Lead Opinion
The issue we must resolve is whether two women involved in a lesbian relationship for several years share parental rights and responsibilities to a child born out of that relationship. The two women are Appellant, the biological mother, and Appellee, the birth mother. This is a case of first impression in Florida.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
The facts are not in dispute. Appellant and Appellee were involved in a committed relationship from 1995 until 2006. They lived together and owned real property as joint tenants, evidenced by a deed in the record. Additionally, both women deposited their income into a joint bank account and used those funds to pay their bills.
The couple decided to have a baby that they would raise together as equal parental partners. They sought reproductive medical assistance, where they learned Appellee was infertile. Appellant and Ap-pellee, using funds from their joint bank account, paid a reproductive doctor to withdraw ova from Appellant, have them fertilized, and implant the fertilized ova into Appellee. The two women told the reproductive doctor that they intended to raise the child as a couple, and they went for counseling with a mental health professional to prepare themselves for parenthood. The in vitro fertilization procedure that was utilized proved successful, and a child was conceived.
The child was born in Brevard County on January 4, 2004. The couple gave the
The women separated in May 2006, and the child lived with Appellee. Initially, Appellant made regular child support payments, which Appellee accepted. Appellant ended the support payments when she and Appellee agreed to divide the child’s time evenly between them. They continued to divide the costs of education. The child treated both women as parents and did not distinguish between one being the biological or the birth parent.
The parties’ relationship further deteriorated, and the affection each once had for the other eventually turned to animus. Appellee severed Appellant’s contact with the child on December 22, 2007, when Ap-pellee quit her job and moved with the child to an undisclosed location. Eventually, Appellant located them in Queensland, Australia, and there served Appellee with the underlying lawsuit.
Appellee filed a Verified Motion for Summary Judgment, which alleged that the facts were not in dispute and that she was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. Appellant accepted Appel-lee’s facts for the purpose of summary judgment. The trial judge held a hearing on the motion and issued the final summary judgment in favor of Appellee. In ruling as he did, the trial judge stated that he felt constrained by the state of the law and expressed his hope that this court would reverse the ruling:
THE COURT: First, let me say, I find that [Appellee’s] actions to be — this is my phraseology — morally reprehensible. I do not agree with her actions relevant to the best interest of the child. However, that is not the standard. There is no distinction in law or recognition of rights of the biological mother verses a birth mother. If a contract is not binding in this situation, then intent is not relevant under these circumstances.
Same-sex partners do not meet the definition of commissioning couple. There really is no protection for [Appellant] under Florida law because she could not have adopted this child to prevent this current set of circumstances. I do not*790 agree with the current state of the law, but I must uphold it. I believe the law is not caught up with science nor the state of same-sex marriages. I do think that is on the horizon.
The trial court then stated to Appellant, “If you appeal this, I hope I’m wrong.” Appellant has appealed. In order to determine whether the trial judge was wrong in entering summary judgment in favor of Appellee, as Appellant argues, we must apply the de novo standard of review. See Volusia County v. Aberdeen at Ormond Beach, L.P.,
Appellee advances several arguments in support of the summary judgment in her favor. She argues that section 742.14, Florida Statutes, denies an ovum donor any parental rights to the child. Appellee next argues that she and Appellant could not legally qualify to adopt a child and, therefore, the Legislature forbids gay or lesbian couples from sharing parental rights to a child. Appellee further argues that an implied consent form executed at the reproductive doctor’s office included a written waiver that relinquished Appellant’s parental rights to the child. Finally, Appellee asserts that since she and Appellant have separated, she has sole parental rights as the birth mother.
Appellant observes that this is a case of first impression in Florida and argues that the existing law does not contemplate the situation of a dispute between a biological mother and a birth mother and that there is nothing in the provisions of chapter 742 that applies to deny her parental rights to her child. Alternatively, Appellant challenges the constitutionality of chapter 742, including the provisions of section 742.14. Appellant also argues that the implied consent form did not include a binding waiver of her parental rights.
Our analysis reveals that there is nothing in chapter 742, and specifically section 742.14, that addresses the situation where the child has both a biological mother and a birth mother who were engaged in a committed relationship for many years and who decided to have a child to love and raise together as equal parental partners. This is a unique case, and the appellate courts in Florida have never before considered a case quite like it. Based on the facts and circumstances of this ease, we can discern no legally valid reason to deprive either woman of parental rights to this child. The women were in a committed relationship for many years and both decided and agreed to have a child born out of that relationship to love and raise as their own and to share parental rights and responsibilities in rearing that child. Specifically, when it was discovered that Ap-pellee was infertile, both women agreed to have ova removed from Appellant, to have them artificially inseminated with the sperm of a donor, and to have the ova inserted into Appellee’s womb, in order to conceive a child that they would raise together as parental partners. After the child was born, both women were parents to the child and equally cared for the child for several years.
II. Application and Interpretation of Section 742.14 by the Trial Court and the Dissent.
The trial court held that Appellant is a “donor” of her ova and that the provisions of section 742.14 apply to deny Appellant parental rights to her child. Section 742.14 provides that:
Donation of eggs, sperm, or preembr-yos
The donor of any egg, sperm, or preem-bryo, other than the commissioning couple or a father who has executed a preplanned adoption agreement under s.*791 63.212, shall relinquish all maternal or paternal rights and obligations with respect to the donation or the resulting children. Only reasonable compensation directly related to the donation of eggs, sperm, and preembryos shall be permitted.
The terms “donor” and “donation” are not defined in chapter 742, and when the Legislature does not define terms in a statute, the courts generally look to the plain and ordinary meaning of the terms. Greenfield v. Daniels,
In K.M. v. E.G.,
In the present case, we must decide whether a woman who provided ova to her lesbian partner so that the partner could bear children by means of in vitro fertilization is a parent of those children. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that Family Code section 7613, subdivision (b), which provides that a man is not a father if he provides semen to a physician to inseminate a woman who is not his wife, does not apply when a woman provides her ova to impregnate her partner in a lesbian relationship in order to produce children who will be raised in their joint home. Accordingly, when partners in a lesbian relationship decide to produce children in this manner, both the woman who provides her ova and her partner who bears the children are the children’s parents.
The circumstances of the present case are not identical to those in Johnson, but they are similar in a crucial respect; both the couple in Johnson and the couple in the present case intended to produce a child that would be raised in their own home. In Johnson, it was clear that the married couple did not intend to “donate” their semen and ova to the surrogate mother, but rather permitted their semen and ova to be used to impregnate the surrogate mother in order to produce a child to be raised by them. In the present case, K.M. contends that she did not intend to donate her ova, but rather provided her ova so that E.G. could give birth to a child to be raised jointly by K.M. and E.G. E.G. hotly contests this, asserting that K.M. donated her ova to E.G., agreeing that E.G. would be the sole parent. It is undisputed, however, that the couple lived together and that they both intended to bring the child into their joint home. Thus, even accepting as true E.G.’s version of the facts (which the superior court did), the present case, like Johnson, does not present a “true ‘egg donation’ ” situation. (Johnson v. Calvert, supra,5 Cal.4th 84 , 93, fn. 10,19 Cal.Rptr.2d 494 ,851 P.2d 776 .) K.M. did not intend to simply donate her ova to E.G., but rather provided her ova to her lesbian partner with whom she was living so that E.G. could give birth to a*792 child that would be raised in their joint home. Even if we assume that the provisions of section 7613(b) apply to women who donate ova, the statute does not apply under the circumstances of the present case. An examination of the history of 7613(b) supports our conclusion.
