|
Bleeding Heartland
It's what plants crave.
|
Mon Dec 08, 2008 at 21:58:18 PM CST
|
(Thanks to jpmassar for walking us through the legal issues. - promoted by desmoinesdem)
Tuesday, December 9th, 2008, the Iowa Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the case of Varnum vs. Brien. In August of 2007 Polk County District Judge Robert Hanson ruled in that case in favor of gay couples seeking to marry. He determined that the statute that prevents them from marrying, Iowa 535.2, which states in part:
"Only a marriage between a male and female is valid."
violates the Iowa State Constitution.
Hanson then issued stay of execution of his order, but not before one couple had legally obtained a marriage license and gotten married.
Continue on as I try to explain what might happen if the Supreme Court upholds Hanson's decision, his logic contained in the ruling, and give some interesting exerpts from the ruling itself. |
| jpmassar :: Iowa Supreme Court & the Case for Equal Marriage Rights |
If the Iowa Supreme Court upholds Polk's decision, then, possibly depending on exactly how it is upheld, Iowa lawmakers would have to decide whether to attempt to pass a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. If lawmakers do decide on an amendment, it would take years: unlike California, proposed constitutional amendments have to be approved twice by both houses of the Legislature during consecutive years and only then put to voters for final ratification.
Judge Hanson's decision, all 63 pages of it, can be found here:
http://www.buddybuddy.com/finding9.pdf
Polk's ruling, as best I, a non-lawyer, can interpret it, goes something like this:
-- The constitutionality of the statute (Iowa 595.2) that restricts marriage solely to between a man and a woman must be analyzed using strict scrutiny, because marriage is a fundamental right protected by the Iowa Constitution. Any statute diminishing a fundamental right must serve a compelling state interest. The statute does no such thing, and therefore it is unconstitutional because it denies a fundamental right.
-- And even if what is claimed above is not valid, the constitutionality of the statute would then be analyzed under what is known as intermediate scrutiny, because it discriminates on the basis of gender. Any statute which discriminates on this basis must at least serve an important (as opposed to compelling) state interest. But Hanson concludes that the ban on same-sex marriage is not related to any important state interest and is therefore unconstitutional because of its discriminatory nature.
-- And even if it should not be analyzed using intermediate scrutiny, then the constitutionality of the statue can be still be challenged using 'rational basis' (i.e., does it serves some kind of legitimate and rational purpose?). Hanson concludes that even using this kind of analysis the Defendent has failed to show that the law makes any sense at all.
That's some pretty strong stuff!!
Below are some fairly extensive excerpts from the ruling, with commentary, elaborating on my above summary.
Hanson first cites 120 'Undisputed Facts' related to the case. Two of the most interesting are
On the effects of marriage or lack thereof
33. Plaintiffs and their families are harmed in numerous tangible and intangible (including dignitary) respects by their exclusion fiom the right to marry in Iowa.
On the concept of traditional marriage
99. American marriage law has vastly changed in its treatment of men and women. When Iowa's first marriage law was passed, the centuries-old doctrine of coverture, in which the woman's separate legal identity disappeared into the man's upon marriage, reigned in Iowa as elsewhere. Married women were essentially chattel; they were not considered legal "persons" who could exercise rights, hold property, earn money, or deny their husbands access to their bodies.
In other words, anyone who is claiming that they are defending or upholding the definition or concept of traditional marriage is full of, shall we say, animal excrement...
The Defendant's argument in support of the existing statute
Hanson then lays out the Defendant's case by enumerating the Defendants reasons for claiming that the law serves legitimate State purposes, to wit:
1) promoting procreation;
2) promoting child rearing by a father and a mother in a marriage relationship;
3) promoting stability in opposite-sex relationships where children may be born;
4) conserving state and private resources; and
5) promoting the concept of fundamental marriage or the integrity of traditional marriage.
