In Re Marriage of Dahl and Angle

194 P.3d 834, 222 Or. App. 572, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1452
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 8, 2008
DocketDR04090713; A133697
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 194 P.3d 834 (In Re Marriage of Dahl and Angle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Marriage of Dahl and Angle, 194 P.3d 834, 222 Or. App. 572, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1452 (Or. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*574 ARMSTRONG, P. J.

In this marital dissolution case, husband appeals a dissolution judgment that ordered the destruction of six cryopreserved embryos (frozen embryos) 1 that were formed using husband’s sperm and wife’s eggs and that have been held in storage at Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU). For the reasons stated below, we affirm.

Although we review the evidence de novo, ORS 19.415(3), we will defer to the trial court’s implied and express credibility findings. Olson and Olson, 218 Or App 1, 3, 178 P3d 272 (2008). Husband and wife married in March 2000. Wife bore one son, J, whom she and husband conceived by traditional means. In May 2004, the parties decided to try to conceive a child through in vitro fertilization (IVF), which involved OHSU staff harvesting eggs from wife, combining those eggs with husband’s sperm to form embryos, and implanting some of the embryos in wife’s uterus. After several failed attempts to implant embryos through that process, the parties discontinued that effort. Soon after, the parties decided to dissolve their marriage. The parties reached an agreement on all matters pertaining to the dissolution of their marriage except for one: the disposition of six frozen embryos that remained from the IVF process.

At the time of the IVF procedure, the parties and OHSU executed an Embryology Laboratory Specimen Storage Agreement (agreement) that detailed the terms of *575 storage of embryos created through the IVF procedure. Section 5 of the agreement addressed the parties’ ability to transfer and dispose of the embryos. As is relevant here, that section provides:

“In connection with requests for transfer of the Embryos or upon termination of this Agreement, UNIVERSITY is hereby irrevocably authorized and directed to transfer or dispose of the Embryos as follows:
“A. In accordance with the written joint authorization of CLIENTS pursuant to the terms of this Agreement, or if one of said CLIENTS is deceased (as established by a certified copy of a death certificate) in accordance with the surviving CLIENT’S such authorization; or
“B. If the CLIENTS are unable or unwilling to execute a joint authorization, the CLIENTS hereby designate the following CLIENT or other representative to have the sole and exclusive right to authorize and direct UNIVERSITY to transfer or dispose of the Embryos, pursuant to the terms of this Agreement[.]”

(Emphasis added.) Directly below paragraph 5B, wife’s name is printed in a space designated “Name,” and, next to wife’s name, her initials (“LD”) and husband’s initials (“DA”) appear in spaces designated for the parties’ approval. Below that, the following paragraph states:

“Provided however, prior to any transfer/thaw in accordance with the foregoing, if any court of competent jurisdiction shall award to either CLIENT all rights with respect to the Embryos to the exclusion of the other CLIENT, by an order or decree which is final and binding as to them, then UNIVERSITY shall have the right thereafter, whether or not a party to the proceedings in which such order or decree is issued, to deal exclusively with the CLIENT to whom such rights were awarded, without liability or accountability to the other CLIENT.”

Paragraph C then sets forth steps that OHSU will take to dispose of the embryos in the event that (1) the parties refuse to comply with the provisions in paragraphs A and B, (2) either party fails to comply with provisions of the agreement within 60 days of written demand from OHSU, or (3) both parties die. Those steps entail, first, OHSU using reasonable efforts to accomplish up to three alternatives, *576 with the first two requiring the approval of husband and wife. The first alternative provides for OHSU to donate the embryos to another woman who is attempting to initiate a pregnancy, in which case both husband and wife would need to sign and have notarized a donation consent form and would waive and release any claims to the embryos or any resulting offspring. The spaces designated for the parties’ election of that option are blank. The second alternative provides for OHSU either to donate the embryos to a recognized research facility approved by its Institutional Review Board or to use the embryos in its own laboratory. The initials “LD” and “DA” appear in the designated spaces below that alternative. Paragraph C then reads:

“If neither alternative (1) or (2) is selected, or if UNIVERSITY has been unable to accomplish the selected alternative(s) in accordance with the foregoing, UNIVERSITY may thaw and discard the Embryos.”

The final page of the agreement has the parties’ signatures, which were executed and notarized on May 14, 2004. In addition, every page of the agreement has spaces for the parties’ and the OHSU representative’s initials; each of those spaces is marked with the initials “LD,” “DA,” and those of the OHSU representative.

Both wife and husband testified at a hearing in the dissolution proceeding on the disposition of the six embryos. Wife testified that, when she and husband signed the agreement, they had intended to use the embryos to create a child for themselves as a married couple and did not intend to use the embryos if they were no longer married. She further stated that they had discussed what would happen to any embryos that were not used by them and had agreed that they would donate the embryos to a facility for scientific research. Her understanding of the agreement was that, if she and husband disagreed on the disposition of the embryos, she would have sole and exclusive right to direct OHSU to transfer or dispose of the embryos. She opposed having the embryos donated to another woman for implantation. She expressed concern that, if the embryos were successfully implanted, then the resulting offspring might eventually attempt to contact J, as his or her genetic sibling. In addition, *577 she did not want to produce another child with husband, and she stated that, if she were to produce more children genetically, she would not want someone other than her to raise them.

Husband denied having initialed or read the OHSU agreement, and stated that he had signed the last page of the document without a notary present and without having seen the rest of the document. He said that he believed that the “embryos are life,” and opposed their destruction or donation to science because “there’s no pain greater than having participated in the demise of your own child.” Accordingly, he wished to have the embryos donated to others who were attempting to conceive. He testified that he would do “everything” to protect wife’s and J’s confidentiality related to the donation of the embryos, but acknowledged that he could not guarantee their anonymity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 P.3d 834, 222 Or. App. 572, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 1452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-dahl-and-angle-orctapp-2008.