A legal blog offering excursions into the Constitution, equality law, sex, gender identity, and sexual orientation.
Showing posts with label Perry v. Schwarzenegger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Perry v. Schwarzenegger. Show all posts
Friday, July 12, 2013
Prop 8 Proponents Ask California Supreme Court to Stop Marriages
“If I make improper suggestions
…
Desperate but not serious”
Here they go again: Bypassing the lower state courts, the Proponents of Proposition 8 have filed a petition for a writ of mandate (here) asking the California Supreme Court to order the clerks of the counties in California to stop issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples. It seems very unlikely that the California Supreme Court would exercise its discretion to take up this matter and then rule in favor of the proponents, especially since those proponents are or come very close to asking the state court to interfere with a federal court injunction.
In a nutshell, the proponents are arguing first that Prop 8 is actually constitutional, that federal judge Vaughn Walker was mistaken in ruling to the contrary after the trial on Prop 8, and that the U.S. Supreme Court has not disagreed with them because it dismissed the Prop 8 appeal on standing grounds rather than reaching the constitutional equal protection or right to marry issues. Second, they argue that county clerks have a ministerial duty to enforce the marriage laws of the state, which in their view include Prop 8, and that by ordering them not to, State Registrar Tony Agurto, following the legal conclusion of Attorney General Kamala Harris, violated the provision of the California Constitution that bars administrative agencies and at least some governmental executive officials from refusing to enforce state laws on the ground that they’re unconstitutional unless an appellate court has made a determination that the state law at issue is indeed unconstitutional. (Although the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit did “make a determination” that Prop 8 is unconstitutional, the proponents of the measure argue that since the U.S. Supreme Court vacated that decision, it cannot satisfy this state constitutional clause.) And, third, they argue that the issue is so important, implicating as it does (in their view) the efficacy of the state initiative process, that these supposedly lawless same-sex marriages must be stopped immediately.
Unless a majority of the California Supreme Court Justices are extremely peeved that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Prop 8 proponents lacked federal court standing, this latest effort to revive Prop 8 (or at least to demonstrate to constituents the proponents’ need for funds to keep up their committed fight for the measure’s legal life) is unlikely to go anywhere. It’s certainly unlikely to result in an immediate order against issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples. However important the rule of law and the California initiative process may be, the petition contains no explanation for why those cannot be vindicated through an orderly judicial process that resolves Prop 8’s constitutionality and an order at the end of it to resume enforcing Prop 8, if that judicial process concludes it really is constitutional.
Moreover, this petition dangerously veers into or close to asserting the power of state courts to interfere with federal court injunctions. Indeed, the proponents’ arguments make claims about the federal court’s supposed lack of authority of have bound certain defendants in certain ways. Given our system of federalism, and specifically of the supremacy of federal law, state courts just are not allowed to disregard or narrow federal court orders (as was made clear to the chagrin of the segregationist South in the mid twentieth century). Even if they were right that the state Attorney General erred in concluding that county clerks are within the terms of the federal court injunction against Prop 8 as employees controlled or supervised by the state defendants, the proper route to clarify the scope of a federal court injunction is to return to that federal court and ask it to rule.
Finally, in what is hard to believe is a good faith mistake, the proponents do not acknowledge that the City and County of San Francisco was allowed by Judge Walker to intervene as a plaintiff challenging Prop 8. Instead, they refer repeatedly to “the four plaintiffs,” meaning the two same-sex couples who were plaintiffs. They then argue that because those couples are now married, the federal injunction cannot even apply to Los Angeles and Alameda Counties, where those couples reside. (Again, that’s a question about the proper scope of the federal injunction that the state courts cannot do anything about.) But since San Francisco was a prevailing plaintiff, and the federal court injunction prohibits Prop 8 from being enforced against it, at a very minimum it can continue to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples even if no other county could (which I do not believe to be the case). Because Californians can get a marriage license in any county regardless of their residence or where the wedding will be held in the state, the Prop 8 proponents desperate, last-ditch (one hopes!) petition here cannot stop marriage equality in the state. The futility of their petition is, thus, one more reason why the California Supreme Court is likely to deny it. For the sake of those same-sex couples planning marriages and weddings, I hope the court does so quickly.
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Times Change
Oh there been times that I thought I couldn’t last for long
But now I think I’m able to carry on
As many across the U.S.A. celebrate Independence Day, I’m
finally taking a moment to write briefly about a couple of the Supreme Court’s
late June decisions from the end of what’s referred to as its October 2012 term
(i.e., its sessions of hearing and deciding cases for 2012-13). The Court by the narrowest margin invalidated
a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, leaving another provision
inoperative. Yet by other five-to-four
lineups, the Court also restored same-sex couple’s right to marry in California
and struck down the federal so-called Defense of Marriage Act (“DOMA”), which
required the federal government to discriminate against lawfully married
same-sex couples. One common theme of
the Court’s decisions in the voting rights and marriage equality areas is the
idea that times change, and with them potentially changes the constitutionality
of government action.
In Shelby County, Alabama v.Holder, the
five more right-leaning Justices on the Court (all appointed by Republican
Presidents) held unconstitutional the “coverage formula” in Section 4 of the
Voting Rights Act of 1964 (“VRA”), and thereby rendered inoperative the
“preclearance” requirement of Section 5 of the VRA. Chief Justice Roberts’s opinion for the
Court, joined by Justices Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas, and Alito, noted that it had
upheld the constitutionality of the VRA after it was first adopted and after
each of three earlier federal statutes reauthorizing and extending the VRA’s
requirements. In particular, Section 5
of the VRA prohibits covered jurisdictions, such as states or counties, from
changing their voting practices without first getting “preclearance” from the
Justice Department or from a three-judge federal court in Washington, D.C.,
which is only allowed if the change will have neither the purpose nor the
effect of denying or abridging the right to vote “on account of race or color.”
