Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 848South Africa
Ex parte Three Surrogacy Applications and Others (8749/22;9353/22;34190/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 848 (25 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 October 2022
Headnotes
this requirement requires an investigation of whether the surrogate is -
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ex parte Three Surrogacy Applications and Others (8749/22;9353/22;34190/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 848 (25 October 2022)
Ex parte Three Surrogacy Applications and Others (8749/22;9353/22;34190/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 848 (25 October 2022)
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sino date 25 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
8749/22
9353/22
34190/22
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED:
NO
25
October 2022
In
the ex parte matters of:
THREE
SURROGACY
APPLICATIONS
Applicants
DONRICH
THALDAR
First
Amicus
BRIGITTE
CLARK
Second
Amicus
WILLENE
HOLNESS
Third
Amicus
SHEETAL
SONI
Fourth
Amicus
BONGINKOSI
SHOZI
Fifth
Amicus
NTOKOZO
MNYANDU
Sixth
Amicus
ALIKI
EDGCUMBE
Seventh
Amicus
MELODIE
LABUSCHAIGNE
Eighth
Amicus
MAGDA
SLABBERT
Ninth
Amicus
JUDGMENT
THE
COURT
Introduction
[1]
This Court is seized with the sole legal
question:
"Should
it, as a rule, be required that a clinical psychologist assess the
existing child(ren) of commissioning and surrogate
parents to
determine whether they are prepared for the surrogacy and its
outcome?"
[2]
The
legal question arises from the judgment of this Court in
Ex
Parte JCR.
[1]
The
legal question stands on its own, but not in the abstract.
The
question has been carved out of three pending surrogacy applications.
This
Court has to determine the question, as a separate legal issue,
before the surrogacy applications
can
be considered.
[3]
Surrogate
motherhood agreements ('surrogacy agreements'), entered into by
commissioning parents and surrogate mothers, are subject
to
confirmation by the High Court.
If
the surrogacy agreement is not confirmed by the High Court, it is
unenforceable and invalid.
[2]
A
Court will only confirm a surrogacy agreement after it has considered
the requirements of
section 295
of the
Children's Act, 38 of 2005
.
[3]
The Court's answer to the legal question will impact whether an
evaluation of the children
of
the
commissioning
parents
and/or
surrogate
mother
forms
part
of
the
requirements in
section 295.
This
will in turn directly impact on the three pending surrogacy
applications.
[4]
Of importance in surrogacy applications
are the child's best interests.
Motivated by the need for certainty and
clarity in an issue involving children, this Full Court was
constituted and the question
was considered as a matter of priority.
[5]
To
ensure all interested parties were provided an opportunity to be
heard, the Deputy Judge President issued a Directive
[4]
in terms of
section 14(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
read with section 173 of the Constitution, setting out the legal
question to be considered and the context within which the question
arose.
[5]
The
Directive was sent to all major legal bodies in the province and all
interested parties were invited to apply to be admitted
as
amici
curiae.
[6]
The invitation was taken up by nine
legal scholars, including four professors.
The legal scholars have extensive
research in health law and/or family law, with a particular interest
in surrogacy matters in general.
They
have a particular interest in the legal question the Court has to
consider.
The
legal scholars were admitted as
amici
curiae
and provided an opportunity
to make written and oral submissions.
[7]
The applicants in the three surrogacy
applications similarly made written and oral submissions on the legal
question.
They
are cited, collectively in this judgment, as the three surrogacy
applications and referred to as the applicants in this matter.
[8]
The
amici
and
applicants presented a, largely,
[6]
unified position in their submissions to this Court. Expert evidence
was presented to the Court by the applicants and the
amici.
[9]
The
amici
and the applicants are for the
greatest part collectively referred to, for ease of reference, as the
parties. The parties' stance
is that there must be no general
requirement to subject the children of either the commissioning
parents or the surrogate, to a
psychological evaluation in the
context of section 295.
