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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mrs U v Centre for Reproductive Medicine [2002] EWCA Civ 565 (24th April, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/565.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 565 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
FAMILY DIVISION
(THE PRESIDENT)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY
and
LADY JUSTICE HALE
____________________
MRS U | Appellant | |
- and – | ||
CENTRE FOR REPRODUCTIVE MEDICINE | Respondent |
____________________
Angus Moon (instructed by Bevan Ashford) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 11 April 2002
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Hale:
Legislative context
“1. A consent under this Schedule must be given in writing and, in this Schedule, “effective consent” means a consent under this Schedule which has not been withdrawn.”
“2. - (2) A consent to the storage of any gametes or any embryo must -
(a) specify the maximum period of storage (if less than the statutory storage period), and
(b) state what is to be done with the gametes or embryo if the person who gave the consent dies or is unable because of incapacity to vary the terms of the consent or to revoke it,
and may specify conditions subject to which the gametes or embryo may remain in storage.”
Paragraph 2(4) deals with the use and storage of embryos, including those resulting from stored gametes:
“2. - (4) A consent under this Schedule may apply –
(a) to the use or storage of a particular embryo, or
(b) in the case of a person providing gametes, to the use or storage of any embryo whose creation may be brought about using those gametes,
and in the paragraph (b) case the terms of the consent may be varied, or the consent may be withdrawn, in accordance with this Schedule either generally or in relation to a particular embryo or particular embryos.”
A person may therefore make different provision for the storage of his gametes and for the storage of any resulting embryos.
“3. - (1) Before a person gives consent under this Schedule –
(a) he must be given a suitable opportunity to receive proper counselling about the implications of taking the proposed steps, and
(b) he must be provided with such relevant information as is proper.
(2) Before a person gives consent under this Schedule he must be informed of the effect of paragraph 4 below.”
“4 - (1) The terms of any consent under this Schedule may from time to time be varied, and the consent may be withdrawn, by notice given by the person who gave the consent to the person keeping the gametes or the embryo to which the consent is relevant.”
Section 46 of the Act deals with the procedure for giving notices, including by delivery, leaving it at the proper address or sending it by post.
Facts
“Storage and disposal is also subject to important ethical issues. For example, in the event of a man’s death his widow might want to be inseminated with his stored sperm to have a baby by him, but we believe that would be wrong. We fully appreciate and sympathise with the reasons for wanting such treatment, but our primary consideration must be from the point of view of any resulting child . . . We therefore agree to store sperm subject to the sole ownership of the man, to be used and stored for artificial insemination only during his lifetime, . . . It is the ethical policy of this unit not to perform posthumous insemination. Possible transfer of sperm to another unit could be discussed at consultation.”
“22. Ms Hinks told me that she specifically asked Mr U to change the form. She probably did say something like ‘it will be necessary to stop and pause and sit down and talk about the implications of posthumous insemination’. She would certainly have talked about consultation with a doctor and counselling. She would have explained, I have no doubt, the reasons why she considered posthumous insemination to be wrong and would have done so clearly and firmly. I am satisfied that Ms Hinks did not actually tell Mr and Mrs U that the treatment would not continue unless the consent form was changed. I am equally satisfied that she gave to the wife the impression that there would be at least a pause in the treatment cycle with the possibility that it might be interrupted or even brought to a halt. They were already a long way down the treatment road. The husband had completed his part of the programme and the wife was about to start her part two days later. It was, to say the least, an unfortunate moment to embark on this issue. I also do not consider that it was done at all sensitively. Ms Hinks said that the programme was a huge ordeal. Three quarters of the way through an interview dealing with the treatment cycle, the husband was asked straight out to change the consent form. They had not taken up the opportunity for counselling and therefore were unprepared for the request to alter the form and the possible implications for them if the consent was or was not given. It was not suggested that they might go away and think about it. On the contrary I have no doubt that Ms Hinks sat there expecting Mr U to change the form. She did this in all good faith and for the best intentions, but the pressure must have been considerable”.
“The Claimant is ‘neutral’ as to the decision made on the application, in the sense that it seeks the Court’s guidance as to what it should do in the difficult circumstances in which it finds itself. On the one hand, continued storage of Mr U’s sperm is arguably a criminal offence. On the other hand, the Claimant is deeply sympathetic to Mrs U’s plight. Nonetheless insofar as the case advanced on behalf of Mrs U relies on duress, undue influence or misrepresentation by the Claimant’s nursing staff, those allegations are not accepted.”
Undue influence
“28. When one stands back and looks at the facts of this case, it seems to me that it is difficult to say that an able, intelligent, educated man of 47, with a responsible job and in good health, could have his will overborne so that the act of altering the form and initialling the alterations was done in circumstances in which Mr U no longer thought and decided for himself. I have no doubt that Mr U did not want a pause in the treatment and did want to go along with the Centre. He did not have the opportunity for consultation with his wife, although he could have asked for it. As Mr Jenkins said, it is likely that he and his wife did not really think that there was any likelihood that this part of the form would ever be necessary. He succumbed to the firmly expressed request of Ms Hinks and under some pressure. But to prove undue influence, Mr U has to show something more than pressure. As Lord Donaldson said in re T, it does not matter how strong the persuasion was so long as it did not overbear the independence of the patient’s decision. The case of Miss T showed the sort of pressure in an emergency which might amount to undue influence. This case is far removed from the case of Miss T. Can it be said that Mr U made the alterations under compulsion? Once one asks the question in this case, the answer has to be no. ” (Emphases supplied)
This appeal