Section 4 of the VRA contained a “coverage formula”
specifying those jurisdictions to which this preclearance requirement
applied. It barred jurisdictions that
had used things like literacy tests or “good moral character” requirements as
preconditions for voting and had low voter turnout or registration in the 1964
presidential election. Subsequent
reauthorizations updated the date used to evaluate coverage, with nine states
including Alabama and a number of counties across the nation covered by the
preclearance requirement, and extended the requirement to cover a broader range
of discriminatory practices. The VRA
also, however, had a “bailout” provision to allow jurisdictions to be relieved
of the preclearance requirement provided they proved they had for ten years not
used tests or devices, had not been denied preclearance for voting practice
changes they sought, and had not lost been found by a court to have adopted
voting changes with the purpose or effect of discriminating on the basis race
or color.
It is this coverage formula that the Supreme Court struck
down in Shelby County, and, since the statute otherwise contains no provision
making the preclearance requirement apply to any states or counties, in
practical effect the Court thereby also struck down Section 5’s preclearance
requirement itself. Although the Court
had upheld the VRA as early as 1966, but now, “[n]early 50 years later, things
have changed dramatically,” Chief Justice Roberts wrote. He recognized that the improvement in
disparities between black and white voter registration owe much to the VRA
itself. But today, the Court objected,
coverage “is based on decades-old data and eradicated practices.” Because the coverage formula applied only to
some but not all states, the Court insisted that Congress “must identify those
jurisdictions to be singled out on a basis that makes sense in light of current
conditions.” In the eyes of the
majority, “[o]ur country has changed, and while any racial discrimination in
voting is too much, Congress must ensure that the legislation it passes to
remedy that problem speaks to current conditions.”
Justice Ginsburg, joined by Justices Breyer, Kagan, and
Sotomayor (all appointed by Democratic Presidents), dissented and would have
upheld the coverage formula. They did
not deny that times change and that “conditions in the South have impressively
improved since passage of the Voting Rights Act.” But they also believed it relevant that “the
covered jurisdictions have a unique history of problems with racial
discrimination in voting.” They pointed
to a study “ignored by the Court” that reasonably was taken by Congress to show
“that the coverage formula continues to identify the jurisdictions of greatest
concern.” They protested that “hardly
showing the respect ordinarily paid when Congress acts to implement the Civil
War Amendments” (the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments), “the Court does not even
deign to grapple with the legislative record.”
For the dissenters, times change, but so too do the forms that
discrimination takes, as born out by history and as the Congress’s that enacted
and reauthorized the VRA attempted to combat by imposing the preclearance
requirement. The dissenting Justices
would have deferred to Congress’s conclusion, when reauthorizing the VRA in
2006, that “40 years has not been a sufficient amount of time to eliminate the
vestiges of discrimination following nearly 100 years of disregard for the
dictates of the 15th amendment and to ensure that the right of all citizens to
vote is protected as guaranteed by the Constitution.”
The next day, in Hollingsworth v. Perry,
the Court held five-to four (with Justices Scalia, Ginsburg, Breyer, and Kagan
joining Chief Justice Roberts’s opinion) that the sponsor’s of California’s
state constitutional amendment that had stripped same-sex couples of the right
to marry lacked “standing” or the legal authority to take appeals from the
trial court decision holding it unconstitutional. Even though the Court did not reach the
merits of the challenge to Prop 8 and so did not decide whether or not it in
fact violated the Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause, this standing
decision had the effect of letting same-sex couples marry again in the state
for the first time since the measure was adopted in the November 2008 election.
The Court did reach the equal protection issue in UnitedStates v. Windsor,
however, and five-to-four it held that DOMA Section 3, which limits the
definition of “marriage” and “spouses” for federal law to male-female couples,
unconstitutionally discriminated against same-sex couples validly married under
state law. Although the majority opinion
by Justice Kennedy (which was joined by Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, Kagan, and
Sotomayor) did not state that DOMA was ever constitutional, it spoke in terms
of changed times and changing understandings.
The Court noted that Congress acted preemptively in 1996 to
ban federal recognition of same-sex couples’ marriages before any state allowed
them, “as some States were beginning to consider the concept of same-sex
marriage.” But then states did begin to
allow or recognize marriages between same-sex couples:
“[U]ntil recent years, many citizens had not even considered
the possibility that two persons of the same sex might aspire to occupy the
same status and dignity as that of a man and woman in lawful marriage. For marriage between a man and a woman no
doubt had been thought of by most people as essential to the very definition of
that term and to its role and function throughout the history of civilization.
That belief, for many who long have held it, became even more urgent, more
cherished when challenged. For others,
however, came the beginnings of a new perspective, a new insight. Accordingly some States concluded that
same-sex marriage ought to be given recognition and validity in the law for
those same-sex couples who wish to define themselves by their commitment to
each other. The limitation of lawful marriage to heterosexual couples, which
for centuries had been deemed both necessary and fundamental, came to be seen
in New York and certain other States as an unjust exclusion.”