The
parties object to a requirement to subject children to an evaluation,
as a rule.
They
submit that if it is a requirement, it would be at odds with the
guiding principle in our law that the child's best interests
must be
examined on a case-by-case basis.
[10]
The
parties rely on the tide of jurisprudence that describes child law as
"an area that abhors maximalist legal propositions
that preclude
or diminish the possibilities of looking at and evaluating the
specific circumstances of the case".
[7]
[11]
The
parties invite this Court to adopt a case-by-case approach, rather
than an absolutist approach, imposing a general requirement.
The
parties ground such a nuanced approach in the provisions of
section
295(c)(ii)
of the
Children's Act as
interpreted by this Court in
Ex
Parle KAF and Others (KAF 2)
[8]
Section
295(c)(ii)
provides that a Court must be satisfied that a surrogate
is emotionally available to her children before the Court confirms
the
surrogacy agreement.
This
Court, in
KAF
2,
[9]
held that this requirement requires an investigation of whether the
surrogate is -
"emotionally
available for her own child or children, including her readiness to
discuss the surrogate pregnancy with her child
or children, depending
on their ages and levels of comprehension".
[12]
The parties submit that this criterion,
focusing on the mother's emotional availability, is clearly motivated
by a concern for the
well-being of the surrogate mother's child(ren)
point of departure between the
amici
and the applicants contained in the
expert reports.
The
applicant contends that in instances where the surrogate mother's
embryo is used there could be a need for an evaluation of
the
surrogate's existing children.
The
amici
disagree
with this and points out that there is no basis in the study
conducted and reports relied on to draw this distinction.
The court
is constrained to an assessment of the best evidence available. At
present the best evidence available
does
not
provide
a
basis
for
the
distinction
sought
to
be
drawn
by
the
applicants. and that this requirement
sufficiently protects the child's best interests.
There is no need for a blanket
prescription of a psychological assessment, as the emotional
availability requirement is already
in place and caters to the
child's best interests.
In
short, the existing mechanisms to ensure that parents are suitable
can be used to protect the psychological well-being of their
children.
[13]
The parties argued that normally parents
do not require their children to be evaluated if they want to extend
their families.
A
requirement that the child(ren) of the commissioning parents and/or
surrogate mother should be psychologically evaluated before
the Court
confirms the surrogacy agreement, is not justified.
Such a requirement may subject children
to emotional turmoil should the surrogacy agreement terminate for any
reason provided for
in the
Children's Act or
if there is a
miscarriage.
[14]
The parties do not seek an outright ban
against the evaluation of children.
It
is the blanket application of the requirement to all children, that
they wish the Court to reject. Their position is that if
the
particular circumstances of a child necessitate the need for
evaluation, then it remains open to the Court to consider the
need
for such an evaluation, based on the particular facts of the case.
Depending on the social and cultural
background, as well as other particularised aspects of the
child(ren), such a need may well
arise.
However, the need for such an evaluation
will come to the fore after and through an evaluation of the
surrogate parent.
It
however can only arise if there are objective facts presented to the
Court to ground the need for such an evaluation.
[15]
Before considering the arguments, the
Court first turns to the evidence relied on by the parties.
Evaluation
of expert evidence
[16]
The
amici
presented this Court with the
affidavit and report of Ms. Rodrigues, a clinical psychologist. She
is an expert in the psychology
of infertility and the management
thereof.
She
further counsels people and couples who have challenges in having
children,
deals
with
psychological
assessments
of
gamete
donors
and
surrogate mothers, counsels patients
during in vitro fertilisation process, counsels donor game recipients
and their partners, and
counsels surrogacy commissioning parents.
[17]
Ms. Rodrigues's opinion is that there is
no need for a general requirement to evaluate the child(ren) of
surrogate and commissioning
parents.
Her
reasons are:
18.1
A
psychological evaluation, depending on the child,
[10]
may be harmful to the child. Ms. Rodrigues states that "whilst
some children might experience being evaluated by a psychologist
as a
non-event, or even a pleasant interaction, some children might
experience it as a source of discomfort or even anxiety."
