the time pregnancy is diagnosed, the Intended Parents agree to pay such sums [in the Agreement]'
The exhibit A in the gestational surrogacy agreement listing the payments to be made to DP is entitled 'Gestational Carrier Agreement – Altruistic'. It did not include reference to the payment of sums totalling $38,500. The documents submitted to the court in Nevada by DP and her husband in support of the pre birth order confirm DP did not receive 'compensation' for being a gestational carrier.
'..the laws in the state of Nevada are unclear with regards to gestational surrogacy. Your exhibit A provides for compensation that we believe is permitted under the laws of Nevada. However, [KL and MW] want to ensure you receive the same compensation as any other surrogate mother in our programme. We are unsure if the courts in Nevada will uphold additional compensation, and in an attempt to ensure that you receive the same consideration as any other surrogate mother we have attached an additional Agreement between you and your couple......I hope the attached Agreement is acceptable to you and your attorney. We have drafted several agreements of this kind in the past for surrogate mothers that reside outside the state of California....'
At the time the applicants did not question why the agreement had been prepared in this way. CSP had told them they had worked with surrogates in Nevada before and this was how it was arranged before.
'It is unlawful to pay or offer to pay money or anything of value to the surrogate except for the medical and necessary living expenses related to the birth of the child as specified in the contract'.
Her opinion is that it does not create a criminal offence as the relevant statute does not provide for any penalties; consequently, in her opinion, it is considered to be unconstitutionally vague and as a result cannot be enforced by way of a criminal sanction.
'In most cases, the Court will conduct an evidentiary hearing where the Gestational Carrier is sworn in as a witness and canvassed on the record. The Court is looking to determine if there is clear and convincing evidence that the Gestational Carrier's motivation in participating in the surrogacy was not connected to the money that she received. Meaning, the money was not an inducement for her to participate in the process....In the case at hand, the additional 'gift schedule' appears to be in line with what the Nevada court's find to be proper. The gifts and the contract are not contingent upon delivery of a healthy child, handing over of a child to the Intended parents.....it is not out of the ordinary to see a monthly living expense of $2,000 a month and it is not out of the ordinary for a surrogate's monthly living expenses to increase dramatically at weeks thirty four, thirty six and upon birth...In conclusion, I am confident that a Nevada Judge would find the sums paid to the Carrier in this case were not disproportionate to her reasonable monthly living expenses. That the Surrogate was not 'bought' for lack of a better term in violation of the public policy that existed under Nevada law at that time. The fees in this case were not dissimilar to similar cases that I have been involved in, other than they are slightly lower that the average cases that we see in Nevada.'
Section 54 Criteria
(i) Was the sum disproportionate to reasonable expenses
(ii) Were the applicants acting in good faith and without moral taint in their dealings with the surrogate mother and the payments do not overbear the will of the surrogate.
(iii) Were the applicants party to any attempt to defraud the authorities
(iv) To ensure commercial surrogacy arrangements were not used to circumvent childcare laws in this country
(v) The applicants were not involved in the simple payment of money and 'buying' children abroad
In Re L (Commercial Surrogacy) [2010] EWHC 3146 (Fam) Hedley J made it clear the changes introduced by SI 2010/986 the child's welfare was now the court's paramount consideration and he observed 'It must follow that it will only be in the clearest case of abuse of public policy that the court will be able to withhold an order if otherwise welfare consideration supports its making'.
Welfare