当冷冻保存的生殖材料丢失或损坏时,合同救济不需要对有抱负的父母进行补偿:当违反合同导致失去怀孕自己亲生孩子的机会时,对情绪障碍的相应损害赔偿的恢复。

Journal of law and health Pub Date : 2021-01-01
Joseph M Hnylka
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)报告称,在过去十年中,辅助生殖技术(ART)的使用翻了一番。体外受精(IVF)是ART最普遍的形式。在体外受精过程中,提取女性的卵子,在实验室环境中受精,然后植入子宫。许多体外受精程序使用冷冻保存的卵子或精子。最近的一项调查显示,在冠状病毒大流行期间,冷冻保存咨询呈指数级增长,增幅高达60%。据估计,美国各地有超过100万个胚胎被储存在低温保存设施中。随着冷冻保存的使用增加,储存的生殖材料丢失或破坏的可能性也在增加。最近,在俄亥俄州的大学医院生育诊所,超过4000个冷冻保存的人类胚胎在无意中被破坏,而最近在加利福尼亚州的一家生育诊所,一个冷冻保存罐发生故障,导致3500个卵子和胚胎被破坏。当生殖物质丢失或毁坏时,有抱负的父母;主要伤害是情感上的;它本质上是非金钱的。如果失去孩子摧毁了一对夫妇成为父母的唯一希望,这种情感伤害就尤为严重。尽管由于失去孩子而遭受了严重的情感伤害,但有抱负的父母往往没有明确的法律依据来追回情感障碍损害赔偿。虽然情绪干扰损害赔偿很少因违反合同而被判,但文章解释了为什么基于合同法的当前趋势,如《合同》第353条重述(第二)所示,这种赔偿是合理的,并假设诊所和ART专业人员在签订合同时意识到,在违约的情况下,情绪干扰特别可能发生。学者们注意到,当生殖材料丢失或毁坏时,对情感伤害的侵权赔偿通常是不可用的,因为情感伤害不是寄生于身体伤害,也不能克服传统的创伤性精神疾病恢复障碍,因为他们既不在“危险区域”,也不是损失时的旁观者。因此,对于居住在传统障碍司法管辖区的有抱负的父母来说,违约损害赔偿可能是他们恢复情感伤害的唯一希望。这篇文章假设ART诊所和专业人员在签订合同时对原告储存生殖材料的特殊原因有实际的或建设性的了解,即为了实现以后的怀孕,以便支持对情绪障碍的后果损害赔偿。这种对合同目的的了解,加上交易的性质和周围环境,使ART诊所和专业人员在签订合同时注意到,违约特别可能导致情绪困扰。该条还假定,冷冻保存协议中所载的典型的广泛的免责条款不应强制执行,这些条款试图否定冷冻和储存生殖材料的所有责任,包括疏忽责任,因为这些条款使协议变得虚幻和违反公共政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Contract Remedies Need Not Undercompensate Aspiring Parents When Cryopreserved Reproductive Material Is Lost or Destroyed: Recovery of Consequential Damages for Emotional Disturbance When Breach of Contract Results in the Lost Opportunity to Become Pregnant with One's Own Biological Child.

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported that the use of assisted reproductive technology (ART) has doubled over the past decade. In vitro fertilization (IVF) is the most prevalent form of ART. During IVF, a woman's eggs are extracted, fertilized in a laboratory setting, and then implanted in the uterus. Many IVF procedures use eggs or sperm that were stored using a process called cryopreservation. A recent survey reported that cryopreservation consultations increased exponentially during the coronavirus pandemic, rising as much as 60 percent. It is estimated that more than one million embryos are stored in cryopreservation facilities throughout the United States. As the use of cryopreservation increases, so too does the possibility that stored reproductive material will be lost or destroyed. Recently, over 4,000 cryopreserved human embryos inadvertently were destroyed at University Hospitals Fertility Clinic in Ohio, and 3,500 eggs and embryos were destroyed when a cryopreservation tank recently malfunctioned at a fertility clinic in California. When reproductive material is lost or destroyed, the aspiring parents; primary harm is emotional; it is non-pecuniary in nature. The emotional harm is particularly extreme in cases where the loss destroys a couple's only hope of becoming parents. Despite the severity of the emotional harm suffered due to the loss, aspiring parents often are left without a clear legal basis to recover emotional disturbance damages. Although emotional disturbance damages are rarely awarded for breach of contract, the article explains why such awards are justified based on the current trend in contract law, as exemplified by Restatement (Second) of Contracts section 353 and posits that clinics and ART professionals are aware at the time of contracting that emotional disturbance is particularly likely in the event of a breach. Scholars have noted that tort damages for emotional harm often are unavailable when reproductive material is lost or destroyed, because the emotional harm is not parasitic to a physical injury, nor can aspiring parents overcome the traditional barriers to NIED recovery because they neither were in the "zone of danger" nor were they bystanders at the time of loss. Therefore, for aspiring parents who reside in traditional barrier jurisdictions, breach of contract damages may represent their only hope to recover for emotional harm. This article posits that ART clinics and professionals have actual or constructive knowledge of plaintiffs' particular reason for storing reproductive material--namely, to achieve a later pregnancy--at the time of contracting, so as to support consequential damages for emotional disturbance. This knowledge of the contract's purpose, coupled with the nature of the transaction and the surrounding circumstances, put ART clinics and professionals on notice at the time of contracting that emotional disturbance is particularly likely to result from a breach. The article also posits that typical broad, sweeping exculpatory clauses contained in cryopreservation agreements that attempt to negate all liability for freezing and storage of reproductive material, including negligence liability, should not be enforced because such clauses render the agreement illusory and contravene public policy.

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