Kyresha Lefever v. Lanesha Matthews

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 2021
Docket353106
StatusPublished

This text of Kyresha Lefever v. Lanesha Matthews (Kyresha Lefever v. Lanesha Matthews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kyresha Lefever v. Lanesha Matthews, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

KYRESHA LEFEVER, FOR PUBLICATION April 1, 2021 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 353106 Wayne Circuit Court LANESHA MATTHEWS, LC No. 19-103263-DP

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: GLEICHER, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and RIORDAN, JJ.

GLEICHER, J. (concurring).

Kyresha LeFever and Lanesha Matthews agreed to create and parent a child together. Using artificial reproductive technology, their efforts resulted in the birth of twins. The majority holds that both women are legal mothers of the twins. I fully concur.

As the majority cogently explains, the trial court erred by interpreting the Surrogate Parenting Act (SPA), MCL 722.851 et seq., as an impediment to the parental standing of Matthews, who bore the children. No surrogacy contract existed and neither woman agreed to relinquish her parental rights, removing this case from the SPA’s ambit. The trial court further erred, the majority points out, by plucking excerpts from other unrelated, inapplicable statutory provisions in an effort to condition a mother’s right to parent on a genetic relationship. I write separately to propose an additional analysis, and to address the constitutional questions the majority abjures.

I. THE COMMON LAW AND THE CHILD CUSTODY ACT

The novel legal issue presented in this custody dispute is whether Matthews, who bore twins while in a committed, nonmarital relationship with Kyresha LeFever, is entitled to be recognized as the children’s mother. Based on the fact LeFever supplied the ova that were fertilized by donor sperm and implanted in Matthews’ uterus, the trial court determined that only LeFever qualified as the twins’ “natural parent.” Matthews, the trial court ruled, was a “third party” entitled to none of the rights of parenthood. In rejecting the trial court’s reasoning and ruling, the majority centers its analysis on the Child Custody Act (CCA), MCL 722.21 et seq., specifically the act’s definition of “parent” as “the natural or adoptive parent of a child.” MCL

-1- 722.22(i). My colleagues devote considerable effort to unraveling the meaning of “natural parent,” consulting four different dictionaries before ultimately concluding that the term “is elastic enough to include” a child’s birth mother.1

This dictionary-driven search for a suitable definition is unnecessary. A woman who gives birth to a child is that child’s natural mother under the common law, and there is no reason to look elsewhere for meaning.

For centuries, “natural mother” has meant a woman who gestates and bears a child; the common law knew no other possibility. “Historically, gestation proved genetic parentage beyond doubt, so it was unnecessary to distinguish between gestational and genetic mothers.” Roosevelt, The Newest Property: Reproductive Technologies and the Concept of Parenthood, 39 Santa Clara L Rev 79, 97 (1998). This case involves children born to lesbian women who were legally prohibited from marrying at the time of their conception. Under the common law, an unmarried woman who gave birth was always considered the mother and had no need to legally establish her custodial rights. “At the moment of birth, the nonmarital child—unlike the marital child—had one legal parent: the mother. Gestation and birth evidenced the biological fact of maternity and furnished a relationship to the child that justified legal recognition.” NeJaime, The Nature of Parenthood, 126 Yale LJ 2260, 2267 (2017).2

1 The majority also unnecessarily relies on dicta from Stankevich v Milliron, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued October 17, 2013 (Docket No. 310710), slip op at 2 (Stankevich I), defining a “natural parent” as “a blood relation.” Stankevich I arose from a custody suit brought by a woman whose wife gave birth to the couple’s child. The panel granted summary disposition to the defendant, holding that the plaintiff lacked standing because she was not a “natural parent.” Relying on a dictionary, Stankevich I held that as used in the phrase “natural parent,” “natural” meant “ ‘related by blood rather than by adoption: one’s natural parents.’ ” Id. Our Supreme Court vacated Stankevich I based on Obergefell v Hodges, 576 US 644; 135 S Ct 2584; 192 L Ed 2d 609 (2015), and remanded for further proceedings. Stankevich v Milliron, 498 Mich 877 (2015) (Stankevich II). On remand and in recounting the history of the case, this Court “noted” its holding in Stankevich I that the plaintiff was not a “natural parent” because she was not “related to the child by blood,” but held that because of the parties’ marriage, the plaintiff was “not barred from asserting” the “equitable-parent doctrine” described in Atkinson v Atkinson, 160 Mich App 601; 408 NW2d 516 (1987). Stankevich v Milliron (On Remand), 313 Mich App 233, 236; 882 NW2d 194 (2015) (Stankevich III). The “related by blood” definition advanced in Stankevich I was inconsequential to the holding of Stankevich III and has no precedential force. The term that requires interpretation in this case is “natural parent,” the phrase the Legislature selected, rather than a term identified by an appellate court in a now-vacated opinion. 2 See also Roberts, The Genetic Tie, 62 U Chi L Rev 209, 253 (1995) (“At common law, a woman was the legal mother of the child to whom she gave birth.”); D’Alton-Harrison, Mater Semper Incertus Est: Who’s Your Mummy?, 22 Medical Law Rev 357, 357 (2014) (“In English law, the legal term for father has been given a broad definition but the definition of mother remains rooted

-2- When the CCA was enacted in 1970, the Legislature undoubtedly assumed that a woman who bore a child would automatically qualify as the child’s natural mother; it made no provision for an alternate choice, and nothing in the act even remotely contemplates a dispute regarding maternity. Three decades later, when enacting the Estates and Protected Individuals Code (EPIC), MCL 700.1101 et seq., the Legislature described various methods through which a man may attain the status of a “natural parent,” but again presumed that a woman bearing a child was the child’s “natural” mother. See MCL 700.2114. Because the plain and ordinary meaning of the term “natural parent” includes a woman who bears a child, I would hold that Matthews is a “natural parent.”3 Accordingly, I concur with the majority that a genetic connection to one’s child is unnecessary to establish maternity.

II. THE CONSTITUTION

The majority elects against addressing the constitutional arguments made by Matthews and 4 amici. In my view, the constitutional issues presented are weighty and merit consideration, particularly because they may become relevant on remand and in similar cases.

Excluding a married birth mother who achieved parenthood through assisted reproductive technology from consideration as a “natural parent” poses serious equal protection problems. Michigan law provides that a husband is the legal parent of a child born to his wife through assisted reproduction technology if he consented to the procedure. MCL 333.2824(6). Analogously, a married woman in a same-sex relationship should have precisely the same right.

Matthews and LeFever could not have legally married in Michigan when the twins were born, and when they separated, same-sex marriage remained illegal. At that time the common law did not authorize or even recognize the concept of two legal fathers. See Michael H v Gerald D, 491 US 110, 118; 109 S Ct 2333; 105 L Ed 2d 91 (1989) (“California law, like nature itself, makes no provision for dual fatherhood.”). Before Obergefell, dual motherhood was also considered legally impossible.

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Bluebook (online)
Kyresha Lefever v. Lanesha Matthews, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kyresha-lefever-v-lanesha-matthews-michctapp-2021.