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Document 1 of 1.
IN THE MATTER OF BABY M, A PSEUDONYM FOR AN ACTUAL PERSON
No. A-39
Supreme Court of New Jersey
109 N.J. 396;
537 A.2d 1227;
1988 N.J. LEXIS 1;
77 A.L.R.4th 1
September 14, 1987, Argued
February 3, 1988, Decided
PRIOR HISTORY:
[***1]
On certification to the Superior Court, Chancery Division, Family Part, Bergen
County, whose opinion is reported at
217 N.J. Super. 313 (1987).
Charles R. Gordon, M.D., Witness, Susan Feldman Gordon, Esq., Witness
William Stern, Natural Father
By: Notary Public PRIMARY RESEARCH
ASSOCIATES OF UNITED STATES, INC. d/b/a INFERTILITY CENTER OF NEW YORK.
COUNSEL:
Harold J. Cassidy and
Alan J. Karcher argued the cause for appellants, Mary Beth and Richard Whitehead (Cassidy, Foss
& San Filippo, attorneys;
Harold J. Cassidy, Alan J. Karcher, Robert W. Ruggieri, Randolph H. Wolf, and
Louis N. Rainone, on the briefs).
Gary N. Skoloff argued the cause for respondents, William and Elizabeth Stern (Skoloff
& Wolfe, attorneys;
Gary N. Skoloff, Francis W. Donahue, and
Edward J. O'Donnell, on the brief).
Lorraine A. Abraham, Guardian
ad litem, argued the cause
pro se (Lorraine A.
Abraham, attorney;
Lorraine A. Abraham and
Steven T. Kearns, on the brief).
Annette M. Tobia submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus curiae Dr. Betsy P. Aigen, (Spivak
& Tobia, attorneys).
George B. Gelman submitted a brief on
[***2] behalf of
amicus
curiae American
Adoption Congress (Gelman
& McNish, attorneys).
Steven N. Taieb and
Steven F. McDowell, a member of the Wisconsin bar, submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus curiae Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights.
Steven P. Weissman submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus
curiae Communications Workers of America, AFL-CIO.
John R. Holsinger, Merrill O'Brien, Mary Sue Henifin, and
John H. Hall, and
Terry E. Thornton, members of the New York bar, submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus curiae Concerned United Birthparents, Inc. (Ellenport
&
Holsinger, attorneys).
David H. Dugan, III, and
Joy R. Jowdy, a member of the Texas bar, submitted a brief on behalf of
amici curiae Concerned Women for America, Eagle Forum, National Legal Foundation, Family
Research Council of America, United Families Foundation, and
Judicial Reform Project.
Alfred F. Russo and
Andrew C. Kimbrell, a member of the Pennsylvania bar, and
Edward Lee Rogers, a member of the District of Columbia bar, submitted a brief on behalf of
amici curiae The Foundation on Economic Trends, Jeremy Rifkin, Betty Friedan,
[***3] Gloria
Steinem, Gena Corea, Barbara Katz-Rothman, Lois Gould, Marilyn French, Hazel
Henderson, Grace Paley, Evelyn Fox Keller, Shelly Mindin, Rita Arditti, Dr.
Janice Raymond, Dr. Michelle Harrison, Dr. W. D. White, Sybil Shainwald, Mary
Daly,
Cathleen Lahay, Karen Malpede, Phylis Chesler, Kristen Golden, Letty Cottin
Pogrebin, and Ynestra King (Russo
& Casey, attorneys).
Louis E. Della Torre, Jr., submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus curiae The Gruter Institute for Law and Behavioral Research, Inc. (Schumann,
Hession, Kennelly
& Dorment, attorneys).
Kathleen E. Kitson, Sharon F. Liebhaber, and
Myra Sun, a member of the Washington bar, submitted a brief on behalf of
amici curiae Hudson County Legal Services Corporation and National Center on Women and
Family Law, Inc. (Timothy K.
Madden, Director, Hudson County Legal Services Corporation, attorney).
Priscilla Read Chenoweth submitted a brief on behalf of
amici curiae Committee for Mother and Child Rights, Inc. and Origins.
Herbert D. Hinkle submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus curiae National Association of
Surrogate Mothers.
Joseph M. Nardi, Jr., and
Edward F. Canfield
[***4] , a member of the District of Columbia bar, submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus curiae The National Committee for Adoption, Inc. (Lario, Nardi
& Gleaner, attorneys).
Charlotte Rosin, pro se, submitted a
letter in lieu of brief on behalf of
amicus curiae National Infertility Network Exchange.
William F. Bolan, Jr., submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus curiae New Jersey Catholic Conference.
Paul J. McCurrie and
Cyril C. Means, Jr., a member of the Michigan
bar, with whom Priscilla Read Chenoweth and Cathleen M. Halko were on the
brief, submitted a brief on behalf of
amici curiae Odyssey Institute International, Inc., Odyssey Institute of Connecticut, Inc.,
Florence Fisher, Judianne Densen-Gerber, Senator Connie Binsfeld, and Angela
Holder.
Merrilee A. Scilla,
pro se, submitted a letter in lieu of brief on behalf of
amicus curiae RESOLVE of Central New Jersey.
Jerrold N. Kaminsky submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus curiae RESOLVE, Inc.
Richard J. Traynor and
John W. Whitehead, a member of the Virginia
bar, and
David A. French, a member of the Michigan bar, submitted a brief on behalf of
amicus curiae The
[***5] Rutherford Institute (Traynor
and Hogan, attorneys).
Nadine Taub submitted a brief on behalf of
amici curiae Women's Rights Litigation Clinic at Rutgers Law School, The New
York State Coalition on Women's Legislative Issues, and the National Emergency
Civil Liberties Committee.
JUDGES:
For affirmance in part, reversal in part and remandment -- Chief Justice Wilentz and Justices Clifford, Handler, Pollock, O'Hern,
Garibaldi and Stein.
Opposed -- None. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Wilentz, C.J.
OPINIONBY: WILENTZ
OPINION:
[*410]
[**1234] In this matter the Court is asked to determine the validity of a contract that
purports to provide a new way of bringing children into a family. For a fee of
$ 10,000, a woman agrees to be artificially inseminated with the semen of
another woman's husband; she is to conceive a child, carry it to term, and
after its birth surrender it to the natural father and his wife. The intent of
the contract is that the child's natural mother will thereafter be forever
separated from her child. The wife is to adopt the child, and she and the
natural father are to be
[*411] regarded as its parents for all purposes. The contract providing
[***6] for this is called a
"surrogacy contract," the natural mother inappropriately
called the
"surrogate mother."
We invalidate the surrogacy contract because it conflicts with the law and
public policy of this State. While we recognize the depth of the yearning of
infertile couples to have their own children, we find the payment of money to a
"surrogate" mother illegal, perhaps criminal, and potentially degrading to women.
Although in this case we grant
custody to the natural father, the evidence having clearly proved such custody
to be in the best interests of the infant, we void both the termination of the
surrogate mother's parental rights and the adoption of the child by the
wife/stepparent. We thus restore the
"surrogate" as the mother of the child. We remand the issue
[**1235] of the natural mother's visitation rights to the trial court,
since that issue was not reached below and the record before us is not
sufficient to permit us to decide it
de novo.
We find no offense to our present laws where a woman voluntarily and without
payment agrees to act as a
"surrogate" mother, provided that she is not subject to a binding agreement to surrender
her
child. Moreover, our
[***7] holding today does not preclude the Legislature from altering the current
statutory scheme, within constitutional limits, so as to permit surrogacy
contracts. Under current law, however, the surrogacy agreement before us is
illegal and invalid.
I.
FACTS
In February 1985, William Stern and Mary Beth Whitehead
entered into a surrogacy contract. It recited that Stern's wife, Elizabeth,
was infertile, that they wanted a child, and that Mrs. Whitehead was willing to
provide that child as the mother with Mr. Stern as the father.
[*412] The contract provided that through artificial insemination using Mr. Stern's
sperm, Mrs. Whitehead would become pregnant, carry the
child to term, bear it, deliver it to the Sterns, and thereafter do whatever
was necessary to terminate her maternal rights so that Mrs. Stern could
thereafter adopt the child. Mrs. Whitehead's husband, Richard, n1 was also a
party to the contract; Mrs. Stern was not. Mr. Whitehead promised to do all
acts necessary to rebut the presumption of paternity
under the Parentage Act.
N.J.S.A. 9:17-43a(1), -44a. Although Mrs. Stern was not a party to the surrogacy
agreement, the contract gave her sole custody of the
[***8] child in the event of Mr. Stern's death. Mrs. Stern's status as a nonparty to
the surrogate parenting agreement presumably was to
avoid the application of the baby-selling statute to this arrangement.
N.J.S.A. 9:3-54.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n1 Subsequent to the trial court proceedings, Mr. and Mrs. Whitehead were
divorced, and soon thereafter Mrs. Whitehead remarried. Nevertheless, in the
course of this opinion we will make reference almost exclusively to the facts
as they existed at the
time of trial, the facts on which the decision we now review was reached. We
note moreover that Mr. Whitehead remains a party to this dispute. For these
reasons, we continue to refer to appellants as Mr. and Mrs. Whitehead.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Mr. Stern, on his part, agreed to attempt the artificial insemination and to
pay Mrs. Whitehead $
10,000 after the child's birth, on its delivery to him. In a separate
contract, Mr. Stern agreed to pay $ 7,500 to the Infertility Center of New York
("ICNY"). The Center's advertising campaigns solicit surrogate mothers and
[***9] encourage infertile couples to consider surrogacy. ICNY arranged for the
surrogacy contract
by bringing the parties together, explaining the process to them, furnishing
the contractual form, n2 and providing legal counsel.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n2 The Stern-Whitehead contract (the
"surrogacy contract") and the Stern-ICNY contract are reproduced below as Appendices A and B
respectively. Other ancillary agreements and their attachments are omitted.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End
Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The history of the parties' involvement in this arrangement suggests their good
faith. William and Elizabeth Stern were
[*413] married in July 1974, having met at the University of Michigan, where both
were Ph.D. candidates. Due to financial considerations and Mrs. Stern's
pursuit of a medical degree and residency, they decided to defer
starting a family until 1981. Before then, however, Mrs. Stern learned that
she might have multiple sclerosis and that the disease in some cases renders
pregnancy a serious health risk. Her anxiety appears to have exceeded the
actual risk, which current
[***10] medical authorities assess as minimal. Nonetheless that anxiety was evidently
quite
real, Mrs. Stern fearing that pregnancy might precipitate blindness,
paraplegia, or other forms of debilitation. Based on the perceived risk, the
Sterns decided to forego having their own children. The decision had special
significance for Mr. Stern. Most of his family had been destroyed in the
Holocaust. As the family's only survivor, he very much
wanted to continue his bloodline.
[**1236] Initially the Sterns considered adoption, but were discouraged by the
substantial delay apparently involved and by the potential problem they saw
arising from their age and their differing religious backgrounds. They were
most eager for some other means to start a family.
The paths of Mrs. Whitehead and the Sterns to
surrogacy were similar. Both responded to advertising by ICNY. The Sterns'
response, following their inquiries into adoption, was the result of their
long-standing decision to have a child. Mrs. Whitehead's response apparently
resulted from her sympathy with family members and others who could have no
children (she stated that she wanted to give another couple the
"gift of
life"); she
[***11] also wanted the $ 10,000 to help her family.
Both parties, undoubtedly because of their own self-interest, were less
sensitive to the implications of the transaction than they might otherwise have
been. Mrs. Whitehead, for instance, appears not to have been concerned about
whether the Sterns would make good parents for her child; the Sterns, on their
part, while conscious of the
obvious possibility that surrendering
[*414] the child might cause grief to Mrs. Whitehead, overcame their qualms because
of their desire for a child. At any rate, both the Sterns and Mrs. Whitehead
were committed to the arrangement; both thought it right and constructive.
Mrs. Whitehead had reached her decision concerning surrogacy before the Sterns,
and had actually been
involved as a potential surrogate mother with another couple. After numerous
unsuccessful artificial inseminations, that effort was abandoned. Thereafter,
the Sterns learned of the Infertility Center, the possibilities of surrogacy,
and of Mary Beth Whitehead. The two couples met to discuss the surrogacy
arrangement and decided to go forward. On February 6,
1985, Mr. Stern and Mr. and Mrs. Whitehead executed the surrogate parenting
[***12] agreement. After several artificial inseminations over a period of months,
Mrs. Whitehead became pregnant. The pregnancy was uneventful and on March 27,
1986, Baby M was born.
Not wishing anyone at the hospital to be aware of the
surrogacy arrangement, Mr. and Mrs. Whitehead appeared to all as the proud
parents of a healthy female child. Her birth certificate indicated her name to
be Sara Elizabeth Whitehead and her father to be Richard Whitehead. In
accordance with Mrs. Whitehead's request, the Sterns visited the hospital
unobtrusively to see the newborn child.
Mrs.
Whitehead realized, almost from the moment of birth, that she could not part
with this child. She had felt a bond with it even during pregnancy. Some
indication of the attachment was conveyed to the Sterns at the hospital when
they told Mrs. Whitehead what they were going to name the baby. She apparently
broke into tears and indicated that she did not know if she could give up the
child. She talked
about how the baby looked like her other daughter, and made it clear that she
was experiencing great difficulty with the decision.
Nonetheless, Mrs. Whitehead was, for the moment, true to her word. Despite
powerful
[***13] inclinations to the contrary, she
[*415] turned her child over to the Sterns on March 30 at the Whiteheads' home.
The Sterns were thrilled with their new
child. They had planned extensively for its arrival, far beyond the practical
furnishing of a room for her. It was a time of joyful celebration -- not just
for them but for their friends as well. The Sterns looked forward to raising
their daughter, whom they named Melissa. While aware by then that Mrs.
Whitehead was
undergoing an emotional crisis, they were as yet not cognizant of the depth of
that crisis and its implications for their newly-enlarged family.
Later in the evening of March 30, Mrs. Whitehead became deeply disturbed,
disconsolate, stricken with unbearable sadness. She had to have her child.
She could not eat, sleep, or concentrate on anything other than her need
for her baby. The next day she went to the Sterns' home and told them how much
she was suffering.
The depth of Mrs. Whitehead's despair surprised and frightened the Sterns. She
told them that she could not live without
[**1237] her baby, that she must have her, even if only for one week, that thereafter
she would surrender her child. The Sterns,
[***14] concerned that Mrs.
Whitehead might indeed commit suicide, not wanting under any circumstances to
risk that, and in any event believing that Mrs. Whitehead would keep her word,
turned the child over to her. It was not until four months later, after a
series of attempts to regain possession of the child, that Melissa was returned
to the Sterns, having been
forcibly removed from the home where she was then living with Mr. and Mrs.
Whitehead, the home in Florida owned by Mary Beth Whitehead's parents.
The struggle over Baby M began when it became apparent that Mrs. Whitehead
could not return the child to Mr. Stern. Due to Mrs. Whitehead's refusal to
relinquish the
baby, Mr. Stern filed a complaint seeking enforcement of the surrogacy
contract. He alleged, accurately, that Mrs. Whitehead had not
[*416] only refused to comply with the surrogacy contract but had threatened to flee
from New Jersey with the child in order to avoid even the possibility of his
obtaining custody. The court papers
asserted that if Mrs. Whitehead were to be given notice of the application for
an order requiring her to relinquish custody, she would, prior to the hearing,
leave the state with the baby.
[***15] And that is precisely what she did. After the order was entered,
ex parte, the process server, aided by the police, in the presence of the Sterns,
entered Mrs. Whitehead's home to execute the
order. Mr. Whitehead fled with the child, who had been handed to him through a
window while those who came to enforce the order were thrown off balance by a
dispute over the child's current name.
The Whiteheads immediately fled to Florida with Baby M. They stayed initially
with Mrs. Whitehead's parents, where one of
Mrs. Whitehead's children had been living. For the next three months, the
Whiteheads and Melissa lived at roughly twenty different hotels, motels, and
homes in order to avoid apprehension. From time to time Mrs. Whitehead would
call Mr. Stern to discuss the matter; the conversations, recorded by Mr. Stern
on
advice of counsel, show an escalating dispute about rights, morality, and
power, accompanied by threats of Mrs. Whitehead to kill herself, to kill the
child, and falsely to accuse Mr. Stern of sexually molesting Mrs. Whitehead's
other daughter.
Eventually the Sterns discovered where the Whiteheads were staying, commenced
supplementary
proceedings in Florida, and obtained
[***16] an order requiring the Whiteheads to turn over the child. Police in Florida
enforced the order, forcibly removing the child from her grandparents' home.
She was soon thereafter brought to New Jersey and turned over to the Sterns.
