Opinion
In this case we must decide whether a widow has the right to use her late husband’s frozen sperm to attempt to conceive a child where her late husband signed an agreement with the company storing the frozen sperm providing that the frozen sperm was to be discarded upon his death. We conclude that in determining the disposition of gametic material, to which no other party has contributеd and thus another party’s right to procreational autonomy is not implicated, the intent of the donor must control. In this judgment roll appeal, the widow cannot challenge the probate court’s finding that the decedent’s intent was to have his frozen sperm discarded upon his death. Accordingly, we affirm the decision denying distribution of the frozen sperm to the widow.
*1026 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Joseph and Iris Kievemagel were married for 10 years prior to Joseph’s death. They contracted with the Northern California Fertility Medical Center, Inc., to perform in vitro fertilization (FVF) to allow Iris to conceive. The fertility center operated a sperm cryopreservation storage program under which sperm was collected and stored at temperatures as low as -196 degrees centigrade. The frozen sperm could then be thawed and used for insemination. The center required Joseph to store a sperm sample under this program in case his live sperm could not be used on the day of insemination.
As part of the sperm cryopreservation storage program, the center required an IVF backup sperm storage and consent agreement (the Agreement). Iris cоmpleted the Agreement and Joseph signed it. The Agreement provided that the sperm sample was Joseph’s sole and separate property and he retained all authority to control its disposition. The Agreement provided for two options for the disposition of the sperm sample upon death or incapacitation: donate the sperm to his wife or discard the sperm sample. The box indicating the sperm sample was to be discarded was checked and Joseph initialed it. The Agreement also provided the sperm sample was to be discarded upon divorce. Iris signed, acknowledging the sperm sample was Joseph’s sole and separate property.
Joseph died in a helicopter crash in July 2005.
Iris was appointed administrator of Joseph’s estate. She petitiоned under Probate Code section 11623 for a preliminary distribution of an “asset of no financial value” but “of immense sentimental value to the widow.” The item she sought was a vial of Joseph’s frozen sperm. The fertility center would not release it without a court order.
Joseph’s parents, as interested parties, objected to the preliminary distribution. They contended it was contrary to Josеph’s express wishes, as set forth in the Agreement, that upon his death, his sperm sample was to be discarded. The Agreement comported with their understanding that their son did not wish to father a child posthumously.
After an evidentiary hearing, the probate court issued a tentative decision. The court found the following undisputed evidence. Joseph and Iris “loved each other deeply and completely.” Joseph was opposed to having children, but agreed to the fertility procedures due to Iris’s strong desire for children. The couple’s dispute over having children led them to marriage counseling. According to the marriage counselor, Joseph believed Iris would divorce him if he did not agree to have children and a divorce would *1027 devastate him. The Agreement provided thе sperm sample was to be discarded upon Joseph’s death. This option was selected instead of the option to donate the sperm sample to Iris. Iris completed the Agreement, making the selections. Joseph signed it.
The probate court found the key issue was the intent of the decedent regarding use of his sperm. The court’s analysis was based on
Hecht v. Superior Court
(1993)
Iris objected to the tentative decision. She questioned the court’s analysis of intent. She argued her testimony that Joseph did not even read the Agreement was admissible evidence with probative value. Finally, she asserted Joseph’s intent was that she have his child.
The court denied the request for clarification of its analysis. It found Iris failed to prove the Agreement did not express Joseph’s intent. By a preponderance of the evidence, the court found Jоseph’s intent was to stop the fertility process upon his death by discarding his frozen sperm.
The petition for distribution of the sperm sample was denied.
DISCUSSION
In making its decision, the court below found “little to no guiding precedent,” but found some guidance in the
Hecht, supra,
We begin our analysis by discussing the Hecht and Davis cases. We then conclude the probate court properly determined that the disposition of the frozen sperm is governed by the intent of the deceased donor and that the Davis balancing test is inappropriate in these circumstances.
In
Hecht, supra,
Kane’s will was admitted into probate and a special administrator appointed. Kane’s children contested the will.
(Hecht, supra,
The appellate court first determined that the frozen sperm fell within the broad definition of property in Probate Code section 62, so the probate court had jurisdiction over it.
(Hecht, supra,
The
Hecht
court then turned to whether the probate court’s order to destroy the sperm could be upheld. It found the decision could not be upheld on the basis of the will or the parties’ settlement agreement because neither permitted destruction of all the sperm.
(Hecht, supra,
In discussing the public policy concerns of postmortem artificial insemination, the Hecht court discussed a French case, Parpalaix v. CECOS, as described in Shapiro & Sonnenblick, The Widow and the Sperm: The Law of Post-Mortem Insemination (1986) 1 J.L. & Health 229 (Shapiro & Sonnenblick). Alain Parpalaix, a 24 year old suffering from testicular cancer, made a deposit of sperm at CECOS, with no instructions for its future use. At the time, Alain was living with his girlfriend; he married her two days before his death. She then requested the sperm deposit. When CECOS denied the request, the widow, joined by her in-laws, went to court. (Shapiro & Sonnenblick, supra, 1 J.L. & Health at pp. 229-230.) Their complaint sounded in contract; they claimed they were owners of the sperm as Alain’s natural heirs and CECOS had broken the contract of bailment by refusing to return the sperm. (Id. at p. 230.) The widow’s attorney alsо argued she had a moral right to the sperm. (Id. at p. 231.) The French court noted the difficulties under French law governing inheritance rights and illegitimacy posed by children bom postmortem, but offered no solutions. (Id. at pp. 231-232.)
