Gamble & Ghevaert

Posts Tagged ‘Sarah Wood-Heath’

Corrie update – keeping it in the family works well

Tuesday, August 21st, 2012

Last night saw Katy’s offer to carry sister Izzy’s baby cause unrest amongst the family.  In our experience, family-based surrogacy arrangements are usually incredibly positive.  The existing relationship between the surrogate and the intended parents provides a solid foundation of mutual trust, support and respect.  Those intended parents who have had an offer from a friend or family member are typically overwhelmed by the generosity shown by someone who has observed their journey from the periphery.  It is, of course, a very personal choice for everyone involved.

There is more information on our website about surrogacy law and about our surrogacy law services.

Sperm donor or dad? Article by Sarah Wood-Heath published in G3 magazine

Tuesday, August 7th, 2012

Sarah Wood-Heath has written an article for lesbian magazine G3 about known donor disputes, and the recent Court of Appeal decision to award contact to a biological father who donated his sperm to a lesbian couple.

Although every case in the family court is fact specific (and the court made it clear that the only binding principle it was setting was that the child’s welfare should be paramount), it is a decision which has changed the trend of previous case law, which has always been to protect the integrity of the lesbian family unit against any claims from the donor.  We have yet to see how significant it may be in future known donation disputes.

You can read Sarah’s G3 article in full or find out more and known donor disputes from our website.

 

Sarah in today’s Independent: civil partnership five times more popular than expected

Tuesday, July 31st, 2012

Today’s Independent (quoting our family disputes specialist Sarah Wood-Heath) reports the rising numbers of same sex couples registering as civil partners – and getting divorced.  According to the ONS, over 50,000 couples have now registered as civil partners, as against original estimates of 11,000 – 22,000.  The numbers of gay couples dissolving civil partnerships is also going up, with 672 dissolutions in 2011 (up 29% from 2010).  The article says:

Sarah Wood-Heath, a solicitor at Natalie Gamble Associates, which specialises in non-traditional family law, said: “An increase in dissolutions is a natural progression from the increase in the number of partnerships.  Often couples need special advice because of the way children are conceived in a same-sex partnership – and the custody issues surrounding that can be different.”

A spokesman for Stonewall, the gay rights campaign group, said: “It is evidently fantastic news that so many people have entered civil partnerships and that they have proved so popular. It is not just same-sex couples but wider society that supports this as well.”

We work with many alternative families, helping in their creation and dealing with problems which arise where relationships break down.  We are happily unsurprised to see that alternative families are a growing force in UK society, and proud of our embracing laws.  At NGA, we support the campaign for gay marriage as the next step for gay and lesbian equality.

We offer a full range of support with civil partnership dissolution for gay and lesbian couples, including financial and children issues.  There is more information about civil partnership dissolution on our website.  You can read The Independent article here.

Gaydar radio on the options for same sex parents

Monday, May 28th, 2012

Sarah Wood-Heath was interviewed on Gaydar Radio on Saturday morning about same sex parenting and the options and pitfalls for gay and lesbian parents starting a family.

Talking to Neil and Debbie on the Saturday morning breakfast show (as Britain’s answer to Ally McBeal!), Sarah explained how surrogacy works for gay fathers, and the differences between a surrogacy arrangement in the UK or abroad.   Careful planning is the best way of avoiding legal problems, especially for gay dads planning international surrogacy, given the immigration issues and the fact that UK law won’t recognise a foreign birth certificate naming you both as the parents.   Sarah was also asked about the options for lesbian couples, discussing the pros and cons of using a known or unknown sperm donor, and the need to set things up in the right way.

Although the law has become much more gay-friendly in the last few years, so much is still so untested, including what happens where relationships break down and who has rights and parental status when gay or lesbian parents break up or get divorced.

The good news is that there are so many options available now for same sex couples and single gay and lesbian parents – adoption and co-parenting are also on the list.  While the law still has a little way to go, it is evolving to try and keep up and it is now much easier for same sex couples or singles to find a way to start a family.  It’s just a question of knowing your options and making an informed decision so you make the right choice for you.  With good advice it needn’t be complicated.

There is more information on our website for gay and lesbian parents at www.nataliegambleassociates.com.  You can also check out the Gaydar Radio website at www.gaydarradio.com.

Birth mother vs non birth mother – children law for lesbian parents who separate

Tuesday, May 8th, 2012

By Sarah Wood-Heath.  This article was first published in Bionews on 8 May 2012 and is reproduced by kind permission of the Progress Educational Trust.  PET is a wonderful charity which does crucial work informing debate on assisted conception and genetics.  You can donate to PET or subscribe to Bionews by clicking here.

Sarah Wood-Heath, a solicitor at Natalie Gamble Associates

Sarah Wood-Heath, solicitor at Natalie Gamble Associates

There have been a number of high profile cases of late involving disputes within alternative family structures. Primarily these concern fathers or known donors seeking more of a relationship with their child than they originally wished for. However, another interesting and sadly increasing area we are witnessing is the breakdown of relationships in two-mother lesbian parent families.