The prior order of the court, issued
ex parte, awarding
custody of the child to the Sterns
pendente lite, was reaffirmed by the trial court after consideration of the certified
representations of the parties (both represented by counsel) concerning the
unusual sequence of events that had unfolded. Pending final
[*417] judgment, Mrs. Whitehead was awarded limited visitation with Baby M.
The Sterns' complaint,
in addition to seeking possession and ultimately custody of the child, sought
enforcement of the surrogacy contract. Pursuant to the contract, it asked that
the child be permanently placed in their custody, that Mrs. Whitehead's
parental rights be terminated, and that Mrs. Stern be allowed to adopt the
child,
i.e., that, for all purposes, Melissa become the Sterns' child.
The
trial took thirty-two days over a period of more than two months. It included
numerous interlocutory appeals and attempted interlocutory appeals. There
[***17] were twenty-three witnesses to the facts recited above and fifteen expert
witnesses, eleven testifying on the issue of custody and four on the subject of
Mrs. Stern's
multiple sclerosis; the bulk of the testimony was devoted to determining the
parenting arrangement most compatible with the child's best interests. Soon
after the conclusion of the trial, the trial court announced its opinion from
the bench.
217 N.J. Super. 313 (1987). It held that the surrogacy contract was valid; ordered that Mrs. Whitehead's
parental
rights be terminated
[**1238] and that sole custody of the child be granted to Mr. Stern; and, after hearing
brief testimony from Mrs. Stern, immediately entered an order allowing the
adoption of Melissa by Mrs. Stern, all in accordance with the surrogacy
contract. Pending the outcome of the appeal, we granted a continuation of
visitation to Mrs.
Whitehead, although slightly more limited than the visitation allowed during
the trial.
Although clearly expressing its view that the surrogacy contract was valid, the
trial court devoted the major portion of its opinion to the question of the
baby's best interests. The inconsistency is apparent. The
[***18] surrogacy contract calls for the surrender of the child to the Sterns,
permanent and sole custody in the Sterns, and termination of Mrs. Whitehead's
parental rights, all without qualification, all regardless of any evaluation
[*418] of the best interests of the child. As a matter of fact the contract recites
(even before the child was conceived) that it is in the best interests of the
child to be placed with Mr. Stern. In effect, the
trial court awarded custody to Mr. Stern, the natural father, based on the same
kind of evidence and analysis as might be expected had no surrogacy contract
existed. Its rationalization, however, was that while the surrogacy contract
was valid, specific performance would not be granted unless that remedy was in
the best interests of the child. The factual
issues confronted and decided by the trial court were the same as if Mr. Stern
and Mrs. Whitehead had had the child out of wedlock, intended or unintended,
and then disagreed about custody. The trial court's awareness of the
irrelevance of the contract in the court's determination of custody is
suggested by its remark that beyond the question of the child's best
interests,
"[a]ll other concerns
[***19] raised by counsel constitute commentary."
217 N.J. Super. at 323.
On the question of best interests -- and we agree, but for different reasons,
that custody was the critical issue -- the court's analysis of the testimony
was perceptive, demonstrating both its understanding of the case and its
considerable experience
in these matters. We agree substantially with both its analysis and
conclusions on the matter of custody.
The court's review and analysis of the surrogacy contract, however, is not at
all in accord with ours. The trial court concluded that the various statutes
governing this matter, including those concerning adoption, termination of
parental rights, and payment of money in connection with adoptions, do
not apply to surrogacy contracts.
Id. at 372-73. It reasoned that because the Legislature did not have surrogacy contracts in
mind when it passed those laws, those laws were therefore irrelevant.
Ibid. Thus, assuming it was writing on a clean slate, the trial court analyzed the
interests involved and the power of the court to accommodate them. It then
held that surrogacy contracts are
valid and should be enforced,
id. at
[*419] 388,
[***20] and furthermore that Mr. Stern's rights under the surrogacy contract were
constitutionally protected.
Id. at 385-88.
Mrs. Whitehead appealed. This Court granted direct certification.
107 N.J. 140 (1987). The briefs of the parties on appeal were joined by numerous briefs filed
by
amici expressing various interests and views on surrogacy and on this case. We have
found many of them helpful in resolving the issues before us.
Mrs. Whitehead contends that the surrogacy contract, for a variety of reasons,
is invalid. She contends that it conflicts with public policy since it
guarantees that the child will not have the nurturing of
both natural parents -- presumably New Jersey's goal for families. She further
argues that it deprives the mother of her constitutional right to the
companionship of her child, and that it conflicts with statutes concerning
termination of parental rights and adoption. With the contract thus void, Mrs.
Whitehead claims primary custody (with visitation rights in Mr.
Stern) both on a best interests basis (stressing the
"tender years" doctrine) as well as on the policy basis of discouraging surrogacy contracts.
[***21] She maintains that even if custody would ordinarily go to Mr. Stern, here it
should be
[**1239] awarded to Mrs. Whitehead to deter future surrogacy arrangements.
In a brief filed after
oral argument, counsel for Mrs. Whitehead suggests that the standard for
determining best interests where the infant resulted from a surrogacy contract
is that the child should be placed with the mother absent a showing of
unfitness. All parties agree that no expert testified that Mary Beth Whitehead
was unfit as a mother; the
trial court expressly found that she was
not
"unfit," that, on the contrary,
"she is a good mother for and to her older children,"
217 N.J. Super. at 397; and no one now claims anything to the contrary.
One of the repeated themes put forth by Mrs. Whitehead is that the court's
initial
ex parte
order granting custody to the Sterns during the trial was a substantial factor
in the ultimate
[*420]
"best interests" determination. That initial order, claimed to be erroneous by Mrs. Whitehead,
not only established Melissa as part of the Stern family, but brought enormous
pressure on Mrs. Whitehead. The order
brought the weight of the state behind
[***22] the Sterns' attempt, ultimately successful, to gain possession of the child.
The resulting pressure, Mrs. Whitehead contends, caused her to act in ways that
were atypical of her ordinary behavior when not under stress, and to act in
ways that were thought to be inimical to the child's best interests in that
they
demonstrated a failure of character, maturity, and consistency. She claims
that any mother who truly loved her child might so respond and that it is
doubly unfair to judge her on the basis of her reaction to an extreme situation
rarely faced by any mother, where that situation was itself caused by an
erroneous order of the court. Therefore, according to Mrs. Whitehead, the
erroneous
ex parte order precipitated a series of events that proved instrumental in the final
result. n3
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n3 Another argument advanced by Mrs. Whitehead is that the surrogacy agreement
violates state wage regulations,
N.J.S.A. 34:11-4.7, and the Minimum Wage Standard Act,
N.J.S.A.
34:11-56a to -56a30. Given our disposition of the matter, we need not reach
those issues.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***23]
The Sterns claim that the surrogacy contract is valid and should be enforced,
largely for the reasons given by the trial court. They claim a constitutional
right of privacy, which includes the right of procreation, and the right of
consenting
adults to deal with matters of reproduction as they see fit. As for the
child's best interests, their position is factual: given all of the
circumstances, the child is better off in their custody with no residual
parental rights reserved for Mrs. Whitehead.
Of considerable interest in this clash of views is the position of the child's
guardian
ad litem, wisely appointed by the court at the outset of the litigation. As the
child's representative, her role in the litigation, as she viewed it, was
solely to protect the child's best interests. She therefore took no position
on the validity of the surrogacy contract, and instead
[*421] devoted her energies to obtaining expert testimony uninfluenced by any
interest other than the
child's. We agree with the guardian's perception of her role in this
litigation. She appropriately refrained from taking any position that might
have appeared to compromise her role as the child's advocate.
[***24] She first took the position, based on her experts' testimony, that the Sterns
should have primary custody, and that while Mrs. Whitehead's parental rights
should not be terminated, no visitation should be
allowed for five years. As a result of subsequent developments, mentioned
infra, her view has changed. She now recommends that no visitation be allowed at
least until Baby M reaches maturity.
Although some of the experts' opinions touched on visitation, the major issue
they addressed was whether custody should be reposed in the Sterns or
in the Whiteheads. The trial court, consistent in this respect with its view
that the surrogacy contract was valid, did not deal at all with the question of
visitation. Having concluded that the best interests of the child called for
custody in the Sterns, the trial court enforced the operative provisions of the
surrogacy contract, terminated Mrs. Whitehead's parental
rights, and granted an adoption to Mrs. Stern. Explicit in the
[**1240] ruling was the conclusion that the best interests determination removed
whatever impediment might have existed in enforcing the surrogacy contract.
This Court, therefore, is without guidance from
[***25] the trial court on the visitation issue, an issue of considerable importance
in any event, and especially important
in view of our determination that the surrogacy contract is invalid.
II.
INVALIDITY AND UNENFORCEABILITY OF SURROGACY CONTRACT
We have concluded that this surrogacy contract is invalid. Our conclusion has
two bases: direct conflict with existing
[*422] statutes and conflict with the public policies of this State, as expressed in
its statutory and decisional law.
One of the surrogacy contract's basic
purposes, to achieve the adoption of a child through private placement, though
permitted in New Jersey
"is very much disfavored."
Sees v. Baber, 74 N.J. 201, 217 (1977). Its use of money for this purpose -- and we have no doubt whatsoever that the
money is being paid to obtain an adoption and
not, as the Sterns argue, for the personal services of Mary Beth Whitehead --
is illegal and perhaps criminal.
N.J.S.A. 9:3-54. In addition to the inducement of money, there is the coercion of
contract: the natural mother's irrevocable agreement, prior to birth, even
prior to conception, to surrender the child to the adoptive couple. Such an
agreement
[***26] is
totally unenforceable in private placement adoption.
Sees, 74 N.J. at 212-14. Even where the adoption is through an approved agency, the formal agreement to
surrender occurs only
after birth (as we read
N.J.S.A. 9:2-16 and -17, and similar statutes), and then, by regulation, only after the
birth
mother has been offered counseling.
N.J.A.C. 10:121A-5.4(c). Integral to these invalid provisions of the surrogacy
contract is the related agreement, equally invalid, on the part of the natural
mother to cooperate with, and not to contest, proceedings to terminate her
parental rights, as well as her contractual concession, in aid of the adoption,
that the child's best interests would be
served by awarding custody to the natural father and his wife -- all of this
before she has even conceived, and, in some cases, before she has the slightest
idea of what the natural father and adoptive mother are like.
The foregoing provisions not only directly conflict with New Jersey statutes,
but also offend long-established State policies. These
critical terms, which are at the heart of the contract, are invalid and
unenforceable; the conclusion therefore follows,
[***27] without more, that the entire contract is unenforceable.
[*423] A. Conflict with Statutory Provisions
The surrogacy contract conflicts with: (1) laws prohibiting the use of money in
connection with adoptions; (2) laws requiring proof of parental unfitness or
abandonment
before termination of parental rights is ordered or an adoption is granted; and
(3) laws that make surrender of custody and consent to adoption revocable in
private placement adoptions.
(1) Our law prohibits paying or accepting money in connection with any
placement of a child for adoption.
N.J.S.A. 9:3-54a.
Violation is a high misdemeanor.
N.J.S.A. 9:3-54c. Excepted are fees of an approved agency (which must be a non-profit
entity,
N.J.S.A. 9:3-38a) and certain expenses in connection with childbirth.
N.J.S.A. 9:3-54b. n4
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n4
N.J.S.A. 9:3-54 reads as follows:
a. No person, firm, partnership, corporation, association or agency shall
make, offer to make or assist or participate in any placement for adoption and
in connection therewith
(1) Pay, give or agree to give any money or any valuable consideration, or
assume or discharge any financial obligation; or
(2) Take, receive,
accept or agree to accept any money or any valuable consideration.
b. The prohibition of subsection a. shall not apply to the fees or services of
any approved agency in connection with a placement for adoption, nor shall such
prohibition apply to the payment or reimbursement of medical, hospital or other
similar expenses incurred in
connection with the birth or any illness of the child, or to the acceptance of
such reimbursement by a parent of the child.
c. Any person, firm, partnership, corporation, association or agency violating
this section shall be guilty of a high misdemeanor.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***28]
[**1241] Considerable care was taken in this case to structure the surrogacy
arrangement so as not to
violate this prohibition. The arrangement was structured as follows: the
adopting parent, Mrs. Stern, was not a party to the surrogacy contract; the
money paid to Mrs. Whitehead was stated to be for her services -- not for the
adoption; the sole purpose of the contract was stated as being that
"of giving a child to William Stern, its natural and
biological father"; the money was purported to be
[*424]
"compensation for services and expenses and in no way . . . a fee for
termination of parental rights or a payment in exchange for consent to
surrender a child for adoption"; the fee to the Infertility Center ($ 7,500) was stated to be for legal
representation, advice, administrative work, and other
"services." Nevertheless, it seems clear that the money was paid and accepted in
connection with an adoption.
The Infertility Center's major role was first as a
"finder" of the surrogate mother whose child was to be adopted, and second as the
arranger of all proceedings that led to the adoption. Its role as adoption
finder is demonstrated
by the provision requiring Mr. Stern to pay
[***29] another $ 7,500 if he uses Mary Beth Whitehead again as a surrogate, and by
ICNY's agreement to
"coordinate arrangements for the adoption of the child by the wife." The surrogacy agreement requires Mrs. Whitehead to surrender Baby M for the
purposes of
adoption. The agreement notes that Mr.
and Mrs. Stern wanted to have a child, and provides that the child be
"placed" with Mrs. Stern in the event Mr. Stern dies before the child is born. The
payment of the $ 10,000 occurs only on surrender of custody of the child and
"completion of the duties and obligations" of Mrs. Whitehead, including
termination of her parental rights to facilitate adoption by Mrs. Stern. As
for the contention that the Sterns are paying only for services and not for an
adoption, we need note only that they would pay nothing in the event the child
died before the fourth month of pregnancy, and only $ 1,000 if the child were
stillborn,
even though the
"services" had been fully rendered. Additionally, one of Mrs. Whitehead's estimated
costs, to be assumed by Mr. Stern, was an
"Adoption Fee," presumably for Mrs. Whitehead's incidental costs in connection with the
adoption.
Mr. Stern knew he was paying for
[***30] the adoption of a child; Mrs.
Whitehead knew she was accepting money so that a child might be adopted; the
Infertility Center knew that it was being paid for assisting in the adoption of
a child. The actions of all three worked to frustrate the goals of the
statute. It strains
[*425] credulity to claim that these arrangements, touted by those in the surrogacy
business as an attractive
alternative to the usual route leading to an adoption, really amount to
something other than a private placement adoption for money.
The prohibition of our statute is strong. Violation constitutes a high
misdemeanor,
N.J.S.A. 9:3-54c, a third-degree crime,
N.J.S.A. 2C:43-1b, carrying a
penalty of three to five years imprisonment.
N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6a(3). The evils inherent in baby-bartering are loathsome for a myriad
of reasons. The child is sold without regard for whether the purchasers will
be suitable parents. N. Baker,
Baby Selling: The Scandal of Black
Market Adoption 7 (1978). The natural mother does not receive the benefit of counseling and
guidance to assist her in making a decision that may affect her for a lifetime.
In fact, the monetary incentive to sell her child
[***31] may, depending on her financial circumstances, make her decision less
voluntary.
Id. at 44. Furthermore, the adoptive parents n5 may not be fully informed of the
natural parents' medical history.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n5 Of course, here there are no
"adoptive parents," but rather the natural father and his wife, the only adoptive parent. As
noted, however, many of the dangers of using money in connection with
adoption may exist in surrogacy situations.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[**1242] Baby-selling potentially results in the exploitation of all parties involved.
Ibid. Conversely, adoption statutes seek to further humanitarian goals, foremost
among them the best interests of the child. H. Witmer, E. Herzog, E.
Weinstein,
&
M. Sullivan,
Independent Adoptions: A Follow-Up Study 32 (1967). The negative consequences of baby-buying are potentially present
in the surrogacy context, especially the potential for placing and adopting a
child without regard to the interest of the child or the natural mother.
(2) The termination of Mrs.
Whitehead's parental
[***32] rights, called for by the surrogacy contract and actually ordered by the
court,
217 N.J. Super. at 399-400, fails to comply
[*426] with the stringent requirements of New Jersey law. Our law, recognizing the
finality of any termination of parental rights, provides for such termination
only where there has been a
voluntary surrender of a child to an approved agency or to the Division of
Youth and Family Services ("DYFS"), accompanied by a formal document acknowledging termination of parental
rights,
N.J.S.A. 9:2-16, -17;
N.J.S.A. 9:3-41;
N.J.S.A. 30:4C-23, or where there has been a showing of parental abandonment or
unfitness.
A termination may ordinarily take one of three forms: an action by an approved
agency, an action by DYFS, or an action in connection with a private placement
adoption. The three are governed by separate statutes, but the standards for
termination are substantially the same, except that whereas
a written surrender is effective when made to an approved agency or to DYFS,
there is no provision for it in the private placement context.
