Terrell v. Torres ( 2019 )


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  •                                 IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    In re the Matter of:
    JOHN JOSEPH TERRELL, Petitioner/Appellee,
    v.
    RUBY TORRES, Respondent/Appellant.
    No. 1 CA-CV 17-0617 FC
    FILED 6-6-2019
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. FN 2016-001785
    The Honorable Ronee Korbin Steiner, Judge
    VACATED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS
    COUNSEL
    Law Office of Dennis P. Levine PC, Phoenix
    By Debora M. Levine
    Co-Counsel for Respondent/Appellant
    The Murray Law Offices PC, Scottsdale
    By Stanley D. Murray
    Co-Counsel for Respondent/Appellant
    Stoddard Law Group PC, Phoenix
    By Allie Stoddard
    Co-Counsel for Petitioner/Appellee
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    Campbell Law Group PLLC, Phoenix
    By Claudia D. Work
    Co-Counsel for Petitioner/Appellee
    Sherman & Howard LLC, Phoenix
    By Christopher M. Jackson, pro hac vice, Matthew A. Hesketh
    Co-Counsel for Amicus Curiae Academy of Adoption & Assisted Reproduction
    Attorneys
    Daniel I. Ziskin PC, Phoenix
    By Daniel I. Ziskin
    Co-Counsel for Amicus Curiae Academy of Adoption & Assisted Reproduction
    Attorneys
    OPINION
    Judge Jennifer B. Campbell delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
    Judge James P. Beene joined. Presiding Judge Maria Elena Cruz dissented.
    C A M P B E L L, Judge:
    ¶1             Ruby Torres and John Joseph Terrell disagree about the
    disposition of cryogenically preserved embryos1 created using Torres’ eggs
    and Terrell’s sperm. The dispute arose over whether, under the terms of
    their in vitro fertilization agreement (“IVF Agreement”), Torres could use
    the embryos for implantation without Terrell’s consent. The parties did not
    challenge the jurisdiction of the family court.2 Following an evidentiary
    1    Arizona statute defines “human embryo” as “a living organism of the
    species homo sapiens through the first fifty-six days of its development,
    excluding any time during which its development has been suspended.”
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. (“A.R.S.”) § 36-2311(3). While other courts have used
    various terms including “preembryo,” A.Z. v. B.Z., 
    725 N.E.2d 1051
    , 1052
    n.1 (Mass. 2000), and “pre-zygote,” Kass v. Kass, 
    696 N.E.2d 174
    , 175 n.1
    (N.Y. 1998), we use the term “embryo,” in line with the legislature’s
    definition. See also Davis v. Davis, 
    842 S.W.2d 588
    , 589 (Tenn. 1992) (similarly
    using the term “embryo”).
    2    In this case, the parties treated the embryos as joint property pursuant
    to statute, see A.R.S. § 25-318(A) (authorizing the court in a dissolution
    proceeding to divide property held in common equitably, though not
    2
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    hearing, the court ordered the embryos to be donated to a third party for
    implantation. We vacate the trial court’s order and hold that Torres may
    use the embryos to attempt to become pregnant.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2             In June 2014, Torres was diagnosed with an aggressive form
    of bilateral breast cancer. Torres’ oncologist explained that she would need
    to begin chemotherapy within a month. The oncologist advised Torres that
    the chemotherapy would impair her ability to become pregnant by causing
    her to begin menopause, after which “there [was] no guarantee that [her]
    body would recover . . . and come out of menopause.” The next month,
    after meeting with Dr. Millie Behera, a fertility specialist at the Bloom
    Reproductive Institute (the “Fertility Clinic”), she elected to undergo IVF to
    produce embryos, using her own eggs and donor sperm.
    ¶3           Torres initially asked Terrell, then her boyfriend, to serve as
    the sperm donor, but he declined. She began the process of preserving her
    eggs and found another sperm donor, a prior boyfriend. Upon learning of
    the other volunteer donor, Terrell changed his mind and agreed to be the
    donor. He later testified he only did this as a favor.
    ¶4            On July 11, 2014, the parties executed the IVF Agreement,
    provided by the Fertility Clinic, which included terms regarding the
    parties’ informed consent for assisted reproduction, the cryopreservation of
    embryos, and the disposition of any embryos that might result from the IVF
    procedure. The IVF Agreement specified that any embryo resulting from
    Torres’ egg and Terrell’s sperm would be their joint property.
    ¶5            The IVF Agreement also contained a provision addressing the
    parties’ preferences regarding the disposition of embryos (the “Disposition
    Provision”), stating, as relevant:
    10. Disposition of Embryos—Because of the possibility of you
    and/or your partner’s separation, divorce, death or
    incapacitation . . . it is important to decide on the disposition
    of any embryos that remain in the laboratory in these
    situations. Since this is a rapidly evolving field, both
    medically and legally, the clinic cannot guarantee what the
    necessarily in kind), although they could have simply brought a contract
    action. Neither party objected to the family court resolving this issue. The
    outcome of this matter is not dependent upon their marital status.
    3
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    available or acceptable avenues for disposition will be at any
    future date.
    Currently, the three alternatives are:
    1. Discarding the cryopreserved embryo(s)
    2. Donating the cryopreserved embryo(s) to another couple in
    order to attempt pregnancy.
    ...
    3. Use by one partner with the contemporaneous permission of
    the other for that use.
    This agreement provides several choices for disposition of
    embryos in these circumstances ([including] separation or
    divorce of the patient and her spouse/partner . . .). Disposition
    may also be controlled by the final decision of a court or other
    governmental authority having jurisdiction.
    I/We agree that in the absence of a more recent written and
    witnessed consent form, Fertility Treatment Center is
    authorized to act on our choices indicated below (items A-H),
    so far as it is practical.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶6           The Disposition Provision also contained the following
    general language entitled “Note”:
    Embryos cannot be used to produce pregnancy against the
    wishes of the partner. For example, in the event of a
    separation or divorce, embryos cannot be used to create a
    pregnancy without the express, written consent of both parties,
    even if donor gametes were used to create the embryos.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶7            The Disposition Provision then identified various options for
    the disposition of embryos, in differing future circumstances, such as death
    of one or both parties, separation, or divorce. Specifically, subsection H
    addressed the parties’ options upon divorce or dissolution of their
    relationship:
    4
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    H. Divorce or Dissolution of Relationship In the event the
    patient and her spouse are divorced or the patient and her
    partner dissolve their relationship, we agree that the embryos
    should be disposed of in the following manner (check one box
    only).
    [1] A court decree and/or settlement agreement will be
    presented to the Clinic directing use to achieve a pregnancy
    in one of us or donation to another couple for that purpose.
    [2] Destroy the embryos.
    The parties selected and initialed the first option placing the disposition
    decision in the hands of the court. This is the sole provision in the
    Disposition Provision of the Agreement between the parties and not
    between the clinic and the parties jointly.
    ¶8            Four days after signing the IVF Agreement, the parties
    married. The IVF procedure yielded seven viable embryos which were
    cryogenically preserved for future use. Torres subsequently underwent
    chemotherapy, causing her hormone levels to drop to menopausal
    amounts. After two years of marriage, Terrell filed a petition for dissolution
    of marriage. The seven embryos were still preserved and there had been no
    attempt at implantation. The parties could not agree on the disposition of
    the embryos—the primary dispute was whether the court could award
    Torres the embryos to achieve a pregnancy.3
    ¶9            At the evidentiary hearing, neither party contested that the
    IVF Agreement represented a valid, binding agreement regarding the
    disposition of the embryos. Terrell explained he elected to sign the IVF
    Agreement because he believed it was “honorable” to do so under the
    circumstances. Relying on the “Note,” Terrell testified he never intended
    for Torres to use the embryos without his consent. He explained that when
    he signed the IVF Agreement, he hoped to have children with Torres “[i]f
    she survived,” but at that time he thought her survival unlikely.
    3      Terrell’s position regarding disposition of the embryos changed
    during the proceedings: he initially argued the embryos should be
    destroyed; later he took the position that he should be awarded the embryos
    to prevent Torres from procreating against his wishes; and still later stated
    he would agree to their use by a third party, rather than having the embryos
    stored in perpetuity.