The dissent contends, however, that what the Legislature really meant by donation was any transfer or provision of ova or sperm to another and that intent is not an issue. The dissent interprets the “donor” and “donation” requirement by utilizing the exceptions in the statute. The dissent does this by proclaiming that commissioning couples, defined as a man and a woman, are permitted to retain their parental rights under the statute and that lesbian couples are not. According to the dissent, it does not matter if the individual providing the ova to her lesbian partner does so for the sole purpose of conceiving her own child; if the ova is provided or, in the vernacular of the dissent, “transferred,” the transferor loses her parental rights under the statute. The dissent essentially attempts to substitute the terms “transferor” or “provider” and “transfer” or “provide” for the statutory terms “donor” and “donation.” This interpretation not only eliminates Appellant’s right to procreate and parent a child of her own by transferring her ova to her lesbian partner through the use of assisted reproductive technology, it eliminates that right for all lesbian couples. This interpretation of the statute is also applied to eliminate the right of the Appellant to parent her child after she had done so for several years after the child was born. This is the interpretation given the statute by the trial court, and this is how the trial court applied the statute in the instant case.
This interpretation and application of the statute violates Appellant’s constitutional rights to equal protection and privacy. Therefore, based on the trial court’s interpretation of the statute, we must reverse the judgment under review.
A. Section 742.14 as Interpreted and Applied by the Trial Court Renders the Statute Unconstitutional Because It Violates Appellant’s Constitutionally Protected Rights.
It is well established that the rights to procreate and to parent one’s child are fundamental rights under both the Florida Constitution
Interpretation and application of this statute by the trial court to deny Appellant parental rights to her child cannot withstand strict scrutiny and violates Appellant’s constitutional rights to equal protection and privacy under the United States
We totally reject the argument made in the dissent that Appellant never had any parental rights and that the strict scrutiny test is, therefore, inapplicable. The very statute the trial court applied to deprive Appellant of her parental rights recognizes her parental rights to her child. Section 742.14 specifically states, in pertinent part, that “the donor of any egg ... shall relinquish all maternal or paternal rights and obligations with respect to ... the resulting children.” One cannot relinquish a
Rather than discuss what rights the Appellant relinquished under the statute, the dissent simply argues in support of the trial court’s ruling that the statute applies, relying on what it perceives to be a common law rule that the birth mother is the legal mother and on statutes concerned with vital statistics and adoptions contained in chapters 63 and 382, Florida Statutes. The argument that permeates the dissent is that the birth mother, as the legal mother under this purported common law rule, has all of the parental rights to the child and the biological mother has none.
As to chapter 382, and specifically section 382.013, Florida Statutes, cited in the dissent, it is clear that these provisions were written to facilitate the issuance of birth certificates and the keeping of vital statistics for public health. As to chapter 63, those provisions were enacted to provide procedures for the adoption of children in this state. We do not believe that these provisions were enacted to address a situation where a woman gave live birth to a child with whom she shared no genetic relationship. Moreover, chapters 63 and 382 do not establish parentage or parental rights. Chapter 742, entitled “Determination of Parentage,” is the statutory vehicle by which paternity is established for children born out of wedlock, see section 742.10(1), Florida Statutes, and it is the provisions of section 742.14 that have been applied by the trial court and argued by Appellee to deny Appellant parental rights to her child.
The dissent derives its purported common law rule from two cases from other jurisdictions.
The second case is In re C.K.G.,
Section 2.01, Florida Statutes, cited in the dissent, simply adopts the common law of England down to the 4th day of July, 1776, provided it is not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States and Florida. The dissent does not cite to any decision from any Florida or
Assuming that this common law rule exists, we do not believe that a rule established during a time so far removed in history when the science of in vitro fertilization was a remote thought in the minds of the scientists of the times has much currency today. Yet the dissent uses this purported ancient rule as its basis for arguing that Appellant never had any parental rights to begin with and that even if section 742.14 is inapplicable, she has no parental rights in the end. We reject that argument.
The citation of two decisions from other jurisdictions that adopt what the dissent purports to be a common law rule that the Florida courts have not adopted fails to answer the question of what rights Appellant had that are relinquished by application of section 742.14. The United States Supreme Court has recognized “ ‘the right of the individual, married or single, to be free from unwarranted governmental intrusion into matters so fundamentally affecting a person as the decision whether to bear or beget a child.’ ” Planned Parenthood v. Casey,
The rights to conceive and to raise one’s children have been deemed ‘essential,’ Meyer v. Nebraska,262 U.S. 390 , 399,43 S.Ct. 625 , 626,67 L.Ed. 1042 (1923), ‘basic civil rights of man,’ Skinner v. Oklahoma,316 U.S. 535 , 541,62 S.Ct. 1110 , 1113,86 L.Ed. 1655 (1942), and ‘rights far more precious than property rights,’ May v. Anderson,345 U.S. 528 , 533,73 S.Ct. 840 , 843,97 L.Ed. 1221 (1953).
Pursuant to the trial court’s application of section 742.14, the “essential” right of Appellant to “bear or beget a child” are statutorily relinquished. Cf. J.R. v. Utah,
In addition, pursuant to the trial court’s application of section 742.14, Appellant’s right to form a parental relationship with her child and to continue to participate in raising the child as a parent as she had done for several years after the child was born are statutorily relinquished. “[A] parent’s desire for and right to ‘the
Here, it is undisputed that Appellant formed and maintained a parental relationship for several years after the child was born, and she did so as an equal parental partner with Appellee who, for all that time, never suggested that Appellant had relinquished her parental rights to her child. We believe that Appellant has constitutionally protected rights as a genetic parent who has established a parental relationship with her genetic offspring that transcend the provisions of section 742.14. Lehr,
the importance of the familial relationship, to the individuals involved and to the society, stems from the emotional attachments that derive from the intimacy of daily association, and from the role it plays in “promot[ing] a way of life” through the instruction of children, Wisconsin v. Yoder,406 U.S. 205 , 231-233,92 S.Ct. 1526 , 1541-1542,32 L.Ed.2d 15 (1972), as well as from the fact of blood relationship.
Id. at 843-44,
We conclude that Appellant is entitled to constitutionally protected parental rights to the child and that the statutory relinquishment of those rights under section 742.14 is prohibited by the Federal and Florida Constitutions. We also conclude that the dissent’s contention that this case simply turns on the conclusion that Florida’s statutory scheme and a purported common law rule render Appellee the legal mother of the child is clearly erroneous and misses the point. “ ‘To say that the test of equal protection [or due process] should be the “legal” rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection [and Due Process] Clause[s] necessarily limit[ ] the authority of a State to draw such “legal” lines as it chooses.’ ” Stanley,
The dissent asserts that section 742.14 provides a reasonable approach to deciding who is, and who is not, entitled to parental rights given the multitude of claims to such rights made possible by assisted reproductive technology.
The dissent’s assertion that Appellant’s right to procreate is not implicated in the instant case merely because her child was conceived by in vitro fertilization is a non sequitur. To suggest that procreative rights do not encompass the use of medical technology ignores the fact that the right not to procreate through the use of contraception and the right to terminate a pregnancy necessarily require access to medical technology and assistance. Moreover, the distinction the dissent draws between this case and abortion cases involving the use of one’s omi body, such as in Carey, is unpersuasive. Appellant’s decision to undergo the ova transfer procedure for the purpose of conceiving a child with Appellee did involve Appellant’s use of her own body.
Furthermore, the dissent’s claim that this decision has created a constitutional right to “use a surrogate’s body for nine months to house and nurture one’s genetic child” is difficult to understand, as is the dissent’s suggestion that this opinion would entitle an ova donor to prevent the recipient from obtaining an abortion. It is well established that a woman has a right to terminate her pregnancy without the consent of the genetic father, for example. See Casey,
The dissent also attempts to skirt the constitutional infirmities of the statute by claiming that the constitutional issues were not adequately addressed in the trial court or in this court.
We conclude that section 742.14, as interpreted and applied by the trial court and as interpreted by the dissent, is unconstitutional because it deprives Appellant of her constitutional rights to equal protection and privacy.