In the Windsor case, at issue was the federal government’s
refusal to recognize Edie Windsor and Thea Spyer’s marriage, which New York
did: “After a statewide deliberative
process that enabled its citizens to discuss and weigh arguments for and
against same-sex marriage, New York acted to enlarge the definition of marriage
to correct what its citizens and elected representatives perceived to be an
injustice that they had not earlier known or understood.” Times had changed, at least in New York, and
the state’s determination to open marriage to same-sex couples “enhanced
the[ir] recognition, dignity, and protection … in their own community,”
something DOMA undermined, be design and in effect. “The dynamics of state government in the
federal system are to allow the formation of consensus respecting the way the
members of a discrete community treat each other in their daily contact and
constant interaction with each other.”
In the majority’s view,
“For same-sex couples who wished to be married, the State
acted to give their lawful conduct a lawful status. This status is a far-reaching legal
acknowledgment of the intimate relationship between two people, a relationship
deemed by the State worthy of dignity in the community equal with all other
marriages. I t reflects both the community’s considered perspective on the
historical roots of the institution of marriage and its evolving understanding
of the meaning of equality.” In denying
recognition to this status across the board for federal purposes, DOMA violated
constitutional equality principles; its purpose and effect were to express disapproval
of same-sex couples whom states chose to protect as they realized the propriety
of such protection.
In Windsor Justice Kennedy did not, but might as well have,
quoted his own language from the Supreme Court’s opinion in Lawrence v. Texas,
the decision the Court issued ten years to the day earlier, striking down
Texas’s law against certain kinds of sexual conduct by two people of the same
sex. There, he wrote that the people who
wrote and adopted the Bill of Rights and Fourteenth Amendment “knew times can
blind us to certain truths and later generations can see that laws once thought
necessary and proper in fact serve only to oppress. As the Constitution
endures, persons in every generation can invoke its principles in their own
search for greater freedom.” Times
change, and constitutional principles respond to those changes.
Friday, December 7, 2012
Supreme Court to Hear Challenges to Prop 8 and DOMA Section 3
“It’s just a case of
learning how to start”
After having deliberated on many cases involving same-sex
couples’ marriage-related rights the week before and deciding nothing, on
December 7, 2012, the Supreme Court of the U.S. announced that it was granting
review in two cases, one that had held unconstitutional Proposition 8, the
initiative that amended California’s state constitution to strip same-sex
couples of the right to marry, and one that had invalidated Section 3 of the
federal so-called Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which requires the federal
government to treat legally married same-sex couples as if they were unmarried. [Quick disclosure: I am a member of the Board of Directors and an
elected General Counsel for the ACLU, which has represented Edie Windsor in her
challenge to DOMA Section 3, although I have not helped with that litigation.] Briefing will occur over the next few months,
and the cases will be argued orally probably in late March, with decisions
likely when the Court wraps up its term at the end of June 2013. In light of the questions the Court posed, it
looks like the term could end with either a bang or a whimper, as I’ll try to
explain.
The clearly bad news, compared to the situation if the Court
had not granted review in Hollingsworth
v. Perry, as the Prop 8 case is now known, is that same-sex couples will
continue to be unable to marry in California until the case is finally
resolved. Had the Court ‘denied cert’ (denied
the petition for a writ of certiorari), leaving the decision of the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit unreviewed, then the trial court’s order
enjoining the government defendants not to enforce Prop 8 would have finally
been allowed to go into effect. That
relief instead remains on hold (“stayed”) until after the Supreme Court rules
in the case.
The Court could in June affirm the judgment below, where
Judge Stephen Reinhardt wrote a ruling for the Ninth Circuit that Prop 8
violated same-sex couples’ right to equal protection of the laws under the U.S.
Constitution. The Supreme Court could
affirm very narrowly, precisely tracking the Ninth Circuit opinion, its ruling
then applying only to those states where same-sex couples were enjoying the
right to marry but then had that right eliminated though they retained the
possibility of every state-law legal consequence of marriage through a parallel
legal institution (in California, “domestic partnerships”). California is the only such state. If the Court reasoned slightly more broadly,
it could ignore the taking away of the right to marry that was being enjoyed
and instead emphasize that California has no functional justification for
excluding same-sex couples from civil marriage since it still offers them the
same rights through domestic partnership.
This reasoning would apply to any state that denies same-sex couples
marriage but offers comprehensive domestic partnerships or civil unions, like
Nevada or New Jersey.
Or the Court could hand the plaintiffs’ attorneys the broad
victory they’ve wanted all along and sweepingly rule that the federal
Constitution’s unenumerated right to marry is enjoyed by same-sex couples, so
that the laws of the 41 states that limit marriage to different-sex couples are
unconstitutional. That kind of broad
ruling against Prop 8 and in favor of same-sex couples seems, based on history,
less likely than a narrower opinion striking down Prop 8. But as long as five Justices agree with one
or another of the constitutional arguments against the measure, then the
plaintiffs will win and the right to marry will be restored in California.
The situation for the California marriage plaintiffs is
actually slightly better than that.
Because California’s elected Governor and Attorney General have refused
to defend Prop 8 since the outset, the federal trial court let the official
Proponents of Prop 8 (the private individuals who qualified it for the ballot)
argue in its defense. But, as I’ve
addressed before on CruzLines (here and in its links), federal constitutional law limits the
kind of parties and lawsuits that may be brought in federal court: Anyone seeking to invoke the federal courts’
authority must have “standing” to do so, a kind of legal right to have federal courts
rule in a case.
The plaintiffs have argued all along that ballot initiative
Proponents such as Prop 8’s official sponsors do not have standing to defend
enacted initiatives in federal court. In
granting review in Perry, the Supreme
Court directed the parties to address not only the “merits question” of whether
Prop 8 violates the Constitution, but also whether the Proponents have
constitutional standing in this case.
