Federal Judge Sets Hearing in Alabama on Same-Sex Marriage
By RICHARD FAUSSET and RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA
FEB. 10, 2015 - New York Times
MOBILE, Ala. — A day after a
federal ruling legalizing same-sex
marriage took effect in Alabama, a federal judge set a hearing that could
determine whether resistant local probate judges must grant licenses to gay
couples. At the same time, some officials who had refused to issue the licenses,
in compliance with a state judicial ruling, reversed course.
The probate judges are caught
between conflicting signals from the state and federal judiciaries. State law
does not require these judges to be lawyers, yet they are being called on to
consider constitutional matters involving the interplay of federal and state
authority. Generally they deal with matters like adoptions, guardianships and
name changes.
Judge Greg Norris of Probate Court
in Monroe County, president of the Alabama Probate Judges Association, was
one of the judges who changed course. On Tuesday, he sent an email to his
colleagues in other counties, explaining his position, but not, he said, urging
them to do the same.
Judge Norris said he would not
personally perform same-sex marriages. gThe law says I may perform them, and I
just donft want to do it,h he said. gIfm going to follow the law to the best of
my ability.h
Another probate judge who changed
positions, John Enslen of Elmore County, explained in a Facebook post that if
the federal court ordered judges to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples,
any judge who refused might have to pay damages and lawyersf fees to aggrieved
same-sex couples.
The confusion began Monday, the
effective date of a ruling by Judge Callie V. S. Granade of Federal District
Court in Mobile that Alabamafs ban on same-sex marriage is unconstitutional. On
Monday morning, the United States Supreme Court turned down a request by state
officials to stay that ruling, pending appeals.
But on Sunday night, Alabamafs
chief justice, Roy S. Moore, had ordered probate judges not to grant marriage
licenses to same-sex couples. Many judges obeyed that order and refused to issue
marriage licenses to gay couples on Monday.
Lawyers who challenged the statefs
ban, and many legal scholars, argue that the law is clear that a federal court
order trumps the direction of Chief Justice Moore.
By Tuesday afternoon, more probate
judges were issuing licenses; those refusing were in 44 of Alabamafs 67
counties, down from 54 on Monday, according to a
tally kept by the Human Rights Campaign, a gay rights group.
Among those resisting was Judge
Don Davis of Probate Court here in Mobile County, the second-most populous
county in the state. This made him the primary target of same-sex marriage
advocates who asked Judge Granade to order him and his aides to issue the
licenses. A hearing is scheduled for Thursday. Advocates hope that an order
against Judge Davis would apply to other refusing judges.
On Monday, dozens of would-be
spouses and their supporters lined up at the Mobile County Courthouse seeking
licenses. But on Tuesday, just six same-sex couples gathered. The marriage
license window was still closed.
gThere wonft be anything going
on,h Mark C. Erwin, the Probate Court chief of staff, told the couples.
gObviously you can stay, but we must maintain the status quo.h
That angered John Humphrey, who
had arrived to marry his partner, James Strawser; they are plaintiffs in one of
the suits that produced Judge Granadefs ruling.
gHow long do they expect taxpayers
to sit behind these closed shields until ordered by the federal judge to make
this happen?h he shouted, to applause from the others waiting.
President Obama, in an interview
with BuzzFeed News on Tuesday, predicted that the Supreme Court would recognize
that same-sex marriage should be legal in all 50 states.
gMy sense is that the Supreme
Court is about to make a shift, one that I welcome, which is to recognize that —
having hit a critical mass of states that have recognized same-sex marriage — it
doesnft make sense for us to now have this patchwork system,h Mr. Obama
said.
On Monday, lawyers for Judge Davis
petitioned the Supreme Court of Alabama for guidance regarding gthe scope and
the effectivenessh of Chief Justice Moorefs administrative order. It showed what
a difficult position Judge Davis — and all of the probate judges in Alabama —
had been put in.
The filing said Chief Justice
Moorefs order had been called into question by the United States Supreme Courtfs
action, and that it was likely the federal judge, Judge Granade, would gshortly
exert personal jurisdictionh over the matter.
In Calhoun County, in the
northeast quadrant of the state, Judge Alice K. Martin was following Chief
Justice Moorefs order and declining to issue marriage licenses to same-sex
couples. In a phone interview, Judge Martin said that her employees were giving
same-sex couples applications for licenses, but that they were not processing
them.
gMy reading of the order that was
issued by Justice Moore is that it is directed to probate judges and their
agents or employees, and it is a direct order to us,h she said. gThat is
something Ifm going to follow until something tells me otherwise.h
But in a sign of how delicate the
situation is, Judge Martin declined to elaborate on her decision. gI think itfd
be inappropriate for me to comment on this, because itfs undecided,h she
said.
Judge Martin also declined to
share her personal opinion on same-sex marriage, and said it did not play into
her decision. She said her office had been prepared to issue same-sex marriage
licenses until Chief Justice Moorefs order.
Judge Steven L. Reed of Montgomery
County Probate Court, the first black elected to that position, said his
decision to issue marriage licenses seemed gclear cuth based on Judge Granadefs
order. But Judge Reed, a Democrat, spoke of how the civil rights era gave him a
gheightened respect for federal rulings.h
He said he was also wary of Chief
Justice Moorefs arguments about federal overreach. To Judge Reed, these were
gcodesh and gdog whistlesh reminiscent of segregationist arguments tapping a
vein of thought here that ggoes back to the Civil War.h
Judge Enslen of Elmore County, who
reversed course on the licenses, said in an interview that granting licenses was
not even a judicial function. Therefore, he argued, Chief Justice Moore did not
have any power over it.
But the most persuasive element in
changing his mind, he said, was the Supreme Courtfs decision, by 7 to 2, not to
temporarily block Judge Granadefs decision legalizing same-sex marriage in the
state. Judge Enslen, a lawyer for more than 40 years and a Republican, said he
disagreed with the Supreme Courtfs action but had to be guided by it.
gThose seven justices went out of
their way to slap Alabama,h he said, sending a message that they saw little
chance of Judge Granadefs decision being reversed.
gWefve got the highest federal
court siding with the District Court,h he said. gThe ballgamefs
over.h
Richard Fausset reported from Mobile, and Richard Pérez-Peña from New
York.
A version of this article appears in print on
February 11, 2015, on page A15 of the New York
edition with the headline: Federal Judge Sets Hearing in Alabama on
Same-Sex Marriage.