In re Marriage of Rooks

2018 CO 85, 429 P.3d 579
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 29, 2018
DocketSupreme Court Case 16SC906
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 2018 CO 85 (In re Marriage of Rooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado 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 Rooks, 2018 CO 85, 429 P.3d 579 (Colo. 2018).

Opinion

JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶ 1 In vitro fertilization ("IVF") has given individuals and couples who are unable to conceive conventionally the opportunity to have genetic children. IVF technology permits the pre-embryos created through this process to be cryogenically frozen and later implanted in the carrier's uterus to be brought to term. IVF thus allows individuals and couples to delay childbearing while preserving the pre-embryos and the possibility of future children. However, when married couples turn to this technology and later divorce, IVF can present a host of legal dilemmas, including how to resolve disagreements over the disposition of cryogenically preserved pre-embryos that remain at the time of dissolution.

¶ 2 Here, a written agreement with the fertility clinic signed by Ms. Mandy Rooks and Mr. Drake Rooks fails to specify what should be done with their remaining pre-embryos in the event of divorce. Instead, per their agreement, the couple has turned to the dissolution court to resolve their dispute. Ms. Rooks wishes to keep the couple's pre-embryos to use them to become pregnant. Mr. Rooks does not want to have genetic children using the pre-embryos and wishes to have them discarded.

¶ 3 We are asked to decide how a court should determine, in dissolution of marriage proceedings, which spouse should receive remaining cryogenically preserved pre-embryos produced by the couple during their marriage. 1 Although this case fundamentally *581 concerns the disposition of a couple's marital property, it presents difficult issues of procreational autonomy for which there are no easy answers because it pits one spouse's right to procreate directly against the other spouse's equivalently important right to avoid procreation, and because the fundamental liberty and privacy interests at stake are deeply personal and emotionally charged. And although Colorado statutes touch on some aspects of assisted reproduction, they do not address what should happen with a couple's cryogenically preserved pre-embryos when the couple divorces. Thus, in the absence of specific legislative guidance in these circumstances, we adopt an approach that seeks to balance the parties' interests given the legislature's general command in dissolution proceedings requiring the court to divide the marital property equitably.

¶ 4 Considering the nature and equivalency of the underlying liberty and privacy interests at stake, a court presiding over dissolution proceedings should strive, where possible, to honor both parties' interests in procreational autonomy when resolving disputes over a couple's cryogenically preserved pre-embryos. Thus, we hold that a court should look first to any existing agreement expressing the spouses' intent regarding disposition of the couple's remaining pre-embryos in the event of divorce. In the absence of such an agreement, a court should seek to balance the parties' interests when awarding the pre-embryos. In so doing, a court should consider (1) the intended use of the pre-embryos by the spouse who wants to preserve them (for example, whether the spouse wants to use the pre-embryos to become a genetic parent him- or herself, or instead wants to donate them); (2) the demonstrated physical ability (or inability) of the spouse seeking to implant the pre-embryos to have biological children through other means; (3) the parties' original reasons for undertaking IVF (for example, whether the couple sought to preserve a spouse's future ability to bear children in the face of fertility-implicating medical treatment); (4) the hardship for the spouse seeking to avoid becoming a genetic parent, including emotional, financial, or logistical considerations; (5) a spouse's demonstrated bad faith or attempt to use the pre-embryos as unfair leverage in the divorce proceedings; and (6) other considerations relevant to the parties' specific situation. However, a court should not consider whether the spouse seeking to use the pre-embryos to become a genetic parent can afford a child. Nor shall the sheer number of a party's existing children, standing alone, be a reason to preclude implantation of the pre-embryos. Finally, a court should not consider whether the spouse seeking to use the pre-embryos to become a genetic parent could instead adopt a child or otherwise parent non-biological children.