    5
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶10          Terrell also claimed that he only married Torres because she
    needed health insurance; he went so far as to testify he would not have
    married her but for that need. Indeed, when asked by counsel if he would
    have “married [Torres] if she had not presented to [him] that she had cancer
    and needed [his] health insurance,” he responded “[n]o.”
    ¶11            Terrell did not want Torres to have the embryos because he
    was concerned about his “financial liability in the future, . . . as far as . . .
    [his] inheritance or, [an obligation to pay] child support for a child that [he]
    would[] never see[].” Terrell also stated concerns about the possibility of
    Torres “poisoning” a child against him and “painting” him as a “monster.”
    When questioned by the court as to whether he could “co-parent” with
    Torres, he answered “[n]o.” Torres testified that, should she conceive a
    child from the embryos, it would be Terrell’s choice whether he wished to
    be involved in the child’s life. Torres also testified that she would not seek
    child support from Terrell, and planned to implant the embryos when, and
    if, she remarried.
    ¶12           Torres and Dr. Behera, the fertility specialist, both testified
    that without the embryos, Torres would be unable to have biological
    children because her hormone levels were menopausal after chemotherapy.
    Behera testified that Torres’ lab work indicated “low to no” ovarian
    function. Behera also testified that if Torres took medication to stimulate
    her ovaries “it probably would not result in any viable eggs.” Agreeing that
    only in a “miraculous situation” Torres could achieve “a postmenopausal
    pregnancy,” Behera testified that there was a “less than 1 percent” chance
    of that occurring. Behera went on to explain that the waiting list for
    obtaining donated embryos was long. Torres testified that although she had
    considered adoption, due to her cancer diagnosis and a genetic mutation
    “BRCA1” that increased her cancer risk, it was “unlikely” she would be
    considered as an adoptive placement.
    ¶13          In the decree of dissolution, the family court noted there is no
    Arizona case law or statutory authority addressing the disposition of
    embryos in a dissolution proceeding. The court analyzed out-of-state case
    law and identified three approaches adopted by other courts: (1) the
    contract approach, (2) the balancing approach, and (3) the
    contemporaneous mutual consent approach.
    ¶14           The trial court found that because the parties disagreed on the
    disposition of the embryos, and because the parties had consented to a
    judicial determination for disposition in the event of a dissolution, it should
    apply a balancing approach based on the language of the IVF Agreement.
    6
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    Analyzing the parties’ competing interests, infra ¶ 45, the court concluded
    that Terrell’s “right not to be compelled to be a parent outweigh[ed]
    [Torres’] right to procreate and desire to have a biologically related child.”
    The trial court directed the Fertility Clinic to donate any remaining embryos
    to a third party or couple.
    ¶15         Torres timely appealed, and we have jurisdiction pursuant to
    Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) § 12-2101(A)(1).
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Overview: The Law of Other States
    ¶16         This is a case of first impression in Arizona. To begin, we must
    determine what law should govern the disposition of cryogenically
    preserved embryos created using one party’s eggs and another party’s
    sperm when the parties disagree. An overview of how other states have
    approached this issue provides significant context for this analysis.
    A.     The Contract Approach
    ¶17             Under the contract approach, an agreement between
    progenitors, or gamete donors, regarding disposition of embryos is
    generally presumed to be valid and binding, and will be enforced. Kass v.
    Kass, 
    696 N.E.2d 174
    , 180 (N.Y. 1998). Some courts have held that such
    agreements are enforceable “subject to mutual change of mind” by the
    parties. Id.; In re Marriage of Dahl & Angle, 
    194 P.3d 834
    , 840 (Or. Ct. App.
    2008) (citation omitted). Cf. J.B. v. M.B., 
    783 A.2d 707
    , 719 (N.J. 2001)
    (holding that a mutual change of mind is not required and that agreements
    entered into at the time of IVF will be enforced “subject to the right of either
    party to change his or her mind about disposition up to the point of use or
    destruction of any stored [embryos]”).4
    ¶18           The contract approach was first enunciated in Davis v. Davis,
    
    842 S.W.2d 588
    , 597 (Tenn. 1992). That case involved dissolution
    proceedings, in which there was no prior agreement between the parties, a
    husband and wife, regarding the disposition of cryogenically preserved
    embryos.5 
    Id. at 598.
    The court concluded as a matter of first impression that
    4      Courts that have adopted this approach have also first considered
    whether enforcing the parties’ prior agreement would violate state public
    policy. Neither party in this matter argues that the contract approach
    violates Arizona public policy.
    5      We discuss this case in more detail below. Infra ¶¶ 26-28.
    7
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    the contract approach should be the preferred method for resolving similar
    disputes, stating:
    We believe, as a starting point, that an agreement regarding
    disposition of any untransferred [embryos] in the event of
    contingencies (such as the death of one or more of the parties,
    divorce, financial reversals, or abandonment of the program)
    should be presumed valid and should be enforced as between
    the progenitors.
    
    Id. at 597.
    The Davis court noted such an approach enables “the progenitors,
    having provided the gametic material giving rise to the [embryos], [to]
    retain decision-making authority as to their disposition.” 
    Id. ¶19 The
    contract approach has been the most preferred and most
    adopted approach nationwide. See Szafranski v. Dunston (“Szafranski I”), 
    993 N.E.2d 502
    , 514, ¶ 40 (Ill. App. Ct. 2013); Dahl & 
    Angle, 194 P.3d at 840-41
    ;
    Roman v. Roman, 
    193 S.W.3d 40
    , 50 (Tex. App. 2006); Litowitz v. Litowitz, 
    48 P.3d 261
    , 267 (Wash. 2002); 
    J.B., 783 A.2d at 719
    ; 
    Kass, 696 N.E.2d at 180
    ;
    
    Davis, 842 S.W.2d at 597
    . But see A.Z. v. B.Z., 
    725 N.E.2d 1051
    , 1057-58 (Mass.
    2000) (rejecting the contract approach and concluding that it violated public
    policy to enforce a contract “that would compel one donor to become a
    parent against his or her will”).
    ¶20            Courts across jurisdictions have generally agreed that the
    primary benefit of the contract approach is that it leaves deeply personal
    decisions involving reproductive choices in the hands of the parties.
    Szafranski 
    I, 993 N.E.2d at 506
    , ¶ 18 (“[A] benefit[] of a contractual approach
    is that . . . it removes state and court involvement in private family
    decisions.”). That is, enforcing the parties’ prior agreements has the benefit
    of “both minimiz[ing] misunderstandings and maximiz[ing] procreative
    liberty by reserving to the progenitors the authority to make what is in the
    first instance a quintessentially personal, private decision.” 
    Roman, 193 S.W.3d at 50
    (quoting 
    Kass, 696 N.E.2d at 180
    ).
    ¶21           The contract approach also provides certainty that the
    contract will be binding and provides an opportunity for the parties to
    carefully reflect on their different options and to think through their
    preferences under different circumstances. Szafranski 
    I, 993 N.E.2d at 515
    ,
    ¶ 41 (“[H]onoring such agreements will promote serious discussions
    between the parties prior to participating in [IVF] regarding their desires,
    intentions, and concerns.”); 
    Kass, 696 N.E.2d at 180
    (“[P]arties should be
    encouraged in advance, before embarking on IVF and cryopreservation, to
    8
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    think through possible contingencies and carefully specify their wishes in
    writing.”). Moreover, the contract approach “encourages parties to enter
    into agreements that will avoid future costly litigation.” Szafranski 
    I, 993 N.E.2d at 506
    , ¶ 18.
    ¶22          The primary criticism of the contract approach is that there
    are numerous “uncertainties inherent in the IVF process” that “extend[] the
    viability of [embryos] indefinitely and allow[] time for minds, and
    circumstances, to change.” 
