William Kane deposited multiple vials of his sperm at California Cryobank prior to his death by suicide. In a duly executed will and an accompanying written letter of instructions, Kane expressly bequeathed all of his right, title, and interest in any stored sperm at the Cryobank to his partner, Deborah Hecht, stating his desire that she be permitted to use it to conceive a child. After Kane's death, his adult children from a prior relationship contested aspects of his estate plan and sought court orders preventing Hecht from obtaining or using the sperm, arguing that posthumous insemination was against public policy and that the material should be destroyed. The superior court ordered the Cryobank to destroy the sperm. Hecht petitioned for extraordinary relief in the Court of Appeal, asserting (1) she had standing as the intended donee of the sperm, (2) Kane's documented intent should control its disposition, and (3) no statute or public policy barred posthumous reproduction in these circumstances. The Cryobank's storage agreement contemplated release pursuant to the depositor's instructions but awaited judicial direction in light of the dispute.
Does a decedent have a property interest in his stored sperm sufficient to permit testamentary disposition to a named donee for potential posthumous reproduction, and did the trial court err by ordering destruction of the sperm on public policy grounds?
In California, a person who deposits sperm for storage retains a legally cognizable, limited property interest—an interest in decision-making control and disposition—that is sufficient to (1) support standing to enforce the depositor's intent, (2) permit testamentary transfer consistent with governing contracts, and (3) preclude judicial destruction absent a contrary statute or compelling public policy. Procreative autonomy, protected by constitutional and common-law principles, encompasses decisions to procreate using stored gametes, and courts will honor clear donor intent unless such use contravenes specific statutory prohibitions or established public policy.
Yes. The decedent retained a property-like interest in his stored sperm that could be the subject of testamentary disposition. The superior court erred in ordering its destruction and in refusing to honor the decedent's expressed intent. The appellate court issued a writ directing the trial court to vacate its destruction order and to recognize Hecht's right, as the intended donee, to possess and potentially use the sperm consistent with Kane's instructions and the Cryobank agreement.
The court began by recognizing that while California law does not treat excised human tissues as conventional property in all contexts (see, e.g., Moore v. Regents of the University of California), individuals may nonetheless possess significant, legally protected interests in bodily materials sufficient to control their disposition. Gametic material is uniquely connected to procreation, a fundamental liberty interest. The donor's decisional autonomy over whether to become a genetic parent justified recognizing a limited property interest in stored sperm—at least to the extent necessary to effectuate the donor's wishes regarding its use or disposition. The court emphasized the strong evidence of Kane's intent: a will specifically bequeathing his interest in the stored sperm to Hecht and a contemporaneous written letter explaining his desire that she conceive his child. The Cryobank's storage arrangements contemplated honoring depositor instructions, and nothing in California statutes categorically prohibited posthumous insemination. The court rejected arguments that public policy barred fatherless conception or that potential psychological effects on existing heirs justified overriding the donor's intent. The interests of adult children in avoiding the birth of a half-sibling did not outweigh Kane's procreative autonomy or Hecht's interest as donee. Nor did the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act or analogous statutes apply to compel destruction; those laws address donations of organs and tissues for transplantation, therapy, or research, not the donor-directed procreative use of gametes. The court also rejected the notion that sperm must be treated as part of the decedent's general estate to be divided among heirs; instead, it treated the donor's control as a limited, sui generis property interest that could be specifically bequeathed to an identified recipient for a defined purpose. Finally, the court concluded that Hecht, as the intended donee named in the will and instructions, had standing to challenge the destruction order and to seek enforcement of the donor's dispositional wishes.
Hecht is a leading case recognizing that stored gametes are subject to donor control as a form of limited property, enabling testamentary transfer for reproductive use. It is central to courses on Property and Trusts & Estates for its intent-centric approach to novel assets and to Family Law/Reproductive Rights for its articulation of procreative autonomy beyond the donor's death. The decision influenced policy debates and later statutes nationwide on posthumous conception, inheritance rights of posthumously conceived children, and clinic consent forms governing disposition of reproductive materials.
Hecht v. Superior Court stands as a landmark recognition that donor intent governs the posthumous disposition and use of stored gametes. By characterizing the depositor's interest as a limited property right tied to procreative autonomy, the court provided a doctrinal framework for resolving disputes over reproductive materials without collapsing into either full commodification or categorical prohibition.