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GRAND
CHAMBER
CASE OF
S.H. AND OTHERS v. AUSTRIA
(Application
no. 57813/00)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
3 November
2011
This
judgment is final but may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of S.H. and Others v. Austria,
The
European Court of Human Rights, sitting as a Grand Chamber composed
of:
Jean-Paul
Costa,
President,
Nicolas
Bratza,
Françoise
Tulkens,
Josep
Casadevall,
Elisabeth
Steiner,
Elisabet
Fura,
Danutė
Jočienė,
Ján
Šikuta,
Dragoljub
Popović,
Ineta
Ziemele,
Päivi
Hirvelä,
Mirjana
Lazarova Trajkovska,
Ledi
Bianku,
Nona
Tsotsoria,
Guido
Raimondi,
Işıl
Karakaş,
Vincent
A. de Gaetano,
judges,
and
Michael O’Boyle, Deputy Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 23 February 2011 and on 5 October 2011,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 57813/00) against the Republic
of Austria lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention
for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the
Convention”) by four Austrian nationals, Ms S.H., Mr D.H.,
Ms. H. E.-G. and Mr M.G. (“the applicants”), on
8 May 2000. The President of the Grand Chamber acceded to the
applicants’ request not to have their names disclosed (Rule 47
§ 3 of the Rules of Court).
- The
applicants were represented by Mr H.F. Kinz and Mr W.L. Weh, both
lawyers practising in Bregenz. The Austrian Government (“the
Government”) were represented by their Agent, Ambassador H.
Tichy, Head of the International Law Department at the Federal
Ministry for European and International Affairs.
- The
applicants alleged in particular that the provisions of the Austrian
Artificial Procreation Act prohibiting the use of ova from donors and
sperm from donors for in vitro fertilisation, the only medical
techniques by which they could successfully conceive children,
violated their rights under Article 8 of the Convention read
alone and in conjunction with Article 14.
- The
application was allocated to the First Section of the Court (Rule 52
§ 1 of the Rules of Court). On 15 November 2007 it was
declared partly admissible by a Chamber of that Section composed of
the following judges: Christos Rozakis, Loukis Loucaides, Nina Vajić,
Anatoly Kovler, Elisabeth Steiner, Khanlar Hajiyev, Giorgio
Malinverni, and also Søren Nielsen, Section Registrar. On 11
March 2010 a Chamber of that Section, composed of the following
judges: Christos Rozakis, Nina Vajić, Anatoly Kovler,
Elisabeth Steiner, Khanlar Hajiyev, Sverre Erik Jebens, Giorgio
Malinverni, and also André Wampach, Deputy Section
Registrar, following a hearing on the merits (Rule 54 § 3),
delivered a judgment in which it held by six votes to one that there
had been a violation Article 14 of the Convention read in conjunction
with Article 8 as regards the first and second applicant and by five
votes to two a violation of those provisions as regards the third and
fourth applicant and unanimously that it was not necessary to examine
the application also under Article 8 alone.
- On
4 October 2010, following a request by the Government dated 1 July
2010, the panel of the Grand Chamber decided to refer the case to the
Grand Chamber under Article 43 of the Convention.
- The
composition of the Grand Chamber was determined according to the
provisions of Article 26 §§ 4 and 5 of the Convention and
Rule 24 of the Rules of Court.
- The
applicants and the Government each filed written observations (Rule
59 § 1). In addition, third-party comments were received from
the German and Italian Governments and from the non-governmental
organisations Hera ONLUS, the European Centre for Law and
Justice and Aktion Leben, who had been given leave by the
President to intervene in the written procedure (Article 36 § 2
of the Convention and Rule 44 § 2).
- A
hearing took place in public in the Human Rights Building,
Strasbourg, on 23 February 2011 (Rule 59 § 3).
There appeared before the Court:
(a) for the Government
Ms B. Ohms, Deputy
Agent,
Mr M. Stormann,
Mr G. Doujak, Advisers;
(b) for the applicants
Mr H.F. kinz,
M W.L.
weh, Counsels,
Mr S. Harg,
Mr C. Eberle, Advisers;
The
Court heard addresses by Mr Weh, Mr Kinz and Ms Ohms.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The applicants were born in 1966, 1962, 1971 and 1971
respectively and live in L. and R.
- The
first applicant is married to the second applicant and the third
applicant to the fourth applicant.
- The
first applicant suffers from fallopian-tube-related infertility
(eileiterbedingter Sterilität). She produces ova, but,
due to her blocked fallopian tubes, these cannot pass to the uterus,
so natural fertilisation is impossible. The second applicant, her
husband, is infertile.
- The
third applicant suffers from agonadism (Gonadendysgenesie),
which means that she does not produce ova at all. Thus she is
completely infertile but has a fully developed uterus. The fourth
applicant, her husband, in contrast to the second applicant, can
produce sperm fit for procreation.
- On
4 May 1998 the first and third applicants lodged an application
(Individualantrag) with the Constitutional Court
(Verfassungsgerichtshof) for a review of the
constitutionality of section 3(1) and section 3(2) of the Artificial
Procreation Act (Fortpflanzungsmedizingesetz - see
paragraphs 27-34 below).
- The
applicants argued before the Constitutional Court that they were
directly affected by the above provisions. The first applicant
submitted that she could not conceive a child by natural means; thus
the only way open to her and her husband would be in vitro
fertilisation using sperm from a donor. That medical technique was,
however, ruled out by section 3(1) and section 3(2) of the
Artificial Procreation Act. The third applicant submitted that she
was infertile. As she suffered from agonadism, she did not produce
ova at all. Thus, the only way open to her of conceiving a child was
to resort to a medical technique of artificial procreation referred
to as heterologous embryo transfer, which would entail implanting
into her uterus an embryo conceived with ova from a donor and sperm
from the fourth applicant. However, that method was not allowed under
the Artificial Procreation Act.
- The
first and third applicant argued before the Constitutional Court that
the impossibility of using the above-mentioned medical techniques for
medically assisted conception was a breach of their rights under
Article 8 of the Convention. They also relied on Article 12 of the
Convention and on Article 7 of the Federal Constitution, which
guarantees equal treatment.
- On
4 October 1999 the Constitutional Court held a public hearing in
which the first applicant, assisted by counsel, participated.
- On
14 October 1999 the Constitutional Court decided on the first and
third applicants’ request. The Constitutional Court found that
their request was partly admissible in so far as the wording
concerned their specific case. In this respect, it found that the
provisions of section 3 of the Artificial Procreation Act, which
prohibited the use of certain procreation techniques, was directly
applicable to the applicants’ case without it being necessary
for a decision by a court or administrative authority to be taken.
- As
regards the merits of their complaints the Constitutional Court
considered that Article 8 was applicable in the applicants’
case. Although no case-law of the European Court of Human Rights
existed on the matter, it was evident, in the Constitutional Court’s
view, that the decision of spouses or a cohabiting couple to conceive
a child and make use of medically assisted procreation techniques to
that end fell within the sphere of protection under Article 8.
- The
impugned provisions of the Artificial Procreation Act interfered with
the exercise of this freedom in so far as they limited the scope of
permitted medical techniques of artificial procreation. As for the
justification for such an interference, the Constitutional Court
observed that the legislature, when enacting the Artificial
Procreation Act, had tried to find a solution by balancing the
conflicting interests of human dignity, the right to procreation and
the well-being of children. Thus, it had enacted as leading features
of the legislation that, in principle, only homologous methods –
such as using ova and sperm from the spouses or from the cohabiting
couple itself – and methods which did not involve a
particularly sophisticated technique and were not too far removed
from natural means of conception would be allowed. The aim was to
avoid the forming of unusual personal relations such as a child
having more than one biological mother (a genetic mother and one
carrying the child) and to avoid the risk of exploitation of women.
- The
use of in vitro fertilisation as opposed to natural
procreation raised serious issues as to the well-being of children
thus conceived, their health and their rights, and also touched upon
the ethical and moral values of society and entailed the risk of
commercialisation and selective reproduction (Zuchtauswahl).
- Applying
the principle of proportionality under Article 8 § 2, however,
such concerns could not lead to a total ban on all possible medically
assisted procreation techniques, as the extent to which public
interests were concerned depended essentially on whether a homologous
technique (having recourse to the gametes of the couple) or
heterologous technique (having recourse to gametes external to the
couple) was used.
- In
the Constitutional Court’s view, the legislature had not
overstepped the margin of appreciation afforded to member States when
it established the permissibility of homologous methods as a rule and
insemination using donor sperm as an exception. The choices the
legislature had made reflected the then current state of medical
science and the consensus in society. It did not mean, however, that
these criteria were not subject to developments which the legislature
would have to take into account in the future.
- The
legislature had also not neglected the interests of men and women who
had to avail themselves of artificial procreation techniques. Besides
strictly homologous techniques it had accepted insemination using
sperm from donors. Such a technique had been known and used for a
long time and would not bring about unusual family relationships.
