Oklahoma Code § 10-557.10

Title 10. Children: Required findings to validate an agreement – Court
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order of validation – Review - Deficiencies.
A.  A court may validate a gestational agreement only as
provided by this section.
B.  A gestational agreement may be validated under the Oklahoma
Gestational Agreement Act only if the court finds by a preponderance
of the evidence that:
1.  The court has jurisdiction over all parties to the
gestational agreement;
2.  The parties to the gestational agreement meet all the
requirements set forth in this act for such parties and all
necessary parties to the gestational agreement have entered into the
gestational agreement;
3.  The gestational agreement meets all the requirements for
gestational agreements set forth in this act;
4.  The medical evidence provided shows that the intended parent
is unable to carry a pregnancy to term and give birth to a child or
is unable to carry a pregnancy to term and give birth to a child
without unreasonable risk to the intended parent's physical or
mental health or to the health of the unborn child;
5.  Each party to the gestational agreement has been advised by
legal counsel in compliance with this act and has voluntarily
entered into and understands the terms of the gestational agreement;
6.  The gestational carrier has given birth to at least one
child and carrying another pregnancy to term and giving birth to
another child would not pose an unreasonable risk to that child's
health or the physical or mental health of the gestational carrier;
and
7.  The intended parents have made guardianship provisions for
the prospective child by amending their existing estate planning
documents or by executing estate planning documents containing such
provisions if they previously had no existing estate planning
documents.
C.  If the court finds that the requirements of subsection B of
this section are satisfied, then the court shall render an order
that:
1.  Validates the gestational agreement and declares that the
intended parents will be the sole parents of any child born under
the gestational agreement;
2.  Orders that each intended parent who is a party to the
gestational agreement be listed as a parent on such child's
certificate of birth to be filed with the state registrar of vital

statistics as provided by Oklahoma law and that neither the
gestational carrier nor any spouse of the gestational carrier shall
be listed on said certificate of birth;
3.  Orders the hospital, birthing facility or any other medical
facility where such child is born to recognize the intended parents
as the legal parents of such child for all purposes immediately upon
the birth of such child; and
4.  Unless the gestational agreement provides otherwise, orders
the hospital, birthing facility or any other medical facility where
such child is born to grant the intended parents the following
rights:
a. the right to immediate custody of and access to such
child upon birth,
b. the right to name such child,
c. the right to make any and all health decisions
regarding such child upon birth, and
d. the right to be designated as the people to be issued
armbands or other security devices identifying them as
the parents of such child.  The gestational carrier
and any spouse of the gestational carrier shall not
receive such armbands or security devices unless it is
medically necessary for such child's welfare.
D.  For good cause shown, a court may validate a gestational
agreement even though it was not validated at the time of transfer
of gametes or embryos to the gestational carrier for the purpose of
conception or implantation, provided that such gestational agreement
was entered into by all necessary parties to the gestational
agreement prior to the time of transfer of such gametes or embryos
to the gestational carrier for the purpose of conception or
implantation, and provided that the court finds that all other
requirements needed to validate a gestational agreement under this
act have been satisfied.
E.  The court may rely solely on affidavits, declarations,
testimony, other competent evidence or any combination thereof in
making its determination as to whether the requirements to validate
a gestational agreement have been satisfied.  A court need not
conduct an evidentiary hearing if it finds that the documentary
evidence supplied by the parties petitioning to validate a
gestational agreement is sufficient to show by a preponderance of
the evidence that the requirements to validate the agreement are
satisfied.
F.  The court's determination as to whether or not the
requirements to validate a gestational agreement have been satisfied
is subject to review only for abuse of discretion.
G.  If the court determines that the gestational agreement does
not meet the necessary requirements to be validated, the court shall
issue an order identifying with specificity each deficiency that it

found which prevents it from validating the gestational agreement.
The parties may thereafter amend the gestational agreement or cure
any other identified deficiencies and thereafter file an amended
petition to validate the gestational agreement.  The same
requirements shall apply to validating an amended gestational
agreement as would apply to validating an original gestational
agreement.  The parties may amend as many times as needed to cure
any deficiencies identified by the court.

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