Court Opinion

ID: 9409203
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-07-17 08:08:29.92073+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:20:49.219841
License: Public Domain

In the
        Court of Appeals
Second Appellate District of Texas
         at Fort Worth
     ___________________________
          No. 02-22-00343-CV
     ___________________________

CAROLINE MICHELLE ANTOUN, Appellant

                     V.

    GABY ELIAS ANTOUN, Appellee

  On Appeal from the 367th District Court
         Denton County, Texas
      Trial Court No. 21-5535-367

    Before Kerr, Bassel, and Wallach, JJ.
    Concurring Opinion by Justice Kerr
                             CONCURRING OPINION

       I write separately only to follow up on the majority’s observation that it has

been 17 years since our sister court in Houston “anticipat[ed] that the issue [of how to

deal with frozen embryos] will ultimately be resolved by the Texas Legislature.” Roman

v. Roman, 193 S.W.3d 40, 44 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, pet. denied). To

date the legislature has not taken up this task, but I believe that it inevitably must.

       In the wake of Dobbs, the Texas Human Life Protection Act of 2021 was

vivified. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. §§ 170A.001–.007; Dobbs v. Jackson

Women’s Health Org., 142 S. Ct. 2228 (2022). With limited exceptions, abortions in

Texas are now indisputably outlawed, reflecting legislative public-policy choices.

       Section 170A.001(5) defines “unborn child” as “an individual living member of

the homo sapiens species from fertilization until birth, including the entire embryonic

and fetal stages of development.” Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 170A.001(5). I

agree with the majority, though, that Appellant’s reliance on this definition to argue

that frozen embryos are thus not property to be divided in a divorce is misplaced, for

the reasons the majority capably laid out.

       But that does not mean that a public-policy clash isn’t brewing. Frozen or not,

embryos are human life—life that our law now protects from being aborted when

growing within a mother’s body. But is that life also worthy of some protection when

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it exists instead in suspended animation, in limbo? Ought that suspended life be

treated as something more than the subject of lifeless property and contract law?1

       These are questions for our elected representatives. I urge the Texas Legislature

to grapple with them in light of, perhaps as on a continuum with, the policies that

protect embryonic life when it is in a different location.

                                                           /s/ Elizabeth Kerr
                                                           Elizabeth Kerr
                                                           Justice

Delivered: July 13, 2023

       1
        An estimated 1 million embryos linger in cold storage at fertility clinics around
the country. See Nat’l Embryo Donation Ctr., http://www.embryodonation.org (last
visited July 5, 2023) (“That surplus [of frozen human embryos] is estimated at roughly
1,000,000 in the United States.”); Elissa Strauss, The Leftover Embryo Crisis, Elle (Sept.
29,     2017),      http://www.elle.com/culture/a12445676/the-leftover-embryo-crisis
(“There are an estimated one million frozen embryos in the United States right
now.”); Daniel Nehrbass & Kimberly Tyson, While IVF Is Allowed To Create Millions Of
Frozen Embryos, Those Babies Need Adoption, The Federalist (Jan. 7, 2020)
http://thefederalist.com/2020/01/07/while-ivf-is-allowed-to-create-millions-of-
frozen-embryos-those-babies-need-adoption (“Well more than 1,000,000 embryos are
now in frozen storage in the United States, posing a looming social and moral crisis.”).
And they can be astonishingly resilient: one baby girl, born in 2020, had spent 27 years
in a tiny Siberia. See, e.g., Scottie Andrew, Baby born from 27-year-old embryo believed to have
broken record set by her big sister, CNN (Dec. 1, 2020, 5:31 PM),
http://www.cnn.com/2020/12/01/us/baby-frozen-embryo-27-years-
trnd/index.html.

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