18.2
A
psychological evaluation prior to fertilisation, ie at the stage of
confirmation of the surrogacy agreement, is premature.
This
is particularly so as the evaluation will precede the fertilisation
at a time when much is uncertain .
[11]
Ms. Rodrigues states that it would be best for the commissioning
parents not to share their intentions to have another child through
surrogacy with their existing children until such time that the
surrogate mother's pregnancy is confirmed.
At
this stage, it would be appropriate to share the news with the
existing child.
Similarly,
telling the children of a surrogate mother in advance that their
mother may become pregnant to help another woman (or
couple) to have
a child "would just cause unnecessary expectations of something
that is still at that stage a big uncertainty".
Children
of surrogate mothers are often young and may not have the capacity to
understand the concept of reproduction
and
exposing
them
to
a
surrogacy
agreement
without
a
guarantee of actual pregnancy could generate questions about
reproduction before they are ready to grasp the concepts or before
it
is explained to them.
18.3
There
is no basis in psychology to assume that a parent's surrogacy
negatively affects the children.
[12]
Ms.
Rodrigues premises this statement on the results of an empirical
study conducted by a research group at Cambridge University.
The
results of the study were published in an article entitled "Children
of surrogate mothers: psychological well-being, family
relationships
and experiences of surrogacy."
[13]
In
the study, the feelings of children of surrogate mothers were
assessed, at the time of handover and currently.
At
the time of handover, 47% of the children reported that they
experienced no difficulties, 50% could not remember and 3% reported
some difficulties. Currently, 97% reported no difficulties, and 3%
reported some difficulties. The study showed that 86% of the
children
had a positive view of their mothers' surrogacy, with the remainder
being neutral or ambivalent.
None
of the children had a negative view of their mothers' surrogacy.
[18]
Ms. Rodrigues states that the results of
the study, conducted over several years and published in 2013, accord
with her experience
in 25 years in clinical practice, and that she
has "never encountered a case where a child of a surrogate
mother was negatively
affected by the mother's surrogate journey."
[19]
The second source of expert evidence is
presented by the applicants and is the report of Carryn Ann Du
Hecquet de Rauville.
Ms.
Du Hecquet de Rauville holds a BA in psychology and sociology and a
MA in Counselling psychology.
Ms.
du Hecquet de Rauville is an active member of the Transplant Advisory
and Ethics Committee.
[20]
In her report she states that -
"There
is no apparent evidence to suggest that the Child Psychological
Assessment Requirement
is warranted or reasonable it would add
favourably to the purpose of protecting the psychological well-being
of the existing child/children or children of a proposed
gestations mother.
In addition, I suggest that such a process may
actually serve to undermine the well-being of certain children,
depending on specific variables of the case and that any
psychological assessment or provision of psychological services
should
be decided on a case by case basis."
[21]
These experts state unequivocally that
the best interests of the child are not served by a requirement to
subject them to psychological
evaluation.
[22]
The
amici
also
referred this Court to literature on the impact of psychological
evaluation on children in family law matters, more broadly.
The
literature raises serious concerns about the potential adverse
effects of assessments on children.
[14]
In
addition, some scholars have questioned the scientific veracity of
psychological assessments of children, which must be taken
seriously
in light of the lack of scientific literature to support that these
kinds of evaluations are actually beneficial to children.
[15]
The
amici
do
not submit that psychosocial examination of children is always
harmful, this they concede is contested.
[23]
The evidence presented indicates that
serious concerns have been raised to illustrate that a risk of harm
exists.
In
addition, all parties have presented evidence that there is little
support for an argument that such evaluation is, as a requirement,
beneficial to the child(ren).
[24]
Armed with this evidence, the parties
propose, instead of a general requirement to subject children to an
evaluation, a nuanced
approach based on a case-by-case approach,
rooted in the existing legislative
and
jurisprudential framework.