    Kass, 696 N.E.2d at 180
    . The court in Davis
    agreed:
    [W]e recognize that life is not static, and that human emotions
    run particularly high when a married couple is attempting to
    overcome infertility problems. It follows that the parties’
    initial “informed consent” to IVF procedures will often not be
    truly informed because of the near impossibility of
    anticipating, emotionally and psychologically, all the turns
    that events may take as the IVF process 
    unfolds. 842 S.W.2d at 597
    ; see also In re Marriage of Witten, 
    672 N.W.2d 768
    , 777 (Iowa
    2003) (noting criticism that the contract approach “insufficiently protects
    the individual and societal interests at stake” by enforcing terms that may
    be inconsistent with a party’s present “wishes, values, and beliefs”
    regarding “matters of such fundamental personal importance” (quoting
    Carl H. Coleman, Procreative Liberty and Contemporaneous Choice: An
    Inalienable Rights Approach to Frozen Embryo Disputes, 
    84 Minn. L
    . Rev. 55, 88
    (1999))).
    ¶23            Another concern with the contract approach is that, as here,
    the IVF Agreement directing disposition of any embryos may be only part
    of the informed consent agreement with the Fertility Clinic, which also
    contains information on the risks of IVF treatment, and therefore can
    include “anxiety-producing information a patient might be inclined to
    resist or ignore.” Ellen A. Waldman, Disputing Over Embryos: Of Contracts
    and Consents, 32 Ariz. St. L.J. 897, 924 (2000). Combining such medical
    information with contract provisions regarding divorce and other difficult
    subjects may make future determinations even more difficult because it
    adds more “information that is difficult to process and thoughtfully
    evaluate.” 
    Id. at 924-25.
    ¶24            Courts have addressed these concerns by permitting parties
    to subsequently jointly modify their initial agreement. See 
    Kass, 696 N.E.2d at 180
    ; see also 
    Davis, 842 S.W.2d at 597
    (concluding that permitting initial
    9
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    agreements to be modified by a subsequent agreement will protect the
    parties against some of the risks of uncertainty and high emotions). The
    ability to subsequently amend an agreement allows the parties flexibility to
    adapt the agreement to changing circumstances to address any new
    concerns.
    B.     Balancing Approach
    ¶25           Next is the balancing approach, where a court balances the
    competing interests of the parties. 
    Davis, 842 S.W.2d at 603
    . That is, courts
    will “consider the positions of the parties, the significance of their interests,
    and the relative burdens that will be imposed by differing resolutions.” 
    Id. Courts have
    applied the balancing approach when they are unable to
    enforce a prior written agreement because it is ambiguous, the agreement
    grants the court the authority to make the disposition decision, or there is
    no agreement to enforce. See id.; Reber v. Reiss, 
    42 A.3d 1131
    , 1136 (Pa. Super.
    Ct. 2012).
    ¶26            Davis provides a framework for analyzing the disposition of
    embryos outside of a written agreement. In Davis, a husband and wife had
    not entered into any agreement regarding the disposition of embryos in the
    event of a dissolution. 
    Davis, 842 S.W.2d at 598
    . The wife wished to donate
    the embryos to another couple. 
    Id. at 604.
    The husband, however, wanted
    the embryos destroyed. 
    Id. at 603-04.
    After considering the wife’s interest in
    knowing that the “lengthy IVF procedures” she had endured were not
    “futile,” the court concluded that the wife’s “interest in donation [was] not
    as significant as the [husband’s] interest . . . in avoiding parenthood.” 
    Id. at 604.
    ¶27            The Davis court applied the following framework to balance
    the interests of the parties in the absence of a contract:
    Ordinarily, the party wishing to avoid procreation should
    prevail, assuming that the other party has a reasonable
    possibility of achieving parenthood by means other than use
    of the [embryos] in question. If no other reasonable
    alternatives exist, then the argument in favor of using the
    [embryos] to achieve pregnancy should be considered.
    
    Id. ¶28 To
    this end, the Davis court also concluded that “[t]he case
    would be closer if [the wife] were seeking to use the [embryos] herself, but
    only if she could not achieve parenthood by any other reasonable means.”
    10
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    
    Id. The court
    noted that the wife still had the opportunity to undergo further
    IVF procedures, as she was still able to harvest viable eggs. 
    Id. Additionally, she
    had previously attempted to adopt and therefore exhibited a
    willingness to “forgo genetic parenthood.” 
    Id. ¶29 The
    balancing approach requires a fact-intensive inquiry
    looking at the parties’ interests in light of both current circumstances and
    those existing at the time of the IVF treatment. A party’s interest in
    parenthood includes the party’s interest in having a biologically-related
    child. The interest in parenthood, however, is broader than that, and may
    also include adoption. Cf. 
    Reber, 42 A.3d at 1138
    (“[S]imply because
    adoption or foster parenting may be available . . . does not mean that such
    options should be given equal weight in a balancing test.”). Contra In re
    Marriage of Rooks, 
    429 P.3d 579
    , 594, ¶ 71 (Colo. 2018) (“[B]ecause . . . the
    relevant interest at stake is . . . achieving or avoiding genetic parenthood,
    courts should not consider whether a spouse seeking to use the []embryos
    to become a genetic parent could instead adopt a child or otherwise parent
    non-biological children.”).
    ¶30           Other courts have applied the Davis framework. See Szafranski
    v. Dunston (“Szafranski II”), 
    34 N.E.3d 1132
    , 1161-62, ¶¶ 124-29 (Ill. App. Ct.
    2015); Szafranski 
    I, 993 N.E.2d at 515
    , ¶ 42; 
    Reber, 42 A.3d at 1137-42
    . Cf. 
    J.B., 783 A.2d at 716
    , 720 (agreeing the party wishing to avoid procreation
    should ordinarily prevail, but “express[ing] no opinion in respect of a case
    in which a party who has become infertile seeks use of stored [embryos]
    against the wishes of his or her partner, noting only that the possibility of
    adoption also may be a consideration, among others, in the court’s
    assessment”).
    C.     Contemporaneous Mutual Consent
    ¶31          Finally, there is the contemporaneous mutual consent
    approach, which has only been adopted by the Iowa Supreme Court.
    Witten, 
    672 N.W.2d 768
    .6 Under this approach, “no transfer, release,
    disposition, or use of the embryos can occur without the signed
    6      But see McQueen v. Gadberry, 
    507 S.W.3d 127
    , 157-58 (Mo. Ct. App.
    2016) (without explicitly adopting the contemporaneous mutual consent
    approach, affirming the trial court’s judgment which jointly awarded
    embryos to a divorcing couple and ordered that the embryos could not be
    released for any use without the signed authorization of both parties).
    11
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    authorization of both donors. If a stalemate results, the status quo would be
    maintained.” 
    Id. at 783.
    ¶32            This approach attempts to avoid many of the concerns
    regarding judicial or state interference in individual reproductive choices,
    which involve “highly personal” and “intensely emotional matters.” 
    Id. at 777-79,
    781. This approach has been criticized “as being totally unrealistic”
    given that “[i]f the parties could reach an agreement, they would not be in
    court.” 
    Reber, 42 A.3d at 1135
    n.5. For instance, it “give[s] each progenitor a
    powerful bargaining chip at a time when individuals might very well be
    tempted to punish their soon-to-be ex-spouses.” Szafranski 
    I, 993 N.E.2d at 512
    , ¶ 31 (citing Mark P. Strasser, You Take the Embryos But I Get the House
    (and the Business): Recent Trends in Awards Involving Embryos Upon Divorce,
    57 Buff. L. Rev. 1159, 1225 (2009)). As such, applying this approach
    “invite[s] individuals to hold hostage their ex-partner’s ability to parent a
    biologically related child in order to punish or to gain other advantages.”
    
    Id. We agree
    with such criticism. We decline to give one party a blanket veto
    and accordingly reject this approach.
    II.    Adoption of the Contract Approach
    ¶33           Having considered each approach, we agree with the majority
    of jurisdictions and adopt the contract approach. As the dissent points
    out—and to which the majority agrees—contracts matter. Specifically, we
    hold that “[a]greements between progenitors, or gamete donors, regarding
    disposition of their [embryos] should generally be presumed valid binding,
    and enforced in any dispute between them.” 
