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Mass. High Court Overturns Marriage
Ruling Gives Legislature 180
Days to Take "Appropriate Action"
Plaintiffs Julie (L) and Hillary Goodridge
by
Euan Bear
As
OITM was going to press, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled
4-3 that preventing couples of the same gender from marrying is unconstitutional
under the commonwealth's charter document. Boston-based Gay & Lesbian
Advocates & Defenders successfully litigated the case on behalf of seven
same-sex couples.
Proponents of same-sex marriage hailed
the ruling as a victory, although the court stopped short of requiring
municipalities to immediately issue marriage licenses. The ruling gives
the Massachusetts legislature 180 days to write legislation conforming
with its ruling. The legislature is already considering a civil unions-type
bill and a proposal for amending the state constitution to ban same-sex
marriages.
Several reports said that the ruling
was very similar to the 1999 Vermont Supreme Court ruling, which resulted
in legislation creating civil unions.
The court in Goodridge et al. v. Department
of Public Health defines civil marriage in Massachusetts as "the voluntary
union of two persons as spouses, to the exclusion of all others."
Chief Justice Margaret Marshall, writing
for the majority, wrote, "Marriage is a vital social institution. The
exclusive commitment of two individuals to each other nurtures love
and mutual support. It brings stability to our society. For those who
choose to marry, and for their children, marriage provides an abundance
of legal, financial and social benefits. In return, it imposes weighty
legal, financial, and social obligations."
"This is a momentous legal and cultural
milestone," said Mary L. Bonauto, of GLAD, who was an attorney for the
couples. "At long last, gay and lesbian families and their children
will finally be equal families in the Commonwealth."
The court's ruling is based on the equality
provisions of the state constitution. Under the "free and equal" clause
in the constitution, it held, "The marriage ban works deep and scarring
hardship on a very real segment of the community for no rational reason."
Because the ruling is based on the Massachusetts Constitution, there
is no appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Four of the couples in the Goodridge
case are raising children together and all have been together for more
than six years.
"This is a profound moment for our family,"
said Hillary Goodridge on behalf of herself and Julie Goodridge, the
named plaintiffs in the case. "We will no longer have to try to explain
to our eight-year-old daughter why we can't marry, or that we love each
other even though we are not married. And more importantly, we'll be
able to provide Annie with the full protections under marriage that
we now can't possibly provide no matter how many legal documents we
draft and sign."
Gary Chalmers, a teacher, and Richard
Linnell, a nurse, were also plaintiffs in the case. "We are thrilled,"
said Chalmers. "We've always been like every other family in our neighborhood."
Susan Murray, one of two attorneys who
litigated Vermont's Baker v. State case said in a statement, "Massachusetts
has built on the precedent set by Vermont. Now it's up to the Massachusetts
legislature to take the next step, and confirm that the only way to
provide true equality for its gay and lesbian citizens is to simply
open up the marriage laws to gay couples."
Echoing the groan of other Vermont pro-civil
union political activists, Murray cautioned, "It's likely that Massachusetts
is in for a battle just like the one that we fought in 2000, both in
the legislature and in the subsequent campaign season. Gays and lesbians
here in Vermont must to do everything we can to support Massachusetts'
fight for full equality."
"This is a historic day for lesbian and
gay couples in Massachusetts who until today have only dreamed of being
able to get married," said David Buckel, Lambda Legal's Marriage Project
Director. "The court has said explicitly that civil marriage can't be
limited to different-sex couples. The state legislature will now look
at how - not whether - Massachusetts couples will have equal marriage
rights.
"This isn't a chess game - today's ruling
is about real people's lives, hopes and dreams," Buckel said. Lambda
Legal is litigating for marriage rights on behalf of seven New Jersey
couples.
Presidential candidate Senator John Kerry
(D-Mass) wasted no time in issuing a statement in support of the ruling
and encouraging the legislature to uphold equal rights for lesbian and
gay couples. "While I continue to oppose gay marriage," he wrote, "I
believe that today's decision calls on the Massachusetts state legislature
to take action to ensure equal protection for gay couples. These protections
are long overdue."
"Our community and the people of Massachusetts
now face a bruising political struggle. We have to make sure that the
'appropriate action' taken by the state legislature is to ensure the
freedom to marry for all its citizens, not some attempt to create some
kind of separate and fundamentally unequal system," wrote National Gay
and Lesbian Task Force Director Matthew Foreman. "We've learned from
painful experience that court victories are incomplete - and sometimes
hollow - until they are translated into statute and fairly implemented."
Foreman likewise cautioned pro-gay marriage
activists in Massachusetts and nationwide to brace for a "vicious, demonizing,
and dehumanizing assault that is likely to be undertaken by anti-gay
extremists."
"Today, the Massachusetts Supreme Court
made history," said Elizabeth Birch, executive director of the Human
Rights Campaign. "This ruling will never interfere with the right of
religious institutions - churches, synagogues and mosques - to determine
who will be married within the context of their respective religious
faiths. This is about whether gay and lesbian couples in long-term,
committed relationships will be afforded the benefits, rights and protections
afforded other citizens to best care for their partners and children.
This is good for gay couples and it is good for America."
The Human Rights Campaign signed onto
a "friend of the court" brief in Goodridge. A variety of other civil
rights organizations, religious groups, child welfare experts, family
and legal historians and others also either signed or filed briefs of
their own in favor of extending civil marriage laws to same-sex couples.
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