Surrogate Son Scores Win: Marquess of Bath Told He Can Inherit After Landmark Ruling

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Surrogate Son Scores Win: Marquess of Bath Told He Can Inherit After Landmark Ruling

Royals (1 / 1) 14.05.2026 03:00 / Olga


A High Court decision has thrown a modern curve into aristocratic inheritance — it centers on a child born by surrogate and what that means for historic family trusts. Read on to discover the full story!

The ruling

Justice Matthews found that the younger son of Ceawlin Thynn, the 8th Marquess of Bath, and Emma Thynn, Marchioness of Bath, should not be treated as anything other than their child for future inheritance purposes. The couple have two sons: John, 11, and Henry, 9, the latter born via an American surrogate after Emma experienced a serious pituitary condition during her first pregnancy.

Why the case was needed

The family sought clarity now to avoid complications with U.S. tax rules and to preserve the option of naming Henry as a beneficiary later. The court acknowledged it would be unfair to exclude a genetic child from consideration simply because of the method of birth.