Showing posts with label gay marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gay marriage. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 05, 2011

Emigrating Same-Sex Civil Partnerships: Should They Be Considered Marriages?

Recently, a website devoted to advocacy for same-sex relationships and rights published a post about a gay couple attempting to divorce in Canada. The couple became civil partners in the United Kingdom, then emigrated to Canada. Their relationship broke down and spousal abuse has been alleged:
Will is a Canadian citizen who decided to move to the UK. He enjoyed his life and, by chance, while living there, met Chris, another Canadian, who had come to the UK as well. They fell in love and had a Civil Partnership Ceremony in the UK. They later decided to return to Canada and settle down. They purchased a home, furnished it together, and lived the married life. Unfortunately, their relationship took a turn for the worse when Will became the victim of spousal abuse and his partner, Chris, was arrested. Upon release, Chris returned home, changed the locks, and threw Will out onto the street with only the clothes on his back. All Will's possessions were in the home, but he was not allowed to get them. Fortunately for Will, he had family a short distance away, who took him in while he tried to sort this mess out.
Will decided that the only way to get back his possessions was to try to file for a divorce here, in Canada. Upon filing, he received a letter from his partner's lawyer, stating that their Civil Union was not recognized in Canada, and that Will had no rights to any of the possessions in the home. Will was devastated but thought that he could find something that would say he had the rights of a spouse. He wrote to officials in the UK and to government officials in Canada. Unfortunately, everywhere he turned, he came upon a brick wall. No one had an answer for him. He found documentation that a Canadian Gay marriage is recognized in the UK, but he found nothing stating that Canada recognized a Civil Union from the UK.
The article goes on to state that "Will" (a pseudonym) will be going to court this month in order to assert his right to a divorce.

This is new legal ground in Canada and there appears to be no caselaw stating what the proper procedure would be in this scenario, making it novel.

The Same-Sex Marriage Reference produced by the Supreme Court in 2004 explicitly divides marriage and civil unions by calling them "distinct ways in which couples can express their commitment and structure their legal obligations," and that civil unions are a "relationship short of marriage." This reading would seem to indicate that it is therefore incumbent upon couples such as Will and his partner, when emigrating to Canada, to marry once they are within the country, as civil unions and marriages are two distinct types of relationships, each with its own set of special privileges.

However, that argument sacrifices human truths for technical correctness. If a same-sex couple in a country that does not allow for same-sex marriage elects to be joined in a civil union, for all practical intents and purposes they are likely doing so because they cannot be married and seek the closest possible alternative, rather than because they want the specific set of legal obligations that come with civil partnership (as opposed to the marriage they cannot obtain).

Many gay couples who elect to enter into civil unions where they cannot be married (and, one could argue, the overwhelming majority thereof) still consider themselves to be married in spirit if not in law.

This is particularly true with respect to civil unions in the United Kingdom, where the Civil Partnership Act of 2004 granted civil unions rights and responsibilities largely equivalent to those of marriages: civil partnerships in England and Wales mirror marriages in England and Wales, and civil partnerships in Scotland mirror marriages in Scotland. (Civil partnerships in England and Wales differ somewhat as compared to as in Scotland, but that has more to do with differences in their respective family law regimes.)

However, not all same-sex civil partnership regimes are like the United Kingdom's. Switzerland's, for example, forbids same-sex civil partners from adopting children or sharing a surname, as does Hungary's; the Czech Republic, in addition to forbidding civil partners adoption rights, does not recognize their right to a widow's pension or as having joint property rights. On the other hand, civil partnership regimes in Germany and Finland are fundamentally equivalent to marriage, as in the UK.

(Special note must be taken of the United States, where civil unions are left to individual states - as the federal government does not recognize marriage - and thus there are a large number of widely differing regimes, from Massachusetts' full recognition of gay marriage to domestic partnerships in Wisconsin which enumerate only some rights.)

The idea, then, that gay couples in civil unions emigrating to Canada should be treated as not being married seems obtuse to the realities of the situation. Depending on the regime under which they were joined, same-sex partners will have either previously had all of the rights equivalent to traditionally married couples, in which case the distinction between civil partnership and marriage is essentially a fiction to placate those not comfortable with the concept of extending marriage rights to same-sex couples, or they will never have had the opportunities to those rights in the first place.

Requiring gay partners to marry a second time while in Canada seems an unnecessary burden for those couples to undertake, particularly considering that at present there is no legal requirement to have a foreign marriage registered in Canada for it to be recognized. Regardless of the fact that the Canadian government did not itself force foreign same-sex couples to enter into civil unions rather than marriages, it seems strikingly unfair that we should require emigrating gay couples to jump through additional hoops when the likelihood of their preference for marriage over a limited domestic contract with few enumerated rights is likely.

Consider that when the state of Massachusetts overturned prohibitions against same-sex marriage in 2004, over six thousand same-sex couples married within the first year and that over half of them had been common-law partners for a decade prior. Forty percent had children. The choice of marriage for these couples despite the availability of civil partnerships in the New England area makes a strong case that, like straight couples, committed gay couples will overwhelmingly choose marriage to certify their commitment when it is available.

(Additionally, Quebec's experiment with both marriage and civil partnership regimes for same-sex couples would seem to bear this out: once same-sex marriage became available to gay couples in Quebec in 2004 as a result of the Civil Marriage Act's passing, the use of civil unions by gay couples cratered in comparison to entry into marriages.)

This writer would urge whatever judge is hearing "Will's" case to recognize same-sex civil unions entered into within other countries as marriages. Given that civil unions are essentially obsolete within most of Canada, having been largely superceded by marriage where they were previously in use, the spirit of fairness demands that we recognize that emigrating civil partnerships are almost certainly only those things because they could not get properly married.

