http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-gaymarry5aug05.story
Judge Backs Same-Sex Marriage
A Washington state law that bars gay unions is unconstitutional, a lower
court rules.
By Lynn Marshall and Elizabeth Mehren
Times Staff
Writers
August 5, 2004
SEATTLE — Gay and lesbian couples can marry
under Washington state law because denying them that right is unconstitutional,
a judge ruled Wednesday.
Prohibiting same-sex couples from marrying is
"not rationally related to any legitimate or compelling state interest," said
King County Superior Court Judge William L. Downing, who issued his ruling in
response to a challenge of a state law defining marriage as between a man and a
woman.
Downing stayed his decision to allow the state's Supreme Court to
review the case. Until that court rules, no marriage licenses can be issued to
same-sex couples in Washington.
If Downing's decision is upheld,
Washington will become the second state — after Massachusetts — to permit gay
and lesbian couples to marry. If sustained, the ruling would go beyond the law
in Massachusetts because Washington has no residency requirements and would
allow out-of-state couples to wed.
The decision came out of two lawsuits
filed last spring by gay and lesbian couples who were denied marriage licenses
in King County soon after the Massachusetts court ruling that legalized same-sex
unions. Eight couples were represented by LAMBDA Legal Defense, a group that
promotes gay and lesbian rights; 11 others by the American Civil Liberties
Union.
The Seattle decision proves that same-sex couples who challenged
the state's definition of marriage "are full and equal citizens of Washington.
No more and no less," said Jennifer Pizer, lead counsel in the case for
LAMBDA.
Joseph Fuiten, president of Washington Evangelicals for
Responsible Government, deplored the ruling as "a breathtaking leap. We don't
know where this is going to take us. What are the costs for our society? I'm
just stunned that a judge would leap off this building not knowing what is
below."
The state is expected to appeal the decision within 30 days and
at the same time ask the Supreme Court to review the case on an expedited
basis.
The Washington ruling came the day after after voters in Missouri
overwhelmingly approved a state constitutional amendment limiting marriage to a
union between one man and one woman. Thirteen other states are expected to have
fall ballot initiatives offering constitutional amendments to ban same-sex
marriage.
California is one of 43 states with laws or court rulings that
prohibit same-sex marriage.
Same-sex marriage remains a political flash
point, prompting demonstrations at last week's Democratic National Convention in
Boston. Protests for and against same-sex marriage also are expected this month
at the Republican National Convention in New York.
The Washington ruling
"underscores why people are rushing all over the country to strengthen their
marriage laws in the face of judicial activism," said Robert Knight, director of
the Culture and Family Institute, an affiliate of Concerned Women for America, a
Christian conservative advocacy and research organization.
The
back-to-back developments on same-sex marriage demonstrate that "we are
literally experiencing in America the best of times and the worst of times,"
said Cheryl Jacques, a former Massachusetts state senator who is president of
the Human Rights Campaign, a gay and lesbian advocacy group.
State after
state is debating the meaning of marriage — and whether that right should be
extended to gays and lesbians. "We are watching this play out all over the
country," Jacques said.
Same-sex marriage gained national prominence in
November, when the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts ruled that all
citizens in the state had the right to wed, regardless of gender. When the
decision took effect May 17, gay and lesbian couples flocked to Massachusetts to
exchange vows.
But Gov. Mitt Romney, a Republican who opposes same-sex
marriage, swiftly invoked a little-known statute barring out-of-state couples
from marrying in Massachusetts if their home states did not acknowledge the
unions.
LAMBDA's other lead attorney in the Washington case, Jamie D.
Pedersen, said Washington would have no such obstacle.
"We do not have an
analog to the Massachusetts law that prevents out-of-state couples from getting
married here," Pedersen said. "There is no residency requirement and no
requirement that your marriage be legal in the jurisdiction where you came from.
So this will be a breakthrough in a way that the Massachusetts law has not
been."
Despite the confusion over residency, the transition to same-sex
marriage in Massachusetts has been "effortless," said Mary Bonauto, a lawyer for
Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders who argued the landmark case in
Boston.
"Prior to May 17, many people just could not conceive of a world
in which same-sex couples would be making this commitment, and it is now de
rigueur," she said, noting that thousands of gay and lesbian couples have
married in Massachusetts.
When the Washington lawsuits were filed in
March and April, Judge Downing promised a swift response.
His ruling
stressed the complexity of what he called "wedlock deadlock." Never, he wrote,
"could this or any court find itself more in tune with the lofty goals advanced
by every party to a lawsuit."
Same-sex marriage, Downing said, remains an
issue about which "people of the highest intellect, the deepest morality and the
broadest public vision maintain divergent opinions, strongly held in good faith
and all worthy of great respect."
Indeed, before revealing his opinion,
Downing said he would "like nothing better than to stop at this point, and with
a warm and sincere pat on the back, to send all the parties off to the State
Supreme Court or the state Legislature or both."
At a news conference
here Wednesday, one of the plaintiff couples expressed joy that Downing did not
defer to the Legislature or another court.
Beth Reis, 52, and Barbara
Steele, 63, said they had been together for 27 years. One of their four children
died in an automobile accident in 2001, and their three surviving children were
all "in long-term, committed, heterosexual relationships." Reis and Steele have
11 grandchildren, three step-grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
"I
am just so happy," Steele said. "After 27 years we are finally getting the
recognition and protection we deserve. Just the security of knowing that in a
medical emergency we will be allowed to speak for each other, to hold each
other's hand in the emergency room."
Reis added: "Knowing that if we have
to go to a nursing home someday we can share a room. We can be buried side by
side. Marriage gives us all the protection we have lived without all these
years."
King County Executive Ron Sims, a defendant in the lawsuit,
issued a statement applauding the decision. Although he said he strongly
supported same-sex marriage, Sims had barred county staff from granting marriage
licenses to gay and lesbian couples because he wanted to force a court
decision.
"This is an issue of equality under the law, and the courts are
the appropriate place to resolve such issues," he said.
Sims praised the
couples who filed the lawsuit. "They had the courage of their convictions," he
said.
Marshall reported from Seattle and Mehren from
Boston.
Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times