    Kass, 696 N.E.2d at 180
    . Such
    agreements, like any contract, can subsequently be modified by written
    agreement. If the parties have no prior agreement, or if the agreement
    leaves the decision to the court, the balancing approach provides the proper
    framework for the determination.7 Such a framework “recognizes that both
    7      During the pendency of this appeal, Arizona adopted a new statute
    governing the disposition of embryos in a proceeding for dissolution of
    marriage or legal separation. See A.R.S. § 25-318.03. This statute only applies
    to married couples and will not resolve similar disputes between
    unmarried persons in the future. See A.R.S. § 25-318.03(A); A.R.S.
    § 25-318(A). The statute directs courts to “[a]ward the in vitro human
    embryos to the spouse who intends to allow the in vitro human embryos to
    develop to birth.” A.R.S. § 25-318.03(A)(1). Even if the spouses have a
    disposition agreement, the statute requires the court to award the embryos
    as prescribed by the statute. A.R.S. § 25-318.03(B). The statute was not in
    12
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    spouses have equally valid, constitutionally based interests in procreational
    autonomy . . . [and] encourages couples to record their mutual consent
    regarding the disposition of remaining [embryos] in the event of divorce by
    an express agreement.” 
    Rooks, 429 P.3d at 594
    , ¶ 72.
    ¶34            In applying the balancing approach, we agree with other
    jurisdictions that the party who does not wish to become a parent should
    prevail if the other party has a “reasonable possibility” of becoming a
    parent without the use of the embryos. 
    Davis, 842 S.W.2d at 604
    (“If no other
    reasonable alternatives exist, then the argument in favor of using the
    [embryos] to achieve pregnancy should be considered.”); Szafranski 
    I, 993 N.E.2d at 515
    , ¶ 42; 
    J.B., 783 A.2d at 719
    -20.
    ¶35           Applying these principles, we turn to the facts of this case.
    III.   Decree of Dissolution
    A.     The IVF Agreement
    ¶36          The trial court correctly started its analysis with the parties’
    contract. Neither party disputes that the IVF Agreement is a valid and
    enforceable agreement. At issue is how the contract is to be interpreted.
    ¶37            Torres argues section H of the IVF Agreement “clearly shows
    that the parties intended for the trial court to make the decision as to the
    disposition of the frozen embryos.” In contrast, Terrell argues that the
    contract unambiguously provides that the court cannot award one party
    the embryos without the express written consent of both parties.
    ¶38            “The interpretation of a contract is a matter of law, which we
    review de novo.” Earle Invs., LLC v. S. Desert Med. Ctr. Partners, 
    242 Ariz. 252
    , 255, ¶ 14 (App. 2017). “When interpreting a contract . . . it is
    fundamental that a court attempt to ‘ascertain and give effect to the
    intention of the parties at the time the contract was made if at all possible.’”
    Taylor v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    175 Ariz. 148
    , 153 (1993) (quoting
    Polk v. Koerner, 
    111 Ariz. 493
    , 495 (1975)). “To determine the parties’ intent,
    we ‘look to the plain meaning of the words as viewed in the context of the
    contract as a whole.’” ELM Ret. Ctr., LP v. Callaway, 
    226 Ariz. 287
    , 290-91,
    ¶ 15 (App. 2010) (quoting United Cal. Bank v. Prudential Ins. Co., 
    140 Ariz. 238
    , 259 (App. 1983)). When the terms of a valid contract are clear and
    unambiguous we must give effect to the contract as written. Grubb & Ellis
    effect at the time the trial court made its decision and we are not bound by
    it in reaching a resolution.
    13
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    Mgmt. Servs., Inc. v. 407417 B.C., L.L.C., 
    213 Ariz. 83
    , 86, ¶ 12 (App. 2006).
    “In interpreting a contract, we attempt to reconcile and give meaning to all
    its terms.” Weatherguard Roofing Co., Inc. v. D.R. Ward Const. Co., Inc., 
    214 Ariz. 344
    , 350, ¶ 27 (App. 2007). Moreover, we must give greater weight to
    specific provisions—namely those that require an affirmative response
    from the parties—in a contract “because specific contract provisions
    express the parties’ intent more precisely than general provisions.” 
    ELM, 226 Ariz. at 291
    , ¶ 18 (citation omitted).
    ¶39            The “Note,” which Terrell relies on, states that “in the event
    of a separation or divorce, embryos cannot be used to create a pregnancy
    without the express, written consent of both parties.” Just three pages later,
    the parties provided the necessary “express, written consent” in subsection
    H. The parties affirmatively elected that upon divorce or dissolution of their
    relationship, a court could either award one party the embryos for
    implantation or award the embryos to a third party for implantation.
    Moreover, the parties acknowledged they could later change their
    selections for disposition, “but need[ed] [a] mutual and written agreement”
    to do so. Subsection H unambiguously governs disposition of the embryos
    by providing the written consent to overcome the more general “Note.” See
    
    id. In making
    the choice to allow the court to determine the disposition, the
    court was required to employ the balancing approach.8
    ¶40            We reject Terrell’s argument that section H was included
    because “if the parties [had] reached an agreement as to final disposition,
    that agreement would, necessarily, and pursuant to Arizona law, [be]
    included in either a decree or settlement agreement [pursuant to Arizona
    Rule of Family Law Procedure 69(A)].” The IVF Agreement makes clear
    that the parties were free “at any time” to jointly enter into a new agreement
    and revise their disposition choices—had the parties reached a new
    agreement, the clinic would honor the parties’ choice. Absent such an
    agreement to modify their choices for disposition of the embryos, the
    8     We further note that the IVF Agreement provided three “alternatives”
    for disposition of the embryos: discarding the embryos, donation to third
    party to attempt to achieve pregnancy, and use by one partner with
    “contemporaneous permission” of the other partner. Supra ¶ 5.
    Immediately following that statement, however, the IVF Agreement also
    states that the disposition of the embryos “may also be controlled by the
    final decision of a court or other governmental authority having
    jurisdiction.” The parties were therefore aware that the three listed
    “alternatives” were not exhaustive.
    14
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    original IVF Agreement applies, and court intervention and decision-
    making was mandated.
    ¶41            Terrell next argues that subsection H refers only to divorce,
    “[t]o read the [IVF Agreement] as allowing a court to direct use of the
    embryos by one-half of a divorcing couple, but as not allowing such an
    option to couples who are unmarried and breaking up, or legally
    separating, is nonsensical.” Terrell simply did not read the contractual
    provision fully. Subsection H of the IVF Agreement applies to the
    disposition of the embryos in the event of “[d]ivorce” or “[d]issolution of
    [r]elationship” and, as such, is not limited to divorcing couples. Thus, we
    do not interpret the IVF Agreement differently depending on the marital
    status of the contracting parties.
    ¶42            The dissent posits that our reading of the IVF Agreement
    renders the “Note” meaningless. It does not. The converse is actually true.
    If the “Note” controls, it renders meaningless the parties’ election in the
    Disposition Provision, which allows the court to award the embryos to one
    party for all purposes, including “use to achieve a pregnancy in one of us or
    donation to another couple for that purpose.” (Emphasis added.) With the
    dissent’s construction of the “Note,” only if the parties agree would
    implantation be possible, which runs against the plain language of Terrell’s
    and Torres’ election in section H. The majority considered each provision
    of the contract together to determine that, by written consent of the parties,
    the court was authorized to make the disposition determination for the
    embryos in this case. See 
    id. (“[E]ach part
    of a contract must be read
    together, ‘to bring harmony, if possible, between all parts of the writing.’”
    (citation omitted)).
    B.     Balance of Interests
    ¶43           Given the authorization granted to the court in the IVF
    Agreement, we must now proceed to balance the interests of the parties.
    Application of the balancing approach involves mixed questions of law and
    fact, which we review de novo. See Willie G. v. Ariz. Dep’t of Econ. Sec., 
    211 Ariz. 231
    , 233, ¶ 8 (App. 2005). We accept the trial court’s factual findings
    unless they are clearly erroneous. In re Estate of Newman, 
    219 Ariz. 260
    , 265,
    ¶ 13 (App. 2008). See also Phoenix Newspapers, Inc. v. Keegan, 
    201 Ariz. 344
    ,
    349, ¶ 21 (App. 2001) (“We can decide whether the superior
    court correctly balanced the interests only after considering what it found
    as facts.”).