B. Section 63.042(3) does not Support the Trial Court’s Ruling that Section 742.14 Deprives Appellant of her Parental Rights
Appellee argues that the Legislature disapproves of children being conceived in the manner utilized by her and Appellant and that this disapproval is evident in the provisions of section 63.042(3), Florida Statutes, which prohibits gay or lesbian couples from adopting children in Florida. This statute was a basis for the trial court’s ruling. However, we do not discern any legislative intent that the pro
III. The Informed Consent Form did not Waive Appellant’s Parental Rights
We likewise reject Appellee’s argument that Appellant waived her parental rights when she executed the informed consent document in the reproductive doctor’s office. At the reproductive clinic, Appellant signed a preprinted form that provides in pertinent part:
I, the undersigned, forever hereinafter relinquish any claim to, or jurisdiction over the offspring that might result from this donation and waive any and all rights to future consent, notice, or consultation regarding such donation. I agree that the recipient may regard the donated eggs as her own and any offspring resulting there from as her own children. I understand that the recipient of the eggs, her partner, their successors, offsprings and assigns have agreed to release me from liability for any mental or physical disabilities of the children born as a result of the Donor Oocyte Program and from any legal or financial responsibilities from an established pregnancy or medical costs related to that pregnancy or delivery.
There are significant factors that inform our conclusion that, as Appellant argues, the purported waiver provisions were not intended by either Appellant or Appellee to apply to the conception and birth of their child.
First, the purported waiver provisions clearly state that they only apply to a “donor” who has “relinquished any claim to, or jurisdiction over the offspring that might result from this donation” and who “understands that the recipient may regard the donated eggs as her own and any offspring resulting therefrom as her own children.” Appellant is not a donor because she did not relinquish any claim to the child or understand that it was solely Appellee’s child. As previously discussed, both women agreed to raise any child born with the ova supplied by Appellant as equal parental partners and both women complied with that agreement for several years after the child was born. In the last quoted sentence the form states that the recipient’s partner has “agreed to release me from liability” and it is clear that Appellant was the partner and that she did not agree to release herself from anything. We believe it very revealing that Appellee never attempted to assert this waiver claim until she decided to take the child to Australia and deprive Appellant of any further contact with the child.
Second, Appellant submitted at the summary judgment hearing an affidavit from the doctor who operated the reproductive center that Appellant and Appellee attended and who had personal knowledge of the services provided to both women. The testimony of the doctor reveals that the waiver provisions were simply part of a standard form he has all patients sign and that those provisions were inapplicable to Appellant and Appellee. In the affidavit, the doctor stated that the two women presented themselves as a couple seeking reproductive therapy, represented that they intended to raise a child together, and
Third, courts in other jurisdictions have held that similar waiver provisions are inapplicable in cases with very similar facts. For example, in K.M. v. E.G.,
Similarly, in In re Adoption of Sebastian,
We conclude based on the particular facts and circumstances of this case that the form Appellant signed did not waive her parental rights to the child. We understand the importance of such waiver forms in the use of assisted reproductive technology and our decision does not extend any farther than the very unusual facts of this case.
IV. A Choice Between Two Mothers is Not Necessary
Finally, Appellee suggests that because she and Appellant have separated, a choice must be made. She posits that, as the birth mother, she should have exclusive parental rights to the child and that Appellant, as the biological mother, should have no rights at all. If we were to accept Appellee’s argument that a choice must be made between the two, perhaps a Solo-monic approach to resolving this dispute would be preferable, but we are neither possessed of the wisdom of Solomon nor are we able to apply his particular methodology under the law as we know it today. Parental rights, which include the love and affection an individual has for his or her child, transcend the relationship between two consenting adults, and we see nothing
V. Conclusion
We conclude that both Appellant and Appellee have parental rights to the child. Accordingly, we reverse the final summary judgment and remand this case to the trial court to determine, based on the best interests of the child, such issues as custody, visitation, and child support. We certify to the Florida Supreme Court the following question as a matter of great public importance:
Does application of section 742.14 to deprive parental rights to a lesbian woman who provided her ova to her lesbian partner so both women could have a child to raise together as equal parental partners and who did parent the child for several years after its birth render the statute unconstitutional under the Equal Protection and Privacy clauses of the Federal and State Constitutions?
REVERSED and REMANDED.
. Appellant included five counts for relief in her Second Amended Petition to Establish Parental Rights and for Declaratory .and Related Relief. In count one, Appellant requested determination of parentage pursuant to chapter 742, Florida Statutes (2009), asking that the court declare her the biological mother of the child, grant her primary residential responsibility, and order the clerk to correct the birth certificate. In count two, she requested determination of parentage and an order granting shared parental responsibility and child support. In count three, Appellant requested declaratory relief that chapter 742, Florida Statutes, "Determination of Parentage," applies equally to determination of maternity in addition to the stated intent of determination of paternity, or in the alternative, that chapter 742 be declared unconstitutional. In count four, she requested that chapter 382, Florida Statutes (2009), The Florida Vital Statistics Act, be declared unconstitutional because it infringed on her right to privacy by preventing recordation of her name on the birth certificate. In count five, she requested that the court declare unconstitutional section 742.14, Florida Statutes (2009), because it violated her equal protection and privacy rights.
. Beagle v. Beagle,
. See Amend. XIV, § 1, U.S. Const.
. See Art. 1, §§ 2, 23, Fla. Const.
. The dissent attempts to buttress its argument that Appellant has no parental rights by citing Wakeman v. Dixon,
. The dissent also cites a number of law review articles in a footnote as authority for this common law rule. One for example, is Mali-na Coleman, Gestation, Intent, and the Seed: Defining Motherhood in the Era of Assisted Human Reproduction, 17 Cardozo L.Rev. 497 (1996) (hereinafter ‘Defining Motherhood"). This article, like the others, cites no case law to support the proposition that such a common law rale exists. Interestingly, the article
. Although Lehr and the other cases cited, with the exception of Wooley, involved the rights of an unwed genetic father, it would pose a substantial equal protection problem to deny an unwed genetic mother the ability to assert parental rights after she established a parental relationship with her child while allowing an unwed genetic father to do so. Cf. Caban v. Mohammed,
. The dissent suggests that section 742.14 is not discriminatory in a meaningful way and merely "places broad limits on the right of all citizens to make a parentage claim after donating genetic material to another.” However, the dissent does not explain why it is permissible to interpret section 742.14 to provide an exception that allows an unmarried male who donates his sperm to retain his parental rights when he is an intended parent,
. The dissent does not raise a preservation issue because the constitutional issues were raised below, argued to the trial court, and argued in this appeal. The dissent claims that the issues were not adequately argued to the trial court or to this court and cites Cantor v. Davis,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
While I fully appreciate the scholarly analysis declaimed in the dissent, I am convinced of the correctness of the position set forth in the majority opinion of Judge Sawaya, and I therefore concur in that opinion. I write in concurrence for two reasons.
First, it is clear to me that section 742.14, Florida Statutes (2009), simply does not apply to the fact situation presented to us by this case. That statute, which obviously seeks to protect a “commissioning couple” seeking to use the benefits of the medical advances made in the science associated with fertility, from possible interference with the resultant child or children by a disinterested donor, does not contemplate the factual situation before us.
Put simply, the appellant certainly did not intend to be a “donor,” as referenced in the statute, the appellee certainly did not act as if the appellant was a “donor,”
All of the testimony in the trial court indicates that the appellant and appellee were in a committed same-sex relationship, and that they both wanted and agreed to conceive a child to be reared jointly by both of them. If there was a contract between them, and I suggest that there was, then the unquestioned intention of the parties was to jointly raise any child that was conceived by this process as parents. Each thereafter played a significant role in the fertilization and birth procedure, and each fully intended to be, and fully acted as, parents to the child in accordance with their agreement. But for the fact that the appellant and appellee are of the same sex, we would probably consider them to be a “commissioning couple” under the statute, and the outcome of this case would be easy. What is ironic is that the appellant, who provided the ovum that resulted in the birth of the child (her probability of parenthood was measured at greater than 99%)
If the situation were reversed and the biological mother had run off with the child, would we exclude the birth mother from contact, even though she contributed very little to the genetic makeup of the child? I think that result would be equally as absurd. The fact is the birth mother under the present fact scenario is a parent as well.