The French court refused to apply contract principles to the case. It also refused to consider the sperm as an indivisible body part; “it described sperm as ‘the seed of life . . . tied to the fundamental liberty of a human being to conceive or not to conceive.’ ” (Shapiro & Sonnenblick, supra, 1 J.L. & Health at p. 232, fn. omitted.) The fate of the sperm was to be decided by the person from whom it was drawn; the sole issue was that of intent. (Ibid.) “The court had to decide not only whether Alain Parpalaix had intended his widow to be artificially inseminated with his sperm, but also whether that intent was ‘unequivocаble.’ ” (Ibid., fn. omitted.) From the testimony of Alain’s wife and parents, the French court found Alain intended to make his wife the mother of his child. (Ibid.)
Relying on this description of the French case, the
Hecht
court appears to have accepted the rule that the sperm donor’s intent controls in disposition of his frozen sperm after his death.
(Hecht, supra,
The
Davis
case arose in a divorce action aftеr the parties agreed on all the terms of dissolution except one. They could not agree on the disposition of seven cryogenically preserved preembryos stored by a fertility clinic that had assisted the Davises with IVF.
(Davis, supra,
The
Davis
court held that an agreement regarding disposition of untransferred preembryos in the event of contingencies (such as death or divorce) should be presumed valid and enforceable.
(Davis, supra,
The Davises had not made such an agreement, so the court was required to resolve the dispute. “[W]e hold that disputes involving the disposition of preembryos produced by
in vitro
fertilization should be resolved, first, by looking to thе preferences of the progenitors. If their wishes cannot be ascertained, or if there is dispute, then their prior agreement concerning disposition should be carried out. If no prior agreement exists, then the relative interests of the parties in using or not using the preembryos must be weighed. Ordinarily, the party wishing to avoid procreation should prevail, assuming that the other party has a reasonable possibility of achieving parenthood by means other than use of the preembryos in question.”
(Davis, supra,
We agree with the
Hecht
court that gametic material, with its potential to produce life, is a unique type of property and thus not governed by the general laws relating to gifts or personal property or transfer of personal property upon death.
1
(Hecht, supra,
Using the intent of the donor to determine the disposition of gametic material upon the donor’s death is consistent with California law in this area. Probate Code section 249.5 addresses the property rights of a child of a decedent conceived and bom after the death of the decedent. Such a child is deemed to have been bom within the decedent’s lifetime, if, among other things, it is proved by clear and convincing evidence that the decedent specified in writing “that his or her genetic material shall be used for the posthumous conception of a child.” (Prob. Code, § 249.5, subd. (a).) Under the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act (Health & Saf. Code, § 7150 et seq.), a person has the right to make, amend, revoke, or refuse to make a donation of any part of his body to take effect after his death. (Health & Saf. Code, §§ 7150.20-7150.30; see also
Moore
v.
Regents of University of California
(1990)
The probate court found Joseph intended that his frozen sperm be discarded upon his death. Iris faults the court for relying on the Agreement and contract law to find Joseph’s intent. Iris cannot attack the court’s finding. The record on appeal does not contain a transcript of the hearing. “In a judgment roll appeal every presumption is in favor of the validity of the judgment and any condition of facts consistent with its validity will be presumed to have existed rather than one which will defeat it. [Citation.] The sufficiency of the evidence to supрort the findings is not open to review. [Citation.]”
(Wheelright v. County of Marin
(1970)
Iris contends
Hecht
requires a finding of the decedent’s “unequivocable” intent. She argues both that the probate court failed to follow
Hecht
on this point and that the “unequivocable” intent test is unworkable. “Unequivocable” intent is not the test set forth in
Hecht.
Although the term is used by the
Hecht
court in quoting the
Parpalaix
case
(Hecht, supra,
Iris argues intent is difficult to determine because those undergoing IVF face great emotional and psychological turmoil, circumstances change, and their intent may change over time. (See, e.g.,
Roman v. Roman
(Tex.App. 2006)
Finally, Iris contends the probate court’s decision ignores the fundamental right of the donee spouse to procreate. She contends the balancing test of
Davis
should be employed. The
Hecht
court indicated the
Davis
balancing test would be pertinent if thе trier of fact determined the decedent’s intent was contrary to Hecht’s intent to bear his child.
(Hecht, supra,
We disagree that the
Davis
balancing test applies in this situation. The
Davis
court noted, “the right of procreational autonomy is composed of two rights of equal significance—the right to procreatе and the right to avoid procreation.”
(Davis, supra,
In this case, there is only one gamete provider. The material at issue is Joseph’s sperm, not a preembryo. Only Joseph had “an interest, in the nature
*1033
of ownership, to the extent that he had decisionmaking authority as to the use of his sperm for reproduction.”
(Hecht, supra,
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Raye, Acting P. J., and Robie, J., concurred.
Notes
In this regard, we note the gametic material at issue here is distinguishable from the preembryos at issue in
Davis, supra,