    15
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶44           The balancing approach allows the consideration of parol
    evidence. See generally 
    Davis, 842 S.W.2d at 603
    -04. In reviewing the
    application of a balancing test, we accept the trial court’s factual
    determinations. See Scottsdale Unified Sch. Dist. No. 48 of Maricopa Cty. v.
    KPNX Broad. Co., 
    191 Ariz. 297
    , 302 (1998). “We are, however, free to draw
    our own conclusions of law from these facts.” 
    Id. To do
    so is not to reweigh
    evidence, because as a matter of first impression, the trial court’s
    application of the law to its findings created the error.
    ¶45            The trial court found that Torres had a strong interest in
    having her own biologically-related child and it was “extremely
    improbable” that Torres could achieve a post-menopausal pregnancy
    without the embryos. Torres had other avenues to parenthood, as further
    noted by the trial court: “[Torres could] still adopt or seek donation of other
    embryos, even if the options are more difficult” or “not as desirable as
    having a biological child of her own.” The trial court found Terrell “would
    face the potential of significant financial responsibilities that despite
    [Torres’] position cannot be waived by her.” The court further concluded
    that “[Terrell] ha[d] legitimate concerns about parenting with [Torres]” and
    it was “unlikely the parties [would] be able to co-parent.” The court also
    found credible Terrell’s testimony that he “never intended on having
    children with [Torres] if the parties were not together.”
    ¶46           Here it is undisputed that the sole purpose of the IVF process
    was for Torres to preserve her ability to have biological offspring. She began
    the IVF procedure immediately after receiving her cancer diagnosis and
    information that cancer treatment would likely make it impossible to
    become a biological parent through normal means. Following her doctor’s
    advice and expertise, Torres elected to preserve embryos, increasing her
    chances of successful procreation. As explained by Dr. Behera, the most
    stable preservation method to ensure successful reproduction in the future
    was to freeze fertilized eggs, or embryos. With this information, Torres
    located a donor who was prepared to assist in the creation of fertilized eggs.
    It was only after hearing about the other donor that Terrell agreed to
    provide his gametes. Although the trial court found that Torres had less
    than a one percent chance of having biological children through normal
    means of pregnancy, and that she had gone through great pains to preserve
    a method by which she could have biological children, the court
    nevertheless appeared to conclude that the mere possibility that Torres
    could conceive and bear a biological child after her cancer treatment tipped
    the balance against Torres’ claims to the embryos.
    16
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶47            The trial court erred by improperly concluding Torres’ “less
    than one percent” chance of becoming pregnant through normal means and
    the remote possibility of adoption or insemination with a donor embryo
    negated her claims to these embryos. The trial court overstated Torres’
    ability to become a parent through means other than the use of the disputed
    embryos. Moreover, the court gave insufficient weight to Torres’ desire to
    have a biologically-related child—which was the entire purpose of
    engaging in IVF in the first place. In regard to her other avenues of
    parenthood, Behera gave unrebutted testimony explaining that embryo
    donation involved being placed on a long waiting list due to the limited
    number of embryos available. Torres testified that adoption was “unlikely”
    not only for the reason outlined by Behera, but also because of her medical
    history, which includes a genetic mutation that substantially increases her
    risk of cancer. This leaves Torres with less than a one percent chance of
    having a biological child and only a speculative chance of having children
    in the future.
    ¶48            Additionally, the trial court erred when it placed heavy
    weight on the parties’ inability to “co-parent.” Nothing in the record
    suggests that either of them expected or intended to co-parent any offspring
    derived from the embryos. As the trial court found, “[Torres left] the choice
    to [Terrell] to be involved or not to be involved in the life of a child if
    awarded the embryos.” At no point did Terrell indicate he had any desire
    to be a part of a child’s life; in fact, he anticipated he may never see children
    resulting from the IVF procedure.
    ¶49           The trial court determined that the parties’ decision to use
    IVF—as opposed to freezing “just” Torres’ eggs—weighed against her. As
    the court explained, had she frozen just her eggs, “there would be no further
    dispute, as [Torres’] eggs would be her sole property and it would not
    involve the potential of [Terrell] becoming a father against his wishes.” This
    was also error. Not only was Torres’ decision to freeze embryos medically
    supported, the court also heard uncontested testimony that Torres gave up
    a ready and willing alternate gamete donor. Without Terrell’s intervention,
    Torres would likely have viable cryogenically preserved embryos ready for
    implantation, as she planned.
    ¶50            The trial court found the parties “did not contemplate a
    marriage and . . . bringing children into the world in the typical manner
    [and] [a]s a result of [Torres’] cancer diagnosis, the parties’ actions were
    more impulsive and expedient.” It later credited Terrell’s testimony that he
    did not intend to have children with Torres if the marriage failed, based in
    part on its finding that “[t]here was no evidence presented that after the
    17
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    marriage the parties, for example, discussed having children regardless of
    the status of their relationship.”
    ¶51           While the record supports the conclusion that the parties may
    not have discussed having children after they married, this is irrelevant to
    the parties’ decision to jointly fertilize embryos. Nothing in the record
    demonstrates that the IVF Agreement was entered into impulsively or done
    in contemplation of marriage. Torres, facing infertility and a serious cancer
    diagnosis, was advised that the only way to preserve her fertility with
    certainty was to undergo IVF treatments. Torres began IVF with an
    immediate and specific intent to preserve her fertility. To be sure, the
    parties entered into the IVF Agreement expediently, but the record shows
    it was done with deliberation. The fact that Torres had already enlisted the
    assistance of a different donor demonstrates her purpose—to preserve her
    ability to have a biologically related child, or children, and not to simply
    have a child biologically related to Terrell. Even though Terrell doubted
    Torres would survive the cancer when he entered into the IVF Agreement,
    his doubts that Torres would live long enough to use the embryos in the
    future does not relieve him of his obligations under the contract. Torres and
    Terrell sought to jointly preserve Torres’ fertility, and not simply to have a
    child within a marriage, or even within a relationship.
    ¶52           It is of course true that if Torres were awarded the embryos,
    Terrell could be legally responsible to financially support the children.9 See
    A.R.S. § 25-814(A)(2) (presumption of paternity); McLaughlin v. Jones ex rel
    Pima Cty., 
    243 Ariz. 29
    , 36, ¶ 29 (2017). That reality is the same today as it
    was when the parties executed the IVF Agreement nearly four years ago.
    ¶53             Finally, we note the trial court erred as a matter of law to the
    extent that it considered and relied on a constitutional right to procreational
    autonomy to resolve the dispute. The trial court appeared to balance what
    it construed as Torres’ “constitutionally established right to procreate”
    against Terrell’s “right not to procreate.” Although expressing some
    skepticism as to whether such “rights” pertained to an agreement between
    the parties, and as to whether there is in fact a “right” not to procreate, the
    trial court nonetheless concluded that Terrell’s “right not to be compelled
    9      See Albins v. Elovitz, 
    164 Ariz. 99
    , 102 (App. 1990) (noting that a
    custodial parent may waive child support payments, but “any such
    agreement[s] [are] not binding on the court and will be enforced only so
    long as the interest of the child is not adversely affected.”).
    18
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    to be a parent outweigh[ed] [Torres’] right to procreate and desire to have
    . . . child[ren].”10
    ¶54            We do not agree that such a framework is useful or applicable
    when two individuals no longer agree on the disposition of embryos and
    the disagreement cannot be resolved by the terms of a prior agreement.
    Such constitutional rights are directed at protecting an individual against
    government intrusion on personal decisions regarding reproduction. See
    Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, 
    505 U.S. 833
    , 849 (1992); Eisenstadt v.