That is no assurance that the Court thinks they lack standing, but it
probably shows that enough Justices had questions that four of them decided to
order the parties to brief the issue. If
the Court holds that the Proponents lack standing, then they never should have
appealed to the Ninth Circuit, and the Court would vacate Judge Reinhardt’s
opinion and send the case back for the Ninth Circuit to dismiss the
appeal. This would leave in place Chief
Judge Walker’s trial decision and grant of an injunction, and same-sex couples
would be able to marry again in California, but there would be no binding opinion
of the Court of Appeals to govern the other western U.S. states in the Ninth
Circuit. (The Ninth Circuit would likely
rule on the marriage issue again in an appeal from federal trial courts in
Hawaii and Nevada that rejected marriage equality claims.)
So, for the Proponents to win in the Supreme Court, they
need five Justices to agree that they both have standing and are correct that
Prop 8 does not violate either same-sex couples equal protection rights or
their right to marry. Conversely, for
the plaintiffs to win back the right to marry, they just need any five Justices
to agree with any version of the argument that Prop 8 is unconstitutional
(broad or narrow) or with the
argument that the Proponents do not have standing to appeal in this litigation.
On the other hand, a ruling by the Supreme Court that
Proposition 8 is constitutional would necessarily be broad. To uphold Prop 8’s constitutionality, the
Court would have to reject each and every argument that it is
unconstitutional. So, it would have to
rule that as a general matter the federal Constitution’s unenumerated right to
marry is only a right to marry a person of a different sex. It would also have to rule that Prop 8 does
not violate the Equal Protection Clause in treating same-sex couples
differently from different-sex couples.
Because this is an especially implausible argument under any form of
heightened judicial scrutiny, this might mean that the Court also might have to
rule that only minimal “rational basis” review applies where sexual orientation
is at issue (making it harder to challenge anti-lesbigay discrimination of any
kind). And the Court would have to hold
that this is true even if a state has no functional justification for the marriage
exclusion because it gives same-sex couples the same legal rights and
responsibilities via domestic partnerships or civil unions that it gives to
heterosexually married couples. Further,
the Court would have to say this is true even where a state used to let
same-sex couples marry, and where there was significant evidence of appeals to
anti-lesbigay prejudice even in the official ballot materials used to persuade
the voters to enshrine such discrimination in the state’s fundamental law. If the Prop 8 plaintiffs lose, they will lose
big (which is one reason the LGBT advocacy groups were not in favor of this
litigation when it was first brought).
If that happens, there’d be little prospect for new constitutional
marriage equality litigation to succeed (at least until the Supreme Court changes
its collective mind, presumably after a change in personnel), and marriage
equality advocates would be forced to continue state-by-state fights to
persuade the voters to repeal restrictive marriage laws or (in a majority of
states) to re-amend their state constitutions to allow same-sex couples to
marry.
How all this will ultimately play out will not be clear
until the Supreme Court hands down its opinions (though perhaps the oral
arguments might offer some clues, however equivocal).
Turning to United
States v. Windsor, the DOMA case in which the Supreme Court granted review,
it’s interesting to note that the Court there also added a question to the one
presented by President Obama’s Solicitor General (“SG,” the nation’s top
Supreme Court attorney, number three in the Justice Department). The SG had asked the Court to decide whether
DOMA Section 3 unconstitutionally denies equal protection to same-sex couples
legally married under state law. The
Court’s order granting the government’s cert petition added the questions “Whether
the Executive Branch’s agreement with the court below that DOMA is
unconstitutional deprives [the Supreme] Court of jurisdiction to decide this
case; and whether the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group of the United States
House of Representatives [“BLAG”] has Article III standing in this case.” Because the federal government is continuing
to enforce DOMA, even though the President and the Attorney General have
concluded that it is unconstitutional, it is still seeking to charge Edie
Windsor inheritance tax that she would not have to pay if the federal
government recognized her marriage to her late wife. Their case thus should present a sufficiently
adverse case that the Supreme Court would have jurisdiction.
If that’s right, it would not matter in Windsor’s case
whether or not the Supreme Court rules that BLAG has standing. The executive branch, here a proper party,
or so I conclude, petitioned for review of the Second Circuit’s decision in
Windsor’s favor, so that would distinguish the standing problems from those in
the Prop 8 litigation.
The BLAG is a different matter. Although the Supreme Court has previously
said that Congress is a proper party to defend federal laws at least when the
executive branch does not, that has generally been in cases where congressional
standing was not necessary to jurisdiction. Here, you have not a decision by Congress to
defend DOMA section 3, but a decision by a bare majority of a committee of just
one House of congress. So there's still a question about BLAG's standing. If I’m right that this does not matter in the
Windsor case, the Court can issue a
judgment on DOMA’s merits, and that would affect other cases’ reasoning, but a
Supreme Court ruling here that BLAG lacks standing could perhaps have
ramifications for some of the many other DOMA cases where BLAG has been
defending the law. (It’s been a long day
and I’d have to think that through further.)
If the Court reaches the merits, it could either affirm the
Second Circuit’s judgment in Windsor
that DOMA Section 3 is unconstitutional or reverse that court. Most of the courts that have held DOMA
unconstitutional have relied on “rational basis review,” the form of judicial
scrutiny most deferential to the government.
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals, in contrast, agreed with the
plaintiffs and with the Justice Department that courts should be more skeptical
when the government discriminates on the basis of sexual orientation; it held
that the same kind of heightened scrutiny used in sex discrimination cases also
applies to anti-lesbigay discrimination.
