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Corbett v Corbett

1970 English transsexual marriage case


Summary

1970 English transsexual marriage case

Infobox court case | concur/dissent = Corbett v Corbett (otherwise Ashley) is a 1970 family law divorce case heard between November and December 1969 by the High Court of England and Wales in which Arthur Corbett sought annulment of his marriage to April Ashley. Corbett had known at the time of the wedding that she had been assigned male at birth and had undertaken gender-affirming surgery. However, after the relationship had broken down, Corbett sought to end the marriage, with the grounds for divorce being that the marriage had been invalid, as Ashley was assigned male at birth and same-sex marriage in the United Kingdom was illegal at the time.

The court held that, for the purposes of marriage, sex was to be legally defined by three factors present at birth that the judge referred to as "biological" – namely chromosomal, gonadal and genital. Any surgery or medical intervention was to be ignored, as were any psychological factors (which were in this case identified with Ashley's "transsexualism"). The judge held that the marriage (which had to be between man and woman) should be annulled. Although the judgment was restricted to a consideration of legal sex specifically within marriage, its reasoning was later applied more widely within England and Wales.

Background

The parties to the case were The Hon. Arthur Corbett, (future 3rd Baron Rowallan), a British aristocrat (the husband), and April Ashley, a model and actress (the wife). Ashley had been registered male at birth in 1935 and had been raised as a boy, but by 1956 was working as what at that time was known as a "female impersonator" in the South of France. In 1960 Ashley underwent sex re-assignment surgery in Casablanca, and became a successful model, photographed by David Bailey for British Vogue.

Corbett and Ashley had met in 1960 and married in September 1963, Corbett doing so with full knowledge of Ashley's history and of the surgery. Within 14 days the relationship had broken down. Ashley's lawyers wrote to Corbett in 1966 demanding maintenance payments, and in 1967 he responded by filing suit to have the marriage annulled. As the case was brought prior to the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 (which would have allowed divorce after a period of marital separation), other grounds had to be relied upon. Corbett argued that the marriage was null and void on the basis that Ashley had at the time of the ceremony been a person of the male sex; or alternatively that the marriage had never been consummated sexually.

After the ruling

The ruling in this case was used as the basis to define the legal sex of transsexual and transgender people for many purposes until the introduction of the Sex Discrimination (Gender Reassignment) Regulations 1999, in an amendment to the Sex Discrimination Act 1975. These Regulations defined "gender reassignment" as "a process which is undertaken under medical supervision for the purpose of reassigning a person's sex by changing physiological or other characteristics of sex". In the Equality Act 2010 the requirement for medical supervision as a condition for legal recognition of a change of sex was removed.

As a result of the decision in this case, alternative ways to achieve amendment of birth records for transsexual and intersex people ceased in England and Wales until the introduction of the Gender Recognition Act 2004.

Relationship to other cases

The decision of the Corbett v Corbett case runs counter to an earlier case, that of Sir Ewan Forbes in 1968. However, that case was not available at the time for consideration as a precedent. Academic and LGBTQI+ advocate Zoë Playdon suggests that the decision in the Forbes case shows "there is apparently no reason why the benefits its precedent provides – a corrected birth certificate and equal civil status – should not be enjoyed by everyone else in the UK who like him has been born with the condition of transsexualism." The Forbes case is the subject of Playdon's 2021 book The Hidden Case of Ewan Forbes.

References

Bibliography

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| access-date = December 29, 2021

  • Gilmore, Stephen, "Corbett v. Corbett (Otherwise Ashley), [1971] P. 83, Corbett v. Corbett: Once a Man, Always a Man?", in Herring, Jonathan, Rebecca Probert & Stephen Gilmore (editors), Landmark Cases in Family Law, 2011, ISBN 9781847317872

  • {{cite book

  • {{cite journal

  • {{cite journal

| access-date = December 29, 2021

References

  1. (February 1970). "Judgment: Corbett v Corbett (otherwise Ashley)".
  2. (4 June 2005). "Sex and the single grande dame". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  3. (5 August 2021). "Ariel Nicholson Is the First Out Trans Woman On the Cover of US Vogue".
  4. (2011). "Landmark Cases in Family Law". [[Bloomsbury Publishing]].
  5. "The Sex Discrimination (Gender Reassignment) Regulations 1999".
  6. "The Equality Act 2010, Section 7".
  7. "The Case of Ewan Forbes | Press for Change".
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