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California same-sex marriages blocked for several
more months
by Rex Wockner
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Aug. 16 blocked any same-sex
marriages from taking place in California while proponents of the state’s
marriage ban appeal the Aug. 4 district-court ruling that found Proposition
8 in violation of the U.S. Constitution. The appeals court said it will
hear the case the week of Dec. 6, and it set up an expedited briefing
schedule for the case’s attorneys. The court also ordered the proponents
of the ban to prove that they have “standing” to appeal the
decision made by District Judge Vaughn Walker. The actual defendants in
the case, including Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Attorney General Jerry
Brown, have refused to defend Prop 8, and the Court of Appeals’
order seemed sympathetic to the idea that proponents of the ban, as “defendant-intervenors,”
are not properly situated to appeal Walker’s ruling.
If they are not, that could end the case, and same-sex marriage would
again be legal in California under Walker’s original ruling, though
a decision on standing could be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The
defendant-intervenors are the same people who put Prop 8 on the ballot
in 2008 to overturn the state’s legalization of same-sex marriage.
“The 9th Circuit put the appeal on a fast track and specifically
directed the Prop 8 proponents to address ‘why the appeal should
not be dismissed for lack of Article III standing’ in their opening
brief,” said the National Center for Lesbian Rights. “That
means the court will consider whether the proponents of Prop 8 have the
right to file an appeal at the same time that it is considering whether
Judge Walker’s decision that Prop 8 violates the federal Constitutional
is legally correct.” The proponents’ opening brief is due
Sept. 17, the plaintiffs’ opposing brief is due Oct. 18 and the
proponents’ reply brief is due Nov. 1. A decision that the proponents
lack standing could come in December. If the 9th Circuit decides the proponents
have standing and goes on to consider the constitutionality of Prop 8,
it would not be expected to issue a decision until sometime in early 2011.
Either decision could be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, the plaintiffs challenging Prop 8 could appeal the 9th Circuit’s
current stay to the U.S. Supreme Court right now but have given no indication
they will do so.
Robin Tyler, whose marriage to Diane Olson was the first same-sex marriage
in Southern California two years ago, said the stay is deeply disappointing.
“We are tired of our emotions being batted around like ping pong
balls,” Tyler said. “Gays and lesbians are human beings, and
there is not one legal reason to delay same-sex marriages in California.
... Martin Luther King said, ‘Justice delayed is justice denied.’
He also said, ‘Wait means never.’ Once again, our hopes have
been dashed.” NCLR Executive Director Kate Kendell said: “Every
additional day that couples must wait to marry again in California is
painful, but despite the terrible disappointment for the many couples
whose right to marry has been delayed yet again, today’s ruling
includes another significant victory for our side. The court did the right
thing by putting the case on a fast track and specifically ordering that
Prop 8 proponents show why they have a legal right to appeal. This ruling
brings us one step closer to ending the nightmare of Prop 8 and restoring
full equality for all Californians.” Lambda Legal called the stay
“painful.”
“We are saddened by the 9th Circuit’s decision to maintain
the stay of Judge Walker’s ruling that Prop 8 is unconstitutional,”
said Jennifer Pizer, director of the group’s Marriage Project. “We
very much hoped to see same-sex couples again free to celebrate their
love and mutual devotion through marriage starting later this week. We
know this delay is painful for couples in love, who have been denied their
basic rights for too long already.”
She also said the 9th Circuit failed to apply “the standard test
for when a stay should be ordered.”
The test requires, among other things, that an appellant prove a strong
likelihood of winning on appeal and that the appellant would suffer an
irreparable injury without a stay. Judge Walker said the Prop 8 proponents
failed to pass any part of the test. The 9th Circuit’s order did
not explain its determination.
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