Further, the use of these techniques was not restricted to married
couples but also included cohabiting couples. However, the interests
of the individuals concerned had to give way to the above-mentioned
public interest when a child could not be conceived by having
recourse to homologous techniques.
- The
Constitutional Court also found that for the legislature to prohibit
heterologous techniques, while accepting as lawful only homologous
techniques, was not in breach of the constitutional principle of
equality which prohibits discrimination. The difference in treatment
between the two techniques was justified because, as pointed out
above, the same objections could not be raised against the homologous
method as against the heterologous one. As a consequence, the
legislature was not bound to apply strictly identical regulations to
both. Also, the fact that insemination in vivo with donor
sperm was allowed while ovum donation was not, did not amount to
discrimination since sperm donation was not considered to give rise
to a risk of creating unusual relationships which might adversely
affect the well-being of a future child.
- Since
the impugned provisions of the Artificial Procreation Act were in
line with Article 8 of the Convention and the principle of equality
under the Federal Constitution, there had also been no breach of
Article 12 of the Convention.
- This
decision was served on the first and third applicants’ lawyer
on 8 November 1999.
II. RELEVANT LEGAL MATERIAL
A. Domestic law: the Artificial Procreation Act
- The
Artificial Procreation Act (Fortpflanzungsmedizingesetz,
Federal Law Gazette 275/1992) regulates the use of medical techniques
for inducing conception of a child by means other than copulation
(section 1(1)).
- These
methods comprise: (i) introduction of sperm into the reproductive
organs of a woman, (ii) unification of ovum and sperm outside the
body of a woman, (iii) introduction of viable cells into the uterus
or fallopian tube of a woman and (iv) introduction of ovum cells or
ovum cells with sperm into the uterus or fallopian tube of a woman
(section 1(2)).
- Medically
assisted procreation is allowed only within a marriage or a
relationship similar to marriage, and may only be carried out if
every other possible and reasonable treatment aimed at inducing
pregnancy through intercourse has failed or has no reasonable chance
of success (section 2).
- Under
section 3(1), only ova and sperm from spouses or from persons living
in a relationship similar to marriage (Lebensgefährten)
may be used for the purpose of medically assisted procreation. In
exceptional circumstances, i.e. if the spouse or male partner is
infertile, sperm from a third person may be used for artificial
insemination when introducing sperm into the reproductive organs of a
woman (section 3(2)). This is called in vivo fertilisation. In
all other circumstances, and in particular for the purpose of in
vitro fertilisation, the use of sperm by donors is prohibited.
- Under
section 3(3), ova or viable cells may only be used for the woman from
whom they originate. Thus ovum donation is always prohibited.
- The
further provisions of the Artificial Procreation Act stipulate, inter
alia, that medically assisted procreation may only be carried out
by specialised physicians and in specially equipped hospitals or
surgeries (section 4) and with the express and written consent of the
spouses or cohabiting persons (section 8).
- In
1999 the Artificial Procreation Act was supplemented by a Federal Act
Establishing a Fund for Financing In vitro Fertilisation
Treatment (Bundesgesetz mit dem ein Fonds zur Finanzierung der In
vitro-Fertilisiation eingerichtet wird – Federal Law
Gazette Part I No. 180/1999) in order to subsidise in vitro
fertilisation treatment allowed under the Artificial Procreation Act.
- The
issue of maternity and paternity is regulated in the Civil Code
(Allgemeines Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch). Under Article
137b, introduced at the same time as when the Artificial Procreation
Act entered into force, the mother of a child is the woman who has
given birth to that child. As regards paternity, Article 163 provides
that the father of a child is the male person who has had sexual
intercourse with the mother within a certain period of time (180 to
300 days) before the birth. If the mother has undergone medically
assisted procreation treatment using sperm from a donor, the father
is the person who has given his consent to that treatment, that is,
the spouse or male partner. A sperm donor can in no circumstances be
recognised as the father of the child.
B. The position in other countries
- The
following overview of the law and practice concerning artificial
procreation in Europe is based essentially on the following
documents: “Medically-assisted Procreation and the Protection
of the Human Embryo Comparative Study on the Situation in 39 States”
(Council of Europe, 1998), the replies by the member States of the
Council of Europe to the Steering Committee on Bioethics’
“Questionnaire on Access to Medically-assisted Procreation”
(Council of Europe, 2005) and a survey carried out in 2007 by IFFS
(International Federation of Fertility Societies).
- From this material it would appear that IVF treatment
was (at 2007) regulated by primary or secondary legislation in
Austria, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland,
France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia,
the Netherlands, Norway, the Russian Federation, Slovenia, Spain,
Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine and the United Kingdom. In
Belgium, the Czech Republic, Ireland, Malta, Lithuania, Poland,
Serbia and Slovakia such treatment was governed by clinical practice,
professional guidelines, royal or administrative decree or general
constitutional principles.
- The
study sets out, in particular, the position of domestic law as
regards seven different artificial procreation techniques: artificial
insemination within a couple, in vitro fertilisation within a
couple, artificial insemination by sperm donor, ovum donation, ovum
and sperm donation, embryo donation and intracytoplasmic sperm
injection (an in vitro
fertilisation procedure in which a single sperm is injected directly
into an egg).
- It
seems that among the countries which have regulated the issue of
artificial procreation sperm donation is currently prohibited in
Italy, Lithuania and Turkey. All three countries do not permit
heterologous assisted fertilisation. Countries allowing sperm
donation do not generally distinguish in their regulations between
the use of sperm for artificial insemination and for in vitro
fertilisation. As regards ova donation, this is prohibited in
Croatia, Germany, Norway and Switzerland, in addition to the three
countries mentioned above.
- It
further appears that in a number of countries, such as Cyprus,
Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal and Romania, where the matter was not
regulated (at 2007), the donation of both sperm and ova is used in
practice.
- A
comparison between the Council of Europe study of 1998 and a survey
conducted by the International Federation of Fertility Societies of
2007 shows that in the field of medically assisted procreation legal
provisions are developing quickly. In Denmark, France and Sweden
sperm and ovum donation, which was previously prohibited, is now
allowed since the entry into force of new legal provisions in 2006,
2004 and 2006 respectively. In Norway sperm donation for in vitro
fertilisation has been allowed since 2003, but not ovum donation.
Since 2007 medically assisted procreation is also regulated by law in
Finland allowing sperm and ova donation.
C. Council of Europe Instruments
- Principle
11 of the principles adopted by the ad hoc committee of
experts on progress in the biomedical sciences, the expert body
within the Council of Europe which preceded the present Steering
Committee on Bioethics (CAHBI, 1989), states:
“1. In principle, in vitro
fertilisation shall be effected using gametes of the members of the
couple. The same rule shall apply to any other procedure that
involves ova or in vitro or embryos in vitro. However,
in exceptional cases defined by the member states, the use of gametes
of donors may be permitted. ”
- The
Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine of 1997 does not deal with
the question of donation of gametes, but forbids the use of a
medically assisted reproduction technique to choose the sex of a
child. Article 14 reads as follows:
“The use of techniques of medically assisted
procreation shall not be allowed for the purpose of choosing a future
child’s sex, except where serious hereditary sex-related
disease is to be avoided.”
- The
Additional Protocol to the above Convention, on Transplantation of
Organs and Tissues of Human Origin, of 2002, which promotes the
donation of organs, expressly excludes from its scope reproductive
organs and tissues.
D. European Union Instruments
- Directive
2004/23/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council dated 31
March 2004 on the setting of standards of quality and safety for the
donation, procurement, testing, processing, preservation, storage and
distribution of human tissues and cells, which seeks to ensure the
quality and safety aspects of human tissues and cells intended for
human applications provides in its preamble as follows:
“(12) This Directive should not
interfere with the decisions made by Member States concerning the use
of or non-use of any specific type of human cells, including germ
cells and embryonic stem cells. If, however, any particular use of
such cells is authorised in a Member State, this Directive will
require the application of all provisions necessary to protect public
health, given the specific risk of these cells based on the
scientific knowledge and their particular nature and guarantee
respect for fundamental rights. Moreover, this Directive should not
interfere with provisions of Member States defining the legal term
“person” or “individual”.”
THE LAW
I. THE GOVERNMENT’S PRELIMINARY OBJECTION
- The
Government argued, as they had done before the Chamber, that the
second and fourth applicants, the husbands of the first and third
applicant respectively, had failed to exhaust domestic remedies as
required by Article 35 of the Convention because they had failed to
lodge themselves an application with the Constitutional Court for
review of the constitutionality of section 3 of the Artificial
Procreation Act.
- This
was disputed by the applicants, who referred to the decision on
admissibility of 15 November 2007 in which the Court rejected the
Government’s objection of non-exhaustion and which, in their
view, settled this matter definitively.
- The
Grand Chamber observes that the chamber rejected the Government’s
objection of non-exhaustion as regards the second and fourth
applicant in its decision on admissibility of 15 November 2007. In
that decision it stated as follows:
“The Court reiterates that the application of the
rule of exhaustion must make due allowance for the fact that it is
being applied in the context of machinery for the protection of human
rights that the Contracting Parties have agreed to set up.
