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No Consent, Yet Permitted: Kerala High Court Grants Wife Right to Preserve Sperm Of Brain-Dead Husband for Assisted Reproduction

Wife Allowed To Preserve Brain-Dead Husband Sperm: HC

Wife Allowed To Preserve Brain-Dead Husband Sperm: HC

Kerala High Court allowed preservation of a brain-dead husband’s sperm without consent due to urgency— raising concerns over men’s reproductive autonomy

ERNAKULAM: In a significant and sensitive case, the Kerala High Court, led by Justice M.B. Snehalatha, passed an interim order allowing a wife to extract and preserve the gametes of her brain-dead husband, even though he could not give consent due to his medical condition. The Court admitted the writ petition and proceeded to grant urgent relief, considering the critical situation of the husband.

The wife approached the Court stating that her husband was undergoing treatment and had suffered severe brain damage, leaving him in a brain-dead condition and dependent on ventilator support. She informed the Court that doctors had confirmed there was no possibility of recovery and that he was unable to provide consent as required under the law.

The petition clearly stated that she wanted to preserve his reproductive material for future use under assisted reproductive technology.

The Court recorded that:

“Her husband suffers from extensive cerebral venous thrombosis post 2 weeks of chicken pox, which has now resulted in his brain death, and he is currently kept alive with ventilator support.”

It was further noted that:

“She is desirous of extracting and cryopreserving gametes of her husband, who is unable to grant consent to the same as contemplated under Section 22 of the Assisted Reproductive Technology (“ART”) Act due to his present medical condition.”

The petitioner argued that the delay in such cases could permanently destroy her chance of having a biological child. The Court acknowledged this urgency and recorded that:

“There is no possibility of obtaining written informed consent from him, and if the matter is delayed any further, irreparable hardship may be caused in view of his health condition and the impending chance of paternity.”

Taking these facts into account, the Court granted interim relief and directed the hospital to proceed with the extraction and preservation process. The order clearly states:

“Interim relief is granted directing the 5th respondent-hospital to allow the extraction and cryopreservation of the gametes… by allowing the services of the 6th respondent or other recognized ART clinics.”

At the same time, the Court placed an important restriction, clarifying that:

“Other than the extraction and preservation of the gametes, no further procedure under the Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Act shall be carried out without the permission of this Court.”

The Court has effectively allowed the use of a man’s reproductive material without his explicit consent due to medical incapacity. The larger legal question remains—if the situation were reversed, would a husband be granted similar permission to extract and preserve his wife’s reproductive material without her consent? The answer to that question will define the true balance of reproductive and bodily autonomy laws in India.

Explanatory Table: Laws & Sections Involved

Law / SectionExplanation (Simple Indian English)Relevance in This Case
Article 226, Constitution of IndiaGives High Courts power to issue directions/orders (writs) to protect rightsWife filed writ to get court permission when law did not allow hospital to act without consent
Writ of MandamusCourt order directing authority to perform dutyUsed to direct hospital to allow extraction of gametes
Section 22, Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Act, 2021Requires written informed consent before using reproductive materialHusband could not give consent due to brain death, creating legal barrier
Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Act, 2021Regulates IVF, sperm/egg use, and fertility procedures in IndiaEntire dispute revolves around whether procedure can happen without consent
Principle of Informed ConsentA person must voluntarily agree before any medical procedureCentral issue—husband’s consent was absent
Judicial Discretion (Equitable Relief)Court can grant relief in exceptional urgent situationsCourt used this to allow preservation despite legal restriction

Case Details

Key Takeaways

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