Wednesday, February 21, 2024

More on the consequences of the Alabama case holding that embryos are "children" for purposes of a wrongful death case

 Yesterday I posted a comment about a recent case in Alabama holding that plaintiffs had a valid cause of action for wrongful death based on the accidental destruction of frozen embryos.  I updated that post soon after I posted it, so if you read it immediately after it was picked up in your news aggregator you may want to go back to read it again because I added a quote from an article by someone else that had some good analysis.

The other part of the equation is the discussion of the possible consequences of the decision for issues outside of the litigation and outside of tort law in general.  That discussion picked up quite a bit today in the news.  Some of those consequences are already coming true:  The University of Alabama has terminated providing IVF care!  The University Hospital is a huge public facility so this decision will affect a lot of patients.  The hospital said they would continue to extract eggs, but they would not fertilize them.

 Here are a few links to articles on the subject.  

The Guardian: "Alabama’s supreme court ruled embryos are ‘extrauterine children’. IVF patients are worried"

MSNBC: Alabama’s embryos ruling is a terrifying preview of another Trump presidency [this link lead to a page that has a video on top; the video is not related to the story; read the article below the video]

NPR (3 minute audio): Alabama's largest hospital says it is halting IVF treatments in wake of court ruling

The Guardian: Alabama university pauses IVF care after frozen embryos deemed ‘children’

Politico: Major Alabama hospital stops IVF treatment after court rules embryos are children

NPR (3 minute audio): University of Alabama in Birmingham pauses IVF procedures due to embryo ruling

The Hill: Alabama hospitals halt IVF after ruling

The Hill:  How Alabama’s frozen embryo decision is shaking the nation: What you need to know

Politico: ‘Another hot potato’: Alabama’s IVF ruling risks political, legal backlash

Alex Wagner Tonight (video segment)

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Alabama Supreme Court rules frozen embryos are ‘children’ for purposes of the state's wrongful death statutes -- UPDATED

As you probably have heard by now, the Alabama Supreme Court recently ruled that a group of in vitro fertilization (IVF) patients could sue for wrongful death because their frozen embryos were destroyed while in the defendant's facility.  

The decision has gathered a lot of attention (see links below) and it does have significant consequences, but there are a couple of things that the coverage is not mentioning.  First, the decision is not unprecedented and, in Alabama's case, it is not that surprising since the state's supreme court had already decided (years ago) to recognize a wrongful death claim for the death of a fetus.

Typically, wrongful death statutes state the circumstances under which survivors of "a person" who dies because of someone's negligence can recover.  And, typically, that language ("a person") is subject to interpretation.  Some statutes provide a definition, while in other states courts have had to interpret the meaning of the words or to decipher the intent of the legislature. 

On the issue of who should be considered a person, jurisdictions fall into one of three categories:  (1) those that define a person as someone who is born alive (which requires evidence of a live birth before the death for which the wrongful death suit is brought; (2) those who consider life to begin at conception (Illinois uses this approach in its statute) and (3) those who "compromise" by holding that "personhood" starts at the point of "viability" (usually defined as the point in time when the fetus could survive independently of the mother).

Back in 2011 or 2012, Alabama decided a case adopting the view that life begins at conception.  In that case, the court held that it would be an "unfair and arbitrary endeavor to draw a line that allows recovery on behalf of a fetus injured before viability that dies after achieving viability but that prevents recovery on behalf of a fetus injured that, as a result of those injuries, does not survive to viability."  I wrote about that case here.  Alabama then reaffirmed its decision in 2017.  

And Alabama is not alone in considering this question.  I do not remember how these cases were ultimately decided but I know the question was litigated in  Nebraska.  Also, in 2013 trial court in Colorado dismissed a wrongful death claim for the death of a fetus, and the state's supreme court denied review.   (the links are to my posts at the time the cases were reported).

I wrote a short comment on the issue back in 2015 here and again in 2021 here.

One can say that once the court took the position that there is a right to a wrongful death claim for the death of an unviable fetus, the view of the court is that life begins at conception.  But then the question becomes what constitutes "conception"?  And that is where the question of the distinction between a fetus, a fertilized egg, a frozen embryo and an implanted embryo becomes important.  I have not seen commentary about that, other than in a short article here.  This is the only comment I have seen that makes the important distinction between cases that involve recognizing a cause of action for the wrongful death of a fetus and the recent case related to an frozen embryo:

Embryos don’t just automatically turn into kids. IVF families can go through multiple implants in an effort to get a child. And for this reason, clinics try to successfully fertilize a number of eggs in case of failure. That creates a bunch of embryos that won’t end up being implanted and that probably wouldn’t result in a child even if they were. Without the freedom to get rid of those cells after the fact, IVF is an untenable industry.

This case, by itself, doesn’t get that far. Families who consent to ending the process aren’t going to sue. But the court didn’t limit itself to giving the plaintiffs a cause of action, and instead went on a tear laying the groundwork to expand the state’s criminal laws to not only shut down IVF, but to greenlight the next prosecutor who wants to charge women with murder for having a miscarriage.

You can read the Alabama Court's opinion here.  To read more commentary about the decision, you can go to the links below. 

The Hill

Why the Alabama Supreme Court’s ruling on embryos matters

NPR (4 minute audio)

Politico

NPR

Courthouse News Service



Saturday, February 3, 2024

Follow up on the possible criminal liability of a parent

 A few days ago I posted a comment on the ongoing prosecution of the mother of a child who engaged in a mass shooting at a school.  The case is a criminal prosecution but some of the issues are similar and relevant for tort law because they involve the possibility of imposing vicarious liability (which is not what is being charged) and the underlying issue of causation (which is very much at issue in the case).  

I am following up on this today because Joseph Margulies. a Professor of Government at Cornell University, recently published a comment on these issues over at Justicia. In it he points out, correctly, that one important issue in the case (as in a torts case) is the question of proximate cause and, although he does not mention it by name, the question of duty.  And, in the end, he questions whether it would be a good idea to impose a duty on parents that could result in criminal liability under the circumstances of the case.  The comment is short and you can read it here.