Accordingly, the Court has recognised that Article 35 § 1
must be applied with some degree of flexibility and without excessive
formalism. The rule is neither absolute nor capable of being applied
automatically. In reviewing whether it has been observed it is
essential to have regard to the particular circumstances of each
individual case. This means amongst other things that the Court must
take realistic account of the general legal and political context in
which the remedies operate, as well as the personal circumstances of
the applicant (see Menteş and Others v. Turkey, judgment
of 28 November 1997, Reports of Judgments and Decisions
1997-VIII, p. 2707, § 58).
The Court observes that the first and third applicants
applied to the Constitutional Court for a review of the
constitutionality of section 3 of the Artificial Procreation Act. In
these proceedings they showed that they had, together with their
spouses, taken a firm decision to undergo a process of
medically-assisted procreation as given their medical condition
natural conception of a child was not possible, and that they were
therefore directly affected by the prohibition at issue. Although the
second and fourth applicants, their spouses, did not participate in
the proceedings before the Constitutional Court, their personal
situation was intrinsically linked to that of their spouses. Thus,
the Court finds it sufficient that the latter have instituted the
proceedings and put their case and consequently also their spouses’
case before the competent domestic court.
The Court therefore concludes that all the applicants
have exhausted domestic remedies within the meaning of Article 35§
1 of the Convention.”
- The
Grand Chamber does not see any reason to come to a different
conclusion from the Chamber. Accordingly, the Government’s
preliminary objection must be rejected.
II. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION
- The
applicants complained that the prohibition of heterologous artificial
procreation techniques for in vitro fertilisation laid down by
section 3(1) and 3(2) of the Artificial Procreation Act had violated
their rights under Article 8 of the Convention.
- Article
8 of the Convention, in so far as relevant, provides:
“1. Everyone has the right to respect
for his private and family life ...
2. There shall be no interference by a public
authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in
accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in
the interests of national security, public safety or the economic
well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the
rights and freedoms of others.”
A. The Chamber judgment
- In
its judgment of 1 April 2010 the Chamber held that there had been a
violation of Article 14 of the Convention read in conjunction with
Article 8 in respect of the first and second applicant as well
as in respect of the third and fourth applicant.
- The
Chamber found that Article 14 read in conjunction with Article 8
was applicable to the case since the right of a couple to conceive a
child and to make use of medically assisted procreation for that end
came within the ambit of Article 8 as such a choice was clearly an
expression of private and family life.
- As
regards compliance with Article 14, the Chamber observed that in view
of the lack of a uniform approach to this question by the Contracting
States and the nature of the sensitive moral and ethical issues
involved, the Contracting States enjoyed a wide margin of
appreciation in this field. This wide margin of appreciation in
principle extended both to its decision to intervene in the area and,
once having intervened, to the detailed rules it lay down in order to
achieve a balance between the competing public and private interests.
The Chamber examined the situation of the first and second applicants
and the third and fourth applicants separately.
- With
regard to the situation of the third and fourth applicants, who
needed ovum donation in order to fulfil their wish for a child, the
Chamber found that concerns based on moral considerations or on
social acceptability were not in themselves sufficient reasons for a
complete ban on a specific artificial procreation in general and that
only in exceptional circumstances would such a complete ban be a
proportionate measure. The Chamber found that in respect of the risks
of ovum donation invoked by the Government, such as the risk of
exploitation of women particularly from economically disadvantaged
backgrounds or “selection” of children, the Artificial
Procreation Act itself already contained sufficient safeguards. In
respect of the other specific concerns indicated by the Government,
such as the creation of unusual relationships by splitting motherhood
between a genetic mother and a biological mother, these problems
could be overcome by enacting appropriate legislation. The Chamber
therefore concluded that there had been a violation of Article 14 in
conjunction with Article 8.
- With
regard to the situation of the first and second applicants, who
needed sperm donation for in vitro fertilisation in order to
fulfil their wish for a child, the Chamber observed first that this
artificial procreation technique combined two techniques which, taken
alone, were allowed under the Artificial Procreation Act, namely, in
vitro fertilisation with ova and sperm of the couple itself on
the one hand and sperm donation for in vivo conception on the
other hand. A prohibition of the combination of these lawful
techniques thus required particularly persuasive arguments. Most of
the arguments put forward by the Government were, however, not
specific to sperm donation for in vitro fertilisation. As
regards the Government’s argument that non-in vitro
artificial insemination had been in use for some time, that it
was easy to handle and its prohibition would therefore have been hard
to monitor, the Chamber found that a question of mere efficiency
carried less weight than particularly important interests of the
private individuals involved and concluded that the difference in
treatment at issue was not justified. The Chamber concluded that
there had been a violation of Article 14 in conjunction with
Article 8 in that respect as well.
B. The parties’ submissions
1. The applicants
- In
the applicants’ view, Article 8 of the Convention was
applicable in their case. They submitted further that the impugned
legislation constituted a direct interference with their rights under
Article 8 because, in the absence of such legislation, the medical
treatment they were seeking – in vitro fertilisation
with donated ova or sperm – would have been a common and
readily available medical technique which had made considerable
progress over the previous years and had become far more reliable
than in the past. Thus there was no question of a positive
obligation, but of a classic case of interference, which was not
necessary in a democratic society and was disproportionate.
- Because
of the special importance of the right to found a family and the
right to procreation, the Contracting States enjoyed no margin of
appreciation at all in regulating these issues. The decisions to be
taken by couples wishing to make use of artificial procreation
concerned the most intimate sphere of their private life and
therefore the legislature should show particular restraint in
regulating these matters.
- All
the arguments raised by the Government were against artificial
procreation in general and were therefore not persuasive when it came
to allowing some procreation techniques while rejecting others. The
risk of exploitation of female donors, to which the Government
referred, was not relevant in circumstances such as those in the
present case. To combat any potential abuse in the Austrian
situation, it would be sufficient to forbid remunerated ovum or sperm
donation; such a prohibition already existed in Austria. Also, the
argument that ovum donation led to unusual family relationships in
which motherhood of a child conceived through artificial procreation
was split between the genetic mother and the mother who gave birth to
the child and led to emotional stress for the child was not
persuasive, as today many children grew up in family situations in
which they were genetically related to only one of the parents.
- The
applicants submitted further that the system applied under the
Artificial Procreation Act was incoherent and illogical, since there
was no blanket prohibition on heterologous forms of medically
assisted procreation because exceptions were made for sperm donation
in relation to specific techniques. The reasons for this difference
in treatment were not persuasive. In this context it should be noted
that there existed a public fund for financing in vitro
fertilisation, apparently because use of this technique was in
the public interest, while at the same time severe restrictions were
imposed on its use.
- With
regard to the legal situation of artificial procreation in the
Contracting States, the applicants argued that there was now a
consensus that ovum and sperm donation should be allowed. Thus, the
prohibition of ovum and sperm donation under Austrian law was in
breach of Article 8 of the Convention.
2. The Government
- As
regards the applicability of Article 8 of the Convention, the
Government referred to the findings of the Constitutional Court that
the private life aspect within the meaning of Article 8 § 1 of
the Convention also covered the desire of couples or life companions
to have children as one of the essential forms of expression of their
personality as human beings. They therefore accepted that Article 8
was applicable to the proceedings at issue.
- In
the Government’s view, the question whether the measure at
issue should be deemed to be an interference by a public authority or
an alleged breach of a positive duty could be left open because both
obligations were subject to the same principles. In both instances a
fair balance had to be struck between the competing private and
public interests and in both contexts the State enjoyed a certain
margin of appreciation, which, in the absence of a common standard
established by the Contracting States, was a particularly wide one.
In any event the prohibition at issue had a legal basis in domestic
law and pursued a legitimate aim, namely, the protection of the
rights of others, in particular potential donors.
- In
the Government’s view, the central issue in the case was not
whether there could be any recourse at all to medically and
technically assisted procreation and what limits the State could set
in that respect, but to what extent the State must authorise and
accept the cooperation of third parties in the fulfilment of a
couple’s wish to conceive a child. Even though the right to
respect for private life also comprised the right to fulfil the wish
for a child, it did not follow that the State was under an obligation
to permit indiscriminately all technically feasible means of
reproduction or even to provide such means. In making use of the
margin of appreciation afforded to them, the States had to decide for
themselves what balance should be struck between the competing
interests in the light of the specific social and cultural needs and
traditions of their countries.
- The
Austrian legislature, taking into account all the interests
concerned, had struck a fair balance in line with Article 8 of the
Convention. Such a balance allowed for medically assisted procreation
while at the same time providing for certain limits where the stage
reached in medical and social development did not yet permit the
legal authorisation of in vitro fertilisation with the sperm
or ova of third persons, as desired by the female applicants. The
Artificial Procreation Act was therefore characterised by the
intention to prevent negative repercussions and potential misuse and
to employ medical advances only for therapeutic purposes and not for
other objectives such as “selection” of children, as the
legislature could not and should not neglect the existing unease
among large sections of society about the role and possibilities of
modern reproductive medicine.
