Florida couple sues fertility clinic after discovering baby girl isn't biologically theirs

PALM BEACH COUNTY, Fla. (CBS12) — A Florida couple is urgently seeking answers after discovering that the baby they carried and delivered in December is not biologically theirs, prompting an emergency lawsuit against an Orlando area fertility clinic and a subsequent court order transferring the case out of Palm Beach County.
According to a verified complaint filed January 9, the couple — identified only as John and Jane Doe — underwent IVF treatment through IVF Life Inc. with Dr. Milton Mc Nichol, and entrusted the clinic with the storage of their three viable embryos.
According to the complaint, in March 2025, one embryo was implanted in Jane Doe, resulting in what appeared to be a normal pregnancy. She gave birth to a healthy baby girl, referenced in court filings as Baby Doe, on December 11, 2025. But the couple soon noticed that the child’s appearance did not resemble either of them. Genetic testing confirmed their fear: the infant has no genetic relation to the Does.
The parents allege the clinic implanted Jane Doe with an embryo belonging to someone else—raising the deeply concerning possibility that their own embryos may have been mistakenly implanted in another patient, who may now be raising, or about to raise, their biological child. The complaint describes the emotional turmoil that followed, including the couple’s simultaneous bond with the child they carried and their moral obligation to reunite her with her biological parents once they are identified.
The Does’ attorneys contacted the clinic on January 5, urging immediate cooperation to identify Baby Doe’s genetic parents and determine the whereabouts of the couple’s embryos. They requested action by the close of business on January 7, but received no substantive response. The complaint states that the lack of cooperation, combined with the potential scope of the error, left the couple with no adequate remedy other than emergency injunctive relief.
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In their lawsuit, the Does ask the court to compel IVF Life Inc. to urgently notify all patients who had embryos in storage during the relevant period, to pay for genetic testing for those patients and any children born under the clinic’s care in the past five years, and to provide a full accounting of the disposition of the couple’s three stored embryos. The complaint also seeks any additional relief the court deems appropriate.
On January 14, the case landed before a Palm Beach County judge, who reviewed the filings on an emergency basis, citing the seriousness of the allegations and the possible consequences of delay. But despite the urgency, the judge ruled that Palm Beach County was not the correct venue. Court records show that the defendants do not maintain an office in Palm Beach County, the alleged error did not occur there, and the plaintiffs do not reside there—facts the complaint does not dispute. Based on Florida venue statutes, the judge ordered the case transferred to either Orange or Seminole County, at the plaintiffs’ discretion, while preserving the original January 9 filing date. The judge declined to address any remaining issues until the case reaches the proper jurisdiction.
The case remains active and is moving forward in Orange County following the plaintiff's selection of a new venue. Meanwhile, the Does continue caring for Baby Doe as they await the identification of her biological parents—and the fate of their own embryos.