All of this is simply to underscore the obvious. We have arrived at a judicial event horizon. We need legislation to guide us in dealing with the cases that will in the future come before the courts of this state as a result of the combination of the societal changes that we have all witnessed in the years since the relevant statutes were adopted and the still evolving science concerned with human fertility. I agree to this extent with how the dissent characterizes the problem facing us: this unexplored legal terrain “begs for legislation.” Our statutes and case law were constructed on the principle that a child is entitled only to one father and one mother. This case demonstrates that we might have to broaden our field of view in this regard. While this may be the first case of its kind in Florida, it will undoubtedly not be the last.
The second reason I write is to highlight the unfortunate absence of an important consideration that should inform our decision in cases such as this. Yes, I know, as did the able trial judge, that the best interests of the child is ordinarily not the test to be applied. Yet, I cannot help but think that it should be. In my view it would be wrong to deprive the child of the benefits — emotional, monetary and supportive — of the relationship to which that
SAWAYA, J., concurs.
. The statute does protect certain rights of a "father who has executed a preplanned adoption agreement under s. 63.212.” Since at the time this case was considered by the trial court, gay adoption was not recognized in Florida, no solace could have been found in that clause by this couple. It is interesting to contemplate how the case of Florida Department of Children & Families v. Adoption of X.X.G.,
. See § 742.12(4), Florida Statutes (2009), concerning the probability for determining fatherhood of a child, which states that "[A] statistical probability of paternity of 95 percent or more creates a rebuttable presumption ... that the alleged father is the biological father of the child.”
. Other states have faced the same challenge. See, e.g., K.M. v. E.G.,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent because I do not believe that binding legal precedent and the statutes we must follow permit the result reached by the majority. In explaining my reasons for reaching this conclusion, I will first discuss legal principles about which the majority and I seem to agree. The majority dismisses the cases setting forth these principles as distinguishable, and I generally agree with that characterization as well. But, because these principles frame the legal issue in this case, I believe it important to a clear legal analysis to have them firmly in mind before proceeding further. Next, I will explain why I believe the majority misses the mark in its analysis of the controlling statute in this case, section 742.14, Florida Statutes (2008), both in terms of the law constraining our appellate review and in its construction of the statute itself. Finally, I will explain what I see as the flaws in the majority’s constitutional analysis and explain why we should not reach the constitutional issue which the majority ultimately relies upon to reach its desired result.
I. Facts and Legal Principles Framing the Issue in this Case
A. The Birth Mother is the Natural (and Legal) Mother of the Child.
At common law, the birth mother was presumed to be the sole legal mother of the child. In re Adoption of Sebastian,
Florida’s statutory scheme also recognizes the birth mother as the legal mother of the child to whom she gave birth. As both parties acknowledge, this is clear from chapter 382, Florida Statutes. That chapter requires that a certificate of live birth be filed with the state “for each live birth that occurs in this state” within “5 days after such live birth .... ” § 382.013(l)(a), Fla. Stat. (2004). Section 382.013(l)(g) requires that the child’s birth mother be listed as the legal parent, regardless “of any plan to place a child for adoption after birth.... ” The definition of “live birth” in section 382.002(9), Florida Statutes, also makes clear that Florida law recognizes the birth mother as the natural and legal mother of the child to whom she gave birth. Id. (“ ‘Live birth’ means the complete expulsion or extraction of a product of human conception from its mother, irrespective of the duration of pregnancy ....”) (emphasis added); see also § 63.032(12), Fla. Stat. (2008) (“ ‘[Pjarenfi means a woman who gives birth to a child or .... the adoptive mother....”).
Accordingly, under both common law and Florida’s statutory law, Appellee, D.M.T., is the natural and legal mother of the child. The majority appears to accept this conclusion insofar as it does not suggest that Appellee can be divested of her legal status as the mother of the child.
First, both Appellant and the majority use the term “biological mother” to describe Appellant. Yet, it is Appellee, not Appellant, who is the natural and legal mother of the child. The issue in this case is whether there is any legal basis on which Appellant can also claim parental rights. At best, it confuses this issue to call Appellant the “mother” from the outset — a term with clear legal implications
Second, as the natural and legal mother of the child, D.M.T. enjoys protection under both the United States Constitution and the Florida Constitution against interference with her parental rights. See Troxel v. Granville,
Finally, given the common law starting point for analysis, if the majority is going to create a new common law rule to account for scientific advances not contemplated at the time the common law rule came into being, it should at least acknowledge that this is what it is doing, address the serious and complex policy implications of doing so, and set forth exactly what new common law rule will now govern cases in this arena.
B. Florida Law Does Not Support a Claim for Parental Rights as a “Psychological” or “De Facto” Parent.
Florida’s appellate courts have consistently held that parental rights cannot be extended or established based upon the emotional or psychological bond that develops over time when one treats a child as his or her own, even with the legal parents’ knowledge and consent. E.g., Wakeman v. Dixon,
The majority neither suggests that we should recede from our own precedent on this issue, nor certifies conflict with the many cases from other district courts applying this precedent. Additionally, the majority does not indicate that it is in any way granting relief based upon Appellant’s claim that section 742.14, Florida Statutes, is unconstitutional in that it infringes on her “right to privacy” by denying her “the right to parent a child for whom she is a de facto parent.” Therefore, although the majority opinion emphasizes the facts demonstrating the emotional or psychological bond that Appellant developed with the child, it is important to note that these bonds do not form a basis for extending parental rights to Appellant under well-established Florida law, and do not form the basis for any constitutional challenge to section 742.14.
C. Florida Law Does Not Support a Claim for Parental Rights Based Upon a Legal Parent’s Agreement to Extend Those Rights to Another.
Florida’s appellate courts have also consistently held that-“‘agreements granting visitation rights to a non-parent are unenforceable.’ ” Wakeman,
[A] sperm donor is a nonparent, a statutory stranger to the children. Even though the parties entered into ... stipulations, purportedly to give visitation rights to this nonparent ... that agreement is not enforceable.
Lamaritata,
Again, the majority does not take issue with this well-settled law, does not suggest that our court should recede from Taylor, and does not certify conflict with any case applying this law. Therefore, although the majority opinion discusses the fact that Appellee agreed to share parental rights with Appellant, it is important to note that the majority does not rely upon this agreement as the basis for extending parental rights to Appellant.
D. Appellant’s Claim to Parental Rights is Based Upon Her Genetic Role, or Egg Donation to Ap-pellee.
This brings us to a final, essential point of agreement that I share with the majori
II. Section 742.14, Florida Statutes.
A. Section 742.14, Florida Statutes, Clearly and Unambiguously Bars Appellant’s Parentage Claim Based Upon Her Egg Donation.
According to the majority, “there is nothing in chapter 742, and specifically section 742.14, that addresses” the issue we must resolve. This is the point on which I respectfully but most strongly disagree with the majority. The issue, again, is whether Appellant can claim parental rights based upon her genetic link to the child, brought about by her egg donation. Section 742.14, Florida Statutes (2008), provides that:
[T]he donor of any egg, sperm, or preembryo ... shall relinquish all maternal or paternal rights and obligations with respect to the donation or the resulting children.18
The statute offers only two exceptions, and Appellant concedes that she does not qualify for either.
