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The Contract in Surrogate Motherhood: A Review of the Issues

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2021

Extract

When Abraham's wife, Sarah, was unable to conceive a child for their marriage, she arranged for her handmaiden, Hagar, to bear a child for them. Abraham consummated this arrangement by making a visit to Hagar's tent.

Surrogate motherhood, as it is practiced today, differs only in insemination technique from this biblical effort. A married couple, unable to conceive because of female infertility, or, perhaps, a single male who desires a child would, as did Sarah, seek out a woman willing to act as a surrogate mother It is likely that the couple would make the initial contact through a classified advertisement and negotiate a contract with a fertile woman through their attorneys. The contract, in its most basic terms, would provide that the surrogate be artificially inseminated with the husband's semen, carry the child to term, and relinquish her parental rights upon birth of the child. Although there have been cases where a woman becomes a surrogate mother without payment, the surrogate mother typically receives a fee for her services as a carrier.

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Article
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Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 1984

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References

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This article does not discuss the issue of whether the surrogate motherhood procedure should only be available in cases of necessity. The use of a surrogate on behalf of a single male raises ethical and policy considerations not covered in this article. Generally, however, where a jurisdiction allows single parent adoptions, the parallel result effected through a surrogate should also be allowed. For simplicity, all future references to surrogate motherhood will be in the context of a married couple.Google Scholar
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Forerunners have been an attorney, Noel Keane, from Dearborn, Michigan, and Dr. Richard Levin and Attorney Katie Brophy, co-founders of the Surrogate Parenting Association, in Louisville, Kentucky.Google Scholar
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Also of special concern where the surrogate is married are those statutes which presume that the husband is the natural father of a child born during the marriage. See, e.g., Cal. Civ. Code §7004(a)(1) (1983).Google Scholar
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Keane, , supra note 17, at 47; Brophy, , A Surrogate Mother Contract to Bear a Child, Journal of Family Law 20: 263 (1982) [hereinafter referred to as Surrogate Mother Contract]. Brophy presents a surrogate mother contract and cautions that many contract terms may be unenforceable. Other commentators agree. See Note, Surrogate Mother Agreements: Legal Aspects of a Biblical Notion, University of Richmond Law Review 16(2): 467, 469 n.12 (1982).Google Scholar
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(1) Except for charges and fees approved by the court, a person shall not offer, give, or receive any money or other consideration or thing of value in connection with any of the following:Google Scholar
(a) The placing of a child for adoption.Google Scholar
(b) The registration, recording, or communication of the existence of a child available for adoption or the existence of a person interested in adopting a child.Google Scholar
(c) A release.Google Scholar
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An exception in many states does allow the payment of direct medical expenses of pregnacy and some maintenance expenses of the mother. Legal Issues, supra note 17, at 330 n.35, and accompanying text.Google Scholar
Permitting payment may be the practical equivalent of requiring it because once available, few surrogates, even those motivated by altruism, would reject compensation. This was the experience of “Elizabeth Kane,” a Louisville surrogate, who did not want to be paid but accepted payment because “others were being compensated.” It's the Father's Child—I Am Simply Growing It for Him, New York Times, May 27, 1980, at B12, col. 2. As a consequence of ‘required payment,” access may be dented to those couples who cannot afford a fee. In the future, the situation may arise where less wealthy couples “settle for a surrogate who does not meet physical or psychological standards but whose fee is reasonable.” Comment, Surrogate Motherhood in California: Legislative Proposals, San Diego Law Review 18(2): 341, 379 (March 1981) [hereinafter referred to as Legislative Proposals]. See also Editorial: Gestation Inc., New York Times, November 23, 1980, §4, at 20, col. 1.Google Scholar
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