Court of Final Appeal finds Government’s refusal to allow transgender men using their acquired gender on identity cards without undergoing full sex reassignment surgery unconstitutional
Introduction
On 6 February 2023, the Court of Final
Appeal (“CFA”), the highest court in
Hong Kong, handed down its landmark judgment in Q, Tse Henry Edward v Commissioner of
Registration [2023] HKCFA 4. The CFA ruled
in favour of Q and Mr Henry Edward Tse, who are female to male transgender
persons, and found the Hong Kong Government has breached their constitutional
rights by refusing them from using their acquired gender (i.e. male) on their
identity cards without undergoing full sex reassignment surgery.
The
gender marker
Every resident over the aged of 11 is
required to register for a Hong Kong Identity Card (“HKID card”), production and inspection of which is engaged
routinely in a wide variety of everyday activities as a means of verifying a
person’s identity. The HKID card will indicate whether the holder is male or
female (“gender marker”).
The
appellants
In Q,
Tse Henry Edward, the two female to male transgender appellants were
diagnosed with gender dysphoria. They have undergone lengthy course of medical
and surgical treatments designed to affirm their male gender identity. Their
gender dysphoria has been medically certified to have been sufficiently
attenuated without any further need for additional surgical procedures. For
medical purposes, the appellants can be regarded as having transitioned from
their assigned female gender to the acquired male gender.
The appellants applied to the Commissioner
of Registration (“Commissioner”) to
have the gender markers on their HKID cards amended to reflect their acquired
gender on the basis that the unamended gender markers (i.e. female) will cause
them to suffer discrimination, humiliation, violation of their dignity and
invasion of their privacy as resulted from having to reveal to third parties
their transgender status when producing their HKID cards. The Commissioner
refused their applications on the basis that under the policy as contained in
guidelines issued on 5 April 2012, the appellants are required to have
undergone full sex reassignment surgery (which may involve removal of the
uterus, removal of the ovaries, removal of the vagina and phallus construction)
to qualify them for a change of the gender markers (“Policy”).
The
judicial review and appeal
The appellants brought judicial review
proceedings to challenge the Commissioner’s refusal on the basis of violation
of their constitutional right to privacy under Article 14 (Protection of
privacy, family, home, correspondence, honour and reputation) of the Bills of
Rights (“BOR 14”), which provides:
“(1) No one shall be subjected to arbitrary or
unlawful interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to
unlawful attacks on his honour and reputation.
(2) Everyone has the right to the protection of
the law against such interference or attacks.”
Their applications before the Court of
First Instance and the Court of Appeal were both dismissed. The appellants
further appealed to the CFA.
The
final appeal
The CFA was of the view that in the case
of a constitutional challenge alleging a violation of a constitutional right or
freedom, it is first necessary to identify whether a constitutional right is
engaged. The next question is to ask whether the impugned provision or conduct
amounts to an encroachment on such right, being an interference with, or
restriction of, that right. If so, unless the constitutional right is absolute,
a proportionality assessment must then be undertaken to determine whether such
interference with the right can be justified.
Constitutional
right to privacy
The CFA was of
the view that BOR 14 is clearly engaged in the present case. The Policy concerns the appellants’
eligibility for an altered HKID card gender marker which reflects their
acquired gender to enable them to conduct their lives and affairs consistently
with their experienced gender. The gender marker does not signify
recognition of the holder’s sex as a matter of law but it merely operates as an
element of an identification document.
The CFA found
that the refusal to allow an amendment to the gender marker involve
humiliation, distress and loss of dignity in routine activities that require
inspection of HKID cards. Furthermore, the Policy’s condition that
the applicants undergo full sex reassignment surgery requires them to make a
choice between accepting frequent infringements of their BOR14 rights to
privacy when using unamended ID cards and undergoing major invasive and
medically unnecessary surgery. The constitutional right under BOR 14 is clearly
engaged and the Policy does constitute an encroachment upon such right. The
Commissioner has the burden to prove the Policy can be justified as satisfying
the test of proportionality.
Proportionality
test
The CFA agreed
that it is generally desirable and legitimate that clear guidelines, like the
Policy in this case, should be drawn up to give direction to those
administering a policy and to inform those affected by it. The requirement for
certification of completion of full sex reassignment surgery does suggest a
rational connection.
In relation to the proportionality test, the CFA ruled that since the Policy
concerns the expression of an individual’s gender identity on a HKID card and a
requirement to undergo extensive surgical intervention as a condition of a
change of gender marker, it calls for a narrower standard of scrutiny, namely
the “no more than reasonably necessary” standard.
CFA rejected the three main reasons for refusal put forward by the
Commissioner and concluded that:
1.
full sex reassignment
surgery is not the only workable, objective and verifiable criterion to enable
a registration officer to determine the application for amendment;
2.
the
requirement of full sex reassignment surgery is not justified by a need to
avoid practical problems that were alleged by the Commissioner; and
3.
the
exceedingly small risk of post-transition reversibility leading to pregnancy
cannot justify adherence to the Policy.
The CFA ruled
that the Policy fails the test of reasonable necessity and is disproportionate,
where CFA said, among other things, that “the
societal benefits of the Policy are in many aspects illusory and are at best
relatively slim”. The full sex reassignment surgery is highly invasive and
is not medically required by many transgender persons whose gender dysphoria
has been effectively treated like the appellants. The Policy clearly does not
reflect a reasonable balance.
The CFA allowed
the appeals and quashed the Commissioner’s refusal. The CFA granted a declaration
that the Commissioner’s refusal and the Policy requiring female to male
transgender persons to undergo full sex reassignment surgery as a necessary
condition for altering the gender markers on HKID cards as unconstitutional and
violating the appellants’ BOR 14 rights.
Takeaways
As a result of this CFA’s landmark judgment, female to male transgender
persons will no longer have to undergo full sex reassignment surgery prior to
amending their gender markers on their HKID cards. However, this case only
focuses on female to male transgender persons. The CFA has expressly left the
male to female situation untouched. Therefore, whether male to female
transgender persons can change of their gender marker (i.e. female) without
undergoing full sex reassignment surgery is uncertain.
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Published by ONC Lawyers © 2023 |