Section
295
and the criteria in
KAF 2
[25]
Parliament
has enacted
[16]
legislation
that regulates surrogacy with stringent safeguards.
The
safeguards are found in Chapter 19 of the
Children's Act.
[17
]
Chapter
19 delineates the procedural and substantive boundaries
[18]
of
surrogate motherhood agreements
[19]
and "is prescriptive about the content of the issues pertaining
to the agreement."
[20]
The
procedure created by Chapter 19 is that an agreement is entered into
between surrogate parent(s) and a commissioning parent(s)
in which it
is agreed that the surrogate mother will be artificially fertilised
and the surrogate mother undertakes to hand over
such a child to the
commissioning parent(s) with the intention that the child concerned
becomes the legitimate child of the commissioning
parent(s).
[21]
[26]
The
entire agreement is then subjected to Court oversight.
[22]
The
Court's confirmation of the agreement is sought through an
ex
parte
application
in which both sets of parents, commissioning and surrogate, are
applicants.
If
the agreement is confirmed by a Court, it is valid with the effect
that -
for
all intents and purposes
-
the
child that is born is the child of the commissioning parents.
[23]
If
not confirmed, the agreement is invalid.
[24]
[27]
The
Court will only confirm
[25]
a
surrogacy agreement if the requirements of
section 295
of the
Children's Act are
met.
[26]
Section
295(c)(ii)
provides that a Court may not confirm a surrogacy
agreement unless the surrogate mother "is in all respects a
suitable person
to act as surrogate mother."
It
is this section that is at the core of the legal question.
[28]
A body of jurisprudence has been built
providing content to
section 295.
In
particular, this Court has given content to
section 295(c)(ii)
in
KAF
2.
In
KAF 2
the
Court was presented with a joint expert opinion by three
psychologists who formulated and provided reasons formulating eight
criteria for determining whether a proposed surrogate mother meets
the requirement of being a "suitable surrogate mother".
The Court approved the criteria
identified and proposed in the expert opinion.
The criteria can be categorised under
three headings.
[29]
The
first
is the minimum information obtained
through personal clinical assessment of the prospective surrogate
mother and her surrounding
circumstances (see
Ex
Parle WH).
The
information must be supported by other collateral information, where
necessary, and must include information on whether the
surrogate
mother:
a)
is physically and medically fit to carry
the gamete and in turn the child to be born to full term;
b)
has an agreement with the comm1ss1oning
parents regarding selective reduction and the risks pertaining
thereto;
c)
is of sound mind enjoys good mental
health, and/ or suffers from any personality disorder, severe
psychiatric illness, or has a
history of self harming behavior;
d)
does
not have a history of substance abuse, including drugs and/or alcohol
and addiction, likely to have similar effects as those
referred to in
c above.
[27]
[30]
Second,
information
regarding the emotional welfare, emotional needs, and resources
available to the surrogate mother. These are relevant
factors for
consideration to determine the likely effects on the child to be born
as well as the fulfilment of the agreement.
Having regards to
section 293(1)
which
requires the written consent of the spouse if the surrogate mother is
married or involved in a permanent relationship, a
report on the:
a)
host mother's need for emotional
resources, if any;
b)
existing emotional resources;
c)
quality and stability of the existing
emotional support structure; and
d)
whether
the surrounding relationships are conducive for the fulfilment of the
surrogacy agreement and may result in termination
of the agreement
after artificial fertilization or a breach.
[28]
[31]
Third,
the
clarity and emotional readiness of the surrogate mother.
Under
section 297(1)(a)
and
section
297(1)(c)
of the
Children's Act, the
surrogate mother will not have
any rights of parenthood or care of the child, or contact with the
child and neither will her husband,
partner, or relatives. The
surrogate mother must understand the nature of the surrogacy
relationship, and she must understand the
nature of surrogate
motherhood, that the child to be born will legally not be her child,
but the child of the commissioning parents.