See N.J.S.A. 9:2-14;
N.J.S.A. 30:4C-23.
N.J.S.A. 9:2-18 to -20 governs an action
[***33] by an approved agency to terminate parental rights. Such an action, whether
or
not in conjunction with a pending adoption, may proceed on proof of written
surrender,
N.J.S.A. 9:2-16, -17,
"forsaken parental obligation," or other specific grounds such as death or insanity,
N.J.S.A. 9:2-19. Where the parent has not executed a formal consent, termination
requires a
showing of
"forsaken parental obligation,"
i.e.,
"willful and continuous neglect or failure to perform the natural and regular
obligations of care and support of a child."
N.J.S.A. 9:2-13(d).
See also N.J.S.A. 9:3-46a, -47c.
Where DYFS is the agency seeking termination, the requirements are similarly
stringent, although at first glance they do
not appear to be so. DYFS can, as can any approved agency, accept a formal
voluntary surrender or writing having the effect of termination and giving DYFS
the right to place the child for adoption.
N.J.S.A. 30:4C-23. Absent such formal written surrender and consent, similar to that
given to approved agencies, DYFS
can terminate parental rights in an
[*427] action for guardianship by proving that
"the best interests of such child require that he be placed
[***34] under proper guardianship."
N.J.S.A. 30:4C-20. Despite this
"best interests" language, however, this Court has recently held in
New Jersey Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. A.W., 103 N.J. 591 (1986), that in order for DYFS to terminate parental rights it must prove, by clear
and convincing evidence, that
"[t]he child's health and development have been or will be seriously impaired by
the parental relationship,"
id. at 604, that
"[t]he parents are unable or unwilling to
eliminate the harm and delaying permanent placement will add to the harm,"
id. at 605, that
"[t]he court has considered alternatives to termination,"
id. at 608, and that
"[t]he termination of parental rights will not do more harm than good,"
id. at 610. This interpretation of the statutory language requires a most substantial
showing of harm to the child if the parental relationship were to continue, far
exceeding anything that a
"best interests" test connotes.
In order to terminate parental rights under the private placement adoption
statute, there must be a finding of
"intentional abandonment or a very substantial
[***35] neglect of parental duties without
a reasonable expectation of a reversal of that conduct in the future."
N.J.S.A. 9:3-48c(1). This requirement is similar to that of the prior law (i.e.,
"forsaken parental obligations,"
L.1953,
c. 264,
§ 2(d) (codified at
N.J.S.A.
[**1243] 9:3-18(d) (repealed))), and to that of the law providing for
termination through actions by approved agencies,
N.J.S.A. 9:2-13(d).
See also
In re Adoption by J.J.P., 175 N.J. Super. 420, 427 (App.Div.1980) (noting that the language of the termination provision in the present statute,
N.J.S.A. 9:3-48c(1),
derives from this Court's construction of the prior statute in
In re Adoption of Children by D., 61 N.J. 89, 94-95 (1972)).
In
Sees v. Baber, 74 N.J. 201 (1977) we distinguished the requirements for terminating parental rights in a private
placement adoption from those required in an approved agency adoption. We
stated that in an unregulated private placement,
"neither consent nor voluntary surrender is singled out as a
[*428] statutory factor in terminating parental rights."
Id. at 213.
[***36]
Sees established that without proof that parental obligations had been forsaken,
there would be no
termination in a private placement setting.
As the trial court recognized, without a valid termination there can be no
adoption.
In re Adoption of Children by D., supra, 61 N.J. at 95. This requirement applies to all adoptions, whether they be private placements,
ibid., or agency adoptions,
N.J.S.A.
9:3-46a, -47c.
Our statutes, and the cases interpreting them, leave no doubt that where there
has been no written surrender to an approved agency or to DYFS, terminationh of
parental rights will not be granted in this state absent a very strong showing
of abandonment or neglect.
See, e.g.,
Sorentino v. Family & Children's Soc'y of Elizabeth, 74 N.J. 313 (1977) (Sorentino II);
Sees v. Baber, 74 N.J. 201 (1977);
Sorentino v. Family & Children's Soc'y of Elizabeth, 72 N.J. 127 (1976) (Sorentino I);
In re Adoption of Children by D., supra, 61 N.J. 89. That showing is required in every context in which termination of parental
rights is sought, be it an
[***37] action by an approved agency, an action by DYFS, or a private placement
adoption proceeding, even where the petitioning adoptive parent is, as here, a
stepparent. While the statutes make certain procedural allowances when
stepparents are involved,
N.J.S.A. 9:3-48a(2), -48a(4), -48c(4), the substantive requirement for terminating the
natural parents' rights is not relaxed one iota.
N.J.S.A. 9:3-48c(1);
In re Adoption of Children by D., supra, 61 N.J. at 94-95;
In re Adoption by J.J.P., supra, 175 N.J. Super. at 426-28;
In re N., 96 N.J. Super. 415, 423-27 (App.Div.1967). It is clear that a
"best interests" determination is never sufficient to terminate parental rights; the statutory
criteria must be
[*429] proved. n6
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n6 Counsel for the Sterns argues that the Parentage Act empowers the court to
terminate parental rights solely on the basis of the child's best interests.
He cites
N.J.S.A. 9:17-53c, which reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
The judgment or order may contain any
other provision directed against the appropriate party to the proceeding
concerning the duty of support, the custody and guardianship of the child,
visitation privileges with the child, the furnishing of bond or other security
for the payment of the judgment, the repayment of any public assistance grant,
or
any other matter in the best interests of the child. [Emphasis supplied].
We do
not interpret this section as in any way altering or diluting the statutory
prerequisites to termination discussed above. Termination of parental rights
differs qualitatively from the matters to which this section is expressly
directed, and, in any event, we have no doubt that if the Legislature had
intended a substantive change in the standards governing an area of such
gravity, it would have said so
explicitly.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***38]
In this case a termination of parental rights was obtained not by proving the
statutory prerequisites but by claiming the benefit of contractual provisions.
From all that has been stated above, it is clear that a contractual agreement
to abandon one's parental rights, or not to contest a termination
action, will not be enforced in our courts. The Legislature would not have so
carefully, so consistently, and so substantially restricted termination of
parental
[**1244] rights if it had intended to allow termination to be achieved by one short
sentence in a contract.
Since the termination was invalid, n7 it follows, as noted above, that adoption
of Melissa
by Mrs. Stern could not properly be granted.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n7 We conclude not only that the surrogacy contract is an insufficient basis
for termination, but that no statutory or other basis for termination existed.
See
infra at 444-447.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
(3) The provision in the surrogacy
contract stating that Mary Beth Whitehead agrees to
"surrender custody . . . and terminate all parental
[***39] rights" contains no clause giving her a right to rescind. It is intended to be an
irrevocable consent to surrender the child for adoption -- in other words, an
irrevocable
[*430] commitment by Mrs. Whitehead to turn Baby
M over to the Sterns and thereafter to allow termination of her parental
rights. The trial court required a
"best interests" showing as a condition to granting specific performance of the surrogacy
contract.
217 N.J. Super. at 399-400. Having decided the
"best interests" issue in favor of the Sterns, that court's
order included, among other things, specific performance of this agreement to
surrender custody and terminate all parental rights.
Mrs. Whitehead, shortly after the child's birth, had attempted to revoke her
consent and surrender by refusing, after the Sterns had allowed her to have the
child
"just for one week," to return Baby
M to them. The trial court's award of specific performance therefore reflects
its view that the consent to surrender the child was irrevocable. We accept
the trial court's construction of the contract; indeed it appears quite clear
that this was the parties' intent. Such a provision, however, making
[***40] irrevocable the natural mother's consent to surrender custody of her child in
a
private placement adoption, clearly conflicts with New Jersey law.
Our analysis commences with the statute providing for surrender of custody to
an approved agency and termination of parental rights on the suit of that
agency. The two basic provisions of the statute are
N.J.S.A. 9:2-14 and 9:2-16. The former provides explicitly that
[e]xcept as otherwise provided by law or by order or judgment of a court of
competent jurisdiction or by testamentary disposition, no surrender of the
custody of a child shall be valid in this state unless made to an approved
agency pursuant to the provisions of this act. . . .
There is no exception
"provided by
law," and it is not clear that there could be any
"order or judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction" validating a surrender of custody as a basis for adoption when that surrender
was not in conformance with the statute. Requirements for a voluntary
surrender to an approved agency are set forth in
N.J.S.A. 9:2-16. This
section allows an approved agency to take a voluntary surrender of
[*431] custody from the parent of a child but provides
[***41] stringent requirements as a condition to its validity. The surrender must be
in writing, must be in such form as is required for the recording of a deed,
and, pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 9:2-17,
must
be such as to declare that the person executing the same desires to relinquish
the custody of the child, acknowledge the termination of parental rights as to
such custody in favor of the approved agency, and acknowledge full
understanding of the effect of such surrender as provided by this act.
If the foregoing requirements are met, the consent, the voluntary surrender of
custody
shall be valid whether or
not the person giving same is a minor and shall be irrevocable except at the
discretion of the approved agency taking such surrender or upon order or
judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, setting aside such surrender
upon proof of fraud, duress, or misrepresentation. [N.J.S.A. 9:2-16.]
The importance of that irrevocability is that the surrender
itself gives the agency
[**1245] the power to obtain termination of parental rights -- in other words,
permanent separation of the parent from the child, leading in the ordinary case
to an adoption.
N.J.S.A.
[***42] 9:2-18 to -20.
This statutory pattern, providing for a surrender in writing and for
termination of parental
rights by an approved agency, is generally followed in connection with adoption
proceedings and proceedings by DYFS to obtain permanent custody of a child.
Our adoption statute repeats the requirements necessary to accomplish an
irrevocable surrender to an approved agency in both form and substance.
N.J.S.A. 9:3-41a. It
provides that the surrender
"shall be valid and binding without regard to the age of the person executing
the surrender,"
ibid.; and although the word
"irrevocable" is not used, that seems clearly to be the intent of the provision. The
statute speaks of such surrender as constituting
"relinquishment of such person's parental rights in or guardianship or custody
of the child
named therein and consent
by such person to adoption of the child."
Ibid. (emphasis supplied). We emphasize
"named therein," for we construe the statute to allow a surrender only after the birth of the
child. The formal consent
[*432] to surrender enables the approved agency to terminate parental rights.
Similarly, DYFS is empowered to
"take voluntary surrenders
[***43] and releases of
custody and consents to adoption[s]" from parents, which surrenders, releases, or consents
"when properly acknowledged . . . shall be valid and binding irrespective of the
age of the person giving the same, and shall be irrevocable except at the
discretion of the Bureau of Childrens Services [currently DYFS] or upon order
of a court of competent jurisdiction."
N.J.S.A. 30:4C-23. Such consent to surrender of the custody of the child would presumably
lead to an adoption placement by DYFS.
See N.J.S.A. 30:4C-20.
It is clear that the Legislature so carefully circumscribed all aspects of a
consent to surrender custody -- its form and substance, its manner of
execution, and the agency or agencies to which it may be made -- in order to
provide the
basis for irrevocability. It seems most unlikely that the Legislature intended
that a consent not complying with these requirements would also be irrevocable,
especially where, as here, that consent falls radically short of compliance.
Not only do the form and substance of the consent in the surrogacy contract
fail to meet statutory requirements, but the surrender of custody is
made to a private party. It is not made,
[***44] as the statute requires, either to an approved agency or to DYFS.
These strict prerequisites to irrevocability constitute a recognition of the
most serious consequences that flow from such consents: termination of parental
rights, the permanent separation of parent from child, and the ultimate
adoption of the child.
See
Sees v. Baber, supra, 74 N.J. at 217. Because of those consequences, the Legislature severely limited the
circumstances under which such consent would be irrevocable. The legislative
goal is furthered by regulations requiring approved agencies, prior to
accepting irrevocable consents, to provide advice and counseling to women,
making it more likely that they fully
[*433] understand and
appreciate the consequences of their acts.
N.J.A.C. 10:121A-5.4(c).
Contractual surrender of parental rights is not provided for in our statutes as
now written. Indeed, in the Parentage Act,
N.J.S.A. 9:17-38 to -59, there is a specific provision invalidating any agreement
"between an alleged or presumed father and the
mother of the child" to bar an action brought for the purpose of determining paternity
"[r]egardless of [the contract's] terms."
[***45]
N.J.S.A. 9:17-45. Even a settlement agreement concerning parentage reached in a
judicially-mandated consent conference is not valid unless the proposed
settlement is approved
before-hand by the court.
N.J.S.A. 9:17-48c and d. There is no doubt that a contractual provision purporting to
constitute an irrevocable agreement
[**1246] to surrender custody of a child for adoption is invalid.
In
Sees v. Baber, supra, 74 N.J. 201, we noted that a natural
mother's consent to surrender her child and to its subsequent adoption was no
longer
required by the statute in private placement adoptions. After tracing the statutory
history from the time when such a consent had been an essential prerequisite to
adoption, we concluded that such a consent was now neither necessary nor
sufficient for the purpose of terminating
parental rights.
Id. at 213. The consent to surrender custody in that case was in writing, had been
executed prior to physical surrender of the infant, and had been explained to
the mother by an attorney. The trial court found that the consent to surrender
of custody in that private placement adoption was knowing, voluntary,
[***46] and deliberate.
Id. at 216. The
physical surrender of the child took place four days after its birth. Two days
thereafter the natural mother changed her mind, and asked that the adoptive
couple give her baby back to her. We held that she was entitled to the baby's
return. The effect of our holding in that case necessarily encompassed our
conclusion that
"in an unsupervised
private placement, since there is no statutory obligation to consent, there can
be no legal barrier to its retraction."
Id. at 215. The only possible relevance of
[*434] consent in these matters, we noted, was that it
might bear on whether there had been an abandonment of the child, or a forsaking of
parental obligations.
Id. at 216. Otherwise, consent in a
private placement adoption is not only revocable but, when revoked early
enough, irrelevant.
Id. at 213-15.
The provision in the surrogacy contract whereby the mother irrevocably agrees
to surrender custody of her child and to terminate her parental rights
conflicts with the settled interpretation of New Jersey statutory law. n8 There
is
only one irrevocable consent,
[***47] and that is the one explicitly provided for by statute: a consent to surrender
of custody and a placement with an approved agency or with DYFS. The provision
in the surrogacy contract, agreed to before conception, requiring the natural
mother to surrender custody of the child without any right of revocation is
one more indication of the essential nature of this transaction: the creation
of a contractual system of termination and adoption designed to circumvent our
statutes.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n8 The surrogacy situation, of course, differs from the situation in
Sees, in that here there is no
"adoptive couple," but rather the natural father and the stepmother, who is the would-be adoptive
mother. This
difference, however, does not go to the basis of the
Sees holding. In both cases, the determinative aspect is the vulnerability of the
natural mother who decides to surrender her child in the absence of
institutional safeguards.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
B. Public Policy Considerations
The surrogacy contract's invalidity, resulting from its direct
[***48] conflict with the above statutory
provisions, is further underlined when its goals and means are measured against
New Jersey's public policy. The contract's basic premise, that the natural
parents can decide in advance of birth which one is to have custody of the
child, bears no relationship to the settled law that the child's best interests
shall determine custody.
See
Fantony v. Fantony, 21 N.J. 525, 536-37 (1956);
see also
Sheehan v. Sheehan, 38 N.J. Super. 120, 125 (App.Div.1955)
[*435] ("Whatever the agreement of the parents, the ultimate determination of custody
lies with the court in the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction as
parens
patriae."). The fact that the trial court remedied that aspect of the contract through
the
"best interests" phase does not make the contractual provision any less offensive to the public
policy of this State.
The surrogacy contract guarantees permanent separation of the child from one of
its natural parents. Our policy, however, has long been that to the extent
possible,
[**1247] children should remain with and be
brought up by both of their natural parents. That was the first
[***49] stated purpose of the previous adoption act,
L.1953,
c. 264,
§ 1, codified at
N.J.S.A. 9:3-17 (repealed):
"it is necessary and desirable (a) to protect the child from unnecessary
separation from his natural parents. . . ." While not so stated
in the present adoption law, this purpose remains part of the public policy of
this State.
See, e.g.,
Wilke v. Culp, 196 N.J. Super. 487, 496 (App.Div.1984), certif. den.,
99 N.J. 243 (1985);
In re Adoption by J.J.P., supra, 175 N.J. Super. at 426. This is not simply some theoretical ideal that in practice has no meaning.
The impact of failure to follow that policy is nowhere better shown than in the
results of this surrogacy contract. A child, instead of starting off its life
with as much peace and security as possible, finds itself immediately
in a tug-of-war between contending mother and father. n9
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n9 And the impact on the natural parents, Mr. Stern and Mrs. Whitehead, is
severe and dramatic. The depth of their conflict about Baby M, about custody,
visitation, about the goodness or badness of each of them, comes through in
their
telephone conversations, in which each tried to persuade the other to give up
the child. The potential adverse consequences of surrogacy are poignantly
captured here -- Mrs. Whitehead threatening to kill herself and the baby, Mr.