The Supreme Court could affirm on either ground. It could agree that heightened scrutiny is
the proper legal test, and that DOMA Section 3 lacks the “exceedingly
persuasive justification” necessary to survive such review. This would make clear that anti-gay
discrimination by the government is dubious regardless of the context, and so
it might seem like a broader ruling. On
the other hand, the Supreme Court could follow other courts and its own model
(in the 1996 case Romer v. Evans,
invalidating a Colorado anti-lesbigay state constitutional amendment), not
reach the question of the appropriate level of scrutiny, and just hold that
DOMA Section 3 does not even pass the easiest form of judicial review. Because every government action that
discriminates on any basis needs at least such a “rational basis,” a holding
that DOMA fails to do so could be helpful in other cases, suggesting a degree
of breadth to an otherwise narrow-seeming kind of analysis.
Of course, it’s also possible that the Supreme Court might
reverse, upholding the constitutionality of DOMA Section 3. To do that, a majority would have to decide
the proper level of scrutiny for sexual orientation discrimination and then
rule that DOMA survives that level.
(Given what he’s said about the Fourteenth Amendment and sex
discrimination based on his view of history, Justice Scalia might vote that the
proper level of scrutiny here is “none.”)
This again could be bad news for challenges of governmental
anti-lesbigay discrimination of all kinds.
So, here’s hoping that the Supreme Court builds its doctrine
in a useful direction, even if narrowly, “one brick at a time.”
[edited 20121208 to correct typo]
[edited 20121208 to correct typo]
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Supreme Court Defers Considering Prop 8/Article Argues Narrow Decision Permissible
“So when they ask me later, I won’t tell them how it’s
going/But now my head is empty and the work load keeps on growing”
As readers probably know by now, the Supreme Court has rescheduled
its consideration of the Proposition 8 litigation, now captioned Hollingsworth v. Perry. The Court will now discuss whether to grant
the Prop 8 proponents’ petition for certiorari (i.e., review of the decision by
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit) at its (private) conference on
November 30. (The SCOTUS docket for the
case is here.) Although the Court is likely to announce
shortly thereafter that it is granting or denying review, it is also possible
that the Justices might keep the case in limbo until after it decides one or
more challenges to the constitutionality of the so-called Defense of Marriage
Act (DOMA) – which virtually all Court watchers including me are certain it
will grant review in – even though there are some distinct issues in the DOMA
challenges and the Prop 8 challenge.
While we await word on the Court’s conference on Perry,
here’s a link to a draft of Repealing Rights: Proposition 8, Perry, and Crawford Contextualized, a short piece I’m preparing for a symposium issue
of the N.Y.U. Review of Law & Social
Change, which hosted me at a live symposium (also featuring Rachel Maddow!)
on “Making Constitutional Change: the Past, Present, and Future Role of Perry v. Brown” on October 5, 2012. In it, I argue that Prop 8’s proponents and
their supporting amici are wrong in claiming that one Supreme Court decision
from 1982 affirmatively establishes the constitutionality of Prop 8’s targeted,
partial repeal of marriage rights enjoyed by same-sex couples in
California. The proponents are therefore
also wrong to maintain that the narrow, California-specific reasoning of the
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals is foreclosed by Supreme Court precedent. It is not, and the Court would not act
improperly if it were simply to deny review in Perry, leaving the Ninth Circuit
judgment intact and finally clearing the way for same-sex couples to marry
civilly in California.
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Historic Vote by Four States for Marriage Equality
“Can’t you feel a
brand new day?”
Based on the available results, I am thrilled to note that
on November 6, 2012, the voters of four states reversed a dramatic and
discouraging pattern of popular votes against same-sex couples’ freedom to
marry. The people of Maryland and (it appears as of this writing) Washington voted “yes” on
referenda approving measures their state legislatures had passed to open civil
marriage to same-sex couples. The people
of Maine approved an initiative to remove the mixed-sex requirement from their
marriage law, just three years after a referendum there defeated a bill the
Maine legislature had passed to do the same.
And in Minnesota, the voters defeated a proposed constitutional
amendment that would have entrenched the state’s present statutory exclusion of
same-sex couples from marriage. This is
an especially welcome development, as it interrupts an unbroken string of
thirty-two marriage “definition” state constitutional ballot measures. (Although Arizona voters rejected a
discriminatory initiative in 2006, that measure would have gone further and
amended the state constitution to block any legal status for same-sex couples
“similar to marriage.” A narrower
‘marriage only’ amendment was approved by a majority of Arizonans voting on it
two years later.)
Coupled with the first-ever election of an openly LGBT
person to the U.S. Senate (Tammy Baldwin, a lesbian and member of the U.S.
House of Representatives from Wisconsin), these four states’ voting for
marriage equality may well mark the beginning of a sea change in the country’s
views of LGBT people and issues affecting us.
It certainly reinforces the view that nationwide marriage equality is,
with the continued hard work of equality supporters of all sexual orientations,
an eventuality and not a mere pipe dream.
I fervently hope that a majority of the Justices of the Supreme Court of
the United States see that and welcome this shift toward fuller justice, and
that they rule accordingly in whatever they do with the cases challenging the
discriminatory federal law restriction on marriage in Section 3 of the
so-called Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), one or more of which the Court is
certain to take up, and in the Perry
litigation thus far holding unconstitutional California’s Proposition 8, which
amended our state constitution to strip same-sex couples of the right to marry,
which the Court could well decide not to review in light of the careful, narrow
opinion written by Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals judge Stephen Reinhardt. We may know shortly after November 20 whether
the Supreme Court will hear any of those cases.