In this regard, there
must be a report on:
a)
the psycho-social support structure of
the surrogate mother;
b)
the understanding and influence of the
spouse, partner, relatives or extended family in the decision;
c)
the understanding that the child to be
born will belong to the commissioning parents;
d)
how handing the baby over to the
commissioning parents will affect her;
e)
that the psychosocial support structure
is not likely to result in the termination of the agreement after
fertilization
or
in a breach; and
f)
whether
she is emotionally available for her own child or children, including
her readiness to discuss the surrogate pregnancy with
her child or
children, depending on their ages and levels of comprehension.
[29]
[32]
The
amici,
applicants, and experts in this
matter all endorse and rely on these criteria. The parties hinge
their argument in this Court on
the emotional availability of the
mother as provided in the last aspect in
KAF
2
particularly, whether the
surrogate mother is emotionally available for her own child or
children, including her readiness to discuss
the surrogate pregnancy
with her child or children, depending on their ages and levels of
comprehension".
They
contend this requirement is adequate and more appropriate to ensure
the best interests of the children are protected.
The approach suggested by the parties
finds support in the evidence of the experts, particularly in that of
Ms. Rodrigues. Ms. Rodrigues
was one of the three psychologists who
authored the joined expert opinion in 2018 on the topic of how to
clinically evaluate an
intended surrogate mother to ensure that she
is, as identified by the
Children's Act, "suitable
".
It is this joined expert opinion that
formed the backbone of the principles identified in
KAF
2.
She concludes that "if an
intended surrogate mother complies with the eight criteria" in
KAF 2
-
"in particular that she is emotionally available for her
children - there should be no reason for concern about her children".
Ms. Rodrigues states -
"If
a court finds, based on a psychologist's report, that an intended
surrogate mother complies with the eight criteria for
suitability,
she has passed through a rigorous evaluation process and accordingly
there should be no cause for concern about the
physiological
well-being of her children. In addition, relying on the parents
involved to take care of their child(ren)'s psychological
well
being - rather than psychologists as part of a legal process -
accords with legal policy and with psychological expert
opinion."
[33]
Part of the requirement
that a suitable
surrogate
mother
must
be emotionally
available
to her
children
will include providing them with security so that they do not fear
abandonment.
In
this way, the child's best interests are protected.
[34]
Ms. Rodrigues's evidence is that "the
appropriate way to protect the emotional welfare of the surrogate
mother's own children,
is to ensure that the surrogate mother herself
is emotionality available for her children."
The reason for this is that a mother
spends far more time with her child, and has a close emotional
relationship with her child.
"As
such relying on the mother to discuss her surrogacy journey with her
children at a stage and in a way that she judges best
appears to me
to be most practical and sustainable way to protect the psychological
well-being of her children."
[35]
The expert evidence before the Court
indicates that the child's best interests are provided for
appropriately through establishing
the emotional availability of the
parents.
Child's
best interests
[36]
The
child's best interests are provided for in section 28 of the
Constitution.
It
is a self standing right; a guiding principle which must be at
the fore of any decision involving a particular child as
well as a
standard against which to test provisions or conduct that affect
children in general.
Section
28 demands that the child's best interests must be determined with
reference to the concrete facts before a court, on a
case-by-case
basis and a court must consider the particular circumstances of the
child before the court.
A
truly principled child-centred approach requires a "close and
individual examination of the precise real-life situation of
the
particular child involved."
[30]
[37]
The
general principle, requiring a case-by-case analysis, has been echoed
in the context of section 295 applications.
Section
295 applications have been approached from the premise that the "best
interest principle has not been given an exhaustive
content, but the
standard should be flexible as individual circumstances will
determine the best interest of the child".
[31]
In
the context of section 295 applications, a Court is mandated to
apply a "value judgment" by "taking into
consideration
the circumstances of the particular case".