Stern begging her not to, each blaming the other. The dashed hopes of the
Sterns, the agony of Mrs. Whitehead, their
suffering, their hatred -- all were caused by the unraveling of this
arrangement.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***50]
The surrogacy contract violates the policy of this State that the rights of
natural parents are equal concerning their child, the father's right no greater
than the mother's.
"The parent
[*436] and child relationship extends equally to every child and to every parent,
regardless of the marital
status of the parents."
N.J.S.A. 9:17-40. As the Assembly Judiciary Committee noted in its statement to the
bill, this section establishes
"the principle that regardless of the marital status of the parents, all
children
and all parents have equal rights with respect to each other."
Statement to Senate No. 888, Assembly Judiciary, Law, Public Safety and
Defense Committee (1983) (emphasis supplied). The whole purpose and effect of
the surrogacy contract was to give the father the exclusive right to the child
by destroying the rights of the mother.
The policies expressed in our comprehensive laws governing consent to the
surrender of a child, discussed
supra at 429-434, stand in
stark contrast to the surrogacy contract and what it implies. Here there is no
counseling, independent or otherwise, of the natural mother, no evaluation, no
warning.
The only legal advice Mary
[***51] 1 Beth Whitehead received regarding the surrogacy contract was provided in
connection with the contract that she previously entered into with another
couple. Mrs.
Whitehead's lawyer was referred to her by the Infertility Center, with which he
had an agreement to act as counsel for surrogate candidates. His services
consisted of spending one hour going through the contract with the Whiteheads,
section by section, and answering their questions. Mrs. Whitehead received no
further legal advice prior to signing the
contract with the Sterns.
Mrs. Whitehead was examined and psychologically evaluated, but if it was for
her benefit, the record does not disclose that fact. The Sterns regarded the
evaluation as important, particularly in connection with the question of
whether she would change her mind. Yet they never asked to see it, and were
content with the assumption that the Infertility Center had made an evaluation
and had concluded that there was
no danger that the surrogate mother would change her mind. From Mrs.
Whitehead's point of view, all that she learned from
[*437] the evaluation was that
"she had passed." It is apparent that the profit motive got the better of the Infertility
[***52] 2 Center. Although the evaluation was made, it was not put to any use, and
understandably so, for the psychologist warned that Mrs. Whitehead demonstrated
certain
traits that might make surrender of the
[**1248] child difficult and that there should be further inquiry into this issue in
connection with her surrogacy. To inquire further, however, might have
jeopardized the Infertility Center's fee. The record indicates that neither
Mrs. Whitehead nor the Sterns were ever told of this fact, a fact that might
have ended their surrogacy arrangement.
Under the contract, the
natural mother is irrevocably committed before she knows the strength of her
bond with her child. She never makes a totally voluntary, informed decision,
for quite clearly any decision prior to the baby's birth is, in the most
important sense, uninformed, and any decision after that, compelled by a
pre-existing
contractual commitment, the threat of a lawsuit, and the inducement of a $
10,000 payment, is less than totally voluntary. Her interests are of little
concern to those who controlled this transaction.
Although the interest of the natural father and adoptive mother is certainly
the predominant interest,
[***53] realistically 3 the
only interest served, even they are left with less than what public
policy requires. They know little about the natural mother, her genetic
makeup, and her psychological and medical history. Moreover, not even a
superficial attempt is made to determine their awareness of their
responsibilities as parents.
Worst of all, however, is the contract's total disregard of the best interests
of the child. There is not the slightest suggestion that any inquiry will be
made at any time to determine the fitness of the Sterns as custodial parents,
of Mrs. Stern as an adoptive parent, their superiority to Mrs. Whitehead, or
the effect on the child of not living with her natural mother.
This is the sale of a child, or, at the very least, the sale of a mother's
right to her child, the only mitigating factor being
[*438] that one of the purchasers is the
father. Almost every evil that prompted the prohibition on the payment of
money in connection with adoptions exists here.
The differences between an adoption and a surrogacy contract should be noted,
since it is asserted that the use of money in connection with surrogacy does
not pose the risks found where money buys
[***54] an adoption. 4 Katz,
"Surrogate Motherhood and the Baby-Selling Laws,"
20 Colum.J.L. & Soc.Probs. 1 (1986).
First, and perhaps most important, all parties concede that it is unlikely that
surrogacy will survive without money. Despite the alleged selfless motivation
of surrogate mothers, if there is no payment, there will be no surrogates, or
very
few. That conclusion contrasts with adoption; for obvious reasons, there
remains a steady supply, albeit insufficient, despite the prohibitions against
payment. The adoption itself, relieving the natural mother of the financial
burden of supporting an infant, is in some sense the equivalent of payment.
Second, the use of money in adoptions does
not
produce the problem -- conception occurs, and usually the birth itself, before illicit
funds are offered. With surrogacy, the
"problem," if one views it as such, consisting of the purchase of a woman's procreative
capacity, at the risk of her life, is caused by and originates with the offer
of money.
Third, with the law prohibiting the use of money in
connection with adoptions, the built-in financial pressure of the unwanted
pregnancy and the consequent support obligation
[***55] do not 5 lead the mother to the highest paying, ill-suited, adoptive parents.
She is just as well-off surrendering the child to an approved agency. In
surrogacy, the highest bidders will presumably become the
adoptive parents regardless of suitability, so long as payment of money is
permitted.
Fourth, the mother's consent to surrender her child in adoptions is revocable,
even after surrender of the child, unless it be to an approved agency, where by
regulation there are protections
[*439] against an ill-advised surrender. In surrogacy, consent occurs so early that
no amount of advice would satisfy the potential mother's need, yet the consent
is irrevocable.
The main difference, that the unwanted pregnancy is unintended while the
situation
[**1249] of the surrogate mother is voluntary and intended, is really not significant.
Initially, it produces stronger reactions of sympathy for the mother whose
pregnancy was unwanted than for the surrogate mother, who
"went into this with her eyes wide open." On reflection, however, it appears that the essential evil is the same, taking
advantage of a woman's circumstances (the unwanted pregnancy or the need for
money) in order to take
[***56] away her child, the 6 difference being one of degree.
In the scheme contemplated by the surrogacy contract
in this case, a middle man, propelled by profit, promotes the sale. Whatever
idealism may have motivated any of the participants, the profit motive
predominates, permeates, and ultimately governs the transaction. The demand
for children is great and the supply small. The availability of contraception,
abortion, and the greater willingness of single mothers to
bring up their children has led to a shortage of babies offered for adoption.
See N. Baker,
Baby Selling: The Scandal of Black Market Adoption, supra; Adoption and Foster
Care, 1975: Hearings on Baby Selling Before the Subcomm. On Children and Youth
of the Senate Comm. on Labor and Public
Welfare, 94th Cong.1st Sess. 6 (1975) (Statement of Joseph H. Reid, Executive
Director, Child Welfare League of America, Inc.). The situation is ripe for
the entry of the middleman who will bring some equilibrium into the market by
increasing the supply through the use of money.
Intimated, but
disputed, is the assertion that surrogacy will be used for the benefit of the
rich at the expense of the poor.
See, e.g., Radin,
[***57]
"Market Inalienability," 7
100 Harv.L.Rev. 1849, 1930 (1987). In response it is noted that the Sterns are not rich and the Whiteheads not
poor. Nevertheless, it is clear to us
[*440] that it is unlikely that surrogate
mothers will be as proportionately numerous among those women in the top twenty
percent income bracket as among those in the bottom twenty percent.
Ibid. Put differently, we doubt that infertile couples in the low-income bracket
will find upper income surrogates.
In any event, even
in this case one should not pretend that disparate wealth does not play a part
simply because the contrast is not the dramatic
"rich versus poor." At the time of trial, the Whiteheads' net assets were probably negative --
Mrs. Whitehead's own sister was foreclosing on a second mortgage. Their income
derived from
Mr. Whitehead's labors. Mrs. Whitehead is a homemaker, having previously held
part-time jobs. The Sterns are both professionals, she a medical doctor, he a
biochemist. Their combined income when both were working was about $ 89,500 a
year and their assets sufficient to pay for the surrogacy contract
arrangements.
The
point is made that Mrs. Whitehead
[***58]
agreed to the surrogacy 8 arrangement, supposedly fully understanding the
consequences. Putting aside the issue of how compelling her need for money may
have been, and how significant her understanding of the consequences, we
suggest that her consent is irrelevant. There are, in a civilized society,
some things that money cannot
buy. In America, we decided long ago that merely because conduct purchased by
money was
"voluntary" did not mean that it was good or beyond regulation and prohibition.
West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, 300 U.S. 379, 57 S.Ct. 578, 81 L.Ed. 703 (1937). Employers can no longer buy labor at the lowest price they can bargain for,
even though that labor is
"voluntary,"
29 U.S.C. § 206 (1982), or buy women's labor for less money than paid to men for the same job,
29 U.S.C. § 206(d), or purchase the agreement of children to perform oppressive labor,
29 U.S.C. § 212, or purchase the agreement of workers to subject themselves to unsafe or
unhealthful working conditions,
29 U.S.C. §§ 651 to 678. (Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970). There are, in short,
[*441] values that society
[***59]
deems more important than 9 granting to wealth whatever it can buy, be it
labor, love, or life. Whether this principle
[**1250] recommends prohibition of surrogacy, which presumably sometimes results in
great satisfaction to all of the parties, is not for us to say. We note here
only that, under existing law, the fact that Mrs. Whitehead
"agreed" to the
arrangement is not dispositive.
The long-term effects of surrogacy contracts are not known, but feared -- the
impact on the child who learns her life was bought, that she is the offspring
of someone who gave birth to her only to obtain money; the impact on the
natural mother as the full weight of her isolation is felt along with the full
reality of the sale of her
body and her child; the impact on the natural father and adoptive mother once
they realize the consequences of their conduct. Literature in related areas
suggests these are substantial considerations, although, given the newness of
surrogacy, there is little information.
See N. Baker,
Baby Selling: The Scandal of Black Market Adoption, supra; Adoption and
Foster Care, 1975: Hearings on Baby Selling Before the Subcomm. on Children and
Youth of the Senate Comm.
[***60]
on Labor and Public Welfare, 94th Cong. 0 1st Sess. (1975).
The surrogacy contract is based on, principles that are directly contrary to
the objectives of our laws. n10 It guarantees
[*442] the separation of a child from its mother; it looks to
adoption regardless of suitability; it totally ignores the child; it takes the
child from the mother regardless of her wishes and her maternal fitness; and it
does all of this, it accomplishes all of its goals, through the use of money.
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n10 We note the argument of the Sterns that the sperm donor section of our
Parentage Act,
N.J.S.A. 9:17-38 to -59, implies a legislative
policy that would lead to approval of this surrogacy contract. Where a married
woman is artificially inseminated by another with her husband's consent, the
Parentage Act creates a parent-child relationship between the husband and the
resulting child.
N.J.S.A. 9:17-44. The Parentage Act's silence, however, with respect to surrogacy,
rather than supporting,
defeats any contention that surrogacy should receive treatment parallel to the
sperm donor artificial insemination situation. In the latter case the statute
expressly transfers parental rights from the biological father,
i.e., the sperm donor, to the mother's husband.
Ibid. Our Legislature could not possibly have intended any other arrangement to have
the consequence of transferring parental
rights without legislative authorization when it had concluded that legislation
was necessary to accomplish that result in the sperm donor artificial
insemination context.
This sperm donor provision suggests an argument not raised by the parties,
namely, that the attempted creation of a parent-child relationship through the
surrogacy contract has been preempted
by the Legislature. The Legislature has explicitly recognized the parent-child
relationship between a child and its natural parents, married and unmarried,
N.J.S.A. 9:17-38 to -59, between adoptive parents and their adopted child,
N.J.S.A. 9:3-37 to -56, and between a husband and his wife's child pursuant to the
sperm
donor provision,
N.J.S.A. 9:17-44. It has not recognized any others -- specifically, it has never
legally equated the stepparent-stepchild relationship with the parent-child
relationship, and certainly it has never recognized any concept of adoption by
contract. It can be contended with some force that the Legislature's statutory
coverage of the creation of the parent-child relationship
evinces an intent to reserve to itself the power to define what is and is not a
parent-child relationship. We need not, and do not, decide this question,
however.
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[***61] 1
Beyond that is the potential degradation of some women that may result from
this arrangement. In many cases, of course, surrogacy may bring satisfaction,
not
only to the infertile couple, but to the surrogate mother herself. The fact,
however, that many women may not perceive surrogacy negatively but rather see
it as an opportunity does not diminish its potential for devastation to other
women.
In sum, the harmful consequences of this surrogacy arrangement appear to us all
too palpable. In
New Jersey the surrogate mother's agreement to sell her child is void. n11 Its
irrevocability
[*444] infects the entire contract, as does the money that purports to buy it.
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n11 Michigan courts have also found that these arrangements conflict with
various aspects of their law.
See
Doe v. Kelley, 106 Mich.App. 169, 307 N.W.2d 438 (1981),
cert. den.,
459 U.S. 1183, 103 S.Ct. 834, 74 L.Ed.2d 1027 (1983) (application of sections of Michigan Adoption Law prohibiting the exchange of
money to surrogacy is constitutional);
Syrkowski v. Appleyard, 122 Mich.App. 506, 333 N.W.2d 90 (1983) (court held it lacked jurisdiction to issue an
"order of filiation" because surrogacy arrangements were not governed by Michigan's Paternity Act),
rev'd,
420 Mich. 367, 362 N.W.2d 211 (1985) (court decided Paternity Act should be applied
but did not reach the merits of the claim).
Most recently, a Michigan trial court in a matter similar to the case at bar
held that surrogacy contracts are void as contrary to public policy and
therefore are unenforceable. The court expressed concern for the potential
exploitation of children resulting from surrogacy arrangements that
involve the payment of money. The court also concluded that insofar as the
surrogacy contract may be characterized as one for personal services, the
thirteenth amendment should bar specific performance.
Yates v. Keane, Nos. 9758, 9772, slip op. (Mich.Cir.Ct. Jan. 21, 1988).
The Supreme Court of
Kentucky has taken a somewhat different approach to surrogate arrangements. In
Surrogate Parenting Assocs. v. Commonwealth ex. rel. Armstrong, 704 S.W.2d 209 (Ky.1986), the court held that the
"fundamental differences" between surrogate arrangements and baby-selling placed the surrogate parenting
agreement beyond the reach of Kentucky's baby-selling statute.
Id. at 211. The rationale for this determination was that unlike the normal adoption
situation, the surrogacy agreement is entered into before conception and is not
directed at avoiding the consequences of an unwanted pregnancy.
Id. at 211-12.
Concomitant with this pro-surrogacy conclusion, however, the court
held that a
"surrogate" mother has the right to void the contract if she changes her mind during
pregnancy or immediately after birth.
Id. at 212-13. The court relied on statutes providing that consent to adoption or to the
termination of parental rights prior to five days after the birth of the child
is invalid, and concluded that consent
before conception must also be unenforceable.
Id. at 212-13.
The adoption phase of an uncontested surrogacy arrangement was analyzed in
Matter of Adoption of Baby Girl, L.J., 132 Misc.2d 972, 505 N.Y.S.2d 813 (Sur.1986). Although the court expressed strong moral and ethical
reservations about surrogacy arrangements, it approved the adoption because it
was in the best interests of the child.
Id. at 815. The court went on to find that surrogate parenting agreements are not
void, but are voidable if they are not in accordance with the state's adoption
statutes.
Id. at 817. The court then upheld the payment of money in
connection with the surrogacy arrangement on the ground that the New York
Legislature did not contemplate surrogacy when the baby-selling statute was
passed.
Id. at 818. Despite the court's ethical and moral problems with surrogate
arrangements, it concluded that the Legislature was the appropriate forum to
address the legality of surrogacy arrangements.
Ibid.
In contrast to the law
in the United States, the law in the United Kingdom concerning surrogate
parenting is fairly well-settled. Parliament passed the Surrogacy Arrangements
Act, 1985, ch. 49, which made initiating or taking part in any negotiations
with a view to making or arranging a surrogacy contract a
criminal offense. The criminal sanction, however, does not apply to the
"surrogate" mother or to the natural father, but rather applies to other persons engaged
in arranging surrogacy contracts on a commercial basis. Since 1978, English
courts have held surrogacy agreements unenforceable as against public policy,
such agreements
being deemed arrangements for the purchase and sale of children.
A. v. C., [1985]
F.L.R. 445, 449 (Fam.