However, the majority sidesteps section 742.14 by interpreting the word “donor” in a manner so as to not encompass Appellant. Citing to the California Supreme Court’s decision in K.M. v. E.G.,
B. A Reversal Based upon the Majority’s Construction of the Term “Donor” Violates Principles of Appellate Review.
It is axiomatic that: “In order to be preserved for further review by a higher court, an issue must be presented to the lower court and the specific legal argument or ground to be argued on appeal or review must be part of that presentation if it is to be considered preserved.” Tillman v. State,
C. The Majority’s Construction of the Term “Donor” is Erroneous Because it is Inconsistent with the Universal Use of the Term in this Context.
In medical science, the procedure by which an egg is removed from one person, to be fertilized and transferred to another person is called “donation.” See Coleman, supra, at 502; Brenda Reddix-Smalls, Assessing the Market for Human Reproductive Tissue Availability: Why Can We Sell Our Eggs But Not Our Livers, 10 Vand. J. Ent. & Tech. L. 643, 651 n. 22 (2008); Kenneth Baum, Golden Eggs: Towards the Rational Regulation of Oocyte Donation, 2001 B.Y.U. L.Rev. 107,108 n. 5 (“Traditionally, the word ‘donation’ refers to the altruistic act of voluntarily giving a good or service without requesting or receiving any valuable consideration in return. Here, by contrast, the assisted reproduction profession, and society at large, has misapplied that term to a situation in which the ‘donor’ expects and receives valuable consideration. It is a misnomer but one that has become entrenched in popular diction and one that I will adopt throughout this article.”). The woman from whom the egg is removed is called the “donor,” and the person to whom the fertilized egg is ultimately transferred is called the “recipient.” Id. These terms are used even when the donor is paid for the egg, and irrespective of why the donation is made. Id.; see also Nicole L. Parness, Forcing a Square into a Circle: Why are Courts Straining to Apply the Uniform Parentage Act to Gay Couples and Their Children? 27 Whittier L.Rev. 893, 895 (2006) (discussing case in which lesbian partner “only agreed to donate her eggs because she and [her partner] had agreed that they would raise the child together [with both as parents]”) (emphasis added); Ralph C. Brashier, Children and Inheritance in the Nontraditional Family 1996 Utah L.Rev. 93, 200 n. 368 (1996) (discussing “lesbian couples, one of whom donates her egg to be gestated by her partner with the intent that both shall rear the child”) (emphasis added); Dana Shilling, Lawyer’s Desk Book, Aspen Publishers § 16.10 Adoption at pp. 16-47 (2011) (discussing “woman whose donated egg was fertilized and implanted in her same-sex partner (they were married in Holland) ... [who] filed for adoption to safeguard her parental rights”) (emphasis added); William Bassett, California Community Property Law s. 2.22 n. 12 (Domestic partnerships registration) (2011 ed.) (discussing California case and explaining that “[t]he donor did not intend simply to donate her eggs, but rather designated her donation so that her partner could give birth to a child who would be raised in their joint home.”) (emphasis added); cf. Katheryn D. Katz, The Legal Status of the Ex Utero Embryo: Implications for Adoption Law, 35 Cap. U.L.Rev. 303, 340 (2006) (“The term ‘hu
The only authority cited by the majority in connection with its definition of the term “donor” is the California Supreme Court case of K.M. v. E.G.,
Significantly, the KM. court used the terms donor, donate, and donation throughout the opinion to describe K.M.’s genetic contribution in that case. Id. at 675 (“ ‘[s]he donated her egg to respondent’ ... KM. ‘explicitly donated her ovum under a clear written agreement by which she relinquished any claim to offspring born of her donation’ ”) (quoting the lower court); id. at 676 (“E.G. then asked K.M. to donate her ova”); id. (“K.M. was the ova donor.”); id. (“she was the ova donor”); id. (“she would not have donated her ova had she known E.G. intended to be the sole parent”); id. (“neither E.G. nor K.M. told anyone K.M. had donated the ova”); id. at 679 (“ ‘the donation of her ova ... her ovum donation .... agreed in advance of the ovum donation .... donating genetic material’ ”) (quoting lower court); id. at 139,
In fact, I have not found any judicial opinion or scholarly writing which defines the term “donor,” in this context, in the novel way that the majority has in this case. Sometimes, when an author is discussing a person who provides genetic material with the intention of relinquishing his or her rights to the material (or any resulting child), the author will use a qualifying phrase such as “anonymous” donor, see, e.g., Erin Y. Hisano, Gestational Surrogacy Maternity Disputes: Refocusing on the Child, 15 Lewis & Clark L.Rev. 517, 519 (2011), “true” donor, see, e.g., Meghan Anderson, K.M. v. E.G.: Blurring the Lines of Parentage in the Modem Courts, 75 U. Cin. L.Rev. 275, 292 (2006), “third-party” donor, see, e.g., Kerry Lynn Mein-
In this case, as in all cases, we should not apply an extraordinary or novel definition to a word in a statute that has a readily apparent common usage in context. State v. Brake,
I also believe that if the Florida Legislature had wanted to consider such factors as a donor’s subjective intent, a private contract regarding parental rights, or even a person’s status as a “de facto” or psychological parent, it certainly could have done so, as other states and jurisdictions have. See, e.g., Del.Code Ann. tit. 13, § 8-703 (2010) (“A man who provides sperm for, or consents to, assisted reproduction by a woman ... with intent to be the parent of her child, is a parent of the resulting child.”); N.J. Stat. Ann. § 9:17-44 (West 2010) (“Unless the donor of semen and the woman have entered into a written contract to the contrary, the donor of semen ... is treated in law as if he were not the father of a child thereby conceived and shall have no rights or duties stemming from the conception of a child.”); D.C.Code § 16-909(a-1)(2) (2010) (“There shall be a presumption that a woman is the mother of a child if she and the child’s mother are or have been married, or in a domestic partnership, at the time of either conception or birth, or between conception or birth, and the child is born during the marriage or domestic partnership.... ”). Where the legislature could have chosen to write a statute a different way, but did not do so, courts cannot disregard language the legislature chose to use, Regency Towers Owners Association v. Pettigrew,
D. The Majority’s Construction of the Term “Donor” is Erroneous Because it Renders the Statutory Exceptions Meaningless.
“It is an elementary principle of statutory construction that significance and effect must be given to every word, phrase, sentence, and part of the statute if possible, and words in a statute should not be construed as mere surplusage.” Hechtman v. Nations Title Ins.,
After broadly barring any egg or sperm donor from claiming parental rights to a
E. The Majority’s Construction of the Term “Donor” is Erroneous Because it Defeats the Clear Purpose of the Statute.
“[Statutory enactments are to be interpreted so as to accomplish rather than defeat their purpose.” Reeves v. State,
First, the majority’s construction places no limit whatsoever on the ability of a provider of genetic material to attempt to assert parental rights. Again, a “donor,” according to the majority, appears to be a person who provides genetic material to another with a subjective intent to relinquish parental rights with respect to any child conceived using his or her genetic material. But, anyone could make an after-the-fact claim that he or she donated genetic material with the intent of parenting any resulting child. It is worth noting that the Appellant in this case signed an informed consent form which stated in plain terms that she would not be claiming parental rights as a result of her donation. The form was drafted broadly to cover situations in which the “donor” knew the planned recipient. The form itself repeatedly uses the term “donor” to describe Appellant’s role, and Appellant signed on the line labeled for the “Donor’s Signature.”
*814 I, the undersigned, forever hereafter relinquish any claim to, or jurisdiction over the offspring that might result from this donation and waive any and all rights to future consent, notice, or consultation regarding such donation. I agree that the recipient may regard the donated egg as her own and any offspring resulting there from as her own children.
The majority is probably correct that this language did not reflect Appellant’s true subjective intentions in this case. However, perhaps recognizing that the form she signed forever relinquishing any claim of parental rights was unambiguous, Appellant contends on appeal (as she did below) that a factual dispute exists regarding her true intentions regarding the donation. Accordingly, Appellant argues that we should remand with directions that the trial court conduct an evidentiary hearing to resolve the dispute, not that we resolve the dispute in her favor.