[32]
[38]
To
apply a pre-determined formula for the sake of certainty,
irrespective of the circumstances, would in fact be contrary to the
best interests of the child(ren) concerned.
[33]
Determining
the best interests of a child is a fact-based enquiry.
The
particular factual scenario must be assessed to determine if it meets
the standards of the best interests of the child principle.
The
freedom of the court to make decisions that are individualised and
speak to the particular child(ren) before it, is one that
our courts
have guarded jealously.
[39]
The
Constitutional Court has struck down legislation that impedes the
Court in considering the circumstances of a particular case.
In
Fitzpatrick
[34]
the
Constitutional Court invalidated provisions of the Child Care Act
[35]
for
"being too blunt and all embracing".
As
these provisions constrained the Court's decision-making, the
Constitutional Court held they did not provide paramountcy to the
best interests of children and were inconsistent with the provisions
of section 28(2) of the Constitution.
[40]
A general requirement that children be
assessed before a surrogate motherhood agreement is confirmed, is not
aligned with the established
position in our law that the child's
best interests should be determined by the facts of individual
circumstances rather than through
the application of general rules.
Whilst it may well be that the best
interests of a particular child may be served by psychological
evaluation, it is not the case
that the best interests of children,
generally, are served by mandatory psychological evaluation.
[41]
It
follows from this that we cannot endorse an approach
[36]
that requires the children of prospective surrogate mothers, or
commissioning parents, to be assessed, always, as a condition for
the
exercise of the Court's powers to endorse the surrogacy agreement.
Such
a
requirement,
will
not adequately
give
effect
to
the
child's best interests. It will not be appropriate for children of
prospective surrogate mothers, or commissioning parents,
to be
assessed unless the circumstances of a particular case render an
assessment necessary.
[42]
Our view is that the case-by-case
approach aligns with the general approach to the child's best
interests.
Such
an approach is in harmony with the criteria adopted in
Ex
Parle KAF 2,
particularly, the
criterion in
KAF 2
that
focuses on the surrogate mother's emotional availability as the
appropriate avenue to safeguard the child's best interests.
The focus on the parents' emotional
availability also aligns with the provisions of
section 7
of the
Children's Act.
Section
7 provides that whenever a provision of the
Children's Act requires
the best interests of the child standard to be applied the Court must
have regard to the "capacity of the parents, or any
specific
parent, or of any other care-giver or person, to provide for the
needs of the child, including the emotional and intellectual
needs".
[43]
The
Court can only consider the parents' emotional availability if it is
provided with an adequate psychological report.
The
report must inform the Court that specific inquiries were made
regarding the parents' emotional availability and ability to
explain
the situation to the children.
The
report must set out sufficient facts to place the Court in a position
to determine whether there is a factual circumstance that
may render
it appropriate to require an evaluation of the existing child(ren).
Where
the report falls short of this requirement, our courts have a
discretion how to ensure it has the necessary information.
Our
courts have, when dissatisfied with the report, dealt with the report
by rejecting
[37]
the
application or requesting an improved report.
[38]
[44]
A psychologist must inform the Court if
an evaluation of the commissioning parents or surrogate mother
indicate a lack of the necessary
skills, knowledge and ability to
handle the situation with care. The psychologist must bring this to
the Court's attention.
In
such circumstances, the psychologist may indicate the need to conduct
an evaluation of the children and the Court will consider
ordering
such an evaluation.
[45]
The
Court, as the upper guardian of all minor children, must advance the
spirit and the objectives of the
Children's Act.
It
cannot simply rubber-stamp a surrogacy agreement.
[39]
Simultaneously, the Court must guard against creating or placing
additional obstacles in the path of litigants who seek to expand
their families.
This
Court holds that permitting an evaluation where the circumstances
require, without demanding it as a requirement, strikes the
balance
between these interests.
[46]
The Court expresses its gratitude to the
parties and experts.
Their
contribution has been invaluable in addressing the legal question.