& C.A.1978). It should be noted, however, that certain surrogacy arrangements,
i.e., those arranged without brokers and revocable by the natural mother, are not
prohibited under current law in the United
Kingdom.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***62] 2
[**1251] III.
TERMINATION
We have already noted that under our laws termination of parental rights cannot
be based on contract, but may be granted only on proof of the statutory
requirements. That conclusion was one of the bases for invalidating the
surrogacy contract. Although excluding the contract as a basis
for parental termination, we did not explicitly deal with the question of
whether the statutory bases for termination existed. We do so here.
As noted before, if termination of Mrs. Whitehead's parental rights is
justified, Mrs. Whitehead will have no further claim either to custody or to
visitation, and adoption by Mrs. Stern may proceed
pursuant to the private placement adoption statute,
N.J.S.A. 9:3-48. If termination is not justified, Mrs. Whitehead remains the legal
mother, and even if not entitled to custody, she would ordinarily be expected
to have some rights of visitation.
Wilke v. Culp, supra, 196 N.J. Super. at 496.
As was discussed,
supra at 425-429, the proper bases for termination are found in the statute relating to
proceedings by approved agencies for a termination of parental rights,
N.J.S.A. 9:2-18, the statute
[***63] allowing 3 for termination leading to a private placement adoption,
N.J.S.A. 9:3-48c(1), and the
statute authorizing a termination pursuant to an action by DYFS,
N.J.S.A. 30:4C-20. The statutory descriptions
[**1252] of the conditions required to terminate parental rights differ; their
interpretation in case law, however, tends to equate them.
Compare
New Jersey
[*445] Div. of Youth and Family Servs. v. A.W., supra, 103 N.J. at 601-11 (attempted termination by DYFS)
with
In re Adoption by J.J.P., supra, 175 N.J. Super. at 426-28 (attempted termination in connection with private placement adoption).
Nothing in this record justifies a finding that would allow a court to
terminate Mary Beth Whitehead's parental rights under the statutory standard.
It is not simply that obviously there was no
"intentional abandonment or very substantial neglect of parental duties without
a reasonable expectation of reversal of that conduct in the future,"
N.J.S.A. 9:3-48c(1), quite the contrary, but furthermore that the
trial court never found Mrs. Whitehead an unfit mother and indeed affirmatively
stated that Mary Beth Whitehead had
[***64] been a good mother to 4 her other children.
217 N.J. Super. at 397.
Although the question of best interests of the child is dispositive of the
custody issue in a dispute
between natural parents, it does not govern the question of termination. It
has long been decided that the mere fact that a child would be better off with
one set of parents than with another is an insufficient basis for terminating
the natural parent's rights.
See
New Jersey Div. of Youth and Family Servs. v. A.W., supra, 103 N.J. at 603;
In re Adoption of Children by D., supra, 61 N.J. at 97-98;
In re Adoption by J.J.P., supra, 175 N.J. Super. at 428. Furthermore, it is equally well settled that surrender of a child and a
consent to adoption
through private placement do not alone warrant termination.
See
Sees v. Baber, supra, 74 N.J. 201. It must be noted, despite some language to the contrary, that the interests of
the child are not the only interests involved when termination issues are
raised. The parent's rights, both constitutional and statutory, have their own
independent vitality.
See
[***65]
New Jersey Div. of Youth and Family Servs. v. A.W., supra, 103 N.J. at 601. 5
Although the statutes are clear, they are not applied rigidly on all occasions.
The statutory standard, strictly construed, appears harsh where the natural
parents, having surrendered
[*446] their child for adoption
through private placement, change their minds and seek the return of their
child and where the issue comes before the court with the adoptive parents
having had custody for years, and having assumed it quite innocently.
These added dimensions in
Sees v. Baber, supra, 74 N.J. 201, failed to persuade this Court to vary the termination
requirements. The natural parent in that case changed her mind two days after
surrendering the child, sought his return unequivocally, and so advised the
adoptive parents. Since she was clearly fit, and clearly had not abandoned the
child in the statutory sense, termination was denied, despite the fact that the
adoptive parents had had custody of the
child for about a year, and the mother had never had custody at all.
A significant variation on these facts, however, occurred in
Sorentino II, supra, 74 N.J. 313.
[***66] The surrender there was not through private placement but through an approved
6 agency. Although the consent to surrender was held invalid
due to coercion by the agency, the natural parents failed to initiate the
lawsuit to reclaim the child for over a year after relinquishment. By the time
this Court reached the issue of whether the natural parents' rights could be
terminated, the adoptive parents had had custody for three years. These
circumstances ultimately persuaded this
Court to permit termination of the natural parents' rights and to allow a
subsequent adoption. The unique facts of
Sorentino II were found to amount to a forsaking of parental obligations.
Id. at 322.
[**1253] The present case is distinguishable from
Sorentino II. Mary Beth Whitehead had custody of Baby M for four
months before the child was taken away. Her initial surrender of Baby M was
pursuant to a contract that we have declared illegal and unenforceable. The
Sterns knew almost from the very day that they took Baby M that their rights
were being challenged by the natural mother. In short, the factors that
persuaded this Court to terminate the parental
rights in
Sorentino
[***67]
II are not found here.
[*447] There is simply no basis, either in the statute 7 or in the peculiar facts of
that limited class of case typified by
Sorentino II, to warrant termination of Mrs. Whitehead's parental rights. We therefore
conclude that the natural mother is entitled to retain her rights as
a mother.
IV.
CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES
Both parties argue that the Constitutions -- state and federal -- mandate
approval of their basic claims. The source of their constitutional arguments
is essentially the same: the right of privacy, the right to procreate, the
right to the companionship of one's child, those rights flowing either directly
from the fourteenth amendment or by its
incorporation of the Bill of Rights, or from the ninth amendment, or through
the penumbra surrounding all of the Bill of Rights. They are the rights of
personal intimacy, of marriage, of sex, of family, of procreation. Whatever
their source, it is clear that they are fundamental rights protected by both
the federal and state Constitutions.
Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248, 103 S.Ct. 2985, 77 L.Ed.2d 614 (1983);
Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 102 S.Ct. 1388, 71 L.Ed.2d 599 (1982);
[***68] 8
Zablocki v. Redhail, 434 U.S. 374, 98 S.Ct. 673, 54 L.Ed.2d 618 (1978);
Quilloin v. Walcott, 434 U.S. 246, 98 S.Ct. 549, 54 L.Ed.2d 511 (1978);
Carey v. Population Servs. Int'l, 431 U.S. 678, 97 S.Ct. 2010, 52 L.Ed.2d 675 (1977);
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 93 S.Ct. 705, 35 L.Ed.2d 147 (1973);
Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 92 S.Ct. 1208, 31 L.Ed.2d 551 (1972);
Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 85 S.Ct. 1678, 14 L.Ed.2d 510 (1965);
Skinner v. Oklahoma, 316 U.S. 535, 62 S.Ct. 1110, 86 L.Ed. 1655 (1942);
Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 43 S.Ct. 625, 67 L.Ed. 1042 (1923). The right asserted by the Sterns is the right of procreation; that asserted by
Mary Beth Whitehead is the right to the companionship of her child. We find
that the
[***69] 9 right of procreation does not extend as far as
claimed by the Sterns. As for the right asserted by Mrs.
[*448] Whitehead, n12 since we uphold it on other grounds (i.e., we have restored her as mother and recognized her right, limited by the
child's best interests, to her companionship), we need not decide that
constitutional issue, and for reasons set forth below, we should not.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n12 Opponents of surrogacy have also put forth arguments based on the
thirteenth amendment, as well as the Peonage Act,
42 U.S.C. § 1994 (1982). We need not address these arguments because we have already held the
contract unenforceable on the basis of state law.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The right to procreate, as protected by the
Constitution, has been ruled on directly only once by the United States Supreme
Court.
See
Skinner v. Oklahoma, supra, 316 U.S. 535, 62 S.Ct. 1110, 86 L.Ed. 1655 (forced sterilization of habitual criminals violates equal protection clause
of fourteenth
amendment).
[***70] Although 0
Griswold v. Connecticut, supra, 381 U.S. 479, 85 S.Ct. 1678, 14 L.Ed.2d 510, is obviously of a similar class, strictly speaking it involves the right
not to procreate. The right to procreate very simply is the right to have natural
children, whether through
sexual intercourse or artificial insemination. It is no more than that. Mr.
Stern has not been deprived of that right. Through artificial insemination of
Mrs. Whitehead, Baby M is his child. The custody, care, companionship, and
nurturing that follow birth are not parts of the right to procreation; they are
rights that may also be constitutionally protected, but that
[**1254] involve
many considerations other than the right of procreation. To assert that Mr.
Stern's right of procreation gives him the right to the custody of Baby M would
be to assert that Mrs. Whitehead's right of procreation does
not give her the right to the custody of Baby M; it would be to assert that the
constitutional right of procreation includes within it a constitutionally
protected
contractual right to destroy someone else's right of procreation.
We conclude that the right
[***71] of procreation is 1 best understood and protected if confined to its
essentials, and that when dealing with rights concerning the resulting child,
different
[*449] interests come into play. There is nothing in our culture or society that
even begins to suggest a fundamental right on the
part of the father to the custody of the child as part of his right to
procreate when opposed by the claim of the mother to the same child. We
therefore disagree with the trial court: there is no constitutional basis
whatsoever requiring that Mr. Stern's claim to the custody of Baby M be
sustained. Our conclusion may thus be understood as illustrating that a
person's rights of
privacy and self-determination are qualified by the effect on innocent third
persons of the exercise of those rights. n13
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n13 As a general rule, a person should be accorded the right to make decisions
affecting his or her own body, health, and life, unless that choice adversely
affects others. Thus, the United States
Supreme Court, while recognizing the right of women to control their own
bodies, has rejected the view that the federal constitution vests a pregnant
woman with an absolute right to terminate her pregnancy. Instead, the Court
declared that the right was
"not absolute" so that
"at some point the state interests as to protection of health, medical
standards, and prenatal
life, become dominant."
Roe v. Wade, supra, 410 U.S. at 155, 93 S.Ct. at 728, 35 L.Ed.2d at 178. The balance struck in
Roe v. Wade recognizes increasing rights in the fetus and correlative restrictions on the
mother as the pregnancy progresses.
Similarly, in the termination-of-treatment cases, courts generally have viewed
a patient's right to terminate or refuse life-sustaining treatment as
constrained by other considerations including the rights of innocent third
parties, such as the patient's children.
Matter of Farrell, 108 N.J. 335, 352 (1987);
Matter of Conroy, 98 N.J. 321, 353 (1985). Consistent with that approach, this Court has directed a mother to submit to a
life-saving blood transfusion to protect the interests of her unborn infant,
even though the mother's religious scruples led her to oppose the transfusion.
Raleigh-Fitkin Paul Morgan Hosp. v. Anderson, 42 N.J. 421, 423 (1964);
see also
Application of President & Directors of Georgetown College, 331 F.2d 1000, 1008 (D.C.Cir.),
cert. den.,
377 U.S. 978, 84 S.Ct. 1883, 12 L.Ed.2d 746 (1964) (ordering blood transfusion because of mother's
"responsibility to the community to care for her infant").
In the present case, the parties' right to procreate by methods of their own
choosing cannot be enforced without consideration of the state's interest in
protecting the resulting child, just as the right to the companionship of one's
child cannot be
enforced without consideration of that crucial state interest.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***72] 2
Mr. Stern also contends that he has been denied equal protection of the laws by
the State's statute granting full
[*450] parental rights to a husband in relation to the child produced, with his
consent, by the union of his wife with a sperm
donor.
N.J.S.A. 9:17-44. The claim really is that of Mrs. Stern. It is that she is in
precisely the same position as the husband in the statute: she is presumably
infertile, as is the husband in the statute; her spouse by agreement with a
third party procreates with the understanding that the child will be the
couple's child. The alleged unequal protection is that the understanding is
honored in the statute when the husband is the infertile party, but no similar
understanding is honored when it is the wife who is infertile.
It is quite obvious that the situations are not parallel. A sperm donor simply
cannot be equated with a surrogate mother. The State has more than a
sufficient basis to distinguish the two situations --
even if the only difference is between the time it takes to provide sperm for
artificial insemination and the time invested in a nine-month pregnancy -- so
as to justify automatically divesting the sperm donor
[***73] of 3 his parental rights without automatically divesting a surrogate mother.
Some basis for an equal
protection argument might exist if
[**1255] Mary Beth Whitehead had contributed her egg to be implanted, fertilized or
otherwise, in Mrs. Stern, resulting in the latter's pregnancy. That is not the
case here, however.
Mrs. Whitehead, on the other hand, asserts a claim that falls within the scope
of a recognized fundamental interest
protected by the Constitution. As a mother, she claims the right to the
companionship of her child. This is a fundamental interest, constitutionally
protected. Furthermore, it was taken away from her by the action of the court
below. Whether that action under these circumstances would constitute a
constitutional deprivation, however, we need not and do not decide. By virtue
of our decision
Mrs. Whitehead's constitutional complaint -- that her parental rights have been
unconstitutionally terminated -- is moot. We have decided that both the
statutes and public policy of this state require that that termination be
[*451] voided and that her parental rights be restored. It therefore becomes
unnecessary to decide whether that same result would
[***74] be required by virtue 4 of the federal or state Constitutions.
See
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Auth., 297 U.S. 288, 341, 346-48, 56 S.Ct. 466, 482-83, 80 L.Ed. 688, 707, 710-12 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring). Refraining from deciding such constitutional
issues avoids further complexities involving the
full extent of a parent's right of companionship, n14 or questions involving
the fourteenth amendment. n15
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n14 This fundamental right is not absolute. The parent-child biological
relationship, by itself, does not create a protected interest in the absence of
a demonstrated commitment to the responsibilities of
parenthood; a natural parent who does not come forward and seek a role in the
child's life has no constitutionally protected relationship.
Lehr v. Robertson, supra, 463 U.S. at 258-62, 103 S.Ct. at 2991-93, 77 L.Ed.2d at 624-27;
Quilloin v. Walcott, supra, 434 U.S. at 254-55, 98 S.Ct. at 554, 54 L.Ed.2d at 519-20. The right is not absolute in another sense, for it is also well settled that
if the state's interest is sufficient the right may be regulated, restricted,
and on
occasion terminated.
See
Santosky v. Kramer, supra, 455 U.S. 745, 102 S.Ct. 1388, 71 L.Ed.2d 599.
[***75] 5
n15 Were we to find such a constitutional determination necessary, we would be
faced with the question of whether it was state action -- essential in
triggering the fourteenth amendment -- that
deprived her of that right
i.e., whether the judicial decision enforcing the surrogacy contract should be
considered
"state action" within the scope of the fourteenth amendment.
See
Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 U.S. 1, 68 S.Ct. 836, 92 L.Ed. 1161 (1948); Cherminsky,
"Rethinking State Action,"
80 Nw.U.L.Rev. 503 (1985).
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Having held the contract invalid and having found no other grounds for the
termination of Mrs. Whitehead's parental rights, we find that nothing remains
of her constitutional claim. It seems obvious to us that since custody and
visitation encompass practically all of what we call
"parental rights,"
a total denial of both would be the equivalent of termination of parental
rights.
Franz v. United States, 707 F.2d 582, 602 (D.C.Cir.1983). That, however, as will be seen below, has not occurred
[***76] 6 here. We express no opinion on whether a prolonged suspension of visitation
would constitute a
termination of parental rights, or whether, assuming it would, a showing of
unfitness
[*452] would be required. n16
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n16 If the Legislature were to enact a statute providing for enforcement of
surrogacy agreements, the validity of such a statute might depend on the
strength of the state interest in making it more likely that infertile couples
will be
able to adopt children. As a value, it is obvious that the interest is strong;
but if, as plaintiffs assert, ten to fifteen percent of all couples are
infertile, the interest is of enormous strength. This figure is given both by
counsel for the Sterns and by the trial court,
217 N.J. Super. at 331. We have been unable to find
reliable confirmation of this statistic, however, and we are not confident of
its accuracy. We note that at least one source asserts that in 1982, the rate
of married couples who were both childless and infertile was only 5.8%. B.
Wattenberg, The Birth Dearth 125 (1987).
On such quantitative differences, constitutional validity can depend, where the
statute in
question is justified as serving a compelling state interest. The quality of
the interference with the parents' right of companionship bears on these
issues: if a statute, like the surrogacy contract before us, made the consent
given prior to conception irrevocable, it might be regarded as a greater
interference with the fundamental right than a statute that
gave that effect only to a consent executed, for instance, more than six months
after the child's birth. There is an entire spectrum of circumstances that
strengthen and weaken the fundamental right involved, and a similar spectrum of
state interests that justify or do not justify particular restrictions on that
right. We do not believe it would be
wise for this Court to attempt to identify various combinations of
circumstances and interests, and attempt to indicate which combinations might
and which might not constitutionally permit termination of parental rights.