Setting this issue aside, however, I cannot help but wonder whether the majority truly appreciates the uncertainty it has created with its holding for infertile women who have used assisted reproductive technology thinking that they would be protected as the sole legal mother of then* children. The majority opinion can only be read as standing for the proposition that even where a donor has signed a form similar to the one signed by Appellant in connection with her donation, that person can still seek to establish a parentage claim at some future date based upon her subjective intent to do so. Although it seems clear on this record that both Appellant and Appellee understood Appellant’s subjective intent at the time of the donation, there is nothing in the majority’s analysis that would prohibit others from bringing a similar claim in which the issue of a donor’s subjective intention is hotly contested — as was the case in KM. (the California case). In KM., the donor testified that she intended to parent any resulting child and the recipient testified that she would never have accepted the donation under those conditions, but that she and the donor had agreed that only she (the recipient) would have parental rights. Disputes like this, creating uncertainty where the legislature seems to have intended to assure certainty, are likely in the future under the majority’s construction of the statute.
In short, if I am correct as to the purposes behind section 742.14, the majority’s construction is erroneous because it defeats the statute’s purposes. Reeves,
III. Constitutional Issues.
As a fail-back position, the majority concludes that if Appellant is an egg “donor,” as that term is used in section 742.14, then the statute still cannot be applied to bar her parentage claim because it is unconstitutional. As a preliminary matter, it is not clear to me why Appellant and the majority believe that avoiding section 742.14 will automatically result in a legal finding that she is entitled to parental rights. Normally, if no statute applies to a subject, we would resort to common law to decide the legal question. As already discussed: “The common law presumes that the birth mother is the legal mother of the child. Unless the rule has been modified by statute, the presumption resolves disputes between the genetic mother and the gestational mother.” Coleman, supra, at 524 (footnotes omitted). Again, the majority does not suggest that it is modifying the common law rule, or what new rule of law it is announcing. Setting this issue aside, however, section 742.14 should not be declared unconstitutional because Appellant has demonstrated no basis to do so.
A. Appellant Has Neither Demonstrated Any Basis on Which to Declare Section 742.14 Unconstitutional Nor Preserved Any Constitutional Argument for Review.
“A statute is presumed constitutional ... [and the] party challenging a statute has the burden of establishing its invalidity.” Peoples Bank of Indian River Cnty. v. State, Dep’t of Banking and Fin.,
The majority dismisses this point, stating that Appellant “specifically pled in her complaint that section 742.14 is unconstitutional, and it was adequately argued in the trial court .... ” (emphasis added). To be crystal clear, the record below contains absolutely no argument from Appellant in support of the three paragraphs in her complaint challenging the constitution
Even on appeal, Appellant does not offer any recognizable constitutional analysis in support of her bald assertion that the statute is unconstitutional.
Just as it is improper to reverse the trial court based upon a statutory construction never advanced by Appellant, it is improper to reverse based upon a constitutional
B. The Majority’s Constitutional Analysis is Questionable.
Attempting to demonstrate a conclusion using a premise that assumes the conclusion as true is called “circular reasoning” or drculus in probando.
The majority also declares section 742.14 unconstitutional as violative of Appellant’s “fundamental” right “to procreate,” citing to Skinner v. Oklahoma,
The issue in Grissom, an adoption case, was whether statutes requiring prospective adoptive parents to bear the costs of
The threshold Fourteenth Amendment issue is whether the “fundamental right to procreate” is to be extended beyond natural procreation to now encompass a constitutional right to use assisted reproductive technologies (also discussed as “ARTs”); and, if so, whether that right extends to the use of that technology outside of one’s own body. This is an issue hotly debated among legal scholars, with absolutely no consensus having been reached. As explained in Andrew B. Coan, Assisted Reproductive Equality: An Institutional Analysis, 60 Case W. Res. L.Rev. 1143, 1146-47 (2010):
Most discussion of procreative liberty and ARTs has focused on substantive due process. In particular, the sharpest battle lines have been drawn over the question whether freedom to use ARTs qualifies as a fundamental liberty for purposes of due process analysis. There is ample ambiguity in the Supreme Court’s prior decisions to support significant debate. Most basically, the Court has never addressed the constitutionality of regulating ARTs. Indeed, it has squarely addressed the due process right to procreate — as opposed to the right not to procreate — only once, in the long since discredited Buck v. Bell. Nevertheless, there is substantial dicta in the Court’s due process decisions extolling “the right of the individual to be free from unwarranted governmental intrusion into matters so fundamentally affecting a person as the decision whether to bear or beget a child.” And, of course, as noted earlier, Skinner v. Oklahoma memorably described procreation as “one of the basic civil rights of man fundamental to the very existence and survival of the race.”
These statements would supply plausible precedential cover for the Court to recognize a broad right to procreative liberty extending to all manner of ARTs. But as most commentators have recognized, the cases hardly compel such a result. Attention has therefore turned to the normative question: Should the right to procreative liberty be interpreted as encompassing the use of some or all ARTs? Answers to this question have varied widely.
Id. at 1146-47 (footnotes omitted; empha
For my analysis of this issue, I would begin with the Supreme Court opinions applying the “substantive due process” doctrine, which hold that the Due Process Clause prohibits states from infringing upon fundamental liberty interests, unless the infringement is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest. See, e.g., Washington v. Glucksberg,
Second, I would point out that the privacy cases to which the majority cites either deal with the government’s attempt to intrude upon private intimate conduct, see, e.g., Lawrence v. Texas,
Third, I would point out that the majority’s strict scrutiny analysis founded upon a fundamental right of procreation still suffers from the logical fallacy that afflicts its pronouncement that section 742.14 interferes with Appellant’s fundamental rights as a parent. As explained in John Lawrence Hill, What Does it Mean to be a “Parent”? The Claims of Biology as the Basis for Parental Rights, 66 N.Y.U. L.Rev. 358 (1991):
[Ojnly a “parent” can exercise the right of procreation with respect to any particular child.... It follows that the application of the constitutional right of procreation depends upon an antecedent definitional conclusion regarding the meaning of parenthood.
Id. at 356 (footnotes omitted). In other words, simply saying that Appellant, or anyone else, has the right to procreate does not answer the question of who the law should favor when a parental rights dispute arises between individuals involved in an assisted reproductive technology arrangement. Each involved potential parent would be able to claim a fundamental right of procreation. And, we are dealing with technology that currently allows up to three women to reasonably claim rights as a mother (the intended mother, an egg donor, and a “surrogate” host); two men to reasonably claim rights as a father (the intended father and a sperm donor); and, “sixteen different reproductive combinations, in addition to traditional conception and childbirth.” Id. (“This total is the product of varying the source of the male gametes (whether by husband or third-party sperm donor), the source of the female gametes (whether by wife or third-party egg donor), the location of fertilization (whether in the wife, the laboratory, or the surrogate host), and the site of gestation (either in the wife or the surrogate).”); see also llana Hurwitz, Collaborative Reproduction: Finding the Child in the Maze of Legal Motherhood, 33 Conn. L.Rev. 127, 129 (2000) (“Collaborative reproduction presents the extraordinary possibility of up to three women claiming rights to legal motherhood. In a gestational surrogacy arrangement, with donor eggs, there may be three prospective maternal claimants: the intended mother, the gestational mother, and the genetic mother (the egg donor).”).
The problem with this pronouncement, when analyzed, is that it necessarily treats the most sweeping dicta from the Supreme Court’s substantive due process case law as binding precedent, with no recognition of the transformative implications of doing so. In Planned Parenthood v. Casey,
[Matters] involving the most intimate and personal choices a person may make in a lifetime, choices central to personal dignity and autonomy, are central to the liberty protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. At the heart of liberty is the right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life. Beliefs about these matters could not define the attributes of personhood were they formed under compulsion of the State.