- After
thorough preparation the legislature had found an adequate solution
for the matter which took into account human dignity, the well-being
of the child and the right to procreation. In vitro
fertilisation opened up far-reaching possibilities for a selective
choice of ova and sperm, which might ultimately lead to selective
reproduction (Zuchtauswahl). This raised essential questions
regarding the health of children thus conceived and born, touching
essentially upon the general ethics and moral values of society.
- In
the debate in Parliament it had been pointed out that ovum donation
depended on the availability of ova and might lead to problematic
developments such as the exploitation and humiliation of women, in
particular those from an economically disadvantaged background. There
was also the risk that pressure might be put on women undergoing in
vitro fertilisation to provide more ova than strictly necessary
for their own treatment to enable them to pay for it.
- In
vitro fertilisation also raised the question of unusual
relationships in which the social circumstances deviated from the
biological ones, namely, the division of motherhood into a biological
aspect and an aspect of “carrying the child” and perhaps
also a social aspect. Lastly, account also had to be taken of the
child’s legitimate interest in being informed about his or her
actual descent, which, with donated sperm and ova, would in most
cases be impossible. Where sperm or ova were donated within the
framework of medically assisted procreation, the actual parentage of
a child was not revealed in the register of births, marriages and
deaths and the protective legal provisions governing adoptions were
ineffective in the case of medically assisted procreation.
- The
reasons for allowing in vivo artificial insemination, as set
out in the explanatory report to the Government’s bill on the
Artificial Procreation Act, were that because it was such an easily
applicable procreation method, compared with others, it could not be
monitored effectively. That technique had also already been in use
for a long time. Thus, a prohibition of this simple technique would
not have been effective and consequently would not constitute a
suitable means of pursuing the objectives of the legislation
effectively.
C. Third-party interveners
1. The German Government
- The
German Government submitted that under section 1(1) of the German
Embryo Protection Act (Embryonenschutzgesetz) it was a
punishable offence to place inside a woman an egg not produced by
her.
- This
prohibition was intended to protect the child’s welfare by
ensuring the unambiguous identity of the mother. Splitting motherhood
into a genetic and a biological mother would result in two women
having a part in the creation of a child and would run counter to the
established principle of unambiguousness of motherhood which
represented a fundamental and basic social consensus. Split
motherhood was contrary to the child’s welfare because the
resulting ambiguousness of the mother’s identity might
jeopardise the development of the child’s personality and lead
to considerable problems in his or her discovery of identity.
- There
was also the danger that the biological mother, being aware of the
genetic background, might hold the egg donor responsible for any
illness or handicap of the child and reject him or her. Another
conflict which might arise and strain the genetic and biological
mothers’ relationships with the child was that a donated egg
might result in the recipient getting pregnant while the donor
herself failed to get pregnant by means of in vitro
fertilisation. For all these reasons split motherhood constituted a
serious threat to the welfare of the child which justified the
existing prohibitions under the Embryo Protection Act.
2. The Italian Government
- The
Italian Government submitted that Italian legislation concerning
medically assisted procreation differed fundamentally from Austrian
legislation. Italian law prohibited generally the use of any
heterologous methods of medically assisted procreation and, as
regards homologous methods, made access to such treatment conditional
on the couple being infertile.
- In
the view of the Italian Government, Article 8 did not protect a
person’s or a couple’s right to conceive a child and to
make use of medically assisted procreation for that purpose. Thus,
there was no positive obligation under that provision for Contracting
States to make available to infertile couples all existing medical
techniques of procreation. The lack of a European consensus on the
question of medically assisted procreation conferred a wide margin of
appreciation on the Contracting States, allowing them to make their
own policy decisions on such a complex matter that had far-reaching
scientific, legal, ethical and social implications. In vitro
fertilisation, which had a direct effect on human life and the
foundations of society, was clearly a highly sensitive matter on
which no European consensus had been reached. Medically assisted
procreation also involved serious risks. Gamete donation might lead
to pressure on women on moderate incomes and encourage trafficking of
ova. Scientific studies also showed that there was a link between IVF
treatment and premature births. Lastly, to call maternal filiation
into question by splitting motherhood would lead to a weakening of
the entire structure of society.
3. Hera ONLUS and SOS Infertilità
Onlus
74. Hera
Onlus and SOS Infertilità Onlus argued that infertility
had to be addressed as a human health issue. A limitation of access
to heterologous in vitro fertilisation constituted a denial of
access to available treatment and therefore an interference with the
rights guaranteed by Article 8 of the Convention. In their view, a
prohibition of access to heterologous medically assisted procreation
was not necessary in order to prevent repercussions on a child’s
psychological and social development. In view of the strict
regulations on quality standards and monitoring established by the
European Union, a complete ban on access to different types of
heterologous treatment was not the best means available for striking
a fair balance between the competing interests involved. There was
also a further negative side-effect of the ban, namely the phenomenon
of “procreative tourism”, which meant that couples
seeking infertility treatment abroad were exposed to the risk of low
quality standards and of suffering from considerable financial and
emotional stress.
4. The European Centre for Law and Justice
- The
European Centre for Law and Justice (“the ECLJ”)
submitted that there was no positive obligation on member States to
provide for medically assisted procreation techniques under the
Convention. But even assuming that, by refusing to allow heterologous
IVF treatment, the State interfered with the rights under Article 8
of the Convention, such interference was proportional.
- In
their view, the Contracting States had a wide margin of appreciation
regarding sensitive moral and ethical issues, since there was no
European consensus on the matter. The ECLJ emphasised that Austria
did not impose a blanket ban on medically assisted procreation, but
allowed certain methods while other methods that were not allowed in
Austria were readily available abroad. Moreover, couples suffering
from infertility could also fulfil their wish for a child by adopting
one.
5. Aktion Leben
- Aktion
Leben argued that IVF treatment using gametes by donors, in
particular ova, led to considerable medical risks and led to the
sensitive and problematic question of multiple parenthood. Moreover,
ovum donation would increase the risk of exploitation of women,
commercialisation of the female body and necessitated a very risky
medical intervention for the donors. The unusual family relationships
thus created could adversely affect existing family and social
relationships. IVF treatment might also lead to problems of identity
of the child so conceived and, in the case of sperm donation, could
create the risk of trauma for a child wanting to establish relations
with his biological father.
D. The Court’s assessment
1. Applicability of Article 8
- The
Government accepted that Article 8 was applicable to the case. In
that connection they referred to the findings of the Constitutional
Court, which, in its judgment of 14 October 1999, held that the
decision of spouses or a cohabiting couple to conceive a child and to
make use of medically assisted procreation techniques for that
purpose came within the scope of their right to respect for their
private lives and accordingly fell within the sphere of protection of
Article 8.
- The
applicants agreed with the Government as to the applicability of
Article 8 of the Convention.
- The
Court reiterates that the notion of “private life” within
the meaning of Article 8 of the Convention is a broad concept which
encompasses, inter alia, the right to establish and develop
relationships with other human beings (see Niemietz v. Germany,
16 December 1992, § 29, Series A no. 251 B), the
right to “personal development” (see Bensaid
v. the United Kingdom, no. 44599/98, § 47, ECHR
2001 I) or the right to self-determination as such (see Pretty
v. the United Kingdom, no. 2346/02, § 61, ECHR
2002 III). It encompasses elements such as gender
identification, sexual orientation and sexual life, which fall within
the personal sphere protected by Article 8 (see, for example, Dudgeon
v. the United Kingdom, 22 October 1981, § 41,
Series A no. 45, and Laskey, Jaggard and Brown v. the United
Kingdom, 19 February 1997, § 36, Reports of
Judgments and Decisions 1997-I), and the right to respect for the
decisions both to have and not to have a child (see Evans
v. the United Kingdom [GC], no. 6339/05, § 71,
ECHR 2007 IV, and A, B and C v. Ireland [GC],
no. 25579/05, § 212, 16 December 2010).
- In
the case of Dickson v. the United Kingdom, which concerned the
refusal to provide the applicants – a prisoner and his wife –
with facilities for artificial insemination, the Court found that
Article 8 was applicable in that the refusal of artificial
insemination facilities at issue concerned their private and family
lives which notions incorporate the right to respect for their
decision to become genetic parents (see Dickson v. the United
Kingdom [GC], no. 44362/04, § 66, ECHR 2007 XIII, with
further references).
- The
Court considers that the right of a couple to conceive a child and to
make use of medically assisted procreation for that purpose is also
protected by Article 8, as such a choice is an expression of private
and family life. Article 8 of the Convention therefore applies to the
present case.