We will say this much, however: a parent's fundamental right to the
companionship of one's child can be significantly eroded by that parent's
consent to the surrender of that child. That surrender, if voluntarily and
knowingly made, may reduce the strength of that fundamental right to the point
where a statute awarding custody and all parental rights to an adoptive couple,
especially one that includes a parent of the child, would be valid.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***77] 7
V.
CUSTODY
Having decided that the surrogacy
contract is illegal and unenforceable, we
[**1256] now must decide the custody question without regard to the provisions of the
surrogacy contract that would give Mr. Stern sole and permanent custody. (That
does not mean that the existence of the contract and the circumstances under
which it was entered may not be considered to
[*453] the extent deemed relevant to the child's best interests.) With the
surrogacy contract disposed of, the legal framework becomes a dispute between
two couples over the custody of a child produced by the artificial insemination
of one couple's wife by the other's husband. Under the Parentage Act the
claims of the natural father and the natural mother are entitled to equal
weight,
i.e., one is not preferred over the other solely because he or she is the father or
the mother.
N.J.S.A. 9:17-40. n17 The applicable rule given these circumstances is clear: the
child's best interests determine custody.
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n17 At common law the rights of women were so fragile that the husband
generally had the paramount right to the custody of
children upon separation or divorce.
State v. Baird, 21 N.J.Eq. 384, 388 (E.
& A. 1869). In 1860 a statute concerning separation provided that children
"within the age of seven years" be placed with the mother
"unless said mother shall be of such character and habits as to render her an
improper guardian."
L.1860,
c. 167. The inequities of the common-law rule and the 1860 statute were
redressed by an 1871 statute, providing that
"the rights of both parents, in the absence of misconduct, shall be held to be
equal."
L.1871,
c. 48,
§ 6 (currently codified at
N.J.S.A.
9:2-4). Under this statute the father's superior right to the children was
abolished and the mother's right to custody of children of tender years was
also eliminated. Under the 1871 statute,
"the happiness and welfare of the children" were to determine custody,
L.1871,
c. 48,
§ 6, a rule that remains law to this day.
N.J.S.A. 9:2-4.
Despite this statute, however, the
"tender years" doctrine persisted.
See, e.g.,
Esposito v. Esposito, 41 N.J. 143, 145 (1963);
Dixon v. Dixon, 71 N.J.Eq. 281, 282 (E.
& A.1906);
M.P. v. S.P., 169 N.J. Super. 425, 435 (App.Div.1979). This presumption persisted primarily because of the prevailing view that a
young child's best interests necessitated a mother's care. Both the
development of case law and the Parentage Act,
N.J.S.A. 9:17-40, however, provide for equality in custody claims. In
Beck v. Beck, 86 N.J. 480, 488 (1981), we stated that it would be inappropriate
"to establish a presumption . . . in favor of any particular custody
determination," as any such presumption may
"serve as a disincentive for the meticulous fact-finding required in custody
cases." This does not mean that a mother who has had
custody of her child for three, four, or five months does not have a
particularly strong claim arising out of the unquestionable bond that exists at
that point between the child and its mother; in other words, equality does not
mean that all of the considerations underlying the
"tender years" doctrine have been abolished.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***78]
8
[*454] We note again that the trial court's reasons for determining what were the
child's best interests were somewhat different from ours. It concluded that
the surrogacy contract was valid, but that it could not grant specific
performance unless to do so was in the child's best interests. The approach
was that of a Chancery judge, unwilling to give extraordinary remedies
unless they well served the most important interests, in this case, the
interests of the child. While substantively indistinguishable from our
approach to the question of best interests, the purpose of the inquiry was not
the usual purpose of determining custody, but of determining a contractual
remedy.
We are not concerned at this point with the question of termination of parental
rights, either those of Mrs. Whitehead or of Mr. Stern. As noted in various
places in this opinion, such termination, in the absence
[**1257] of abandonment or a valid surrender, generally depends on a showing that the
particular parent is unfit. The question of custody in this case, as in
practically all cases, assumes the fitness of
both parents, and no serious contention is made in this case that either is
unfit. The
[***79] issue here is 9 which life would be
better for Baby M, one with primary custody in the Whiteheads or one with primary
custody in the Sterns.
The circumstances of this custody dispute are unusual and they have provoked
some unusual contentions. The Whiteheads
claim that even if the child's best interests would be served by our awarding
custody to the Sterns, we should not do so, since that will encourage surrogacy
contracts -- contracts claimed by the Whiteheads, and we agree, to be violative
of important legislatively-stated public policies. Their position is that in
order that surrogacy contracts be deterred, custody should remain
in the surrogate mother unless she is unfit, regardless of the best interests
of the child. We disagree. Our declaration that this surrogacy contract is
unenforceable and illegal is sufficient to deter similar agreements. We need
not sacrifice the child's interests in order to make that point sharper.
[*455]
Cf.
In re Adoption of Child by I.T. and K.T., 164 N.J. Super. 476, 484-86 (App.Div.1978) (adoptive parents' participation in illegal placement does not mandate denial
of adoption);
In the
Matter of the Adoption of Child by N.P. and F.P., 165 N.J. Super. 591 (Law Div.1979)
[***80] 0 (use of unapproved intermediaries and the payment of money in connection with
adoption is insufficient to establish that the would-be adoptive parents are
unfit or that adoption would not be in child's best interests).
The Whiteheads also contend that the award of custody to the Sterns
pendente lite was erroneous and that the error should not be allowed to affect the final
custody decision. As noted
above, at the very commencement of this action the court issued an
ex parte order requiring Mrs. Whitehead to turn over the baby to the Sterns; Mrs.
Whitehead did not comply but rather took the child to Florida. Thereafter, a
similar order was enforced by the Florida authorities resulting in the transfer
of
possession of Baby M to the Sterns. The Sterns retained custody of the child
throughout the litigation. The Whiteheads' point, assuming the
pendente award of custody
was erroneous, is that most of the factors arguing for awarding permanent custody
to the Sterns resulted from that initial
pendente lite order. Some of Mrs. Whitehead's alleged character failings, as
testified to by experts and concurred in by the trial court, were demonstrated
by her actions
[***81] brought 1 on by the custody crisis. For instance, in order to demonstrate her
impulsiveness, those experts stressed the Whiteheads' flight to Florida with
Baby M; to show her willingness to use her children for her own
aims, they noted the telephone threats to kill Baby M and to accuse Mr. Stern
of sexual abuse of her daughter; in order to show Mrs. Whitehead's
manipulativeness, they pointed to her threat to kill herself; and in order to
show her unsettled family life, they noted the innumerable moves from one hotel
or motel to
another in Florida. Furthermore, the argument continues, one of the most
important factors, whether mentioned or not, in favor of custody in the Sterns
is their continuing custody during the litigation, now having lasted for
one-and-a-half
[*456] years. The Whiteheads' conclusion is that had the trial court not given
initial
custody to the Sterns during the litigation, Mrs. Whitehead not only would have
demonstrated her perfectly acceptable personality -- the general tenor of the
opinion of experts was that her personality problems surfaced primarily in
crises -- but would also have been able to prove better her parental skills
along with an even stronger
[***82] bond 2 than may now
exist between her and Baby M. Had she not been limited to custody for four
months, she could have proved all of these things much more persuasively
through almost two years of custody.
The argument has considerable force. It is of course possible that the trial
[**1258] court was wrong in its initial award of custody. It is also possible that
such error, if that is what it was, may have
affected the outcome. We disagree with the premise, however, that in
determining custody a court should decide what the child's best interests
would be if some hypothetical state of facts had existed. Rather, we must look to what
those best interests
are, today, even if some of the facts may have resulted in part from legal error. The
child's interests come first: we
will not punish it for judicial errors, assuming any were made.
See
Wist v. Wist, 101 N.J. 509, 513-14 (1986);
see also
In re J.R. Guardianship, 174 N.J. Super. 211 (App.Div.), certif. den.,
85 N.J. 102 (1980) (although not explicitly mentioned, natural mother's loss of parental rights
based substantially on failures of DYFS to arrange
[***83] visitation with 3 her child). The custody decision must be based on all
circumstances, on everything that
actually has occurred, on everything that is relevant to the child's best interests.
Those circumstances include the trip to Florida, the telephone
calls and threats, the substantial period of successful custody with the
Sterns, and all other relevant circumstances. We will discuss the question of
the correctness of the trial court's initial orders below, but for purposes of
determining Baby M's best interests, the correctness of those initial orders
has lost relevance.
[*457] There were eleven experts who testified
concerning the child's best interests, either directly or in connection with
matters related to that issue. Our reading of the record persuades us that the
trial court's decision awarding custody to the Sterns (technically to Mr.
Stern) should be affirmed since
"its findings . . . could reasonably have been reached on sufficient credible
evidence present in the record."
Beck v. Beck, 86 N.J. 480, 496 (1981) (quoting
State v. Johnson, 42 N.J. 146, 161 (1964));
see
Palermo v. Palermo, 164 N.J. Super. 492, 498 (App.Div.1978)
[***84] 4 (noting that family court judge was experienced in
dealing with such matters and had opportunity to observe parties and become
immersed in details of case). More than that, on this record we find little
room for any different conclusion. The trial court's treatment of this issue,
217 N.J. Super. at 391-400, is both comprehensive and, in most respects, perceptive. We agree
substantially with its
analysis with but few exceptions that, although important, do not change our
ultimate views.
Our custody conclusion is based on strongly persuasive testimony contrasting
both the family life of the Whiteheads and the Sterns and the personalities and
characters of the individuals. The stability of the Whitehead family life was
doubtful at the time of trial. Their finances were in serious
trouble (foreclosure by Mrs. Whitehead's sister on a second mortgage was in
process). Mr. Whitehead's employment, though relatively steady, was always at
risk because of his alcoholism, a condition that he seems not to have been able
to confront effectively. Mrs. Whitehead had not worked for quite some time,
her last
two employments having been part-time. One of the Whiteheads'
[***85] positive 5 attributes was their ability to bring up two children, and
apparently well, even in so vulnerable a household. Yet substantial question
was raised even about that aspect of their home life. The expert testimony
contained criticism of Mrs.
Whitehead's handling of her son's educational difficulties. Certain of the
experts noted that Mrs. Whitehead perceived herself as omnipotent and
omniscient concerning her
[*458] children. She knew what they were thinking, what they wanted, and she spoke
for them. As to Melissa, Mrs. Whitehead expressed the view that she alone knew
what that child's cries and sounds meant. Her inconsistent stories about
various things engendered grave doubts about her ability to explain honestly
and sensitively to Baby M -- and at the right time -- the nature of her origin.
Although faith in professional counseling is not a
sine qua non of parenting, several experts believed that Mrs. Whitehead's contempt
[**1259] for professional
help, especially professional psychological help, coincided with her feelings
of omnipotence in a way that could be devastating to a child who most likely
will need such help. In short, while love and affection
[***86] there would be, Baby 6 M's life with the Whiteheads promised to be too closely
controlled by Mrs. Whitehead. The
prospects for wholesome, independent psychological growth and development would
be at serious risk.
The Sterns have no other children, but all indications are that their household
and their personalities promise a much more likely foundation for Melissa to
grow and thrive. There
is a track record of sorts -- during the one-and-a-half
years of custody Baby M has done very well, and the relationship between both
Mr. and Mrs. Stern and the baby has become very strong. The household is
stable, and likely to remain so. Their finances are more than adequate, their
circle of friends supportive, and their marriage happy. Most important, they
are loving, giving, nurturing, and open-minded people. They have
demonstrated the wish and ability to nurture and protect Melissa, yet at the
same time to encourage her independence. Their lack of experience is more than
made up for by a willingness to learn and to listen, a willingness that is
enhanced by their professional training, especially Mrs. Stern's experience as
a pediatrician. They are honest; they
can recognize error,
[***87] deal with it, and learn 7 from it. They will try to determine rationally the
best way to cope with problems in their relationship with Melissa. When the
time comes to tell her about her origins, they will probably have found a means
of doing so that accords with the
[*459] best interests of Baby M. All in all, Melissa's
future appears solid, happy, and promising with them.
Based on all of this we have concluded, independent of the trial court's
identical conclusion, that Melissa's best interests call for custody in the
Sterns. Our above-mentioned disagreements with the trial court do not, as we
have noted, in any way diminish our concurrence with its conclusions. We feel,
however, that those disagreements are important
enough to be stated. They are disagreements about the evaluation of conduct.
They also may provide some insight about the potential consequences of
surrogacy.
It seems to us that given her predicament, Mrs. Whitehead was rather harshly
judged -- both by the trial court and by some of the experts. She was guilty
of a breach of contract, and indeed, she did break a very important
promise, but we think it is expecting something well beyond normal human
capabilities
[***88] to suggest that 8 this mother should have parted with her newly born infant
without a struggle. Other than survival, what stronger force is there? We do
not know of, and cannot conceive of, any other case where a perfectly fit
mother was expected to
surrender her newly born infant, perhaps forever, and was then told she was a
bad mother because she did not. We know of no authority suggesting that the
moral quality of her act in those circumstances should be judged by referring
to a contract made before she became pregnant. We do not countenance, and
would never countenance, violating a
court order as Mrs. Whitehead did, even a court order that is wrong; but her
resistance to an order that she surrender her infant, possibly forever, merits
a measure of understanding. We do not find it so clear that her efforts to
keep her infant, when measured against the Sterns' efforts to take her away,
make one, rather than the
other, the wrongdoer. The Sterns suffered, but so did she. And if we go
beyond suffering to an evaluation of the human stakes involved in the struggle,
how much weight should be given to her nine months of pregnancy, the labor of
childbirth, the risk to her life,
[***89] compared to the
[*460] 9 payment of money, the anticipation of a child and the donation of sperm?
There has emerged
a portrait of Mrs. Whitehead, exposing her children to the media, engaging in
negotiations to sell a book, granting interviews that seemed
[**1260] helpful to her, whether hurtful to Baby M or not, that suggests a selfish,
grasping woman ready to sacrifice the interests of Baby M and her other
children for fame and
wealth. That portrait is a half-truth, for while it may accurately reflect
what ultimately occurred, its implication, that this is what Mary Beth
Whitehead wanted, is totally inaccurate, at least insofar as the record before
us is concerned. There is not one word in that record to support a claim that
had she been allowed to continue her possession of her
newly born infant, Mrs. Whitehead would have ever been heard of again; not one
word in the record suggests that her change of mind and her subsequent fight
for her child was motivated by anything other than love -- whatever complex
underlying psychological motivations may have existed.
We have a further concern regarding the
trial court's emphasis on the Sterns' interest in Melissa's education as
[***90] compared to the Whiteheads'. That this 0 difference is a legitimate factor to
be considered we have no doubt. But it should not be overlooked that a
best-interests test is designed to create not a new member of the
intelligentsia but rather a well-integrated person who might reasonably be expected to be happy with life.
"Best interests" does not contain within it any idealized lifestyle; the question boils down to
a judgment, consisting of many factors, about the likely future happiness of a
human being.
Fantony v. Fantony, supra, 21 N.J. at 536. Stability, love, family happiness, tolerance, and, ultimately, support of
independence -- all rank much higher in predicting future happiness than the
likelihood of a college education. We do not mean to suggest that the trial
court would disagree. We simply want to dispel any possible misunderstanding
on the issue.
[*461] Even allowing for these
differences, the facts, the experts' opinions, and the trial court's analysis
of both argue strongly in favor of custody in the Sterns. Mary Beth
Whitehead's family life, into which Baby M would be placed, was anything but
secure -- the quality Melissa needs most.
[***91] And today it may be even less so. n18
1 Furthermore, the evidence and expert opinion based on it reveal personality
characteristics, mentioned above, that might threaten the child's best
development. The Sterns promise a secure home, with an understanding
relationship that allows nurturing and independent growth to develop together.
Although there is no substitute for reading the entire
record, including the review of every word of each experts' testimony and
reports, a summary of their conclusions is revealing. Six experts testified
for Mrs. Whitehead: one favored joint custody, clearly unwarranted in this
case; one simply rebutted an opposing expert's claim that Mary Beth
Whitehead had a recognized personality disorder; one testified to the adverse
impact of separation on
Mrs. Whitehead; one testified about the evils of adoption and, to him, the probable analogous
evils of surrogacy; one spoke only on the question of whether Mrs. Whitehead's
consent in the surrogacy agreement was
"informed consent"; and one spelled
out the strong bond between mother and child. None of them unequivocally
stated, or even necessarily implied, an opinion that custody in the Whiteheads
was in
[***92] the best interests of Melissa -- the ultimate 2 issue. The Sterns' experts,
[*462] both well qualified -- as were the Whiteheads' -- concluded that the best
interests of Melissa required custody
in Mr. Stern. Most convincingly, the three
[**1261] experts chosen by the court-appointed guardian
ad litem of Baby M, each clearly free of all bias and interest, unanimously and
persuasively recommended custody in the Sterns.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n18 Subsequent to trial, and by the time of oral argument,
Mr. and Mrs. Whitehead had separated, and the representation was that there was
no likelihood of change. Thereafter Mrs. Whitehead became pregnant by another
man, divorced Mr. Whitehead, and remarried the other man. Both children are
living with Mrs. Whitehead and her new husband. Both the former and present
husband continue to assert the
desire to have whatever parental relationship with Melissa that the law allows,
Mrs. Whitehead continuing to maintain her claim for custody.
