http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-gaylegal6-2008nov06,0,220763.story
From the Los Angeles Times
Gay rights backers file 3 lawsuits challenging Prop. 8
Lawyers for same-sex couples argue that the anti-gay
marriage measure is an illegal constitutional revision. Backers of the measure
attack the suits.
By Maura Dolan and Tami Abdollah
4:26 PM PST,
November 5, 2008
REPORTING FROM SAN FRANCISCO AND LOS ANGELES — After
losing at the polls, gay rights supporters filed three lawsuits today asking the
California Supreme Court to overturn Proposition 8, an effort the measure's
supporters called an attempt to subvert the will of voters.
"If they want
to legalize gay marriage, what they should do is bring an initiative themselves
and ask the people to approve it," said Frank Schubert, co-chairman of the
Proposition 8 campaign. "But they don't. They go behind the people's back to the
courts and try and force an agenda on the rest of society."
Lawyers for
same-sex couples argued that the anti-gay-marriage measure was an illegal
constitutional revision -- not a more limited amendment, as backers maintained
-- because it fundamentally altered the guarantee of equal protection. A
constitutional revision, unlike an amendment, must be approved by the
Legislature before going to voters.
The state high court has twice before
struck down ballot measures as illegal constitutional revisions, but those
initiatives involved "a broader scope of changes," said former California
Supreme Court Justice Joseph Grodin, who publicly opposed Proposition 8 and was
part of an earlier legal challenge to it. The court has suggested that a
revision may be distinguished from an amendment by the breadth and the nature of
the change, Grodin said
Still, Grodin said, he believes that the
challenge has legal merit, though he declined to make any predictions. Santa
Clara University law professor Gerald Uelmen called the case "a
stretch."
UC Irvine Law School Dean Erwin Chemerinsky said his research
found too little case law on constitutional revisions to predict how the state
high court might resolve the question.
"There is very little law about
what can be done by amendment as opposed to revision," he said.
Jennifer
Pizer, a staff lawyer for Lambda Legal, said the initiative met the test of a
revision because it had far-reaching magnitude.
"The magnitude here is
that you are effectively rendering equal protection a nullity if a simple
majority can so easily carve an exception into it," she said. "Equal protection
is supposed to prevent the targeting and subjugation of a minority group by a
simple majority vote."
Glen Lavy, an attorney for the Proposition 8
campaign, called the lawsuits "frivolous" and "a brazen attempt to gut the
democratic process."
The first action was filed by the ACLU, the National
Center for Lesbian Rights and Lambda Legal. Santa Clara County and the cities of
San Francisco and Los Angeles also filed a suit, and Los Angeles lawyer Gloria
Allred filed a third suit on behalf of a married lesbian couple. All the
lawsuits cited the constitutional revision argument, and two of them asked the
court to block Proposition 8 from taking effect while the legal cases were
pending.
"The court must hold that California may not issue licenses to
non-gay couples because if it does it would be violating the equal protection
clause, "Allred said at a news conference.
A California Supreme Court
spokeswoman said the court would act "as quickly as possible" on the
challenges.
Other lawsuits could follow, but gay rights groups have
called on supporters not to file cases in federal court. They fear that a loss
at the U.S. Supreme Court could set back the marriage movement
decades.
"We think it is early to go into federal court and ask federal
courts to say we have a federal right to marry," Pizer said.
In addition
to going to court, gay rights advocates sought to assure an estimated 18,000
same-sex couples that their marriages will remain valid.
The groups cited
comments by Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown, who has said the initiative was not
retroactive. If the marriages are challenged in court, that case too would go to
the California Supreme Court. Experts differ on whether the law would protect
the marriages.
The California Supreme Court voted 4 to 3 on May 15 that a
state ban on same-sex marriage was unconstitutional. The ruling also elevated
sexual orientation to the constitutional status of race and gender, an elevation
that provides strong legal protection from discrimination.
Dolan and
Abdollah are Times staff writers.
maura.dolan@latimes.comtami.abdollah@latimes.com