Hanson'S Analysis Of The Statute's Constitutionality, in Three Parts
First, as I note above, he claims the statute is invalid because of
Due Process and Strict Scrutiny
The Plaintiffs argue that Iowa Code $595.2(1) violates their fundamental right to marry under the Due Process Clause of the Iowa Constitution:
". . . [N]o person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law."
Both the Iowa Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court have recognized that the right to marry is a fundamental right.
Though not all laws that affect marriage are subject to strict scrutiny review, state law that "significantly interferes" with the right to marry is subject to strict scrutiny review.
The Defendant has cited no evidence that precluding gay and lesbian individuals fiom marrying other gay and lesbian individuals will promote procreation, will encourage child rearing by mothers and fathers, will promote stability for opposite sex marriages, will conserve resources or will promote heterosexual marriage.
Iowa Code §595.2(1) manages to be both over and under-inclusive while effectuating none of its purported rationales. The law is extremely overinclusive in its attempt to strengthen heterosexual marriage and procreation by preventing an entirely distinct group of individuals - homosexuals - from marrying.
The law is also extremely underinclusive by failing to regulate at all how heterosexuals enter into marriage and procreative relationships, despite the narrow focus of the legislation's goals on that group of individuals.
The Defendant fails to sustain his burden of proof that §595.2(1) is narrowly tailored to effectuate the achievement of a compelling state interest. Consequently, this Court concludes that §595.2(1) violates Plaintiffs' Due Process rights guaranteed by Article I, $9 of the Iowa Constitution.
Next, he analyzes the Plaintiffs claims under the Iowa Equal Protection Clause, and concludes that no important state interest is served by denying Equal Protection:
Equal Protection and Intermediate Scrutiny
The Plaintiffs also argue that Iowa Code $595.2 violates their Equal Protection rights under the Iowa Constitution by prohibiting an individual from marrying another individual of the same sex:
"All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation; the General Assembly shall not grant to any citizen, or class of citizens, privileges or immunities, which, upon the same terms shall not equally belong to all citizens."
The Equal Protection Clause "is essentially a direction that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike."
A statute which classifies individuals based upon their sex or gender "is subject to intermediate scrutiny and will only be upheld if it is substantially related to an important state interest."
This Court concludes that the sex-based classification promulgated by Iowa Code $595.2(1) is not substantially related to an important state interest. First, the Defendant has not sustained his burden of proof that any of the five rationales articulated above are important state interests...
Rational Basis
And then, Hanson moves on to 'rational basis' and one by one he analyzes each 'legitimate purpose' (listed above) the Defendant claims the statute might serve, discrediting each in turn and concluding that since
A statute is unconstitutional if legislative goals are achieved in a manner which is wholly arbitrary or which amounts to invidious discrimination.
and since the statute does not, in his opinion, serve any of the stated purposes or does so in an arbitrary or indvidious way
that Iowa Code $595.2 violates the Due Process and Equal Protection provisions in that it is not rationally related to a legitimate government interest.
Finally, we reach his ultimate conclusion:
Hanson's Overall Conclusion
Because $595.2(1) violates Plaintiffs' due process and equal protection rights for the aforementioned reasons including, but not limited to, the absence of a rational relationship to the achievement of any legitimate governmental interest, the Court concludes it is unconstitutional and invalid.
Will the Iowa Supreme Court uphold Hanson's ruling, and if so, on what basis, and if not, on what basis?
If they invalidate, will they claim the the statute does not restrict a fundamental right, and that it does not constitute gender discrimination, and that it in fact does serve some legitimate purpose, despite Hanson's argument that it does not?
If they uphold, will it be on the basis of Due Process, or Equal Protection, or simply that the law as written is not serving and legitimate purpose? If the latter, could the law be rewritten by the Iowa Legislature to satisfy the courts, and thereby avoid having to pass a Constitutional Amendment? And if that were to happen, what would be the fate of all the same-sex couples who got married in the meantime?
All we know now is that the answer may come as late as a year after the arguments are heard tomorrow.
|
|
|