2. Positive obligation or interference with a right?
- In
the case of X, Y and Z v. the United Kingdom (22 April 1997,
Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1997-II) the Court observed
that there existed no generally shared approach amongst the High
Contracting Parties with regard to the manner in which the social
relationship between a child conceived by artificial insemination by
donor and the person who performed the role of father should be
reflected in law. Indeed, according to the information available to
the Court, although the technology of medically assisted procreation
had been available in Europe for several decades, many of the issues
to which it gave rise, particularly with regard to the question of
filiation, remained the subject of debate. For example, there was no
consensus amongst the member States of the Council of Europe on the
question whether the interests of a child conceived in such a way
were best served by preserving the anonymity of the donor of the
sperm or whether the child should have the right to know the donor’s
identity (§ 44). It concluded that the issues of the case
touched upon areas where there was little common ground amongst the
member States of the Council of Europe and, generally speaking, the
law appeared to be in a transitional stage (ibid.).
- The
above judgment was given in 1997, shortly before the applicants, in
May 1998, lodged an application with the Austrian Constitutional
Court for a review of the constitutionality of section 3(1) and 3(2)
of the Artificial Procreation Act in the present case. From the
material at the Court’s disposal, it appears that since the
Constitutional Court’s decision in the present case many
developments in medical science have taken place to which a number of
Contracting States have responded in their legislation. Such changes
might therefore have repercussions on the Court’s assessment of
the facts. However, it is not for the Court to consider whether the
prohibition of sperm and ova donation at issue would or would not be
justified today under the Convention. The issue for the Court to
decide is whether these prohibitions were justified at the time they
were considered by the Austrian Constitutional Court (see J. M. v.
the United Kingdom, no. 37060/06, §
57, 28 September 2010; mutatis mutandis,
Maslov v. Austria [GC], no. 1638/03, § 91, 23
June 2008; and Schalk and Kopf v. Austria,
no. 30141/04, § 106, 22 November 2010). However, the Court is
not prevented from having regard to subsequent developments in making
its assessment.
- The
next step in analysing whether the impugned legislation was in
accordance with Article 8 of the Convention is to identify whether it
gave rise to an interference with the applicants’ right to
respect for their private and family lives (the State’s
negative obligations) or a failure by the State to fulfil a positive
obligation in that respect.
86. The
applicants argued that the impugned legislation
constituted a direct interference with their rights under Article 8
because, in the absence of such legislation, the medical treatment
they were seeking – in vitro fertilisation with donated
ova or sperm – was a common and readily available medical
technique. In the Government’s view, the question whether the
measure at issue should be deemed to be an interference by a public
authority or an alleged breach of a positive duty could be left open
because both obligations were subject to the same principles.
- The
Court reiterates that although the object of Article 8 is essentially
that of protecting the individual against arbitrary interference by
the public authorities, it does not merely compel the State to
abstain from such interference. In addition to this primarily
negative undertaking, there may be positive obligations inherent in
an effective respect for private and family life. These obligations
may involve the adoption of measures designed to secure respect for
private and family life even in the sphere of the relations of
individuals between themselves. The boundaries between the State’s
positive and negative obligations under Article 8 do not lend
themselves to precise definition. The applicable principles are
nonetheless similar. In particular, in both instances regard must be
had to the fair balance to be struck between the competing interests
(see Odièvre v. France [GC], no. 42326/98,
§ 40, ECHR 2003-III, and Evans, cited above, § 75).
88. In
the Grand Chamber’s view, the legislation in question can be
seen as raising an issue as to whether there exists a positive
obligation on the State to permit certain forms of artificial
procreation using either sperm or ova from a third party. However,
the matter can also be seen as an interference by the State with the
applicants’ rights to respect for their family life as a result
of the prohibition under section 3(1) and 3(2) of the Artificial
Procreation Act of certain techniques of artificial procreation that
had been developed by medical science but of which they could not
avail themselves because of that prohibition. In the present case the
Court will approach the case as one involving an interference with
the applicants’ right to avail themselves of techniques of
artificial procreation as a result of the operation of section 3(1)
and 3(2) of the Artificial Procreation Act since they were in fact
prevented from doing so by the operation of the law that they
unsuccessfully sought to challenge before the Austrian courts. In
any case, as noted above, the
applicable principles regarding justification under Article 8 §
2 are broadly similar for both analytical approaches adopted (see
Evans, cited above, § 75, and Keegan
v. Ireland, 26 May
1994, § 49, ECHR,
Series A no. 290).
3. Compliance with Article 8 § 2
- Such interference will be in breach of Article 8 of
the Convention unless it can be justified under paragraph 2 of
Article 8 as being “in accordance with the law”, pursuing
one or more of the legitimate aims listed therein, and being
“necessary in a democratic society” in order to achieve
the aim or aims concerned.
(a) In accordance with the law and
legitimate aim
- The
Court considers that the measure at issue was provided for by law,
namely, section 3 of the Artificial Procreation Act, and that it
pursued a legitimate aim, namely, the protection of health or morals
and the protection of the rights and freedom of others. This is not
in dispute between the parties, who concentrated their arguments on
the necessity of the interference.
(b) Necessity in a democratic society and
the relevant margin of appreciation
- In that connection the Court reiterates that in order
to determine whether the impugned measures were “necessary in a
democratic society” it has to consider whether, in the light of
the case as a whole, the reasons adduced to justify them were
relevant and sufficient for the purposes of Article 8 § 2
(see, among many other authorities, Olsson v. Sweden (no. 1),
24 March 1988, § 68, Series A no. 130; K. and T. v.
Finland [GC], no. 25702/94, § 154, ECHR 2001-VII;
Kutzner v. Germany, no. 46544/99, § 65, ECHR 2002-I;
and P., C. and S. v. the United Kingdom, no. 56547/00, § 114,
ECHR 2002-VI).
- In
cases arising from individual applications the Court’s task is
not to review the relevant legislation or practice in the abstract;
it must as far as possible confine itself, without overlooking the
general context, to examining the issues raised by the case before it
(see Olsson v. Sweden (no. 1), cited above, §
54). Consequently, the Court’s task is not to substitute itself
for the competent national authorities in determining the most
appropriate policy for regulating matters of artificial procreation.
- The
applicants argued that because of the special importance of the right
to found a family and the right to procreation, the Contracting
States enjoyed no margin of appreciation at all in regulating these
issues.
- The
Court reiterates that a number of factors must be taken into account
when determining the breadth of the margin of appreciation to be
enjoyed by the State when deciding any case under Article 8 of the
Convention. Where a particularly important facet of an individual’s
existence or identity is at stake, the margin allowed to the State
will normally be restricted (see Evans, cited above, § 77
and the cases cited therein). Where, however, there is no consensus
within the member States of the Council of Europe, either as to the
relative importance of the interest at stake or as to the best means
of protecting it, particularly where the case raises sensitive moral
or ethical issues, the margin will be wider (see Evans, cited
above, § 77; X., Y. and Z. v. the United Kingdom, cited
above, § 44; Frette v. France, no. 36515/97, §
41, ECHR 2002-I; Christine Goodwin v. the United Kingdom
[GC], no. 28957/95, § 85, ECHR 2002 VI; and A. B. and
C. v. Ireland, cited above, § 232). By reason of their
direct and continuous contact with the vital forces of their
countries, the State authorities are, in principle, in a better
position than the international judge to give an opinion, not only on
the “exact content of the requirements of morals” in
their country, but also on the necessity of a restriction intended to
meet them (see A. B. and C. v. Ireland, ibid., with further
references). There will usually be a wide margin of appreciation
accorded if the State is required to strike a balance between
competing private and public interests or Convention rights (see
Evans, cited above, § 77, and Dickson, cited
above, § 78).
- In
that connection the Court observes that, according to the study
“Medically-assisted Procreation and the Protection of the Human
Embryo Comparative Study on the Situation in 39 States”
compiled by the Council of Europe in 1998 on the basis of replies by
the member States of the Council of Europe to the Steering Committee
on Bioethics, ovum donation was expressly prohibited in Austria,
Germany, Ireland, Norway, Slovakia, Slovenia, Sweden and Switzerland
and sperm donation in Austria, Germany, Ireland, Norway, and Sweden.
At present sperm donation is prohibited, in addition to Austria, in
only three countries: Italy, Lithuania and Turkey, while ovum
donation is prohibited in these countries and in Croatia, Germany,
Norway and Switzerland. However, legislation in that field, if it
exists at all, varies considerably. While medically assisted
procreation is regulated in detail in some countries, it is regulated
only to a certain extent in others and in some other countries not at
all.
- The
Court would conclude that there is now a clear trend in the
legislation of the Contracting States towards allowing gamete
donation for the purpose of in vitro fertilisation, which
reflects an emerging European consensus. That emerging consensus is
not, however, based on settled and long-standing principles
established in the law of the member States but rather reflects a
stage of development within a particularly dynamic field of law and
does not decisively narrow the margin of appreciation of the State.
