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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> In the matter of An Application for Judicial Review v R. [1997] EWCA Civ 4003 (06 February 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1997/4003.html Cite as: (1997) 35 BMLR 1, [1997] 2 FLR 742, [1997] 2 FCR 501, [1999] Fam 151, [1997] EWCA Civ 4003, [1997] 2 WLR 806, [1997] Eu LR 370, [1997] COD 261, [1997] 2 All ER 687, [1997] Fam Law 401, [1997] 2 CMLR 591 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (CROWN OFFICE LIST)
(THE PRESIDENT, THE RT HON SIR STEPHEN BROWN)
Strand London WC2 |
||
B e f o r e :
(LORD WOOLF)
LORD JUSTICE WAITE
LORD JUSTICE HENRY
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW | ||
R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
HUMAN FERTILISATION AND EMBRYOLOGY AUTHORITY | ||
Respondent | ||
EX PARTE DB | ||
Appellant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2HD
Tel: 0171 831 3183
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR D PANNICK QC and MS D ROSE (Instructed by Morgan Bruce & Co, Cardiff CF1 3DP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"(a) Parliament has enacted a careful code allowing for the posthumous use of sperm only if specific requirements are met. In particular there is a clear requirement for the written and effective consent of a man, after he has had the opportunity to receive counselling and after he has had a proper opportunity to consider the implications of a posthumous birth. These important requirements were not satisfied in this case.(b) The Authority does not think that it would be right to allow Mrs Blood to export the sperm to avoid the specific requirements which prevent her from using the sperm in this country. The Authority noted that Mrs Blood has no prior connection with any country to which she wishes to export the sperm.
(c) In the context of the use of genetic material, the Authority considers that any consent should be given in clear and formal terms by the person himself or herself and that the Authority is reluctant to seek to identify a person's wishes from the evidence of another person.
(d) The Authority also bore in mind that Mr Blood had not given any consideration, let alone consent, to the export of his sperm to another country."
1. Treatment in the UK as a matter of statutory construction.
2. Treatment abroad as a matter of domestic law.
3. Treatment abroad as a matter of EC law.
1. The construction issue.
2. The domestic scrutiny issue.
3. The European scrutiny issue.
1. Storage and use in this country.
2. The law which applies to the export of sperm.
3. The validity of the Authority's decision.
The Structure of 1990 Act
"1.(I) In this Act except where otherwise stated
(a) embryo means a live human embryo where fertilisation is complete and
(b) references to an embryo include a egg in the process of fertilisation ...."
"4(1) No person shall -
(a) store any gametes, or
(b) in the course of providing treatment services for any woman, use the sperm of any man unless the services are being provided for the woman and man together or use the eggs of any other woman ...
except in pursuance of a licence."
As to the meaning of "store" section 2(2) provides assistance. It provides:
"(ii) References in this Act to keeping in relation to embryos or gametes, include keeping while preserved, whether preserved by cryopreservation or in any other way ; and embryos or gametes so kept are referred to in this Act as "stored" ( and "store" and "storage" are to be interpreted accordingly).
"1) A consent under this Schedule must be given in writing and, in this Schedule `effective consent' means a consent ... which has not been withdrawn ...
2) A consent to the storage of any gametes must -
(a) specify the maximum period of storage 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 ..."
Paragraph 3 deals with the procedure for giving consent:
"1) Before a person gives a consent under this Schedule -
(a) he must be given suitable opportunity to seek proper counselling about the implications of taking the proposed steps, and ....
(b) he must be provided with such relevant information as is proper."
"(1). A person's gametes must not be used for the purpose of treatment services unless there is an effective consent by that person to their being so used and they are used in accordance with the terms of the consent.
(2). A persons gametes must not be received for use for those purposes unless there is effective consent by that person to their being so used.
(3). This paragraph does not apply to the use of a person's gametes for the purpose of that person, or that person and another person together, receiving treatment services."
The exception in paragraph 5 is the counterpart of the exception in section 4(1)(b)
"A person's gametes must not be kept in storage unless there is an effective consent by that person to their storage and they are stored in accordance with the consent."
In this case there was no effective consent under the Act.
"Directions may authorise any person to whom a licence applies ... to send gametes or embryos outside the United Kingdom in such circumstances and subject to such conditions as may be specified in the directions, and directions may by virtue of this subsection may provide for sections 12-14 of this Act to have effect with such modifications as may be specified in the directions."
This subsection gives to the Authority a broad discretion to give directions allowing the export of gametes and to lay down the conditions under which that export is to take place.
1. Storage and Use in this Country
The Position as to Storage
Treatment
"(b) the sperm of a man, or any embryo the creation of which was brought about with his sperm, was used after his death, he is not to be treated as the father of the child."
2. The Law which applies to the export of sperm.
"the medical operation, normally performed for remuneration, by which the pregnancy of a woman coming from another Member State is terminated in compliance with the law of the Member State in which the operation is carried out is a (cross border) service within the meaning of Article 60 of the EEC Treaty"
"advisedly, because such national rules may nevertheless be compatible with the said Treaty provisions where they are justified by imperative requirements of public interest. In addition, I conclude that in principle Community citizens derive from Articles 59 and 60, where they are applicable, the right to obtain information regarding services lawfully provided in another Member State ..."(para 21 p4715)
"46... Article 59 prohibits even non discriminatory restrictions imposed by the Member State of destination. It would be incongruous if the opposite view were taken with regard to restrictions imposed by the Member State of origin ....
47. Whether a rule of the Member State of origin constitutes a restriction on the freedom to provide services should be determined by reference to a functional criterion, that is to say, whether it substantially impedes the ability of the persons established in this territory to provide intra-Community services. It seems to me that that criterion is consistent with the notion of an internal market and more appropriate than the criterion of discrimination. (emphasis added)
48. From the point of view of the realisation of the internal market, what matters is not whether the rules of a Member State are discriminatory but whether they have an adverse effect on its establishment or functioning. The court has held that the concept of the Common Market involves the elimination of all obstacles to inter-community trade "in order to merge the national market into a single market bringing about conditions as close as possible to those of a genuine internal market". National rules, whether of the "importing" or of the "exporting" Member State which would substantially impede the exercise of the freedom to provide services, adversely affect the establishment and functioning of the internal market and therefore fall within the scope of the Treaty."
"National legislation may fall within the ambit of Article 59 of the Treaty, even if it is applicable without distinction, when it is liable to prohibit or otherwise impede the activities of a provider of services established in another Member State where he lawfully provides similar services."
3 The Authority's Decision in this Case
"The facts of the case need not be repeated as they are well known. The Court of appeal has allowed Mrs Blood's appeal because although the Authority's decision was correct that treatment in the UK could not take place without Mr Blood's written consent, the Authority was not properly advised as to the importance of EC law as to treatment in Belgium. Mrs Blood has the right to be treated in Belgium with her husband's sperm unless there are good public policy reasons for not allowing this to happen.
The Authority also appears not to have had sufficient regard to the fact that in future it will not be possible for this problem to arise because under UK law Mr Blood's sperm should not have been preserved as he had not given his written consent. If the sperm had not been preserved, it could not have been exported. (The Court does not criticise the fact of preservation of the sperm in the circumstances of this case).
Order: Appeal allowed with costs here and below. There will be a declaration that the November decision refusing an export direction was unlawful with liberty to apply as to mandamus or any other relief.