    Baird, 
    405 U.S. 438
    , 453 (1972); Skinner v. Okla. ex rel. Williamson, 
    316 U.S. 535
    , 541-42 (1942). Here, the parties specifically empowered the court to
    decide any future dispute regarding disposition of the embryos. As such,
    the trial court erred in concluding the dispute here involved a “right” to
    procreate and a “right” not to procreate. Under the balancing approach, the
    trial court should have only considered the parties’ competing and varying
    interests.11
    ¶55           We have not, as suggested by the dissent, failed to give due
    weight and consideration to the trial court, but have adopted its factual
    findings in reaching our decision. Even as we defer to the court’s factual
    findings, we must hold that the court erred in its application of the
    balancing approach. This case presents compelling factual support for
    awarding the embryos to Torres. If the factual underpinnings found by the
    court here do not support Torres’ claim to the embryos, then there is likely
    10      For instance, the trial court found that “to the extent either party had
    a constitutional right regarding procreation with these embryos, they both
    waived the right by . . . signing and executing . . . an agreement.” (Emphasis
    added.)
    11      We note that the trial court also found that awarding Torres the
    embryos to achieve pregnancy was against public policy because
    “litigation” over a potential child was “inherent” and would be contrary to
    A.R.S. § 25-103 (declaring the public policy of this state and the general
    purposes of Title 25 are “[t]o promote strong families [and] . . . strong family
    values”). We disagree. Section 25-103 is inapplicable. To apply it to these
    circumstances, in which one party wants to use embryos to procreate and
    the other party objects, would always necessarily tip the balance in favor of
    the objecting party; thus, it would functionally operate to give greater
    weight to the objecting party’s interests much in the same way that the
    contemporaneous mutual consent approach operates to give the objecting
    party greater power in a dispute. Further, any conclusion as to whether
    implantation of the embryos would result in “strong” families and family
    values is speculative.
    19
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    no factual scenario which would result in the award of the embryos to one
    party over the objection of the other. The result reached by the trial court,
    therefore, would be a de facto adoption of the contemporaneous mutual
    consent approach—an approach we have rejected. Supra ¶ 32.
    ¶56            After reviewing the record, deferring to the superior court’s
    factual findings, we apply the balancing approach to the competing
    interests. The majority finds Torres’ interests in the embryos—especially
    given that she gave up the opportunity to use another donor and she is
    likely unable to become a parent (biological or otherwise) through other
    means—outweighs Terrell’s interest in avoiding procreation. We therefore
    vacate the trial court’s order and remand to the trial court to enter an order
    awarding Torres the embryos.
    IV.    Attorney Fees
    ¶57            Pursuant to A.R.S. § 25-324(A), the trial court has discretion
    to award a party’s reasonable attorney fees “after considering the financial
    resources of both parties and the reasonableness of the positions each party
    has taken.” We review the trial court’s award of attorney fees for an abuse
    of discretion. Murray v. Murray, 
    239 Ariz. 174
    , 179, ¶ 20 (App. 2016).
    ¶58            In the decree, the trial court denied Torres’ request for
    attorney fees and costs after finding “there [was] not a substantial disparity
    of financial resources between the parties” and “both parties acted
    unreasonably in a limited way but neither more than the other.”
    Specifically, the trial court found that Torres had acted unreasonably in
    refusing to “refund [Terrell]’s insurance premiums until just before trial
    started, even though the law supports such reimbursement.” Torres does
    not contest the trial court’s finding regarding the disparity of income.
    Instead, she contests the trial court’s finding that she acted unreasonably
    and further argues, “[c]ompared to the number of instances showing
    [Terrell]’s positions were unreasonable, [the] one instance of Torres’
    unreasonableness does not justify completely [denying] her request for an
    award of attorney[] fees.”
    ¶59           Even assuming it is undisputed that Terrell was entitled to
    reimbursement of the insurance premiums, the record supports Torres’
    contention that Terrell did not request reimbursement until a week before
    the evidentiary hearing, in the pretrial statement. At the start of the hearing,
    the parties reached a binding agreement that Torres would reimburse
    Terrell $2,508.54 for the post-service insurance premiums and waived the
    issue for purposes of the hearing. Although the trial court has discretion in
    20
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Opinion of the Court
    determining when a party is unreasonable, based on this record, the trial
    court abused its discretion in concluding that Torres acted unreasonably.
    ¶60           We therefore remand the matter to the trial court, for
    purposes of reassessing Torres’ request for attorney fees consistent with
    A.R.S. § 25-324(A) and our conclusion that Torres was not unreasonable.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶61            For the forgoing reasons, we vacate the trial court’s order
    directing the embryos be donated to a third party. We remand the matter
    for the trial court to enter an order awarding Torres the embryos, and for
    the trial court to reconsider its denial of attorney fees. We deny Torres’
    request for attorney fees, but grant her costs on appeal upon compliance
    with Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate Procedure 21. See A.R.S. § 12-341.
    C R U Z, Judge, dissenting:
    ¶62          Contracts matter. Arizona’s Constitution protects individual
    rights when it explicitly prohibits the impairment of contractual
    obligations. Ariz. Const. art. II, § 25. Accordingly, I must respectfully
    dissent.
    ¶63         The majority holds the trial court erred as a matter of law by
    not awarding the embryos to Torres, even though:
    (1) Neither party disputes the enforceability of the Agreement between
    each other, see supra ¶ 36; and
    (2) Only the interpretation of the contract language is at issue, see 
    id., and a
    specific contract provision, which is entitled to greater weight
    under contract law, expresses the parties’ precise intent that
    “[e]mbryos cannot be used to produce pregnancy against the wishes
    of the partner. For example, in the event of a separation or divorce,
    embryos cannot be used to create a pregnancy without the express,
    written consent of both parties . . . .” 
    See supra
    ¶ 6.
    ¶64            As the majority concedes, the Note at the outset of Section 10
    states that neither party may use the embryos to create a pregnancy without
    the written consent of the other. In interpreting Section 10(H), however, the
    majority incorrectly concludes in paragraph 43 that a court interpreting the
    21
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Cruz, J., dissenting
    Agreement can disregard the Note and proceed to allocate the embryos
    according to a balancing test that is nowhere to be found in the Agreement.
    In other words, the majority concludes that when called upon to decide a
    question that the parties have addressed in the Agreement, the court is not
    governed by that Agreement.
    ¶65            But 10(H) does not say that. Instead, it recognizes that, in the
    case of a dissolution or separation, the Clinic can relinquish control of the
    embryos only upon receipt of a court order or agreement. It is no surprise
    that the form contract drafted by the Clinic would insulate the Clinic, for its
    own protection, from the obligation of having to act in the event of a
    disagreement between the parties. That is the meaning of the language in
    10(H) that the parties checked, to the effect that a decree or settlement
    agreement “will be presented to the Clinic directing use to achieve a
    pregnancy in one of us or donation to another couple for that purpose.” But
    nothing in the Agreement states that a court is free to disregard the other
    terms of the Agreement when it decides the question. Instead, 10(H)
    recognizes that, upon dissolution or separation, the court does what courts
    do: interpret the Agreement to decide the matter.
    ¶66            The majority concludes that because 10(H) refers to the
    specific situation of a dissolution or separation, it should “control” over the
    Note. But the Note itself specifically states that it applies in the event of
    separation or divorce: “For example, in the event of a separation or divorce,
    embryos cannot be used to create a pregnancy without the express, written
    consent of both parties . . . .” Under the Note, the court may not allocate the
    embryos to Torres because Terrell does not consent. Because the parties did
    not check the box to signify their agreement that the embryos could be
    destroyed, the only available option under the Agreement was donation to
    a third party. Instead, the majority’s interpretation of Section 10 would
    render a part of the contract—the Note—meaningless. That is, “in the event
    of separation or divorce, embryos cannot be used to create a pregnancy
    without the express, written consent of both parties,” is language wholly
    cast aside because the majority now has balanced the interests in favor of
    Torres. (Emphasis added.) See Aztar Corp. v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co., 
    223 Ariz. 463
    , 478, ¶ 56 (App. 2010) (stating the court should not construe one
    contractual term in a way that renders another meaningless) (citation
    omitted); Gesina v. Gen. Elec. Co., 
    162 Ariz. 39
    , 45 (App. 1988) (“Each section
    of an agreement must be read in relation to each other to bring harmony, if
    possible, between all parts of the writing.”) (citation omitted).
