GPA: When the Court of Cassation Erases the Boundary of Natural Law

Ongoing story : Misoprostol seul et Jérôme Lejeune : deux visions de l'homme face à face· Part 7/7

FranceMembers only 52 min ago2Add to bookmarks

GPA: When the Court of Cassation Erases the Boundary of Natural Law
Illustration : Marie Yukimura Saitō

The Court of Cassation imposes the recognition in France of filiation established abroad through surrogacy. The last legal barrier has just been lifted—without a vote from the legislature.

Context

The Court of Cassation has just crossed a line. In a ruling dated July 3, 2026, it requires French civil status officers to transcribe parentage established abroad through surrogacy, without the possibility of opposing it on grounds of international public policy. A legal turning point that ends the last resistance of French law against surrogacy.

Facts

The Court of Cassation ruled that parentage established by a foreign court in the context of surrogacy must be recognized in France. It relies on the Mennesson ruling of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR, June 26, 2014, No. 65192/11), which requires the recognition of the parent-child relationship of a child born through surrogacy. France, condemned multiple times by the ECtHR, had until now maintained a fragile barrier through the exception of public policy. This barrier has just been lifted. The decision applies to births that occurred abroad to French nationals in countries where surrogacy is legal.

Doctrinal Analysis

The magisterium is clear and consistent. The Donum Vitae instruction (1987) states that "every child has the right to be conceived, carried, born, and raised within and through marriage" (II, B, 8). Evangelium Vitae emphasizes that the dignity of the human person cannot be treated as a resource or a product (No. 19). The Catechism of the Catholic Church condemns techniques that separate biological, gestational, and social parenthood: "They violate the child's right to be conceived, carried in the womb of a mother, and born" (CCC 2376). Surrogacy instrumentalizes the woman's body and treats the child as an available object. What French law has just accepted, natural law fundamentally rejects.

Stakes for the Church and the Faithful

The systematic recognition of surrogacy parentage by the French judiciary paves the way for de facto legalization. The legislator will no longer need to vote: the courts will have normalized the practice through transcription. Civil status officers will no longer be able to refuse. This is an institutional defeat for all those who had defended the public policy lock.

Critical Reading and Blind Spots

The decision is consistent with the ECtHR's jurisprudence, but it is not inevitable: other member states of the Council of Europe, notably Italy and Poland, have maintained their resistance despite similar condemnations. France has chosen legal capitulation where others have chosen political resistance. The major blind spot: the position of the surrogate mother, systematically erased from the judicial debate, as if her body had been nothing more than a passing instrument.

To Reflect and Act

To Ponder
"The child is not a right, but a gift" (CCC 2378). When the State transforms this gift into a right enforceable through the courts, it no longer protects the child: it protects the parental project. The distinction is decisive. Catholics engaged in law, medicine, or education are called to clearly name this confusion, without shame or brutality, but with the precision that truth demands. [/ENCADRE]

Content reserved for members

Create a free account to access all our content and the weekly review.

Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.

Our newsroom
Was this article helpful?

2 people liked this article

Like
Isabelle de FranclieuJuriste, chroniqueuse bioéthique & société
Juriste de formation, elle suit les questions de bioéthique, de famille et de liberté de conscience, dans la perspective du droit naturel.
Share:
Comments (2)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Bénédicte77 03 Jul 2026 · 13:11

La nature n’est pas un détail technique que les juges peuvent effacer d’un trait de plume. On parle de gestation, pas d’un contrat de location.

Ph. Renard 03 Jul 2026 · 12:56

La Cour contourne le débat démocratique, c’est inquiétant. Qui décide vraiment des limites du droit : les juges ou le peuple ?

unLecteur33 03 Jul 2026 · 15:24

Si le peuple tranchait tout, les minorités n’auraient jamais voix au chapitre, non ?

Topics
Explore
Information