The parties have assisted the Court in
its determination of a matter that involves the child's best
interests as well as an issue
of dignity in the formation of
families.
The
parties have acted with expedience in order for the matter to be
addressed with the due care and attention it required.
ORDER
It
is declared that:
1.
It is not a requirement of general
application in applications for the confirmation of surrogate
motherhood agreements that existing
children of commissioning parents
and surrogate mothers are assessed by a clinical psychologist to
determine whether the children
are prepared for the surrogacy and its
outcome;
2.
Courts, considering applications for the
confirmation of surrogate motherhood agreements, have a discretion to
require that existing
children of commissioning parents and surrogate
mothers are assessed by a clinical psychologist to determine whether
the children
are prepared for the surrogacy and its outcome;
3.
No order as to costs.
THE
COURT
AP
Ledwaba
Deputy
Judge President
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
I
de Vos
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines. As a
courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicants: Adv.
B. Gradidge
Instructed
by: Robynne
Friedman Attorneys
Counsel
for the
Amici: Prof.
D. Thaldar
Dr.
B. Shozi
Date
of the hearing: 12
September 2022
Date
of judgment:
25 October 2022
[1]
Ex Parle JCR and Others (51606/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 209;
2022 (5) SA
202
(GP) (16 March 2022)
[2]
S 295(1)
of the
Children's Act 38 of 2005
.
[3]
The full citations of these three cases are Ex Parle: LM and Others
(8749/22) Ex Parle: GP and Others (9353/22) and Ex Parle:
AN and
Others (34190/22). The parties in the three surrogacy applications
are collectively referred to as the applicants in this
matter.
[4]
A Full Bench was previously constituted to consider issues arising
from surrogacy applications to "ensure consistency and
develop
a uniform practice in matters of this nature" and also invited
the bars and amici to make submissions. See Ex parte:
WH and Others
(29936/11) [2011] ZAGPPHC 185;
2011 (6) SA 514
(GNP);
[2011] 4 All
SA 630
(GNP) (27 September 2011) at para 9 ("Ex Parle WH').
[5]
The Directive sets out that the Deputy Judge President (in his
capacity as Acting Judge President) was approached oy a group
of law
academics that posed a concern regarding the application of a
general obligation to subject to children to psychological
evaluation as part of a
section 295
application.
[6]
The amici and applicants diverge on whether there ought to be a
general requirement to subject the children of a surrogate whose
gamete is used in the fertilisation to an evaluation. There is a
Position of the amici curiae and the applicants
[7]
AD v OW
[2007] ZACC 27
;
2008 (3) SA 183
(CC) para 55.
[8]
Ex Parle KAF and Others (2018/5329) [2018] ZAGPJHC 529;
2019 (2) SA
510
(GJ) (28 June 2018) ("Ex Parle KAF 2").
[9]
Supra at para 29.6.
[10]
The psychological effect of mandatory psychological evaluation on a
child will depend on a variety of factors, such as the child's
age,
maturity, personality trains, and awareness of parental
expectations.
[11]
Ms. Rodrigues states -
"it is clearly best
for pre-teen and even teenage children not to be drawn it to their
parents' reproductive plans, as these
plans are inherently
uncertain, highly emotional, and repeated disappointment can be
experienced as traumatic. ...Involving a
child with less emotional
resources than adults, in the emotionally loaded planning process of
a surrogate pregnancy - even before
a surrogacy agreement has been
approved by the court - does a disservice to a child. As a general
rule, I would caution against
it."
[12]
Ms. Rodrigues states -
"I
could find nothing in the psychology literature that suggest that
children of a surrogate mother ought to be prepared
by a
psychologist for their mother's surrogate pregnancy. On the
contrary, the literature suggests that children of surrogate
mothers
are unlikely to be negatively affected by their mother's surrogate
journey."
[13]
V Javda and S Imrie "Children of surrogate mothers:
psychological well-being, family relationships and experiences of
surrogacy" (Human Reproduction, Val 29, No1, pp 90 2014 (Oxford
University Press).