    ¶67     The two options available to the parties—(1) allow one of the two
    parties to use the embryos for pregnancy as to one of the parties, or (2)
    22
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Cruz, J., dissenting
    donate them to another couple—are consistent with the parties’ selections
    under additional sections of the Agreement, such as Sections A, B, D, and
    E. Those Sections of the Agreement anticipate and provide for other
    situations in which the Clinic would need to dispose of the embryos. Those
    are discontinuation of IVF treatment, nonpayment of storage fees, age-
    limited storage, death of a patient, and divorce or dissolution of the
    relationship of the parties. Most notably, Section H is the only circumstance
    of the five enumerated where the parties would be on opposing sides of a
    lawsuit. No other circumstance, not even the death of a party, requires a
    court order or settlement agreement for the Clinic to release the embryos.
    Logically, as discussed above, because of the potential for legal exposure,
    in divorce cases the Clinic requires the parties to produce either a court
    order or settlement agreement before it will release the embryos to either
    party. This requirement shields the Clinic from the risk of inadvertently
    releasing the embryos to the wrong party or releasing the embryos to a
    party who may use them to produce pregnancy against the wishes of the
    other partner, in clear violation of the terms of the Agreement. On the other
    hand, if the divorcing parties agree that one party may use the embryos for
    implantation, a court order need not be provided, so long as the settlement
    agreement displays the “contemporaneous permission” of the parties. This
    interpretation of the IVF Agreement gives effect to Sections A, B, D, E, and
    H without rendering any one of them meaningless.
    ¶68           Torres testified acknowledging the binding effect of the
    contract, admitting “we did sign a contract and we agreed to these
    provisions.” Because the Agreement requires the contemporaneous
    permission of the other partner before one of them may use the embryos,
    when it states that “in the event of a separation or divorce, embryos cannot
    be used to create a pregnancy without the express, written consent of both
    parties,” given that Terrell does not consent to the embryos being given to
    Torres, Section H’s requirement directs the court to direct the Clinic to
    exercise the only remaining alternative: that the embryos be donated to
    another couple. Torres admitted she understood this to be the only
    alternative under the Agreement and that her request to have the embryos
    awarded to her was a request for relief outside the terms of the Agreement.
    Torres’ own admission is telling:
    Q. What are you asking the court to order with regard to the
    embryos?
    A. I’m asking the court to order that they be awarded to me
    with use or in the alternative to be donated just like the
    contract. I want—you know, we both made this agreement
    23
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Cruz, J., dissenting
    when we were okay. And I understand things didn’t go the
    way we planned—or at least the way I planned, I’m not sure.
    But we did sign a contract and we agreed to these provisions.
    We agreed to donate them. Never did we select to destroy
    them.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶69           Here, the majority, instead of construing the contract in a way
    that harmonizes all sections and is consistent with Torres’ own
    understanding of their Agreement, interprets Section H to grant discretion
    to a court presiding over a dissolution “to make the disposition
    determination for the embryos in this case,” without concern for other
    provisions of the parties’ Agreement. 
    See supra
    ¶42. The majority
    incorrectly concludes that Section 10(H) charges the court with deciding
    between awarding them to either party or donating them to another couple
    untethered to the constraints of the Agreement. Respectfully, I believe this
    conclusion is wholly unsupported. If the parties intended to grant a court
    the power to determine who should receive the embryos upon their
    divorce, unconstrained by the other terms of their Agreement, the IVF
    Agreement would have said so explicitly.
    ¶70             The IVF Agreement contains express language explicitly
    prohibiting the result the majority reaches today. Specific provisions in a
    contract are entitled to greater weight “because specific contract provisions
    express the parties’ intent more precisely than general provisions.” ELM
    Ret. Ctr., LP v. Callaway, 
    226 Ariz. 287
    , 291, ¶ 18 (App. 2010) (citing Tech.
    Equities Corp. v. Coachman Real Estate Inv. Corp., 
    145 Ariz. 305
    , 306 (App.
    1985), and Cent. Hous. Inv. Corp. v. Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Ass’n, 
    74 Ariz. 308
    , 311
    (1952)); see also Duenas v. Life Care Ctrs. of Am., Inc., 
    236 Ariz. 130
    , 140, ¶ 34
    (App. 2014). The Agreement says that the “[e]mbryos cannot be used to
    produce pregnancy against the wishes of the partner. . . . without the
    express, written consent of both parties . . . .” (Emphasis added.) If the
    parties intended that in the event of a divorce a court should be the ultimate
    decisionmaker, their written agreement would state that the terms of the
    Agreement have no effect in the context of a divorce. Likewise, if Torres
    wanted to be permitted to use the embryos regardless of the Terrell’s
    consent, she should have included such language in the Agreement or
    otherwise made plain that she did not agree to the requirement that his
    written consent would be required to make use of the embryos. By Torres’
    own testimony, we know Terrell was not her only sperm donor option.
    Torres’ ex-boyfriend had previously agreed to donate his sperm. Whether
    that ex-boyfriend would have agreed to donate his sperm without
    24
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Cruz, J., dissenting
    limitation on her use of the resulting embryos, or whether any sperm
    contribution by that ex-boyfriend would have generated embryos is
    speculative; but the terms of the contract for obtaining Terrell’s sperm
    contribution were clear, agreed to by the parties and memorialized in a
    signed contract. Torres chose, despite having another donor option, to
    enter the Agreement and IVF process with Terrell.
    ¶71           Not only do I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the
    Agreement granted the court the power to decide the issue based not on the
    language of the Agreement but instead by balancing the parties’ interests, I
    also disagree with the majority’s decision to balance those interests itself.
    In so doing, the majority has not accorded due weight to the discretion of
    the superior court to consider the evidence and decide issues of credibility.
    ¶72            Because it is a legal question, we review de novo the trial
    court’s choice of a legal principle to apply. Pullen v. Pullen, 
    223 Ariz. 293
    ,
    295, ¶ 9 (App. 2009). However, because the weight to which a factor is given
    is a factual question within the discretion of the trial court, the law requires
    that we review the court’s weighing of factors in a balancing test for an
    abuse of discretion, giving appropriate deference to the trial court’s ruling,
    and we will uphold the court’s application of those factors if the court’s
    decision is supported by sufficient evidence. 
    Id. at 295-96,
    ¶ 9; State v.
    Chapple, 
    135 Ariz. 281
    , 297 n.18 (1983) (“Something is discretionary because
    it is based on an assessment of conflicting procedural, factual or equitable
    considerations which vary from case to case . . . . Where a decision is made
    on that basis, it is truly discretionary, and we will not substitute our
    judgment for that of the trial judge . . . .”) (internal citations omitted).
    ¶73            Although we do not reweigh evidence on appeal, here the
    majority holds the trial court erred as a matter of law in its application of the
    balancing approach—in other words, it concludes the trial court correctly
    decided to undertake to balance the parties’ respective interests but
    weighed them incorrectly. This is clear from the majority’s listing of what
    the trial court did wrong: “The trial court erred by improperly concluding
    Torres’ ‘less than one percent’ chance of becoming pregnant through
    normal means and the remote possibility of adoption or insemination with
    a donor embryo negated her claims to these embryos”; “the court gave
    insufficient weight to Torres’ desire to have a biologically related child”;
    “the trial court erred when it placed heavy weight on the parties’ inability
    to ‘co-parent’”; the court improperly weighed Torres’ decision to freeze
    embryos as opposed to just her eggs; and the court placed too much
    emphasis on its findings regarding the parties’ marriage, calling the parties’
    actions “impulsive and expedient.” 
    See supra
    ¶¶ 47-50.
    25
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Cruz, J., dissenting
    ¶74           Under Davis v. Davis, the interests of the party wishing to
    avoid procreation should prevail in such a balancing, assuming the other
    party has a reasonable possibility of achieving parenthood by other means.
    
    842 S.W.2d 588
    , 604 (Tenn. 1992). However, if no other reasonable
    alternatives exist, then the argument in favor of allowing the partner to use
    the pre-embryos to achieve pregnancy should be considered. 
    Id. The lack
    of reasonable alternatives does not automatically require the court to award
    the embryos to the party seeking parenthood, but instead requires that it
    weigh that fact along with the other interests of the parties to resolve
    disposition of the embryos in a fair and responsible manner. 