- Since
the use of IVF treatment gave rise then and continues to give rise
today to sensitive moral and ethical issues against a background of
fast-moving medical and scientific developments, and since the
questions raised by the case touch on areas where there is not yet
clear common ground amongst the member States, the Court considers
that the margin of appreciation to be afforded to the respondent
State must be a wide one (see X, Y and Z v. the
United Kingdom, cited above, § 44). The State’s margin
in principle extends both to its decision to intervene in the area
and, once having intervened, to the detailed rules it lays down in
order to achieve a balance between the competing public and private
interests (see Evans, cited above § 82). However, this
does not mean that the solutions reached by the legislature are
beyond the scrutiny of the Court. It falls to the Court to examine
carefully the arguments taken into consideration during the
legislative process and leading to the choices that have been made by
the legislature and to determine whether a fair balance has been
struck between the competing interests of the State and those
directly affected by those legislative choices. In order to do so,
the Court finds that the situation of the first and second applicants
and that of the third and fourth applicants have to be examined
separately. The Court considers that it is appropriate to start the
examination with the third and fourth applicants.
(c) The third and fourth applicants (ovum
donation)
- The
third applicant is completely infertile, while her husband, the
fourth applicant, can produce sperm fit for procreation. It is not in
dispute that, owing to their medical condition, only in vitro
fertilisation with the use of ova from a donor would allow them to
fulfil their wish for a child of which at least one of the applicants
is the genetic parent. However, the prohibition of heterologous
artificial procreation techniques for in vitro fertilisation
laid down in section 3(1) of the Artificial Procreation Act, which
does not permit ovum donation, rules out this possibility. There is
no exception to this rule.
- The
Government argued that the prohibition of ovum donation for in
vitro fertilisation enacted by the Austrian legislature was
necessary in a democratic society. In their view, the Austrian
legislature struck a fair balance between the public and private
interests involved. They argued that the legislature had to set
certain limits on the possibilities offered by medical techniques of
artificial procreation because it had to take account of the morally
and ethically sensitive nature of the issues involved and the unease
existing among large sections of society as to the role and
possibilities of modern reproductive medicine.
- The
Court considers that concerns based on moral considerations or on
social acceptability must be taken seriously in a sensitive domain
like artificial procreation. However, they are not in themselves
sufficient reasons for a complete ban on a specific artificial
procreation technique such as ovum donation. Notwithstanding the wide
margin of appreciation afforded to the Contracting States, the legal
framework devised for this purpose must be shaped in a coherent
manner which allows the different legitimate interests involved to be
adequately taken into account.
- The
Government submitted, in particular, that medically advanced
techniques of artificial procreation such as in vitro
fertilisation carried the inherent risk that they would not be
employed only for therapeutic purposes but for other objectives such
as “selection” of children; in vitro fertilisation
posed such a risk. In addition, they submitted that there was a risk
that ovum donation might lead to exploitation and humiliation of
women, in particular those from an economically disadvantaged
background. Also pressure might be put on a woman who would otherwise
not be in a position to afford in vitro fertilisation to
produce more ova than necessary (see paragraph 66 above). The
technique of in vitro fertilisation, which necessitated that
ova be extracted from the woman, was risky and had serious
repercussions for the person subject to such an intervention; the
legislature must take particular care to reduce such risks where
third persons, such as donors, were involved.
- The
applicants argued that the adverse effects relied on by the
Government in arguing the necessity of the interference could be
reduced, if not prevented, by further measures that the Austrian
legislature could enact and, in any event, were not sufficient to
override the interests of the applicants in fulfilling their wish for
a child.
- The
Court considers that the field of artificial procreation is
developing particularly fast both from a scientific point of view and
in terms of the development of a legal framework for its medical
application. It is for this reason that it is particularly difficult
to establish a sound basis for assessing the necessity and
appropriateness of legislative measures, the consequences of which
might become apparent only after a considerable length of time. It is
therefore understandable that the States find it necessary to act
with particular caution in the field of artificial procreation.
- The
Court observes in this connection that the Austrian legislature has
not completely ruled out artificial procreation as it allows the use
of homologous techniques. According to the findings of the
Constitutional Court in its decision of 14 October 1999, the Austrian
legislature was guided by the idea that medically assisted
procreation should take place similarly to natural procreation, and
in particular that the basic principle of civil law – mater
semper certa est – should be maintained by avoiding the
possibility that two persons could claim to be the biological mother
of one and the same child and to avoid disputes between a biological
and a genetic mother in the wider sense. In doing so, the legislature
tried to reconcile the wish to make medically assisted procreation
available and the existing unease among large sections of society as
to the role and possibilities of modern reproductive medicine, which
raises issues of a morally and ethically sensitive nature.
- The
Court observes further that the Austrian legislature has established
specific safeguards and precautions under the Artificial Procreation
Act, namely, reserving the use of artificial procreation techniques
to specialised medical doctors who have particular knowledge and
experience in this field and are themselves bound by the ethical
rules of their profession (see paragraph 32 above) and statutorily
prohibiting the remuneration of ovum and sperm donation. These
measures are intended to prevent potential risks of eugenic selection
and their abuse and to prevent the risk of exploitation of women in
vulnerable situations as ovum donors. The Austrian legislature could
theoretically devise and enact further measures or safeguards to
reduce the risk attached to ovum donation as described by the
Government. Having regard to the risk referred to by the Government
of creating relationships in which the social circumstances deviated
from the biological ones, the Court observes that unusual family
relations in a broad sense, which do not follow the typical
parent-child relationship based on a direct biological link, are not
unknown in the legal orders of the Contracting States. The
institution of adoption was created over time in order to provide a
satisfactory legal framework for such relations and is known in all
the member States. Thus, a legal framework satisfactorily regulating
the problems arising from ovum donation could also have been adopted.
However, the Court cannot overlook the fact that the splitting of
motherhood between a genetic mother and the one carrying the child
differs significantly from adoptive parent-child relations and has
added a new aspect to this issue.
- The
Court accepts that the Austrian legislature could have devised a
different legal framework for regulating artificial procreation that
would have made ovum donation permissible. It notes in this regard
that this latter solution has been adopted in a number of member
States of the Council of Europe. However, the central question in
terms of Article 8 of the Convention is not whether a different
solution might have been adopted by the legislature that would
arguably have struck a fairer balance, but whether, in striking the
balance at the point at which it did, the Austrian legislature
exceeded the margin of appreciation afforded to it under that Article
(see Evans, cited above, § 91). In determining this
question, the Court attaches some importance to the fact that, as
noted above, there is no sufficiently established European consensus
as to whether ova donation for in vitro fertilisation should
be allowed.
- In
this connection the Court observes further that the only instruments
at European level dealing with the subject matter of ovum donation
for artificial procreation are the principles adopted by the ad
hoc committee of experts on progress in the biomedical sciences
of 1989. Principle 11 states that, in principle in vitro
fertilisation shall be effected using gametes of the members of the
couple. The Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine of 1997 and
the Additional Protocol of 2002 to this Convention are silent on this
matter. Directive 2004/23/EC of the European Union explicitly
provides that “this Directive should not interfere with the
decisions made by Member States concerning the use of or non-use of
any specific type of human cells, including germ cells and embryonic
stem cells”.
(d) The first and second applicants (sperm
donation)
- The
first applicant suffers from fallopian-tube-related infertility and
the second applicant, her husband, is infertile. It is not in dispute
that, owing to their medical conditions, only in vitro
fertilisation with the use of sperm from a donor would allow them to
fulfil their wish for a child of which at least one of the applicants
is the genetic parent.
- However,
the prohibition of heterologous artificial procreation techniques for
in vitro fertilisation laid down by section 3(1) of the
Artificial Procreation Act, which, in the circumstances of the first
and second applicants, rules out sperm donation excludes this
possibility. At the same time section 3(2) of that Act allows sperm
donation for in vivo fertilisation.
- The
Court reiterates that it is not contrary to the requirements of
Article 8 of the Convention for a State to enact legislation
governing important aspects of private life which does not provide
for the weighing of competing interests in the circumstances of each
individual case. Where such important aspects are at stake it is not
inconsistent with Article 8 that the legislator adopts rules of an
absolute nature which serve to produce legal certainty (see Evans,
cited above, § 89).
- The
Chamber attached particular importance to the fact that this type of
artificial procreation (sperm donation for in vitro treatment)
combined two techniques which, taken alone, were allowed under the
Artificial Procreation Act, namely, in vitro fertilisation on
the one hand and sperm donation for in vivo conception on the
other hand. It found that a prohibition of the combination of two
medical techniques which, taken in isolation, were allowed, required
particularly persuasive arguments. The only argument which, in the
Chamber’s view, was specific to that prohibition was that in
vivo artificial insemination had been in use for some time, was
easy to handle and its prohibition would therefore have been hard to
monitor. Such an argument related merely to a question of efficiency,
which carried less weight than particularly important interests of
the private individuals involved, and therefore the Chamber concluded
that the difference in treatment at issue was not justified (see §§
92-93 of the Chamber Judgment).
- The
Grand Chamber is not persuaded by this line of reasoning. It
considers that when examining the compatibility of a prohibition of a
specific artificial procreation technique with the requirements of
the Convention the legislative framework of which it forms a part
must be taken into consideration and the prohibition must be seen in
this wider context.