As with any relationship breakdown, issues to be dealt with include division of the finances, any civil partnership dissolution and with whom any children will live (as well as contact with the non-resident parent). But these types of divorce cases have a more complex dynamic, with difficult legal and social questions arising from the mismatched biological (and often legal) status of the two female parents.

To date there has been very little judicial guidance as to how much weight the family court will place on the importance of being a birth mother in divorce proceedings, and whether in such cases the birth history and biological link should be considered more important than the relationship between the non-birth mother and the child.

Of course every case is unique, but the two main cases so far where the court has considered and explored these issues in principle make for very interesting reading.

The first case was that of Re G [2006] UKHL 43 which involved a difficult dispute about where the children conceived by a lesbian couple through artificial insemination should live following their separation. The High Court and Court of Appeal ruled that the non-birth mother should have primary care of the two children (mainly because the birth mother had behaved badly and removed the children to Cornwall deliberately to obstruct her former partner’s relationship with the children).  However, in a landmark judgment the House of Lords ruled that the lower courts had not given sufficient weight to the fact that the birth mother was the biological mother of the children and ordered that the children should continue to live with her. The House of Lords expressly stated that the lower courts had placed too much weight on the behaviour of the birth mother and not enough on the biological basis of her relationship. This was a ‘significant consideration which was of importance’. Being the birth mother is, it seems, significant.

The more recent case of T v B [2010] EWHC 1444 (Fam) involved a lesbian couple who were not civil partners but had lived together for many years and had undergone fertility treatment to conceive a child together. Once the child was born they both undertook the role of parents. Although the law at the time did not recognise the non-birth mother as a legal parent, she sought – and was given by the court – parental responsibility, which meant she had full legal authority to take decisions as a parent and to be involved in her child’s care.  Following separation the birth mother applied to the courts for financial provision from the non-birth mother. The court ruled that as the non-birth mother was not a legal parent she had no financial obligation despite the fact that she had to all intents and purposes been a ‘parent’ to them from the very start. The court was somewhat constrained by the wording of the law (and its frustration was evident) but it was clear in this case that whether you were a birth mother or not was deeply significant.

When the court are considering cases involving disputes about care arrangements for children, the court has a range of factors it has to take into consideration. These include: the child’s age, sex and background; their physical, emotional, educational needs; the effect of any change in circumstances; their ascertainable wishes and feelings; any harm the child has suffered or is at risk of suffering and how capable each parent is in meeting the child’s needs.  The welfare of the child will be the court’s paramount consideration and any decision made by the court will be based on what the court considers to be in the child’s best interests. In practice this gives a lot of flexibility, although it is clear that the court is inclined to place weight on the importance of the biological link with the birth mother. In relation to child maintenance questions, this bias is more institutional, with clear legal rules which make only legal parents (and their spouses) financially responsible.

On 6 April 2009 the law in the UK changed to allow two mothers to be named on the birth certificate, recognising them both as the legal parents and giving them both financial responsibility for their children. It is notable that both of the birth mother vs non-birth mother cases have involved children born before this legal change.  Whether or not the new law will give greater weight to the non-birth mother’s position waits to be seen (although this will certainly be the case in relation to financial questions). Things are likely to be muddied further by the increasing blurring of the lines between birth and biological parenthood for lesbian couples. We are certainly seeing more egg swapping cases, where an egg has been taken from the non birth mother, fertilised and then transferred to the birth mother. Where parents in these situations separate, will the birth mother or the biological mother be the one with the upper hand?

Same-sex divorces are undoubtedly legally complex where children are involved. In a dispute over a child within an alternative family structure, an argument often run is the importance of the biological link, and the genetic identity of the child. With changes to the law and even more complex family structures emerging, it will be interesting to see how the court responds.

Find out more from our website about divorce and relationship breakdown and lesbian parenting.

The Natalie Gamble Associates family has grown

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

Sarah Wood-Heath, a solicitor at Natalie Gamble Associates

We love it when we get happy news from the families we work with, but today we too have a chance to announce a new arrival.

Solicitor Sarah Wood-Heath has joined our team from London.  With five years’ experience as a qualified lawyer, Sarah’s background is in complex disputed family and children law and she has particular experience working for alternative families.

We are thrilled to welcome Sarah on board to help us meet growing demand for our specialist expertise.  Sarah will be an integral part of our team’s legal work, and will have particular responsibility for supporting parents in disputed situations (including known donor disputes and financial claims in respect of children) for which we are seeing greater and greater need.  With recent publicity surrounding same sex parenting disputes, an issue with which we have long been involved (including helping to make the new laws for same sex parents in 2008), this is an area of our practice we expect to keep growing.  Sarah is also able to help with relationship breakdown and pre-nutial agreements.

Sarah has two small sons, and she and her family are loving their relocation to the New Forest in order to join us.

You can contact Sarah on 0844 4560017 or at sarahwh@nataliegambleassociates.com.