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Kidney Donations from the Legally Incompetent in Jewish and Comparative Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 July 2014
Extract
The Israeli Supreme Court addressed the issue of kidney donations from the mentally incompetent in Attorney General v. A and Others. The Supreme Court reversed a District Court decision which permitted the transplant of a kidney from a 39 year old mentally incompetent son to his 65 year old father, who was suffering from severe renal failure. In permitting the transplant the District Court noted the uncontested fact that the son was receiving the best possible care from his father, and reasoned that it was in the best interests of the son to give up a kidney in order to continue receiving his father's devoted care. In reversing the District Court's decision, the Supreme Court emphasised the need for the establishment of a “clear and substantial benefit” to the legal incompetent before any of his or her organs are transplanted to another individual. The Court was not inclined to accept the more subjective substituted judgment approach found in some similar American cases. The interests of other individuals, or even of the community as a whole, may not be preferred over those of the incompetent person. In the present case, no such “clear and substantial benefit” accruing to the son from the kidney donation had been demonstrated. Amongst the reasons given by the Court for this finding was the existence of a doubt as to the chances of a successful transplant in light of both the father's age and the seriousness of his condition. It was also unclear why the son could not receive the same quality of care from his siblings as he had received up to now from his father.
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- Bioethics and the Law — Organ Transplants
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press and The Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1993
References
1 (1988) 42(ii) P.D. 661.
2 The substituted judgment standard requires that any decision regarding organ donation on behalf of a legal incompetent be made as if he or she were, in fact, competent. Account is taken of the person's previously expressed interests, values and desires in any decision regarding transplantation. This standard usually provides more leeway for allowing transplants than the strictly objective best interests criterion, and is popular in American law since it reflects the strong concern of that system with individual rights, and their exercise — even on the part of the legally incompetent. On some of the disadvantages of the substituted judgment approach, see infra nn. 35 and 47.
3 16 L.S.1. 106, as amended in Capacity and Guardianship (Amendment No. 7) Law, 1983 (37 L.S.I. 87).
4 See Shapira, A., “Informed Consent to Medical Treatment”, (1989) 14 Iyunei Mishpat 264–266Google Scholar, for an analysis of this case. Shapira contends that the view of the Supreme Court is undoubtedly the correct one in relation to organ transplantation.
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8 Resp. Radbaz 3 no. 627; Resp. Triz Eliezer 10 no. 25:7: Yosef, R. Ovadiah, “A Responsum Concerning Kidney Transplants”, (1977) 7 Dinei Israel 25.Google Scholar
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19 Gittin, ibid.; Maimonides, ibid. According to Rashi, the reason for not submitting the estate to assessment is because it imposes a continuous burden upon the estate (Gittin, ad. loc.) R. Joseph Trani maintains that charity is unlimited in terms of the sum expended on it, unlike sukkah and megillah which do have a limit (Resp. Maharit 1 no. 127).
20 Bava Bathra 8a. In this Talmudic case, charity was assessed from the estate of a family which had a reputation for supporting the needy, and it was for the purpose of “enhancing the orphan's reputation that the assessment was made” (R. Gershom, ad. loc.) This principle is codified by Maimonides, in Hilkkot Matnot Aniyim 7:12Google Scholar, and is incorporated into the laws of guardianship in Shulhan Arukh, Hoshen Miahpat 290:16.
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25 Ktzot Hahoshen, Hoshen Mishpat 358:1.
26 Resp. Maharit 1 no. 127.
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29 Attorney General v. A and Others, supra n. 1, at 683–684.
30 See infra nn. 39–40.
31 See supra n. 15.
32 See supra n. 5.
33 Nishmat Avraham 4, Hoshen Mishpat 147:1, citing R. Shlomoh Zalman Auerbach.
34 Attorney General v. A and Others, supra n. 1, at 681.
35 See Superintendent of Belchertown School v. Saikewicz 373 Mass.728, 370 N.E. 2d 417 (1977); Sinclair, D., “The Terminal Patient in Jewish Law with Comparative Reference to English and American Law”, (1993) 12 Tel-Aviv University Law Studies (forthcoming).Google Scholar
36 445 SW 2d 145 (Ky App. 1969).
37 (1816) 2 Mer. 99, 35 Er. 878.
38 (1846) Craig and Ph. 76, 41 ER 418.
39 11 Paige 257 (NY, 1844).
40 In re Pescinaki (1976) 226 NW 2d 180 (Wisc. Sup. Ct.); In re Richardson (1973) 284 50 2d 185 (Lou. C.A.).
41 34 (1979) 576 SW 2d 493 (Texas C.A.). Also see Robertson, D., “Organ Donation by Incompetents”, (1976) 76 Colum. L.R. 48.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
42 Supra n. 1.
43 Skegg, P., Law, Ethics and Medicine (Oxford, 1984) 61.Google Scholar
44 Mason, J. and Smith, R. McCall, Law and Medical Ethics (London, 1991) 303.Google Scholar
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47 Airedale N.H.S. Trust v. Bland (1993) 1 All E.R. 821, at 843 and 872.
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