USA TODAY US Edition

Gay-marriage case revolves around 5 issues Richard Wolf

Supreme Court steps in at end of month

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State bans on same-sex marriage have been justified based on judicial precedent, states’ rights, regulating procreatio­n, optimal child-rearing and centuries-old tradition. Those reasons have been loudly disputed.

When it convenes April 28 for one of the most historic oral arguments in its 226-year history, the Supreme Court will hear all those arguments from five lawyers representi­ng gays and lesbians on one side, and the states of Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee on the other. The justices will have read what dozens of federal trial and appeals court judges have written.

Here’s a look at five major arguments cited by those appeals court judges in their rulings. In addition to the four Midwest states whose bans were upheld, the circuit courts struck down similar bans in Idaho, Indiana, Nevada, Oklahoma, Utah, Virginia and Wisconsin.

1 JUDICIAL PRECEDENT

The first hurdle in the gaymarriag­e debate facing lower court judges has been what to make of a 1972 Supreme Court ruling that denied marriage rights to a gay couple in Minnesota. The one-line decision in Baker v. Nelson upheld the state’s ban on same-sex marriage “for want of a substantia­l federal question.”

Because of the wealth of judicial rulings that have come in the

following four decades, most federal judges have reasoned that Baker does not tie their hands. “Since Baker, the court has meaningful­ly altered the way it views both sex and sexual orientatio­n through the equal protection lens,” the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit ruled Virginia’s Bostic v. Schaefer.

In the case of Obergefell v. Hodges before the Supreme Court, Judge Jeffrey Sutton of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit differed with all the previous rulings. “This type of summary decision, it is true, does not bind the Supreme Court in later cases,” he wrote for his panel’s 2-1 majority. “But it does confine lower federal courts in later cases.”

2 STATES’ RIGHTS

At the heart of the case is a tug of war between the 14th Amendment’s guarantees of due process and equal protection, and the rights of states and voters to make their own laws. A majority of federal district and appeals courts have said the Constituti­on is paramount and have ruled for gay and lesbian plaintiffs. The 6th Circuit disagreed.

“Not one of the plaintiffs’ theories ... makes the case for constituti­onalizing the definition of marriage and for removing the issue from the place it has been since the founding: in the hands of state voters,” Sutton wrote.

Though the democratic process might be a worthy goal, other appeals courts to review samesex marriage bans have relegated it to secondary status compared with the rights of gays and lesbians to marry. They note the Supreme Court denied states the right to prevent mixed-race cou- ples, prison inmates and people owing child support from marrying.

“The protection and exercise of fundamenta­l rights are not matters for opinion polls or the ballot box,” the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit ruled in Kitchen v. Herbert.

3 REGULATING PROCREATIO­N

Why did states authorize and regulate marriages in the first place? Many say it was to channel men and women into matrimony so children would be raised by two parents. Since gays and lesbians cannot get pregnant by accident, the argument goes, they do not merit the same considerat­ion.

“Government­s got into the business of defining marriage, and remain in the business of defining marriage, not to regulate love but to regulate sex, most especially the intended and unintended effects of male-female intercours­e,” Sutton wrote.

That argument has been ridiculed by other judges as a way to penalize same-sex couples for carefully considerin­g whether to have children, while offering financial incentives to opposite-sex couples for having children out of wedlock.

“Heterosexu­als get drunk and pregnant, producing unwanted children; their reward is to be allowed to marry,” Judge Richard Posner wrote for a unanimous panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, which struck down bans in Indiana and Wisconsin. “Homosexual couples do not produce unwanted children; their reward is to be denied the right to marry. Go figure.”

4 RAISING CHILDREN

Opponents of same-sex marriage argue that children should be raised with a mother and father. Proponents say evidence shows gays and lesbians do an equally good job.

No reputable studies have shown that same-sex parents do an inferior job raising children. Briefs have been submitted to the Supreme Court on behalf of children arguing both sides of the question, but judges mostly have agreed that the results aren’t in.

“A state might wish to wait and see before changing a norm that our society (like all others) has accepted for centuries,” Sutton wrote.

The 10th Circuit majority reasoned that opposite-sex couples can be bad parents, too — making it wrong to discrimina­te against gays and lesbians only.

Similarly, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit ruled in cases from Idaho and Nevada that same-sex marriage bans penalized some potential parents while rewarding others who did not deserve it.

“A man and a woman who have been convicted of abusing their children are allowed to marry; same-sex partners who have been adjudicate­d to be fit parents in an adoption proceeding are not,” the unanimous panel said.

5 HISTORY, TRADITION

In the legal profession, great weight is given to the argument: It has always been thus. That was a major reason the Supreme Court last year upheld an Upstate New York town’s practice of allowing mostly Christian clergy to deliver opening prayers at government meetings. Lawmakers had been praying, the justices noted, since the founding of the republic.

Thus did Sutton base part of his reasoning on tradition.

“From the founding of the republic to 2003, every state defined marriage as a relationsh­ip between a man and a woman,” he wrote.

Other appeals court judges reasoned that if history and tradition were a guide, the Supreme Court would not have reversed common practice in 1967 and struck down state bans on interracia­l marriage in the landmark case Loving v. Virginia.

“To claim that marriage, by definition, excludes certain couples is simply to insist that those couples may not marry because they have historical­ly been denied the right to do so,” the 10th Circuit majority wrote in the Utah case.

 ??  ?? H. DARR BEISER, USA TODAY From left, Vin Testa, Ariel Prince, David Baker and Shane Bitney Crone demonstrat­e in favor of gay marriage outside the Supreme Court.
H. DARR BEISER, USA TODAY From left, Vin Testa, Ariel Prince, David Baker and Shane Bitney Crone demonstrat­e in favor of gay marriage outside the Supreme Court.

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