Legal issues relating to surrogacy in Connecticut USA - Welcome to Surrogacy Sisters- FREE Worldwide Surrogacy Connection Services and Links to Surrogacy Law Specialists
Created by The Child Listener™ - founder of Fertility Choices- including FSDW - Free Sperm Donations Worldwide - and DIY Baby™.

Private surrogacy arrangements in AustraliaWelcome to Surrogacy Sisters!
Private Surrogacy Connections Worldwide
Email info@Surrogacy-Sisters.com


Find your surrogate here! Search for a surrogate with Surrogacy Sisters Worldwide


Connecticut Surrogacy Law

Summary: Surrogacy law in Connecticut is uncertain, but favorable. The statutes are silent with regard to surrogacy agreements, but various cases have looked favorably on such agreements, including a case concerning a same-sex couple.

Explanation: The Connecticut Supreme Court, in Doe v. Doe, decided a custody dispute in 1998 between a husband and wife over a child born to a surrogate mother through a traditional surrogacy agreement (in which the surrogate mother is the biological contributor of the egg). The court ruled in favor of the wife, stating that the wife’s role in raising the child was enough to overcome the statutory presumption that it is in the child’s best interests to be in the custody of a biological parent (in this case, either the husband or the surrogate mother). However, the Court explicitly stated that it was not addressing “whether, or to what extent a surrogate contract . . . is enforceable.”

In the 1998 case of Doe v. Roe, the Connecticut Supreme Court found that a trial court had subject matter jurisdiction to approve an adoption agreement that includes a surrogate mother’s consent to termination of her parental rights. The surrogate mother had argued that the contract was void because it was against public policy. The Court once again explicitly stated that it was not deciding the validity of surrogacy contracts.

In the 2008 case of Cassidy v. Williams*, a same-sex couple had contracted with a gestational surrogate (in which the surrogate mother is not the biological contributor of the egg), who subsequently became pregnant with twins. The Superior Court ordered: (1) “that the plaintiffs . . . be declared and adjudged the intended parents of both” children; (2) “that the gestational carrier agreement . . . is found to be valid, enforceable, irrevocable and of full legal effect;” (3) “that [the surrogate] is declared not to be the mother of the unborn children;” (4) that the hospital place the surrogate’s name on the birth certificates; and (5) that the Department of Public Health prepare replacement birth certificates, replacing the surrogate’s name with the names of the intended parents.

It is legal in Connecticut for same-sex couples to jointly adopt, as well as for individuals to adopt the children of their same-sex partner. Moreover, now that same-sex couples have the right to marry in Connecticut, it seems likely that a court would look favorably upon a surrogacy agreement involving LGBT individuals.

 

 

 

 



Surrogacy Related Web Sites in FocusAdd your surrogavy related web site and details here!
- Useful Surrogacy Related Web Sites




Contact Emma
for approval to add your
listing to the Directory!
Or click here to advertise your quality surrogacy related services.


Are you a licenced lawyer, who specialises in Family Law Solicitor- Lawyer specialising in surrogacy? Contact Surrogacy Sisters and list your details!surrogacy
and family law?

Please contact us to list your details- we can connect you with individuals and couples who have been matched with potential surrogates through Surrogacy Sisters.

Or click here to advertise your quality surrogacy
related services.



Looking for a surrogacy law specialists in Australia, New Zealand, UK, USA, Canada or Worldwide? Use the links to the right of this page- start here


 

We are Interested in Surrogacy- So How Do
We Do This?

 

In traditional surrogacy (also known as the Straight method) the surrogate is pregnant with her own biological child, but this child was conceived with the intention of relinquishing the child to be raised by others such as the biological father and possibly his spouse or partner. The child may be conceived via sexual intercourse (NI), home artificial insemination using fresh or frozen sperm or impregnated via IUI (intrauterine insemination), or ICI (intra cervical insemination) which is performed at a Fertility Clinic.

Sperm from the male partner of the 'commissioning couple' may be used, or alternatively, sperm from a sperm donor can be used. Donor sperm will, for example, be used if the 'commissioning couple' are both female or where the child is commissioned by a single woman.


To find a sperm donor privately visit FSDW (Free Sperm
Donations Worldwide
)

In gestational surrogacy (aka the Host method) the surrogate becomes pregnant via embryo transfer with a child of which she is not the biological mother. She may have made an arrangement to relinquish it to the biological mother or father to raise, or to a parent who is unrelated to the child (e. g. because the child was conceived using egg donation, sperm donation or is the result of a donated embryo). The surrogate mother may be called the gestational carrier. Find a Fertility Clinic




Is there Money Involved in Surrogacy?


Altruistic surrogacy is a situation where the surrogate receives
no financial reward for her pregnancy or the relinquishment of the child (although usually all expenses related to the pregnancy and birth are paid by the intended parents such as medical expenses, maternity clothing, and other related expenses).

Commercial surrogacy is a form of surrogacy in which a gestational carrier is paid to carry a child to maturity in her womb and is usually resorted to by higher income infertile couples who can afford the cost involved or people who save and borrow in order to complete their dream of being parents. This procedure is legal in several countries including in India where due to high international demand and ready availability of poor surrogates it is reaching industry proportions. Commercial surrogacy is sometimes an emotionally charged and contentious ethical issue.

To find out if commercial surrogacy is legal in your country please see the links to the right of this page, or click here and
scroll down


Fertility clinic? Reproductive specialist in Australia? List your details with Surrogacy Sisters!


Reproductive Specialist?





Do you offer fertility assistance or other related services, that would be useful to women who are considering being a surrogate for an individual or couple? Please contact us to list your details with Surrogacy Sisters!

Or click here to advertise your quality surrogacy related services.

 

photo

Find a Fertility Clinic or Specialist in your Country- Assisted Pregnancy- Surrogacy Options - Find a Medical Professional to help with the conception side of surrogacy



Fertility Clinics Australia



Fertility Clinics Australia- View Listings



Fertility Clinics New Zealand



Fertility Clinics New Zealand- View Listings



Fertility Clinics UK




Fertility Clinics UK- View Listings



Fertility Clinics USA




Fertility Clinics USA- View Listings



Fertility Clinics Canada





Fertility Clinics Canada- View Listings


Fertility Clinics Worldwide



 

Fertility Clinics Worldwide- View Listings


Surrogate Wanted Message Boards


Surrogate Wanted in Australia
-
View Messages



Surrogate Wanted in New Zealand

-
View Messages



Surrogate Wanted in the UK

- View Messages



Surrogate Wanted in the USA

- View Messages



Surrogate Wanted in Canada

- View Messages


Surrogate Wanted in Other Countries- Worldwide
- View Messages





 






Surrogacy Stories - Share Your Story With Surrogacy Sisters