We refer to this development only because it suggests less stability in the
Whiteheads' lives. It does not necessarily suggest that Mrs. Whitehead's
conduct renders her any less a fit parent. In any
event, this new development has not affected our decision.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***93] 3
Some comment is required on the initial
ex parte order awarding custody
pendente lite to the Sterns (and the continuation of that order after a plenary hearing).
The issue, although irrelevant to our disposition of this case, may recur; and
when it does, it can be of crucial
importance. When father and mother are separated and disagree, at birth, on
custody, only in an extreme, truly rare, case should the child be taken from
its mother
pendente lite, i.e., only in the most unusual case should the child be taken from its mother
before the dispute is finally determined by the court on its merits. The
probable bond
between mother and child, and the child's need, not just the mother's, to
strengthen that bond, along with the likelihood, in most cases, of a
significantly lesser, if any, bond with the father -- all counsel against
temporary custody in the father. A substantial showing that the mother's
continued custody would threaten the child's health or
welfare would seem to be required.
In this case, the trial court, believing that the surrogacy contract might be
valid, and faced with the probable flight from the jurisdiction by Mrs.
Whitehead and the baby if
any
[***94] 4 notice were served, ordered,
ex parte, an immediate transfer of possession of the child,
i.e., it ordered that custody be transferred immediately to Mr.
Stern, rather than order Mrs. Whitehead not to leave the State. We have ruled,
however, that the surrogacy contract is unenforceable and illegal. It provides
no basis for either an
ex parte, a plenary, an interlocutory, or a final order requiring a mother to surrender
custody to a father. Any application by the
natural father in a surrogacy dispute for custody pending the outcome of the
litigation will henceforth
[*463] require proof of unfitness, of danger to the child, or the like, of so high a
quality and persuasiveness as to make it unlikely that such application will
succeed. Absent the required showing, all that a court should do is list the
matter
for argument on notice to the mother. Even her threats to flee should not
suffice to warrant any other relief unless her unfitness is clearly shown. At
most, it should result in an order enjoining such flight. The erroneous
transfer of custody, as we view it, represents a greater risk to the child than
removal to a foreign jurisdiction,
unless parental unfitness
[***95] 5 is clearly proved. Furthermore, we deem it likely that, advised of the law
and knowing that her custody cannot seriously be challenged at this stage of
the litigation, surrogate mothers will obey any court order to remain in the
jurisdiction.
VI.
VISITATION
The trial court's decision to terminate Mrs. Whitehead's
parental rights precluded it from making any determination on visitation.
217 N.J. Super. at 399, 408. Our reversal of the trial court's order, however, requires delineation of Mrs.
Whitehead's rights to visitation. It is apparent to us that this factually
sensitive issue, which was never addressed below, should not be determined
de novo by this Court. We therefore remand the
visitation issue to the trial court for an abbreviated hearing and
determination as set forth below. n19
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n19 As we have done in similar situations, we order that this matter be
referred on remand to a different trial judge by the vicinage assignment judge.
The original trial judge's potential
"commitment to its
findings,"
New Jersey Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. A.W., supra, 103 N.J. at 617, and the extent to which a judge
"has already engaged in weighing the evidence,"
In re Guardianship of R., 155 N.J. Super. 186, 195 (App.Div.1977), persuade us to make that
change. On remand the trial court will consider developments subsequent to the
original trial court's opinion, including Mrs. Whitehead's divorce, pregnancy,
and remarriage.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***96] 6
[*464] For the benefit of all concerned, especially the child, we would prefer to end
[**1262] these proceedings now, once and for all. It is clear to us, however, that it
would be unjust to do so and contrary to
precedent.
The fact that the trial court did not address visitation is only one reason for
remand. The ultimate question is whether, despite the absence of the trial
court's guidance, the record before us is sufficient to allow an appellate
court to make this essentially factual determination. We can think of no issue
that is more dependent on
a trial court's factual findings and evaluation than visitation.
When we examine the record on visitation, the only testimony explicitly dealing
with the issue came from the guardian
ad litem's experts. Examination of this testimony in light of the complete record,
however, reveals that it was an insignificant part of their opinions. The
parties, those with a real stake
in the dispute, offered no testimony on the issue. The cause for this
insufficiency of guidance on the visitation issue was unquestionably the
parties' concentration on other, then seemingly much more important, questions:
custody, termination of
[***97] parental rights, 7 and the validity of the surrogacy contract.
Even if we were willing to rely solely on the opinions of the guardian
ad litem's experts, their testimony was not fully developed because the issue was not
the focus of the litigation. Moreover, the guardian's experts concentrated on
determining
"best interests" as it related to custody and to termination of parental rights. Their
observations about visitation, both in quality and quantity, were really
derivative of their views about custody and
termination. The guardian's experts were concerned that given Mrs. Whitehead's
determination to have custody, visitation might be used to undermine the
Sterns' parental authority and thereby jeopardize the stability and security so
badly needed by this child. Two of the experts recommended suspension of
visitation for five years and the other suspension for an undefined
period. None of them fully considered the
[*465] factors that have led our courts ordinarily to grant visitation in other
contexts, with no suspension, even where the non-custodial parent was less than
a paragon of virtue.
See, e.g.,
Wilke v. Culp, supra, 196 N.J. Super. at 496;
[***98]
In re Adoption by J.J.P., supra, 175 N.J. Super. at 430. 8 Based on the opinions of her experts, the guardian
ad litem recommended suspension of Mrs. Whitehead's visitation rights for five years,
with a reevaluation at that time. The basis for that recommendation, whether
one regards it as the right or the wrong conclusion, was apparently
bolstered when it was learned that Mrs. Whitehead had become pregnant, divorced
Richard Whitehead, and then married the father of her new child-to-be. Without
any further expert testimony, the guardian
ad litem revised her position. She now argues that instead of five years, visitation
should be suspended until Melissa reaches majority. This radical change
in the guardian
ad litem's position reinforces our belief that further consideration must be given to
this issue.
The foregoing does not fully describe the extent to which this record leaves us
uninformed on the visitation issue. No one, with one exception, included a
word about visitation in the final briefs
before the trial court. The exception was Mrs. Whitehead's parents who argued
for their own visitation. This claim was denied by the trial court
[***99] and is not now before us. The oral summations of counsel before the trial
court 9 were almost equally bereft of even a reference to the visitation issue.
Mrs.
Whitehead's counsel did not mention visitation. The Sterns' counsel referred
to the guardian
ad litem's expert testimony about visitation, not to argue for or against visitation
but only to support his argument in favor of termination of Mrs. Whitehead's
parental rights. The guardian
ad litem did
argue the visitation issue, devoting a minimal portion of her summation to it.
Only the grandparents dealt with visitation, but with their visitation, not
with the issue of Mrs. Whitehead's visitation. Finally, on appeal before this
Court the record on visitation is inadequate -- especially when compared to the
treatment of other issues.
[*466]
[**1263] We join those who want this litigation to end
for the benefit of this child. To spare this two-year-old another sixty to
ninety days of litigation, however, at the risk of wrongly deciding this
matter, which has life-long consequences for the child and the parties, would
be unwise.
We also note the following for the trial court's consideration: First, this is
not
[***100] a divorce case where visitation is
almost invariably granted to the non-custodial spouse. To 0 some extent the
facts here resemble cases where the non-custodial spouse has had practically no
relationship with the child, see
Wilke v. Culp, supra, 196 N.J. Super. 487; but it only
"resembles" those cases. In the instant case, Mrs. Whitehead
spent the first four months of this child's life as her mother and has
regularly visited the child since then. Second, she is not only the natural
mother, but also the legal mother, and is not to be penalized one iota because
of the surrogacy contract. Mrs. Whitehead, as the mother (indeed, as a mother
who nurtured her child for its first
four months -- unquestionably a relevant consideration), is entitled to have
her own interest in visitation considered. Visitation cannot be determined
without considering the parents' interests along with those of the child.
In all of this, the trial court should recall the touchstones of visitation:
that it is desirable for the child to have contact with both parents; that
besides the child's
interests, the parents' interests also must be considered; but that when all is
said and done,
[***101] the best interests of the child are paramount.
We have decided that Mrs. Whitehead is entitled 1 to visitation at some point,
and that question is not open to the trial court on this remand. The trial
court will determine what kind of visitation shall be granted to her, with or
without conditions, and when and under what
circumstances it should commence. It also should be noted that the guardian's
recommendation of a five-year delay is most unusual -- one might argue that it
begins to border on termination. Nevertheless, if the circumstances as further
developed by appropriate proofs
[*467] or as reconsidered on remand clearly call for that suspension under applicable
legal principles of visitation, it should be so
ordered.
In order that the matter be determined as expeditiously as possible, we grant
to the trial court the broadest powers to reach its determination. A decision
shall be rendered in no more than ninety days from the date of this opinion.
The trial court shall, after reviewing the transcripts and other material,
determine in its
discretion whether further evidence is needed and through what witnesses it
shall be presented. The trial court should consider limiting
[***102] the witnesses to the experts who testified and to Mr. and Mrs. Stern and Mr.
and Mrs. Whitehead, 2 using its own judgment in deciding which of them, if any,
shall be called on to give further evidence. The trial court, in its
discretion, may either hear testimony or receive verified written submissions,
relaxing the Rules of Evidence to the extent compatible with reliable
factfinding and desirable for an expeditious decision. n20 Many significant
facts bearing on visitation have already been adduced. Although additional
evidence may be important, we believe that fairness does
not necessarily require that it be produced with all of the procedural
safeguards implicit in the Evidence Rules. When it comes to custody matters,
application of
[**1264] rules, including those concerning evidence, must on some occasions be
flexible,
New Jersey Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. S.S., 185 N.J. Super. 3 (App.Div.),
certif. den.,
91 N.J. 572 (1982), especially in view of the child's interests in this unique situation.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n20 Ordinarily relaxation of the Rules of Evidence depends on specific
authority, either within the Rules or in statutes.
See N.J.Rules of Evidence, Comment 2 to Evid.R. 2(2), 72-76 (1987). There are numerous examples, however, of relaxation of
these Rules in judicial proceedings for reasons peculiar to the case at hand.
We regard the circumstances of the visitation aspect of this case as most
unusual. In addition to the ordinary risks to the stability of an infant
caused by prolonging this type of
litigation, here there are risks from publicity that we simply cannot quantify.
We have no doubt that these circumstances justify any sensible means of
abbreviating the remand hearing.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***103] 3
[*468] Any party wishing to appeal from the trial court's judgment on visitation
shall file a notice of appeal within ten days thereafter, the Court hereby
reducing the ordinary time to appeal pursuant to
Rule 2:12-2. Any such appeal is hereby certified to this Court.
Any further proceedings in this matter, or related thereto, if made by
application to the trial court shall be made to the judge to whom the matter is
assigned on remand. That direction applies to applications related to this
matter in any way: whether made
before, during, or after proceedings on remand, and regardless of the nature of
the application. Any applications for appellate review shall be made directly
to this Court.
We would expect that after the visitation issue is determined the trial court,
in connection with any other applications in the future, will attempt to assure
that this case is treated like any
other so that this child may be spared any further damaging publicity.
While probably unlikely, we do not deem it unthinkable that, the major issues
having been resolved, the parties' undoubted love for this child might result
in a good faith attempt to work out the visitation themselves,
[***104] in 4 the best
interests of their child.
CONCLUSION
This case affords some insight into a new reproductive arrangement: the
artificial insemination of a surrogate mother. The unfortunate events that
have unfolded illustrate that its unregulated use can bring suffering to all
involved. Potential victims include the surrogate mother and her family, the
natural father and his wife, and most
importantly, the child. Although surrogacy has apparently provided positive
results for some infertile couples, it can also, as this case demonstrates,
cause suffering to participants, here essentially innocent and well-intended.
We have found that our present laws do not permit the surrogacy contract used
in this case. Nowhere, however, do
[*469] we find any legal prohibition
against surrogacy when the surrogate mother volunteers, without any payment, to
act as a surrogate and is given the right to change her mind and to assert her
parental rights. Moreover, the Legislature remains free to deal with this most
sensitive issue as it sees fit, subject only to constitutional constraints.
If the Legislature decides to address surrogacy,
consideration of this case will highlight many of its
[***105] potential 5 harms. We do not underestimate the difficulties of legislating on
this subject. In addition to the inevitable confrontation with the ethical and
moral issues involved, there is the question of the wisdom and effectiveness of
regulating a matter so private, yet of such public interest. Legislative
consideration of surrogacy may also
provide the opportunity to begin to focus on the overall implications of the
new reproductive biotechnology --
in vitro fertilization, preservation of sperm and eggs, embryo implantation and the
like. The problem is how to enjoy the benefits of the technology -- especially
for infertile couples -- while minimizing the risk of abuse. The problem can
be addressed only when
society decides what its values and objectives are in this troubling, yet
promising, area.
The judgment is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
[*470]
[**1265] APPENDIX A
SURROGATE PARENTING AGREEMENT
THIS AGREEMENT is made this 6th day of February, 1985, by and between
MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, a married woman (herein referred to as
"Surrogate), RICHARD WHITEHEAD, her husband (herein referred
[***106] to a
"Husband"), and WILLIAM 6 STERN, (herein referred to as
"Natural Father").
RECITALS
THIS AGREEMENT is made with reference to the following facts:
(1) WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, is an individual over the age of eighteen (18) years who is desirous of entering into this Agreement.
(2) The sole purpose of this Agreement is to enable WILLIAM STERN and his
infertile wife to have a child which is biologically related to WILLIAM STERN.
(3) MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, and RICHARD WHITEHEAD, her husband, are
over the age of eighteen (18) years and desirous of entering into this
Agreement in consideration of the following:
NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual promises contained Herein and the
intentions of being legally bound hereby, the parties agree as follows:
1. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, represents that she is capable of
conceiving children. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD understands and agrees that in the
best interest of the child, she
will not form or attempt to form a parent-child relationship with any child or
children she may conceive, carry to term and give birth to, pursuant to the
provisions of this Agreement, and shall freely surrender custody to WILLIAM
[***107] STERN, Natural Father, immediately 7 upon birth of the child; and terminate
all parental
rights to said child pursuant to this Agreement.
2. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, and RICHARD WHITEHEAD, her husband, have
been married since 12/2/73, and RICHARD WHITEHEAD is in agreement with the
purposes, intents and provisions of this Agreement and acknowledges that his
wife, MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, shall be artificially inseminated
pursuant to the
provisions of this Agreement. RICHARD WHITEHEAD agrees that in the best
interest of the child, he will not form or attempt to form a parent-child
relationship with any child or children MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, may
conceive by artificial insemination as described herein, and agrees to freely
and readily surrender immediate
custody of the child to WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father; and terminate his
parental rights; RICHARD WHITEHEAD further acknowledges he will do all acts
necessary to rebut the presumption of paternity of any offspring conceived and
born pursuant to aforementioned agreement as provided by law, including blood
testing and/or HLA testing.
3. WILLIAM
STERN, Natural Father, does hereby enter into this written contractual
[***108] Agreement with MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, 8 Surrogate, where MARY BETH WHITEHEAD
shall be artificially inseminated with the semen of WILLIAM STERN by a
physician. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, upon becoming pregnant,
acknowledges that she will carry said embryo/fetus(s) until delivery. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, and RICHARD
WHITEHEAD, her husband, agree that they will cooperate with any background
investigation into the
[*471]
[**1266] Surrogate's medical, family and personal history and warrants the information
to be accurate to the best of their knowledge. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate,
and RICHARD WHITEHEAD, her husband, agree to surrender
custody of the child to WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, immediately upon birth,
acknowledging that it is the intent of this Agreement in the best interests of
the child to do so; as well as institute and cooperate in proceedings to
terminate their respective parental rights to said child, and sign any and all
necessary affidevits, documents, and the like, in order to further the intent
and
purposes of this Agreement. It is understood by MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, and
RICHARD WHITEHEAD, that the child to be conceived is being done so for
[***109] the sole purpose of giving said child to WILLIAM STERN, 9 its natural and
biological father. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD and RICHARD WHITEHEAD agree to sign all
necessary affidavits prior to and after the
birth of the child and voluntarily participate in any paternity proceedings
necessary to have WILLIAM STERN'S name entered on said child's birth
certificate as the natural or biological father.