Today, though, feels like a brand new day.
Everybody look around
'Cause there's a
reason to rejoice you see
Everybody come out
And let's commence to
singing joyfully
Everybody look up
And feel the hope that
we've been waiting for
Everybody's glad
Because our silent
fear and dread is gone
Freedom, you see, has
got our hearts singing so joyfully
Just look about
You owe it to yourself
to check it out
Can't you feel a brand
new day?
[“Everybody Rejoice (Brand New Day),” by Charlie Small, from
the soundtrack of The Wiz]
[date typo corrected 20121107 8:23 p.m. PST]
[date typo corrected 20121107 8:23 p.m. PST]
Thursday, November 17, 2011
CA Supreme Court's Disappointing Standing Decision
Well, my heart went "boom"
The California Supreme Court issued the latest entry in the legal paper trail of the saga of Proposition 8 today. Prop 8, recall, is California’s initiative constitutional amendment that stripped same-sex couples of their previously fundamental right to marry under the California Constitution. Answering a question that had been certified by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, the court ruled “that when the public officials who ordinarily defend a challenged state law or appeal a judgment invalidating the law decline to do so, under ... the California Constitution and the relevant provisions of the Elections Code, the official proponents of a voter-approved initiative measure are authorized to assert the state’s interest in the initiative’s validity, enabling the proponents to defend the constitutionality of the initiative and to appeal a judgment invalidating the initiative.” With this ruling, the dispute over Prop 8's constitutionality returns to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, where that federal court now seems more likely to rule that Prop 8's official sponsors ("the Proponents") have the legal authority or standing to appeal Judge Walker's August 2010 decision holding Prop 8 unconstitutional.
I discussed the procedural posture of the challenge to Prop 8 and issues of the Proponents standing to appeal Walker's decision more fully here and here (among others). For now, let me repeat that to be able to take an appeal in federal court, the Proponents must have a sufficient stake in the dispute that they have "standing." Either they must have what the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) has called a "concrete and particularized interest" in the dispute, or they must somehow be able to step into the shoes of the state of California since pretty much everyone agrees that a state would have standing in federal court to defend its laws. Prior SCOTUS case law makes it exceeding unlikely that the Proponents would have a particularized interest in Prop 8's validity, and indeed CASC does not even address that part of the Ninth Circuit's question. Rather, it essentially holds that California law authorizes initiative proponents to step into the state's shoes when the elected state officers who ordinarily defend such measures choose not to.
But from where does this authority stem? CASC repeatedly says that Proponents enjoy this authority "under state law." And, as quoted in the opening paragraph here, the court says that it is the provisions of the state constitution providing for the initiative power and the provisions of the state's election statutes specifying the role that initiative sponsors such as the Proponents play in getting an initiative adopted that confer this authority on ballot sponsors. The court does not actually say that it is interpreting any of these provisions as the source of the authority to defend and to appeal adverse judgments -- and with good reason. As Ted Olson emphasized in oral argument to the court, the California constitution expressly says that "The initiative is the power of the electors to propose statutes and amendments to the Constitution and to adopt or reject them." It says nothing about anyone defending enacted initiatives (or any other post-enactment function). Likewise, the state's Election Code details the role that initiative sponsors have prior to enactment of their measures, and says nothing whatsoever about any post-enactment role for initiative sponsors such as the Proponents of Prop 8. Ordinary principles of statutory and constitutional interpretation thus would seem to weigh heavily against CASC's conclusion today as a matter of interpretation, and the court does not even pretend to try to parse the meaning of the provisions of law on which it claims it is basing its decision. The court's ruling thus is better understood not as an interpretation of state law but as a common-law holding, an interpolation, or a judicial construction, a rule the court chose to adopt to give effect to the values reflected in the California constitution and the state Election Code -- "to guard the people's right to exercise the initiative power."
There is evidence in the CASC's opinion to support this characterization. The court quoted prior opinions where it had said of the initiative power that it is "the duty of the courts to jealously guard this right of the people." To that end, the court reaffirmed, "if doubts can reasonably be resolved in favor of the use of [the initiative] power, courts will preserve it." The trouble, of course, is that, as described above, the reserved initiative power is the power of the people to propose California statutory or constitutional measures and to vote them up or down. To propose and to vote, as Ted Olson rightly emphasized at oral argument last December.
How then does the court justify creating its own gap-filling rule allowing initiative sponsors the authority to assert the state's interest in an enacted initiative to defend a measure or to appeal a decision invalidating it? The court quotes the same decisions, specifically their language saying that courts should "apply a liberal construction to [the initiative] power wherever it is challenged in order that the right be not improperly annulled."
Set aside the problem that the court is not interpreting but clearly adding to the words of the state constitution and the Election Code. Where is the risk that an enacted initiative would be "nullified," whether "directly or indirectly" (as the court says elsewhere in the opinion) by acts of elected state officers? Even if "the [California] Constitution‘s purpose in reserving the initiative power to the People would appear to be ill-served by allowing elected officials to nullify either proponents' efforts to ‘propose statutes and amendments to the Constitution’ or the People‘s right ‘to adopt or reject’ such propositions" (in the Ninth Circuit's words, quoted by the court), how could elected officers do that nullifying? No one was claiming that governors and attorney generals could simply disregard an enacted initiative and treat it as a nullity. As the same-sex couple plaintiffs pointed out and the court conceded, "invalidation of Proposition 8 in the underlying federal litigation did not result from any action or inaction by the Governor or
Attorney General but from a decision by the federal district court after a contested
trial." Thus, it is far from necessary to vest initiative proponents with authority to represent the states interest to keep elected officers from nullifying measures the people adopt.