    Id. at 591.
    ¶75           Here, it is undisputed that when Torres signed the contract,
    she understood and agreed that she could not use the embryos without
    Terrell’s permission. Nevertheless, balancing her interests to use the
    embryos against Terrell’s desire not to have Torres use the embryos to
    achieve parentage, the trial court determined that Terrell’s right not to be
    compelled to be a parent outweighed Torres’ right to become a biological
    parent. Supporting its conclusion, the trial court found Terrell had an
    interest in choosing not to parent a biological child with Torres outside of
    marriage, would face a potentially significant financial responsibility of
    raising children, and that Torres waived her interest in procreating with the
    embryos created with Terrell’s genetic contribution by signing the
    contract.12
    ¶76           The majority on one hand agrees with Davis and relies on it to
    support application of the balance of interests approach, but on the other
    ignores that Davis recognized “the right of procreational autonomy is
    composed of two rights of equal significance—the right to procreate and
    the right to avoid 
    procreation.” 842 S.W.2d at 601
    ; Eisenstadt v. Baird, 
    405 U.S. 438
    , 453 (1972) (“If the right of privacy means anything, it is the right
    of the individual, married or single, to be free from unwarranted
    governmental intrusion into matters so fundamentally affecting a person as
    the decision whether to bear or beget a child.”) (emphasis added) (citation
    12     To the extent the court’s order was based on public policy, I agree
    with the majority that it may have been an improper consideration, though
    I agree that Terrell had an interest and right not to be forced to procreate
    with Torres if he did not wish to do so. As the court found, Terrell testified
    he did not intend to have children with Torres if they were not together,
    and neither Torres nor Terrell presented evidence they discussed having
    children together if the relationship ended, nor did they execute any further
    agreements saying otherwise.
    26
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Cruz, J., dissenting
    omitted). “The equivalence of and inherent tension between these two
    interests are nowhere more evident than in the context of in vitro
    fertilization.” 
    Davis, 842 S.W.2d at 601
    . While crediting Torres’ interest
    (right) in biological procreation and the difficulty she would otherwise
    encounter if not granted the embryos, the majority disregards Terrell’s
    interest (right) in not having biological children, though they both equally
    extend from the same right of procreational autonomy—a “right to
    procreate” and a “right to avoid procreation.” See 
    id. at 601,
    603 (emphasis
    added); 
    discussion supra
    Section II.B. Although the majority correctly notes
    this case does not present the same type of government intrusion on the
    parties’ personal decisions regarding reproduction, see supra ¶¶ 53-54, it
    errs by separating the parties’ rights from the interests protected by those
    rights.
    ¶77           Moreover, the trial court did not improperly discount Torres’
    interest in having children. The court considered Torres’ “strong interest
    in having a biological child,” and acknowledged “the evidence supports
    that it would be almost impossible for [Torres] to become pregnant through
    normal means of pregnancy and through the use of any existing egg.” On
    the other hand, the court noted Torres could achieve parenthood by other
    means.
    ¶78            The majority concludes “[t]he trial court overstated Torres’
    ability to become a parent through means other than the use of the disputed
    embryos.” 
    See supra
    ¶ 48. In support of this proposition, the majority relies
    on Dr. Behera’s testimony that “embryo donation involved being placed on
    a long waiting list,” and on Torres’ testimony that she has thought of
    adoption but her medical history makes it unlikely that she would be given
    the opportunity to adopt a child. But the court heard no evidence, other
    than Torres’ speculation, regarding her perceived inability to adopt
    children. To be sure, Dr. Behera offered no testimony regarding the
    likelihood that Torres could achieve parenthood through adoption.
    ¶79           In Davis, the court concluded that “if [the wife] were unable
    to undergo another round of IVF, or opted not to try, she could still achieve
    the child-rearing aspects of parenthood through 
    adoption.” 842 S.W.2d at 604
    . While Torres asserts her desire to have biological children—an interest
    entitled to some weight—the trial court found she can still adopt or seek
    donation of other embryos, even if those avenues were more difficult.
    Arizona law treats biological children and adopted children the same.
    A.R.S. § 8-117 (“On entry of the decree of adoption, the relationship of
    parent and child and all the legal rights, privileges, duties, obligations and
    other legal consequences of the natural relationship of child and parent
    27
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Cruz, J., dissenting
    thereafter exist . . . as though the adopted child were born to the adoptive
    parent in lawful wedlock.”). Torres may have a higher interest in biological
    children and the trial court may give weight to her interest, but I am wary
    of a judicial determination that a greater weight to biological parenthood
    exists over adoptive.13 Furthermore, any medical concerns regarding her
    ability to adopt a child or to raise adoptive children are similarly present
    during pregnancy and biological child-rearing. And Torres was medically
    cleared by her oncologist to become pregnant through IVF. Arguably, if
    Torres’ medical history does not prevent her from achieving parenthood
    through implantation, it should not act as a bar to adoption either. To
    conclude Torres is likely unable to become a parent through adoption is to
    step outside out role and reweigh the credibility of Torres’ self-serving
    testimony. The trial court saw and heard Torres testify. As such, the court
    was free to take all positions, significance of interests, and burdens into
    account when making credibility determinations and resolving the
    conflicting interests of the parties, including those of her prospective
    children if Torres suffers future medical hardship. 
    Davis, 842 S.W.2d at 603
    .
    Therefore, the trial court gave proper consideration to Torres’ ability to
    become a parent through adoption.
    ¶80            Also, while it is true that the possibility of a child support
    obligation existed when Terrell signed the IVF agreement, the terms of the
    Agreement protected him, in the event of a separation or divorce, from
    incurring that financial responsibility without his express written consent.
    Moreover, a father’s involvement with children may extend beyond simple
    financial support, to the raising and caring for children in every way
    contemplated by society, just as the mother’s involvement extends beyond
    maternal care to financial support. The majority’s ruling also ignores
    Terrell’s position that, given Torres’ connection to Terrell’s family and
    friends, there exists a high likelihood that any children, potentially seven or
    more of them, born of the embryos would be known to Terrell’s family and
    friends, forcing him to choose between accepting parenthood or crassly and
    openly avoiding it. The trial court properly weighed these factors.
    ¶81          Notwithstanding the contract, the trial court balanced the
    competing interest of the parties. Still, consistent with the parties’
    contractual Agreement, the court awarded the embryos to the IVF center to
    13      Contra Reber v. Reiss, 
    42 A.3d 1131
    , 1139 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2012) (“There
    is no question that the ability to have a biological child and/or be pregnant
    is a distinct experience from adoption. Thus, simply because adoption or
    foster parenting may be available to Wife, it does not mean that such
    options should be given equal weight in a balancing test.”).
    28
    TERRELL v. TORRES
    Cruz, J., dissenting
    allow another couple to bring them to life. The majority reweighs the
    evidence to reach a different result. For the foregoing reasons, I dissent
    from the majority opinion vacating the trial court’s order and directing the
    trial court to award Torres the embryos based on the majority’s own re-
    weighing of the parties’ interests.
    ¶82            I further dissent as to the form of relief granted. If we
    conclude the court erred as a matter of law when it improperly weighed
    Torres’ interests, then, rather than putting ourselves in the position of fact-
    finder by weighing the interests of the parties, we should remand this
    matter to the trial court for a proper weighing of the interests. See, e.g., Owen
    v. Blackhawk, 
    206 Ariz. 418
    , 423, ¶¶ 22-23 (App. 2013) (remanding upon
    finding the trial court failed to properly consider father’s engagement and
    certain related evidence, with instructions to the trial court to give such
    evidence “full consideration”). It is not our role as an appellate court to
    invade the factual province of the superior court and balance the interests
    of the parties ourselves.
    ¶83           Do contracts matter? I believe they do. Therefore, because
    the contract of these parties explicitly prohibits the outcome reached by the
    majority, and because it is outside our purview to reweigh the evidence, I
    would affirm the trial court’s judgment, or, in the alternative, remand the
    matter to the trial court for a new weighing of the parties’ interests.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED:    JT
    29