¶ 5 Here, the parties' written agreement does not squarely resolve how remaining cryogenically preserved pre-embryos should be allocated in the event of divorce, and thus, for purposes of this dissolution proceeding, the disposition of these remaining pre-embryos must be resolved by balancing the parties' interests. Because the trial court and court of appeals considered certain inappropriate factors in attempting to balance the parties' interests here, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case with directions to return the matter to the trial court to balance the parties' interests under the framework we adopt today.

I. Facts and Procedural History

¶ 6 Petitioner Ms. Mandy Rooks and Respondent Mr. Drake Rooks married in 2002. They separated in August 2014, and Mr. Rooks filed a petition for dissolution of marriage the following month. When the trial court entered its final orders in the dissolution proceedings in 2015, Mr. and Ms. Rooks had three children, and Ms. Rooks was not pregnant.

¶ 7 Mr. and Ms. Rooks used IVF to have their three children. In 2011, and again in 2013, they entered into agreements with the Colorado Center for Reproductive Medicine ("CCRM") and Fertility Laboratories of Colorado ("FLC") for the IVF services. The agreements identify Ms. Rooks as the "Female Patient" and Mr. Rooks as the "Spouse/Partner." These agreements provide information about the IVF and cryopreservation process.

*582 ¶ 8 IVF is a procedure that helps those facing fertility issues to become pregnant. The technique involves several steps: (1) developing eggs in the contributor's ovaries using hormones to stimulate ovulation, (2) removing the eggs from the contributor's ovaries, (3) placing the eggs and sperm together in a laboratory to allow fertilization to occur, and (4) transferring fertilized pre-embryos into the carrier's uterus.

¶ 9 As described in the agreements with CCRM and FLC, the purpose of cryopreservation is to preserve excess pre-embryos produced in an IVF treatment cycle in order to (1) reduce the risks of multiple gestation, (2) preserve fertility potential in the face of certain medical procedures, and (3) minimize the medical risk and cost to the patient by decreasing the number of hormone stimulation cycles and egg retrievals.

¶ 10 According to the agreements, pre-embryos are frozen on day 1, 2, 3, 5, or 6 after fertilization. The pre-embryos frozen on day 1 are at the pronuclear stage, when the single cell zygote has two nuclei. Pre-embryos frozen on day 2 or day 3 are at the multicellular stage, when the pre-embryo has four to eight cells. In most cases, pre-embryos are frozen on day 5 or 6 at the blastocyst stage, when the pre-embryo has eighty or more cells, an inner fluid-filled cavity, and a small cluster of inner cells. The FLC embryologists transfer the pre-embryos to a special solution where they are cooled to -35° C in a machine designed to control the rate of freezing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pham v. Super. Ct.
California Court of Appeal, 2025
Elken v. Bain
2025 COA 83 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2025)
Bruce Wohlers, Jr. v. Stephanie Wohlers
Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2024
Allyson Scott v. Richard Barnes
2024 Ark. App. 418 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2024)
Dawn Pieper v. Jacob Thomas Carlson
Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2024
David Freed v. Elizabeth Freed
Indiana Court of Appeals, 2024
20231207_C363720_59_363720D.Opn.Pdf
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2023
Jonathan Smith v. Lauri Smith
Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2023
In re Marriage of Katsap
2022 IL App (2d) 210706 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2022)
Marriage of Olsen
Colorado Court of Appeals, 2022
Marriage of Bowers
Colorado Court of Appeals, 2021
Jocelyn P. v. Joshua P.
250 A.3d 373 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2021)
In re Marriage of Hogsett & Neale
2021 CO 1 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2021)
In re the Marriage of Edi L. HOGSETT v. Marcia E. NEALE
478 P.3d 713 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2021)
Bilbao v. Goodwin
333 Conn. 599 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2019)
In re Marriage of Olsen
2019 COA 80 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2019)
Penniman v. Univ. Hosps. Health Sys., Inc.
130 N.E.3d 333 (Court of Appeals of Ohio, Eighth District, Cuyahoga County, 2019)
Terrell v. Torres
438 P.3d 681 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 CO 85, 429 P.3d 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-rooks-colo-2018.