Faced with that inescapable reality, the court retreated from its ostensible concern with preventing initiatives from being nullified, to a concern with keeping them from being "undermined." At one point, the court suggests that "the California initiative process may be undermined if a California initiative goes undefended in a federal proceeding." Explaining at greater length, the court argued:
“If public officials refuse to provide [a competent and spirited] defense [of an initiative], the ability of the initiative proponents to intervene in the pending litigation, and to appeal an adverse judgment, is inherent in, and essential to the effective exercise of, the constitutional initiative power. To hold otherwise not only would undermine that constitutional power, it also would allow state executive branch officials to effectively annul voter-approved initiatives simply by declining to defend them, thereby permitting those officials to exceed their proper role in our state government‘s constitutional structure.”
But this is simply wrong. The court emphasizes that it is affirming only a limited authority of initiative sponsors to defend initiatives, not to take any affirmative enforcement measures. So assume that someone has brought suit to challenge the validity of an enacted initiative. If the plaintiffs litigate in state court, the state courts are free to allow the initiative's sponsors to intervene as defendants, and once they do so, they may present any non-frivolous legal arguments in defense of the initiative they had proposed. (Alternatively, the state court could let the sponsors participate as amicus curiae or "friends of the court," submit briefs, and engage in oral arguments.) So, there is no risk of "effective nullification."
On the other hand, if the plaintiffs litigate in federal court, they have to satisfy federal standing requirements. If they do not have a sufficiently concrete and particularized injury as a result of the initiative, then the federal court will dismiss their suit, and the initiative will not be nullified. But if the plaintiffs do have an adequate injury to proceed, then the initiative sponsors would not have to satisfy federal standing requirements to intervene as defendants -- there is already an adequate "case or controversy" (in the terminology of federal standing rules) between the plaintiffs and the state officer defendants who are by assumption refusing to defend the measure. This is what happened in the Prop 8 litigation. So, the initiative gets a "competent and spirited defense," and it therefore cannot be pejoratively labeled a state officer "nullification" if a federal judge concludes after an adversarial trial that the measure violates the federal constitution. Only were state officers to refuse to defend and the federal court also to refuse to allow the sponsors to intervene as defendants would there remotely be a risk of nullification. But then, either the federal appeals court might well deem it to be an abuse of the trial court's discretion to refuse such intervention -- nullifying the nullification worry -- or state law could much more narrowly vest proponents with authority to step into the state's shoes under those narrow circumstances for purposes of defending the initiative at trial.
So, perhaps the California Supreme Court’s opinion offers some justification for it concluding that it is necessary to use its power to create a rule (of state law) authorizing initiative sponsors to represent the state’s interests under certain rare conditions. But once anyone has made “a full and robust defense” of an initiative at trial, and thus we can be confident that the trial court will be “aware of and address[] the full range of legal arguments that reasonably may be proffered in the measure’s defense,” a decision holding the measure unconstitutional is no improper nullification, whether or not that judgment gets appealed. The California Supreme Court’s opinion thus has not justified extending the authority it by near-fiat gave initiative sponsors in today’s decision beyond defending the initiative the sponsors helped enact to appealing from trial court rulings invalidating the initiative. It is unjustified to suggest that a law that is invalidated after a full adversarial trial has been somehow improperly “nullified” by a state officer’s decision not to appeal the trial court’s judgment. Indeed, it is an insult to the integrity of federal trial court judges (who along with non-defending governors and attorneys general are the persons about whom the court is worrying). True, a federal trial court might make a mistake. But so might a federal appellate court. And so might the California Supreme Court. But the prospect of mistake, or even an actual mistake, cannot transform judgment into usurpation. To the extent the California Supreme Court is worried about “the appearance of the fairness of the” federal judicial process, it is taking on the responsibility of a different level and branch of government: the federal judiciary.
The California Supreme Court’s only halfway real effort to justify its repeated afterthought of “or appeal” whenever it talks about proponents “defending” a measure is relegated to a footnote. There, the court claims that “Ordinarily, … public officials who are defending a state law against a constitutional challenge can be expected to appeal an adverse trial court judgment to an appellate court.… The inability of the official proponents of an initiative measure to appeal a trial court judgment invalidating the measure, when the public officials who ordinarily would file such an appeal decline to do so, would significantly undermine the initiative power.” This passage is awfully weak. It shifts away from the court’s main trope about elected officers “nullifying” initiative measures to a much more nebulous claim about “undermin[ing] the initiative power,” and offers no empirical support for its claim about what is ordinarily done nor any normative argument about why the people of the state need someone besides elected officials to have the ability to take appeals from valid federal judgments holding initiatives unconstitutional for that legislative initiative power to be robust.