4. That the consideration for this Agreement, which is compensation for
services and expenses, and in no way is to be construed as a fee for
termination of parental
rights or a payment in exchange for a consent to surrender the child for
adoption, in addition to other provisions contained herein, shall be as
follows:
(A) $ 10,000 shall be paid to MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, upon surrender of
custody to WILLIAM STERN, the natural and biological father of the
child born pursuant to the provisions of this Agreement for surrogate services
and expenses in carrying out her obligations under this Agreement;
(B) The consideration to be paid to MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, shall be
deposited with the Infertility Center of New York (hereinafter ICNY), the
representative of WILLIAM STERN, at the
[***110] time of the signing of this
Agreement, and held in escrow 0 until completion of the duties and obligations
of MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, (see Exhibit
"A" for a copy of the Escrow Agreement), as herein described.
(C) WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, shall pay the expenses incurred by MARY BETH
WHITEHEAD, Surrogate,
pursuant to her pregnancy, more specifically defined as follows:
(1) All medical, hospitalization, and pharmaceutical, laboratory and therapy
expenses incurred as a result of MARY BETH WHITEHEAD'S pregnancy, not covered
or allowed by her present health and major medical insurance, including all
extraordinary medical expenses and all reasonable expenses
for treatment of any emotional or mental conditions or problems related to said
pregnancy, but in no case shall any such expenses be paid or reimbursed after a
period of six (6) months have elapsed since the date of the termination of the
pregnancy, and this Agreement specifically excludes any expenses for lost wages
or other
non-itemized incidentals (see Exhibit
"B") related to said pregnancy.
(2) WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, shall not be responsible for any latent
medical expenses occurring six (6) weeks subsequent
[***111] to the birth of the child, unless the medical problem or abnormality 1
incident thereto was known and treated
by a physician prior to the expiration of said six (6) week period and in
written notice of the same sent to ICNY, as representative of WILLIAM STERN by
certified mail, return receipt requested, advising of this treatment.
(3) WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, shall be responsible for the total
costs of all peternity testing. Such paternity testing may, at the option of
WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, be required prior to release of the surrogate
fee from escrow. In the event WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, is conclusively
determined not to be the biological father of the child as a result of an HLA
test, this Agreement will be
deemed breached and MARY BETH
[*472]
[**1267] WHITEHEAD, Surregate, shall not be entitled to any fee. WILLIAM STERN,
Natural Father, shall be entitled to reimbursement of all medical and related
expenses from MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, and RICHARD WHITEHEAD, her
husband.
(4) MARY BETH WHITEHEAD'S reasonable travel expenses incurred at the
request of WILLIAM STERN, pursuant to this Agreement.
5. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, and RICHARD
[***112] WHITEHEAD, her husband, understand and agree to assume all risks, including
the risk 2 of death, which are incidental to conception, pregnancy, childbirth,
including but not limited to, postpartum complications. A copy of said
possible risks and/or
complications is attached hereto and made a part hereof (see Exhibit
"C").
6. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, and RICHARD WHITEHEAD, her husband, hereby
agree to undergo psychiatric evaluation by JOAN EINWOHNER, a psychiatrist as
designated by WILLIAM STERN or an agent thereof. WILLIAM STERN shall pay for
the
cost of said psychiatric evaluation. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD and RICHARD WHITEHEAD
shall sign, prior to their evaluations, a medical release permitting
dissemination of the report prepared as a result of said psychiatric
evaluations to ICNY or WILLIAM STERN and his wife.
7. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, and RICHARD WHITEHEAD, her husband, hereby
agree that it is the exclusive and sole right of WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father,
to name said child.
8.
"Child" as referred to in this Agreement shall include all children born
simultaneously pursuant to the inseminations contemplated herein.
9. In the event of the death of WILLIAM
[***113] STERN, prior or subsequent to the birth of said child, it is hereby understood
and agreed
3 by MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, and RICHARD WHITEHEAD, her husband, that
the child will be placed in the custody of WILLIAM STERN'S wife.
10. In the event that the child is miscarried prior to the fifth (5th) month
of prognancy, no compensation, as enumerated in paragraph 4(A), shall be
paid to MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate. However, the expenses enumerated in
paragraph 4(C) shall be paid or reimbursed to MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate.
In the event the child is miscarried, dies or is stillborn subsequent to the
fourth (4th) month of pregnancy and said child does not survive, the Surrogate
shall receive $
1,000.00 in lieu of the compensation enumerated in paragraph 4(A). In the
event of a miscarriage or stillbirth as described above, this Agreement shall
terminate and neither MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, nor WILLIAM STERN,
Natural Father, shall be under any further obligation under this Agreement.
11.
MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, and WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, shall have
undergone complete physical and genetic evaluation, under the direction and
supervision of a licensed
[***114] physician, to determine whether the physical health and well-being of each is
satisfactory. 4 Said physical examination shall include testing for venereal
diseases, specifically including but not limited to, syphilis, harpes and
gonorrhea. Said venereal diseases testing shall be done prior to, but not
limited to, each series of inseminations.
12. In the event that pregnancy has not occurred within a reasonable time, in
the opinion of WILLIAM STERN,
Natural Father, this Agreement shall terminate by written notice to MARY BETH
WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, at the residence provided to the ICNY by the Surrogate,
from ICNY, as representative of WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father.
[*473]
[**1268] 13. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, agrees that she will not short the
childrence conceived except, if
in the professional medical opinion of the inseminating physician, such action
is necessary for the physical health of MARY BETH WHITEHEAD or the child has
been determined by said physician to be physiologically abnormal. MARY BETH
WHITEHEAD further agress, upon the request of said physician to undergo
amniocentesis (see Exhibit
"D") or similar tests to
detect genetic and congenital defects.
[***115] In the event said test reveals that the fetus is genetically or congenitally
abnormal, MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, 5 Surrogate, agrees to abort the fetus upon
demand of WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, in which event, the fee paid to the
Surrogate will be in accordance to Paragraph
10. If MARY BETH WHITEHEAD refuses to abort the fetus upon demand of WILLIAM
STERN, his obligations as stated in this Agreement shall cease forthwith,
except as to obligation of paternity imposed by statute.
14. Despite the provisions of Paragraph 13, WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father,
recognizes that some genetic and
congenital abnormalities may not be detected by amniocentesis or other tests,
and therefore, if proven to be the biological father of the child, assmuses the
legal responsibility for any child who may possess genetic or congenital
abnormalities. (See Exhibits
"E" and
"F").
15. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, further agrees to adhere to all
medical instructions given to her by the inseminating physician as well as her
independent obstetrician. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD also agrees not to smoke
cigarettee, drink alcoholic beverages, use illegal drugs, or take
non-prescription medications or prescribed medications
[***116] without written consent from her physician. MARY BETH WHITEHEAD
agrees to follow a prenatal medical 6 examination schedule to consist of no
fewer visits then: one visit per month during the first seven (7) months of
pregnancy, two visits (each to occur at two-week intervals) during the eighth
and ninth month of pregnancy.
16.
MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate, agrees to cause RICHARD WHITEHEAD, her husband,
to execute a refusal of consent form as annexed hereto as Exhibit
"G".
17. Each party acknowledges that he or she fully understands this Agreement
and its legal effect, and that they are signing the same freely and voluntarily
and that neither party has any reason to believe that the other(s) did not freely and voluntarily execute said Agreement.
18. In the event any of the provisions of this Agreement are deemed to be
invalid or unenforceable, the same shall be deemed severable from the remainder
of this Agreement and shall not cause the invalidity or unenforceability of the
remainder of this Agreement. If such provision shall be deemed invalid due to
its scope or breadth, then said provision
shall be deemed valid to the extent of the scope or breadth permitted by law.
[*474]
[***117]
[**1269] 19. The original of this Agreement, upon execution, shall be retained by the
Infertility Center 7 of New York, with photocopies being distributed to MARY
BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate and WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father, having the same
legal
effect as the original.
WILLIAM STERN, Natural Father
DATE 2/6/85
STATE OF NEW YORK
SS.:
COUNTY OF NEW YORK
On the 6th day of February, 1985, before me personally came WILLIAM STERN,
known to me, and to me known, to be the individual described in the foregoing
instrument and he acknowledged to me that he executed the
same as his free and voluntary act.
NOTARY PUBLIC
[*475]
[**1270] APPENDIX B
We have read the foregoing five pages of this Agreement, and it is our
collective intention by affixing our signatures below, to enter into a binding
legal obligation.
MARY BETH WHITEHEAD, Surrogate
DATE 1-30-85
RICHARD WHITEHEAD, Surrogate's
Husband
DATE 1-30-85
STATE OF NEW YORK
SS.:
COUNTY OF NEW YORK
On the 6th day of February, 1985, before as personally came MARY BETH
WHITEHEAD, known to me, and to me known to be the individual described in the
foregoing instrument and she acknowledged to me that she executed the same as
[***118] her free and voluntary act.
NOTARY PUBLIC
STATE OF NEW YORK
SS.:
COUNTY OF NEW YORK
On the 6th day of February, 1985, 8 before as personally came RICHARD
WHITEHEAD, known to me, and to me known to be the individual described in the
foregoing instrument and he acknowledged to me that he executed the same me his
free and voluntary act.
NOTARY PUBLIC
[*476]
[**1271] AGREEMENT
THIS
AGREEMENT is made this THIRD day of DECEMBER 1984, by and between WILLIAM STERN
hereinafter referred to as Natural Father, and the Primary Research Associates
of United States, Inc., d/b/a Infertility Center of New York, (hereinafter
referred to as
"ICNY").
WHEREAS, Natural Father is desirous of taking
part in the process of surrogate parenting wherein he will attempt to conceive
a child by artificial insemination of a surrogate mother;
WHEREAS, ICNY is a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of
the State of New York for the purpose inter alia of engaging in research,
developmental work and design in the areas of surrogate parenting, ovum
transfer and in vitro fertilization with implentation in a surrogate; and
additionally providing administrative and supportive
[***119] services for the above; and
WHEREAS, Natural Father is desirous of contracting with ICNY for such services;
and
WHEREAS ICNY is desirous 9 of
contracting with the Natural Father to provide such services;
NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual promises contained herein, and
with the intentions of being legally bound hereby, the parties mutually agree
as follows:
(1) Natural Father hereby contracts with ICNY for the services offered by ICNY
and ICNY agrees to contract with the Natural Father to use its
best effered to assist the Natural Father in the selection of a
"surrogate mother" as hereinafter defined, it being understood that the final selection of the
"surrogate mother" is solely within the discretion of the Natural Father. In addition to
assisting the Natural Father in the selection of a
"surrogate mother", ICNY shall also
provide the services set forth in Exhibit
"A" annexed hereto and made a part hereof and these services shall continue until
the completion of the duties and obligations of surrogate or until such time as
the Natural Father decides not to utilize ICNY's services, provided that the
Natural Father is not in breach of this Agreement.
(2) Natural Father
[***120] agrees and understands that he must enter into an agreement with the selected
surrogate mother whereby Natural Father agrees to the process 0 of artificial
insemination with the use of his semen for the purpose of impregnating the
surrogate mother. Thereafter, the surrogate mother shall give birth to a child
fathered by the Natural
Father and voluntarily surrender custody of said child to the Natural Father.
(3) Natural Father hereby agrees to pay ICNY as compensation for the services
provided by ICNY the sum of SEVEN THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS ($ 7,500.00)
incurred by ICNY on behalf of the Natural Father. The Natural Father
understands and
agrees that said sum is non-refundable. A partial list of costs and expenses
is annexed hereto and made a part hereof as Exhibit
"B". ICNY shall on a periodic basis bill the Natural Father for the costs and
expenses incurred on behalf of the Natural Father.
The Natural Father agrees that ICNY shall
act as escrow agent for the fee to be paid by the Natural Father to the
selected surrogate mother.
(4) The following list of definitions shall apply throughout this Agreement:
(a)
"Child" is defined as all children born simultancously as a
[***121] result of the Insemination contemplated by this Agreement.
[*477]
[**1272] (b)
"Natural Father" is
defined as the individual over the age of eighteen 1 (18) who has selected the
surrogate mother and whose semen is used in the insemination contemplated
herein resulting in the birth of the child.
(c)
"Surrogate mother" is defined as a woman over the age of eighteen (18) selected by the Natural
Father to be impregnated by the
process of artificial insemination with woman of the Natural Father for the
purpose of becoming pregnant and giving birth to a child and surrendering the
child to the Natural Father.
(5) ICNY agrees to provide the services detailed in Exhibit
"A". Said services including the offering, at the option of the Natural Father,
of legal representation of the
Natural Father in his negotiations and agreement with the surrogate mother.
The Natural Father understands and acknowledges that ICNY offers these legal
services through the law firm retained by ICNY but, ICNY makes no
representations or warranties with respect to matters of law or the legality of
surrogate parenting and is not rendering
legal services on providing legal advice. However, the Natural Father
[***122] has the absolute right to seek legal counsel of his own selection in his
negotiations and agreement with the selected surrogate mother or her
representative. 2 In the event the Natural Father utilizes the legal services
of counsel other than the law firm retained by
ICNY, all legal fees and cost shall be borne by the Natural Father and such
fees and costs shall be in addition to the fees and costs set forth in
Paragraph 3 of this Agreement.
(6) Prior to signing this Agreement, each party has been given the opportunity
to consult with an attorney of his own choice concerning the
terms and legal significance of the Agreement, and the effect which it has upon
any and all interests of the parties. Each party acknowledges that he fully
understands the Agreement and its legal effect, and that he is signing the same
freely and voluntarily and that neither party has any reason to believe that
the other did not understand fully the terms and effects of this Agreement, or
that he did not freely and voluntarily execute this
Agreement.
(7) Natural Father warrants and represents the following to ICNY:
(a) That the Natural Father's semen is of sufficient nature both quantitatively
and qualitatively
[***123] to impregnate the selected surrogate mother.
(b) That the Natural Father is medically free from disease or other hereditary
medical problems which could 3 cause injury, defect, or
disease to the surrogate mother or child.
(c) That the Natural Father will not make or attempt to make directly or
through a representative, a subsequent agreement with the selected surrogate
mother or any other surrogates introduced to the Natural Father by ICNY before
or at any time after the birth of his child. In the
event of a further arrangement with the surrogate for a child is made, the
Natural Father agrees to pay to ICNY a second fee in the amount specified in
Paragraph 3 of this Agreement.
(8) Natural Father agrees that breach of any of his warranties and
representations shall cause this Agreement to immediately
terminate but in no way relieve the Natural Father from his obligations under
this Agreement. Further, the Natural Father agrees that his warranties and
representations shall survive the termination of this Agreement.
(9) Natural Father hereby acknowledges that ICNY makes no representations or
warranties with respect to any agreement or understanding which may be reached,
or
may
[***124] have been reached, between himself and a prospective
"surrogate mother." Natural Father further acknowledges that the nature of any such agreement or
understanding 4 as well as all ramifications, obligations and enforcement
matters relating thereto are subject which he must seek advice from his
attorney.
[*478]
[**1273] (10) It is expressly understood that ICNY does not guarantee or warrant that
the
"surrogate
mother" will in fact conceive a child fathered by Natural Father; nor does ICNY
guarantee or warrant that if a child is conceived, it will be a healthy child,
free from all defects; nor does ICNY guarantee or warrant the
"surrogate mother" (and her husband, if applicable) will comply with the terms and provisions of
the separate
agreement entered into between herself and Natural Father including but not
limited to, the
"surrogate mother's" refusal to surrender custody of the child upon birth.
(11) Natural Father hereby specifically releases ICNY and its officers,
employees agents and representatives from any and all liability and
responsibility of any nature whatsoever except willful and gross
negligence, which may result from complications, breaches, damages, losses,
[***125] claims, actions, liabilities, whether actual or asserted of any kind, and all
other costs or detriments of any kind, in any way related to or arising from
any agreement or understanding 5 between himself and a
"surrogate mother" located through the services of ICNY. Moreover, the Natural
Father understands the relationship between ICNY and the relationship of the
doctors used in connection with insemination, monitoring and any other medical
or psychiatric procedure or treatment of the surrogate or of the child is that
of an independent contractor and that there is no other relationship between
the parties.
(12) This Agreement is binding on each party's respective executors, heirs,
assigns and
successors.
(13) This Agreement has been drafted, negotiated and executed in New York, New
York, and shall be governed by, continued and enforced in accordance with the
laws of the State of New York.
(14) In the event any of the provisions of this Agreement are deemed to be
invalid or unenforceable, the same shall be deemed severable from the remainder
of this
Agreement and shall not cause the invalidity or unenforceability of the
remainder of this Agreement. If such provision(s) shall be
[***126] deemed invalid due to its scope or breadth, then said provision(s) shall be
deemed valid to the extent of the scope or breadth permitted by law.
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