- It
is true that some of the arguments raised by the Government in
defence of the prohibition of gamete donation for in vitro
fertilisation can refer only to the prohibition of ovum donation,
such as preventing the exploitation of women in vulnerable situations
or limiting potential health risks for ovum donors and preventing the
creation of atypical family relations because of split motherhood.
However, there remain the basic concerns relied on by the Government,
namely, that the prohibition of the donation of gametes involving the
intervention of third persons in a highly technical medical process
was a controversial issue in Austrian society, raising complex
questions of a social and ethical nature on which there was not yet a
consensus in the society and which had to take into account human
dignity, the well-being of children thus conceived and the prevention
of negative repercussions or potential misuse. The Court has found
above that the prohibition of ovum donation for in vitro
fertilisation, which relied on these grounds, is compatible with the
requirements of Article 8 of the Convention and, in taking into
account the general framework in which the prohibition at issue must
be seen, is also of relevance here.
- The
fact that the Austrian legislature, when enacting the law on
artificial procreation which enshrined the decision not to allow the
donation of sperm or ova for in vitro fertilisation, did not
at the same time prohibit sperm donation for in vivo
fertilisation – a technique which had been tolerated for a
considerable period beforehand and had become accepted by society –
is a matter that is of significance in the balancing of the
respective interests and cannot be considered solely in the context
of the efficient policing of the prohibitions. It shows rather the
careful and cautious approach adopted by the Austrian legislature in
seeking to reconcile social realities with its approach of principle
in this field. In this connection the Court also observes that there
is no prohibition under Austrian law on going abroad to seek
treatment of infertility that uses artificial procreation techniques
not allowed in Austria and that in the event of a successful
treatment the Civil Code contains clear rules on paternity and
maternity that respect the wishes of the parents (see, mutatis
mutandis, A. B. and C. v. Ireland, cited above,
§ 239).
(e) The Court’s conclusion
- Having
regard to the above considerations, the Court therefore concludes
that, neither in respect of the prohibition of ovum donation for the
purposes of artificial procreation nor in respect of the prohibition
of sperm donation for in vitro fertilisation under section 3
of the Artificial Procreation Act, the Austrian legislature, at the
relevant time, exceeded the margin of appreciation afforded to it.
- Accordingly,
there has been no breach of Article 8 of the Convention as regards
all of the applicants.
- Nevertheless
the Court observes that the Austrian parliament has not, until now,
undertaken a thorough assessment of the rules governing artificial
procreation, taking into account the dynamic developments in science
and society noted above. The Court also notes that the Austrian
Constitutional Court, when finding that the legislature had complied
with the principle of proportionality under Article 8 § 2 of the
Convention, added that the principle adopted by the legislature to
permit homologous methods of artificial procreation as a rule and
insemination using donor sperm as an exception reflected the then
current state of medical science and the consensus in society. This,
however, did not mean that these criteria would not be subject to
developments which the legislature would have to take into account in
the future.
- The
Government have given no indication that the Austrian authorities
have actually followed up this aspect of the ruling of the
Constitutional Court. In this connection the Court reiterates that
the Convention has always been interpreted and applied in the light
of current circumstances (see Rees v. the United Kingdom, 17
October 1986, § 47, Series A no. 106). Even if it finds no
breach of Article 8 in the present case, the Court considers that
this area, in which the law appears to be continuously evolving and
which is subject to a particularly dynamic development in science and
law, needs to be kept under review by the Contracting States (see
Christine Goodwin, cited above, § 74, ECHR 2002 VI,
and Stafford v. the United Kingdom [GC], no. 46295/99,
§ 68, ECHR 2002 IV).
III. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 14 OF THE CONVENTION
READ IN CONJUNCTION WITH ARTICLE 8
- The
applicants complained that the prohibition of heterologous artificial
procreation techniques for in vitro fertilisation laid down by
section 3(1) and section 3(2) of the Artificial Procreation Act
had violated their rights under Article 14 read in conjunction with
Article 8.
- In
the circumstances of the present case the Court considers that the
substance of this complaint has been sufficiently taken into account
in the above examination of the applicants’ complaints under
Article 8 of the Convention. It follows that there is no cause for a
separate examination of the same facts from the standpoint of Article
14 read in conjunction with Article 8 of the Convention.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
- Dismisses, unanimously, the Government’s
preliminary objection;
- Holds, by thirteen votes to four, that there has
been no violation of Article 8 of the Convention;
3. Holds, unanimously, that it is not necessary to
examine the application also under Article 14 of the Convention
read in conjunction with Article 8 of the Convention.
Done in English and in French, and delivered at a public hearing in
the Human Rights Building, Strasbourg, on 3 November 2011.
Michael O’Boyle Jean-Paul Costa
Deputy
Registrar President
In accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74
§ 2 of the Rules of Court, the following separate opinions are
annexed to this judgment:
(a) Separate
opinion of Judge de Gaetano;
(b) Joint dissenting opinion of Judges Tulkens, Hirvelä,
Lazarova Trajkovska and Tsotsoria .
J.-P.C.
M.O.B.
SEPARATE OPINION OF JUDGE DE GAETANO
- I
voted with the majority in this case since I believe that the facts
do not disclose a violation of Article 8, or indeed of Article 14
read in conjunction with Article 8. Nevertheless, I have serious
misgivings about some of the implied reasoning in the majority
judgment.
- Human
dignity – and the underlying notion of the inherent value of
human life – is at the very basis of the Convention as a whole.
It may, of course, engage directly and immediately some Articles more
than others. One such provision is Article 8. The issue, adverted to
in paragraphs 85 et seq., of whether the instant case was to be
examined as one of “interference with the applicants’
right to respect for their family lives...or a failure by the State
to fulfil a positive obligation in that respect” requires first
an acknowledgment of the proper parameters of Article 8. While there
is no doubt that a couple’s decision to conceive a child is a
decision which pertains to the private and family life of that couple
(and, in the context of Article 12, to the couple’s right
to found a family), neither Article 8 nor Article 12 can be
construed as granting a right to conceive a child at any cost.
The “desire” for a child cannot, to my mind, become an
absolute goal which overrides the dignity of every human life.
- In
Dickson v. the United Kingdom, referred to in paragraph 81 of
the judgment, this Court held, in effect, that procreation detached
from the conjugal act fell within the ambit of Article 8. To my mind,
that decision did not advance human dignity but merely played second
fiddle to advances in medical science. Human procreation, instead of
being a personal act between a man and a woman, was reduced to a
medical or laboratory technique.
- The
present judgment suggests (see paragraph 106) that a “European
consensus” on the subject matter under examination is an
important consideration for determining whether or not there has been
a violation of the Convention (in this case of Article 8). Again,
this suggestion deflects attention from the necessity of asking
whether a particular act or omission or limitation enhances or
detracts from human dignity (apart from the fact that history teaches
that “European consensus” has in the past led to acts of
gross injustice both in Europe and beyond). Similarly, whether or not
the Austrian parliament has undertaken to examine thoroughly “the
rules governing artificial procreation, taking into account the
dynamic developments in science or society” (see paragraph 117)
is neither here nor there.
- The
issue of artificial procreation (as distinguished from medically
assisted natural procreation) raises, of course, other issues which
are beyond the scope of the present judgment, such as the freezing
and destruction of human embryos.
- Irrespective
of the advances in medicine and other sciences, the recognition of
the value and dignity of every person may require the prohibition of
certain acts in order to bear witness to the inalienable value and
intrinsic dignity of every human being. Such a prohibition –
like the prohibitions against racism, unjust discrimination and the
marginalisation of the ill and the disabled – is not a denial
of fundamental human rights but a positive acknowledgment and
advancement of the same.
JOINT DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGES TULKENS, HIRVELÄ,
LAZAROVA TRAJKOVSKA AND TSOTSORIA
(Translation)
- Regarding
this particularly sensitive and delicate question of medically
assisted procreation (MAP), we do not share the conclusion reached by
the majority that there has not been a violation of Article 8 of the
Convention in respect of the four applicants.
- In
the present case the first couple were not allowed to use donor eggs
and the second couple were not allowed to use donor sperm, in
accordance with the Artificial Procreation Act of 1992 which provides
that only gametes from spouses (or from persons living in a marital
relationship) can be used, thus prohibiting MAP with a third-party
donor.
- It
is important to note at the outset, however, that the Grand Chamber,
like the Chamber, confirms and extends the applicability of Article 8
of the Convention to the present situation. Indeed, since the Evans
v. the United Kingdom judgment of 10 April 2007 (Grand Chamber),
our Court has accepted that the concept of private life, within the
meaning of Article 8 of the Convention, covers the right to respect
for the decision to have or not to have a child (see § 71).