The court’s reasoning addressing the plaintiffs’ objection to creating new state law giving initiative sponsors the kind of authority at issue here is not much better. The court argues that “because there is no reason to doubt that the California Legislature … would have authority to step in to assert the state’s interest in the validity of a statute enacted by the Legislature if the state’s executive officials have declined to defend the statute‘s validity in a court proceeding, we conclude that the people are no less entitled to have the state’s interest in the validity of a voter-approved initiative asserted on their behalf when public officials decline to defend the measure.” But if the legislature were to intervene to defend a law, it would be pursuant to a vote of the legislature or perhaps one of its chambers, either directly authorizing intervention in a particular case, or an earlier vote vesting authority to intervene in legislative leadership, a house, a committee, or some other subset. Here, even assuming the people (acting in parallel fashion to the legislature, by enacting law via the initiative process) are “entitled to have the state’s interest in the validity of a voter-approved initiative asserted on their behalf,” there is no evidence that the people have chosen to have the state’s interest on their behalf. As Ted Olson emphasized at oral argument before the California Supreme court, although perhaps not as strongly as he might have, Prop 8 contained no clause granting standing to defend it to its sponsors. Had there been such language, as there was in Prop 22 (the statutory ban on same-sex couples marrying adopted by the initiative process in 2000), then the same vote that adopted Prop 8 as an amendment to the state constitution also would have expressed the voters’ will to be represented by this particular self-appointed group of California voters. But there was not. So it is really the will of the California Supreme Court Justices, and not the will of the people, that appointed Prop 8 sponsors as champions of the people’s interests.
And the identity of these champions matters. The court recognized that “Plaintiffs also contend that because the official proponents of an initiative measure are private individuals who have not been elected to public office, take no oath to uphold the California Constitution or laws, cannot be recalled or impeached, and are not subject to the conflict of interest rules or other ethical standards that apply to public officials, they cannot properly assert the state‘s interest in the validity of a challenged initiative measure.” But the court’s rejection of this argument completely misses the mark.
The court somewhat defensively replies that its ruling “does not mean that the proponents become de facto public officials or possess any official authority to enact laws or regulations or even to directly enforce the initiative measure in question.” But that’s exactly the plaintiffs’ point! Unlike the attorney general and the governor, the sponsors of a measure are just one or more California voters. They have not been elected, and therefore cannot be turned out of office by the voters, so this unaccountable collection of California voters cannot claim that basis of democratic legitimacy to represent the interests of the people of the state as a whole, which is what “the State’s interests” are.
The fact that initiative sponsors “are properly subject to the same ethical constraints that apply to all other parties in a legal proceeding,” as the court feebly notes, does not go far enough. One does not, merely by suing or defending, become obligated to uphold the California and U.S. Constitutions. Unlike a governor or attorney general, therefore, initiative sponsors therefore can make arguments that are patently antithetical to the foundational law governing in California. There was a reason that the Governor and the Attorney General of California chose not to appeal Judge Walker’s ruling: They believed Walker was correct to rule Prop 8 unconstitutional. When same-sex couples are being denied their basic constitutional rights every day that Prop 8 (or any other initiative that has been held unconstitutional by a trial court) is in effect, fidelity to the Constitution is absolutely a trait that we should want in those empowered to represent the state’s interest. (The court’s arguments about “public interest” mandate actions and “private attorney general” cases are somewhat more helpful to it, but the fact that they were “initially recognized by judicial decision notwithstanding the absence of any specific constitutional or statutory provision expressly granting such authority” does not enhance their legitimacy.)
Regrettably, all of the shortcoming’s in the court’s analyses are probably somewhat beside the point. The California Supreme Court as a general matter is the ultimate judicial authority on the content or meaning of California law. Thus, the innovative and problematic principle it articulated is an authoritative articulation of state law. The Ninth Circuit and even the U.S. Supreme Court are generally not able to hold that state law means anything different.
That does not mean that the Ninth Circuit would be completely compelled to grant standing just because of what the California Supreme Court said today. Footnote 7 of the court’s opinion notes that the authority to appeal in California state court litigation follows merely from being a party at trial, but also that the rule is different in federal court, where even a party must satisfy federal standing requirements to be able to take an appeal. Footnote 27 says that SCOTUS’s “decision in Arizonans for Official English imposes no impediment to a state court‘s determination that, under state law, an initiative proponent has the authority to intervene as of right in an action in state court challenging the validity of an initiative measure.” Taken together, this provides support for an argument and leaves room for the Ninth Circuit to conclude that, in federal court under federal law, today’s decision by the California Supreme Court does not dictate the conclusion that the Prop 8 Proponents do indeed have standing to appeal Judge Walker’s decision.
However, based on the argument before the Ninth Circuit last December, most observers do not think that Judge Reinhardt wants to hold that the proponents lack standing. He was clearly frustrated with the possibility that he might not be able to reach the merits of the constitutional challenge to Prop 8 and instead might have to dismiss the appeal on the grounds that the Proponents lack standing to appeal. If this reading is right, he may be looking for a reason to grant them such standing, and today’s California Supreme court decision may provide him just what he’s looking for.
If that is the case, the panel can be expected to rule on the constitutional questions fairly quickly (likely after allowing the parties to submit briefs on the significance of today’s opinion and perhaps after allowing argument). Then, each side can be expected to ask SCOTUS to agree to review the case. (It’s a matter of discretion whether SCOTUS accepts most appeals.) Since neither the plaintiffs nor the Prop 8 Proponents wanted to have a factual trial in the first case, it is possibly but not highly likely that either side would ask for en banc review by a larger panel of eleven Ninth Circuit judges before asking SCOTUS to get in on the act. If the Ninth Circuit does rule on the merits, then a narrower, California-specific equal protection holding that Prop 8 was unconstitutional would be less likely to be reversed by SCOTUS than a broader right-to-marry ruling that would invalidate marriage restrictions in 44 states. Judge Walker’s opinion contained both kinds of rulings. Only time, though not that much of it, will tell what kind of ruling the Ninth Circuit will make.
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