At the end of the day, it is this principle that the majority must rely upon. Because, what the majority is really saying is that the Florida Legislature cannot dictate to a citizen that he or she live life constrained by the traditional notions of family implicit in Florida law. Section 742.14, consistent with the rest of Florida’s relevant statutory law, is drafted so that each child has only one legal mother and one legal father. Cf. Daniels v. Greenfield,
What the Casey dicta says, however, is that each person must be left free to choose for themselves how to order his or her life, guided by his or her individual “concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life.” There are a number of citizens who would choose to order their lives around various non-traditional concepts of family, if allowed by law. I do not see how we can say, on the one hand, that the government cannot prohibit Appellant from ordering her life in a family unit consisting of two legally recognized mothers — as a fundamental substantive due process right guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment— unless we are also willing to invalidate laws prohibiting same-sex marriage, bigamy, polygamy, or adult incestuous relationships on the same basis. See, e.g., Perry v. Schwarzenegger,
Fourth, I would point the majority to the cautionary warning given by the Supreme Court regarding expanding the substantive due process doctrine by recognizing new “fundamental rights.” In Glucksberg, the Court cautioned that courts should be “ ‘reluctant to expand the concept of substantive due process because guideposts for responsible decision making in this unchartered area are scarce and open-ended.’” Id. at 720,
By extending constitutional protection to an asserted right or liberty interest, we, to a great extent, place the matter outside the arena of public debate and legislative action. We must therefore “exercise the utmost care whenever we are asked to break new ground in this field,” lest the liberty protected by the Due Process Clause be subtly transformed into the policy preferences of the Members of this Court[.]
Id. (citations omitted). In my view, it is somewhat reckless to recognize the right of procreation through assisted reproductive technology without any real analysis, in a case where the issue was never raised below or briefed on appeal.
Fifth, I would point out that invalidating section 742.14 as a violation of Appellant’s fundamental right to procreate (using ARTs) does effectively place the use of assisted reproductive technology “outside of the arena of public debate and legislative action.” To me, the question of parentage in the context of the voluntary use of assisted representative technology is the kind of difficult and controversial policy question that begs for legislation. See, e.g., Sorenson v. Secretary of Treasury of U.S,
Finally, I would note that the statute in question here is not directed just at men or women, heterosexuals or homosexuals, or any other narrow class. It places broad limits on the right of all citizens to make a parentage claim after donating genetic material to another. And, as previously noted, the statute does not bar Appellant (or any women, irrespective of sexual preference) from using assisted reproductive technology to conceive, bear and give birth to a child of her own, using her own body. This appears, at least on its face, to be a rational way to address this difficult social policy issue, irrespective of whether it reflects a policy choice that the majority or I would prefer, cf. McIntyre,
But, my main concern in attempting to address any constitutional claim of this importance and complexity on a completely undeveloped record is the nagging feeling that we may be missing something. I understand that the parties in this case probably do not have the resources to fund the kind of .research and analysis that these issues warrant. But, there have to be organizations with enough of an interest in this important topic that, had they been notified, probably would have appeared without compensation, at least as amici on appeal. And, if the majority believes that there is a viable constitutional argument preserved for appellate review, the proper course of action in this case would be a remand with directions that the trial court address that constitutional question in the first instance. See 16 Am.Jur.2d Constitutional Law § 132 (updated 2010) (explaining the need for parties “to fully brief and argue” a constitutional issue in the trial court “with thoughtful and complete arguments” so as to “furnish[ ] reviewing courts with an adequate record upon which to adjudge the constitutionality of the statute” and concluding that “[a] court should not rule that a statute is unconstitutional as applied to a particular case until a complete record has been developed.”); see also St. John v. Coisman,
C. Limited Response to Equal Protection Analysis.
1. Any Equal Protection Challenge to the Statute Should Be Analyzed Under the Rational Basis Test, and Appellant Has Not Demonstrated Any Basis for Relief under that Standard.
“[Ejqual protection is not a license for courts to judge the wisdom, fairness, or
Under this deferential standard, a legislative classification “is accorded a strong presumption of validity,” [Heller, 509 U.S.] at 319,113 S.Ct. at 2642 , and “must be upheld against equal protection challenge if there is any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could provide a rational basis for the classification,” id. at 320,113 S.Ct. at 2642 (citation omitted). This holds true “even if the law seems unwise or works to the disadvantage of a particular group, or if the rationale for it seems tenuous.” Romer,517 U.S. at 632 ,116 S.Ct. at 1627 . Moreover, a state has “no obligation to produce evidence to sustain the rationality of a statutory classification.” Heller,509 U.S. at 320 ,113 S.Ct. at 2643 . Rather, “the burden is on the one attacking the legislative arrangement to negative every conceivable basis which might support it, whether or not the basis has a foundation in the record.” Id. at 320-21,113 S.Ct. at 2643 (citation omitted).
Id. If we were to entertain a constitutional challenge to section 742.14 under the rational basis test, it would end here — because Appellant has made no effort to “negative” any basis which might support the statute. See also Vance v. Bradley,
2. Lehr and Related Cases.
The majority also attempts to make an equal protection argument grounded in Lehr v. Robertson,
The easy response to Lehr is that it is not an assisted reproductive technology case. Significantly, the Lehr majority noted that: “‘The mother carries and bears the child, and in this sense her parental relationship is clear.’” Id. at 260,
Michael H. involved an “adulterous” relationship between Michael H. and a married woman, Carol D., during a time when Carol was separated from her husband, Gerald D. A child, Victoria, was born out of the relationship, who Michael held out to others as his own and treated as his own. Michael, Carol and Victoria even lived together for a time, while Carol and Gerald remained separated. However, Carol later reconciled with Gerald, and began denying Michael access to Victoria. Michael sued for visitation rights, arguing that under the Lehr line of cases he had a recognized liberty interest as a natural father who had participated in the rearing of his child and had developed a relationship with her. Part of the evidence presented to the trial court was a psychologist’s recommendation that it would be in Victoria’s best interest to maintain the relationship with Michael. The Supreme Court rejected Michael’s argument. As explained in Justice Scalia’s plurality opinion, fundamental liberty interests are only recognized if they are “interest[s] traditionally protected by our society” that are “ ‘so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental.’ ” Id. at 122,
Applying this well-settled law, the Court summarized the issue in Michael H. as “reduc[ed] to whether the relationship between persons in the situation of Michael
What differentiates Appellant from the men who would be afforded protection under the Lehr line of cases is not that she is a woman. Rather, as in Michael H, it is that Appellant (or, more accurately, the majority, as Appellant herself never made the argument) is attempting to state a claim that has no support in the traditions of this country.
D. My Overriding Concern with the Majority’s Approach to the Constitutional Issues in this Case.
More than a century ago, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes discussed the difficulty judges face when addressing issues in an emotionally-charged case like the one before us today. He explained that:
Great cases, like hard cases, make bad law. For great cases are called great ... because of some accident of immediate overwhelming interest which appeals to the feelings and distorts the judgment. These immediate interests exercise a kind of hydraulic pressure which makes what previously was clear seem doubtful, and before which even well settled principles of law will bend.
N. Sec. Co. v. United States,
Judicial review, in this context, refers to a court’s power to invalidate a legislative act as unconstitutional. See Black’s Law Dictionary 924 (9th ed. 2009) (defining judicial review as, inter alia, “[a] court’s power to review the actions of other branches or levels of government; esp., the courts’ power to invalidate legislative and executive actions as being unconstitutional” and “[t]he constitutional doctrine providing for this power”). Judicial review serves as an essential “check” or “balance” to bind the legislature to the rule of law— assuring that it neither exceeds its constitutional power through its acts nor violates the rights of the people secured by the Constitution.