Moreover, in the Dickson v. the United Kingdom judgment of 4
December 2007 (Grand Chamber), which concerned the possibility of
artificial insemination facilities, the Court concluded that
Article 8 was applicable on the ground that the procreation
technique in question concerned the private and family life of the
persons concerned, specifying that that notion incorporated the right
to respect for their decision to become genetic parents (see §
66). In the instant case the Court states that “the right of a
couple to conceive a child and to make use of medically assisted
procreation for that purpose is also protected by Article 8, as such
a choice is an expression of private and family life” (see
paragraph 82 of the judgment). That acknowledgment is all the more
important in that, unlike the Chamber, the Grand Chamber subsequently
limits its examination to Article 8 taken alone, considering
that the substance of the applicants’ complaints falls within
that Article. Article 8 of the Convention thus appears to play an
enhanced role now regarding questions related to procreation and
reproduction.
- In
an area undergoing profound changes, both from a scientific and
medical point of view and in social and ethical terms, one feature of
the present case is the time factor. The decision of the
Austrian Constitutional Court dismissing the application lodged by
the applicants was adopted on 14 October 1999. In that
decision the court observed itself that “the choices the
legislature [of 1992] had made reflected the then current state of
medical science and the consensus in society. It did not mean,
however, that these criteria were not subject to developments which
the legislature would have to take into account in the future”
(see paragraph 22 of the judgment). The application was lodged with
our Court on 8 May 2000 and the Chamber judgment was adopted
on 1 April 2010. In these particular circumstances, we
find it artificial for the Court to confine its examination to the
situation as it existed when the Constitutional Court gave judgment
in 1999 and in the context at the time, thus deliberately depriving a
Grand Chamber judgment, delivered at the end of 2011, of any real
substance. Admittedly, the judgment takes care to specify that “the
Court is not prevented from having regard to subsequent developments
in making its assessment” (see paragraph 84 of the judgment),
but that specification remains a dead letter in actual fact.
- We
find this approach, for which there is no decisive support in the
Court’s case-law – in fact quite the contrary (see, inter
alia, Yaşa v. Turkey, 2 September 1998, §
94, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1998 VI, and
Maslov v. Austria [GC], no. 1638/03, §§ 91 and
92, 23 June 2008) – all the more problematical in that the main
thrust of the Grand Chamber’s reasoning is based on the
European consensus regarding gamete donation (eggs and sperm) which,
as we well know, has evolved considerably (see paragraphs 35 et seq.
of the judgment). Moreover, the judgment clearly acknowledges this
point: “From the material at the Court’s disposal, it
appears that since the Constitutional Court’s decision in the
present case many developments in medical science have taken place to
which a number of Contracting States have responded in their
legislation. Such changes might therefore have repercussions on the
Court’s assessment of the facts” (see paragraph 84 of the
judgment). They did not subsequently have any repercussions, though.
- More
specifically, and this is a weighty factor in our view, the majority
expressly notes that the Austrian parliament has still not, to date,
undertaken a thorough assessment of the rules governing artificial
procreation taking into account the dynamic developments in science
and society in this area, despite the fact that the Constitutional
Court – back in 1999 – had said that the criteria were
subject to developments which the legislature would have to take into
account (see paragraph 117 of the judgment). Ten years have passed,
however, and this has still not been followed up in any way.
Nevertheless, the Grand Chamber considers that the legislature has
complied with the principle of proportionality under Article 8 §
2 of the Convention and confines itself to stating that the area
“needs to be kept under review by the Contracting States” (see
paragraph 118 of the judgment).
- Even
it were acceptable in 2011 to have regard exclusively to the
situation existing in 1999, it would still be necessary for the
European consensus as it existed at the time to be carefully
ascertained in order to determine the breadth of the margin of
appreciation because “[w]here a particularly important facet of
an individual’s existence or identity is at stake, the margin
allowed to the State will normally be restricted” (see
paragraph 95 of the judgment). Accordingly, for example, in the
Connors v. the United Kingdom judgment of 27 May 2004 the
Court reiterated that the margin “will tend to be narrower
where the right at stake is crucial to the individual’s
effective enjoyment of “intimate” or key rights”
(see § 82), which is clearly the case here.
- Even
according to the comparative study on medically assisted procreation
undertaken by the Council of Europe in 39 countries in 1998, ovum
donation was prohibited in only eight countries at the time and sperm
donation in five countries. Despite that, the Court considers that
“the consensus is not, however, based on settled and
long-standing principles established in the law of the member States
but rather reflects a stage of development within a particularly
dynamic field of law and does not decisively narrow the margin of
appreciation of the State” (see paragraph 96 of the
judgment). The Court thus takes the unprecedented step of conferring
a new dimension on the European consensus and
applies a particularly low threshold to it, thus potentially
extending the States’ margin of appreciation beyond limits. The
current climate is probably conducive to such a backward step. The
differences in the Court’s approach to the determinative value
of the European consensus and a somewhat lax approach to the
objective indicia used to determine consensus
are pushed to their limit here, engendering great legal uncertainty.
- It
is significant that in a report of a meeting on “Medical,
ethical and social aspects of assisted reproduction” organised
by the World Health Organisation as far back as 2001, the
authors point out that “[i]t is commonly accepted that
infertility affects more than 80 million people worldwide. In
general, one in ten couples experiences primary or secondary
infertility” and “it is a central issue in the lives of
the individuals who suffer from it. It is a source of social and
psychological suffering for both men and women and can place great
pressures on the relationship within the couple”.
Today, “society has to cope with new challenges brought to the
forefront by [a] technological revolution [in the field of assisted
reproduction] and its social implications”.
In this respect, it seems to us important to recall Article 12 §
1 and Article 15 § 1 b) of the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1966) which recognizes the
right of everyone to enjoy the benefits of scientific progress and
its applications, and the right of everyone to enjoy the highest
standard of physical and mental health. Ultimately, what is at stake
here is not a question of choice between different techniques but,
more fundamentally, a restriction on access to heterologous in
vitro fertilisation constituting denial of access to available
treatment.
- Despite
the fact that the data at the relevant time mainly support the
opposite approach, and without taking into consideration the
developments that have taken place in the meantime, the Grand Chamber
unhesitatingly affirms that there is not yet “clear common
ground between the member States” and that the margin of
appreciation to be afforded to the respondent State “must be a
wide one”, allowing it to reconcile social realities with its
positions of principle. That reasoning implies that these factors
must now take precedence over the European consensus, which is a
dangerous departure from the Court’s case-law considering that
one of the Court’s tasks is precisely to contribute to
harmonising across Europe the rights guaranteed by the Convention.
- Together
with the European consensus, the margin of appreciation is thus the
other pillar of the Grand Chamber’s reasoning. This is
sometimes described as wide or broad (see paragraph 97 of the
judgment), and is sometimes referred to without any qualifying
adjective (see paragraphs 106 and 115 of the judgment), thereby
indicating a certain amount of hesitation as to the correct weight to
be given to that concept and to the seriousness of the limitation in
question. The result is that the Court’s position is unclear
and uncertain, or even opaque. Whilst acknowledging that the
legislature could have provided acceptable, perhaps more balanced,
legal solutions to the difficulties associated with egg and sperm
donation, the Grand Chamber confines itself to examining whether, by
adopting the impugned solution, it exceeded its margin of
appreciation (see paragraph 106 of the judgment). In our opinion,
this is not the issue here. On the one hand, where the States have
authorised MAP, the Court has to verify whether the benefit thereof
is granted in accordance with their obligations under the Convention
and whether they have chosen the means that impinge the least on
rights and freedoms. The margin of appreciation goes hand in hand
with European supervision. On the other hand, in a case as sensitive
as this one, the Court should not use the margin of appreciation as a
“pragmatic substitute for a thought-out approach to the problem
of proper scope of review”.
Ultimately, through the combined effect of the European consensus and
the margin of appreciation, the Court has chosen a minimum – or
even minimalist – approach that is hardly likely to enlighten
the national courts.
- One
of the arguments advanced by the Government and accepted by the
majority is particularly problematical in our view, namely, that
“there is no prohibition under Austrian law on going abroad to
seek treatment of infertility that uses artificial procreation
techniques not allowed in Austria and that in the event of successful
treatment the Civil Code contains clear rules on paternity and
maternity that respect the wishes of the parents (see paragraph 114
of the judgment).
- In
our view, the argument that couples can go abroad (without taking
into account the potential practical difficulties or the costs that
may be involved) does not address the real question, which is that of
interference with the applicants’ private life as a result of
the absolute prohibition in Austria; it totally fails to satisfy the
requirements of the Convention regarding the applicants’ right
to compliance with Article 8. Furthermore, by endorsing the
Government’s reasoning according to which, in the event that
treatment abroad is successful, the paternity and maternity of the
child will be governed by the Civil Code in accordance with the
parents’ wishes, the Grand Chamber considerably weakens the
strength of the arguments based on “the unease existing among
large sections of society as to the role and possibilities of modern
reproductive medicine”, particularly concerning the creation of
atypical family relations (see paragraph 113 of the judgment).
Lastly, if the concern for the child’s best interests –
allegedly endangered by recourse to prohibited means of reproduction
– disappear as a result of crossing the border, the same is
true of the concerns relating to the mother’s health referred
to several times by the respondent Government to justify the
prohibition.
- For
all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude that there has in this case
been a violation of Article 8 of the Convention in respect of the
four applicants.