[14]
Turoy-Smith, Powell MB and Brubacher SP "Professionals' views
about child interviews for family law assessments" (2018)
56
Family Court Rev 607-622.
[15]
Turkat ID "Harmful effects of child-custody evaluations on
children" (2016) Court Review: The Journal of the American
Judges Association 152 - 158.
[16]
The enactment is based on recommendations by the South African Law
Commission (Review of the Child Care Act (Project 110) 2002
and
Report on Surrogate Motherhood (Project 65) 1993 and Parliamentary
ad hoe committee on Surrogate Motherhood "Report
on the Report
by the South African Law Commission on Surrogate Motherhood",
1999.
[17]
The
Children's Act deals
with the question of payments in respect of
surrogacy and generally prohibits commercial surrogacy while only
permitting payments
related to compensation for expenses, loss of
earnings and bona fide professional, legal and medical services
related to the
confirmation of a surrogate motherhood agreement.
[18]
The surrogate agreement must be in writing and must set out the
effect of a surrogate agreement on the status of a child, the
issue
of termination of a surrogate agreement, the effect of the
termination of the agreement, termination of pregnancy, prohibition
of payment in relation to surrogacy and the identity of parties.
[19]
AB v Minister of Social Development
2017 (3) BCLR 267
(CC) para 39.
[20]
Ex Parle WH para 39. These include consent, genetic origin of the
child, when artificial fertilisation could take place, termination
of the agreement, and the effect of the termination of the
agreement.
[21]
Definition of surrogacy motherhood agreement in
Children's Act.
[22
]
Section 292(1)(e)
demands that the agreement be confirmed by a High
Court.
[23]
Ex Parle MS & Others (48856/2010) [2014] ZAGPPHC 457 (2 December
2013) para 47.
[24]
Section 297(2)
of the
Children's Act.
[25]
Ex Parle WH para 71.
[26]
Section 295
provides -
"A
court may not confirm a surrogate motherhood agreement unless-
(a)
the commissioning parent or parents are not able to give birth to a
child and that
the condition is permanent and irreversible;
(b)
the commissioning parent or parents
(i)
are in terms of this Act competent to enter into the agreement;
(ii)
are in all respects suitable persons to accept the parenthood of the
child
that is to be conceived; and
(iii)
understand and accept the legal consequences of the agreement and
this Act and
their rights and obligations in terms thereof;
(c)
the surrogate mother-
(i)
is in terms of this Act competent to enter into the agreement;
(ii)
is in all respects a suitable person to act as surrogate mother;
(iii)
understands and accepts the legal consequences of the agreement and
this Act and
her rights and obligations in terms thereof;
(iv)
is not using surrogacy as a source of income;
(v)
has entered into the agreement for altruistic reasons and not for
commercial purposes;
(vi)
has a documented history of at least one pregnancy and viable
delivery; and
(vii)
has a living child of her own.
[27]
Ex Parle KAF 2 para 27.
[28]
Ex Parle KAF 2 para 28.
[29]
Ex Parle KAF 2 para 29.
[30]
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2008 (3) SA 232
(CC) para 24.
[31]
Ex Parle WH para 61 quoting Minister of Welfare and Population
Development v Fitzpatrick
[2000] ZACC 6
;
2000 (3) SA 422
(CC) ("Fitzpatrick').
[32]
Ex Parle WH para 63.
[33]
S V M
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2008 (3) SA 232
(CC) para 24.
[34]
Fitzpatrick para 20.
[35]
Act 74 of 1983.
[36]
See Ex Parle JCR and Others (51606/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 209;
2022 (5)
SA 202
(GP) (16 March 2022).
[37]
Ex Parle KAF and Others (14341/17) [2017] ZAGPJHC 227 (10 August
2017).
[38]
Ex Parte JCR, above.
[39]
Ex Parle WH para 72.
sino noindex
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