Judicial restraint, in this context, refers to the principle that a court’s power of judicial review should only be used where the law demands it, and never as a means of simply substituting the values or judgment of the individual judges deciding a case for the values or judgment of the elected representatives of the people. See Black’s Law Dictionary 924 (9th ed. 2009) (defining judicial restraint as, inter alia, “[a] philosophy of judicial decision-making
First, I have already explained that we should not reach the constitutional questions ultimately decided by the majority because they were neither preserved for appellate review in the trial court nor adequately presented on appeal. Reaching these issues under these circumstances violates the “fundamental rule of judicial restraint” that a court not “decide questions of a constitutional nature unless absolutely necessary[.]” Webster v. Reprod. Health Serv.,
Second, the majority’s decision improperly discards “one of the first principles of constitutional adjudication — the basic presumption of the constitutional validity of a duly enacted state or federal law.” San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Rodriguez,
Third, as a related principle of judicial restraint, the United States Supreme Court has repeatedly cautioned that a substantive due process analysis “must begin with a careful description of the asserted right, for ‘[t]he doctrine of judicial self-restraint requires us to exercise the utmost care whenever we are asked to break new ground in this field.’ ” Reno v. Flores,
As explained not long ago by a former member of Florida’s Supreme Court: “Dating to Marbury v. Madison,
Conclusion
Because the trial court correctly applied the controlling case law and statutes, and because no other issue is preserved for appellate review, we should affirm the final judgment. Having said this, I fully agree with the majority that this case involves a question of great public importance that should be reviewed by the Florida Supreme Court. It is my hope that if the Supreme Court does accept review, it will at least be the beneficiary of a thorough briefing of the issues, so lacking in our review.
. See also Nancy D. Polikoff, A Mother Should Not Have To Adopt Her Own Child: Parentage Laws for Children Of Lesbian Couples in the Twenty-First Century, 5 Stan. J. Civ. Rts. & Civ. Liberties 201, 208 (2009) (“For most of our history, not just in America but in the common law tradition from which we get our laws, a child's legal parents were the mother who gave birth to that child and the man to whom she was married.”); Dorothy E. Roberts, The Genetic Tie, 62 U. Chi. L.Rev. 209, 253 (1995) ("The European-American tradition identifies a child's mother through the biological act of giving birth.”); Elizabeth E. Swire Falker, The Disposition of Cryopreserved Embryos: Why Embryo Adoption is an Inapposite Model for Application to Third-Party Assisted Reproduction, 35 Wm. Mitchell L.Rev. 489, 501(2009) ("well established common law presumptions provide that a woman who gives birth to a child will be deemed the legal and natural mother of that child”); Malina Coleman, Gestation, Intent, and the Seed: Defining Motherhood in the Era of Assisted Human Reproduction, 17 Cardozo L.Rev. 497, 524 (1996) ("The common law presumes that the birth mother is the legal mother of the child.").
. The majority does repeatedly posit that Florida’s legislature abrogated this rule by using the word "relinquish” in section 742.14. This argument is contrary to well-settled law. As explained in Thornber v. City of Fort Walton Beach,
The presumption is that no change in the common law is intended unless the statute is explicit and clear in that regard. Unless a statute unequivocally states that it changes the common law, or is so repugnant to the common law that the two cannot coexist, the statute will not be held to have changed the common law.
Id. at 918 (citations omitted). Section 742.14 does not reference the common law rule that the birth mother is the legal mother, much less explicitly, clearly or unequivocally state that it is changing it. The majority is really arguing that by choosing the word "relinquish” to describe the legal effect of an egg donation, the legislature has impliedly recognized a different common law rule. First, I do not believe that the word "relinquish” implies any such thing. Relinquish means to give up. All that section 742.14 says is that when you give up your genetic material, you also give up any legal claims that you could have made before your donated it. Second, even if use of this word did in some oblique way imply a different common law rule, the law does not permit abrogation of a well-settled common law rule in this manner. Id. This is especially true here, where all statutes the legislature has adopted that directly address the topic also clearly and unequivocally recognize the birth mother as the sole legal mother of the child.
. The term "egg” in this context refers to the female reproductive cell, also called an "oo-cyte” or "ova.”
. We are bound by this prior panel decision from our court until it is “overruled either by this court, sitting en banc, or a higher court.” Sturdivant v. State, - So.3d -,
. As the majority notes, when Appellant donated an egg for fertilization and implantation into Appellee, she signed a consent form acknowledging that she would have no claim of parental rights as to any child bom as a result of the donation.
. The statute provides exceptions for "a father who has executed a preplanned adoption agreement under s. 63.212,” and a "commissioning couple”. The statute defines a commissioning couple as "the intended mother and father” of the child. § 742.13(2), Fla. Stat. (2008).
. Cf. Lamaritata,
. See U.S. Const. Amend. XIV, § 1 and Art. I, § 2, Fla. Const.
. See Art. 1, § 23, Fla. Const.
. As noted by the majority, Appellant made similar conclusory constitutional allegations with respect to other statutes, all of which suffer from the same defects.
. This is the one passing acknowledgement by Appellant that Appellee enjoys a fundamental constitutional right as a parent. Citing to Kazmierazak v. Query,
. Circular reasoning was recognized as a formal logical fallacy as early as 350 B.C., when Aristotle penned Prior Analytics.
. Ironically, the majority supports this conclusion by claiming that it is evident from the "undisputed facts” established below. The irony is that Appellant herself claims on appeal that disputed issues of fact exist as to these issues, including the issue of her intent when donating her genetic material, that should have precluded summary judgment. In addition, the majority appears to rest its constitutional analysis in part on its perception regarding the "bond" formed between Appellant and the child and its conclusion that it would be in the child’s best interest for Florida to extend parental rights to Appellant. Yet, there has been no fact-finding as to these issues, and no affidavits were submitted at the summary judgment stage regarding either issue.
. The quoted passage notes that the affirmative right to procreate has only been directly addressed by the United States Supreme Court in one case — Buck v. Bell,
. As science continues its advances, it is possible that genetic material from multiple males and multiple females could be combined to create a child. Since each genetic contributor would enjoy a fundamental procreative right, it would follow that each could claim a fundamental constitutional right to parent any resulting children under the majority’s circular proclamation that the right to procreate equates to a claim of parenthood with respect to children resulting from the genetic contribution. And, there are already those who term cloning as a form of procreation, and advocate for recognition of the right to use cloning technology as an extension of the "right to procreate.” See, e.g., Elizabeth Price Foley, The Constitutional Implications of Human Cloning, 42 Ariz. L.Rev. 647, 695 (2000) ("Because cloning is merely an asexual form of procreation, it is arguably as much a fundamental constitutional right as our right to procreate by either passion or the petri dish.”); John A. Robertson, Human Cloning and the Challenge of Regulation, 339 New Eng. J. Med. 119, 120 (1998) ("Whether described as 'replication' or as ‘reproduction,’ the resort to cloning is similar enough in purpose and effects to other reproduction and genetic-selection practices that it should be
. Again, Appellant's complaint below did not even allege a substantive due process violation under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Instead, Appellant confined her privacy allegation to a claim under Article I, Section 23 of the Florida Constitution. However, because Article I, Section 23 is limited in its scope by Article I, Section 27 of the Florida Constitution, cf. State v. Geiss,
. The test for recognizing a right as fundamental is the same irrespective of whether a court is applying the Due Process Clause or the Equal Protection Clause. See Ronald D. Rotunda and John E. Nowak, 2 Treatise on Const. L. § 15.4(a) (4th ed.); see also id. at § 18.3(a)(v) (“A law that burdens the ability of all persons to exercise a fundamental right will be examined under substantive due process. A law that uses a classification that burdens or impairs the ability of only one class of persons who wished to exercise a fundamental constitutional right will be examined under equal protection.”).