True, there may be the occasional instance of a couple choosing a civil union rather than a marriage, but this writer firmly believes they will be extremely occasional given the wide berth between marriage and civil partnership in most countries in terms of rights and privileges, and their potential existence does not present enough reason to complicate the lives of emigrating gay couples who believe - and understandably so - that Canada will validate and recognize their desire to be married.
- Christopher Bird, Toronto

Addendum:

To some extent, I differ on this point.

I am not sure it is accurate to assume in all cases that partners have specific marriage-like intentions when opting for civil union.

The leap to full marital property rights may be more than either party bargained for.

Certainly, it would be a mistake to extend entitlements - and obligations - to partners that they would not enjoy even in the jurisdictions of their civil unions - and which would exceed the entitlements of common law spouses, same sex or otherwise, in Canada.

If a blanket rule of recognition of civil unions as marriage is employed, as Chris suggests, how would one distinguish between jurisdictions such as Massachusetts, where civil union and formal marriage are both available same-sex options - yielding wholly different property regimes - and other states where gay marriage is not yet legalized and civil union is the only option?

It would be prudent, however, for our courts to enquire as to the nature of property rights acquired in the actual jurisdiction of the parties’ civil union and to consider whether those entitlements and obligations ought to be applicable in Canada – perhaps on an implied contract basis.

Beyond that, it is unclear why "Will" need to assert these broader "marital rights" to secure his own belongings (and one-half of the joint assets) along with his interest in the family home – Ontario's common law spouses regularly secure such relief via civil actions and family law applications, alleging constructive or resulting trusts or entitlement to replevin.

Frankly, I think Will needs to speak with a lawyer, not a journalist.

The determination of a mechanism in Canada for dissolving marriage-like unions entered into elsewhere does indeed pose an interesting challenge, however. Our courts and legislators will need to address this current legal status vacuum. It does not follow, however, that the extension of property rights to civil union partners must necessarily be part of such a law reform package.

Worthy of additional note, perhaps, is that the trust entitlements of common law spouses were recently clarified and extended by the Supreme Court of Canada in its February 18, 2011 decision in Kerr v. Baranow, 2011 SCC 10.
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

Sunday, December 05, 2010

Same-Sex Marriage by Skype?

A same-sex couple from Texas has been disappointed to learn that its D.C. marriage by Skype, conduced by an official in Washington while the couple remained in its home state, has been rejected by the D.C. Superior Court.

As same-sex marriage is prohibited in Texas, the couple sought to formalize their marriage under District of Columbia law. That jurisdiction, along with Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont, permits gay couples to marry.

Same-sex marriages have been recognized throughout Canada since July 20, 2005, and was in effect in most provinces from 2003.

CNN comments on the Texas case, which ultimately is of most interest for its holding that a Skype conference cannot establish a necessary physical presence in a jurisdiction:
But the court said its notice had nothing to do with the gender of the men and everything to do with the location of their ceremony.
Marriage statutes in the District of Columbia (dating back to 1901) requires marriages to be celebrated within the jurisdictional and territorial boundaries of the city," Marie Robertson, a spokeswoman for the D.C. Superior Court, wrote CNN in an e-mail. "Both the officiant and the parties to the marriage must be physically present at the ceremony performed in the district."
Though video conferencing allows people to interact in new ways, such technology raises tricky questions about what it means to be present in a legal sense. Describing themselves as "accidental activists," Reed and Walkup now find themselves part of the new legal tangle.
Also see Family Law Prof Blog, which notes this case today.
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Straight U.K. Couple To Appeal For Entitlement to "Gay" Civil Partnership

Claiming discrimination, a heterosexual London couple will challenge a UK law that limits "civil partnerships" to same-sex couples. MSNBC reports:
The 26-year-old Londoners think they should be allowed to have a civil partnership, a form of legal union available in Britain only to same-sex couples. Gay rights activists are backing the couple's bid in an attempt to legalize gay marriage.

...Doyle and Freeman were refused a permit Tuesday from their local town hall, setting up a likely appeal.

Human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell, who accompanied Doyle and Freeman at the Islington registry office, said "denying heterosexual couples the right to have a civil partnership is heterophobic.

"Marriage and civil partnership are virtually identical in law, and activists think both should be open to all couples.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

Monday, September 20, 2010

Canada's Military 'Parade"

More 'wisdom' from the U.S. right:
"Well, those [countries] that do [allow gays to serve openly], they're the ones that participate in parades, they don't fight wars to keep the nation and the world free,"
- Tony Perkins, Family Research Council,at the Value Voters Summit
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Thursday, May 13, 2010

The Slippery Slope

Or not...

(via Andrew Sullivan)

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Not an Acceptable License Plate?

Apparently, IM GAY does not cut it on Oklahoma's highways. Lawsuit follows:

The Oklahoma Tax Commission, the organization that reviews and approves applications for personalized license plates in the Sooner State, has reportedly allowed the following to appear on the state’s plates: STR8FAN and STR8SXI.

But the Tax Commission has denied a college student’s request to put IM GAY on his license plate. The student, Keith Kimmel, 28, of Norman, has sued, arguing that the decision violates his First Amendment rights. Click here for the story, from the Oklahoman.

The backstory: The Oklahoma Tax Commission turned Kimmel down due to an internal rule against special license tags that “may be offensive to the general public.”

Via WSJ Law Blog

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

U.S. Supreme Court Extends Camera Ban at California Gay Marriage Trial

In a 5-4 ruling today, the U.S. Supreme Court has indefinitely extended the ban on videotaping the ongoing Proposition 8, same-sex marriage trial in California.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Monday, January 11, 2010

US Supreme Court Blocks You Tube Airing of Gay Marriage Trial

Trial begins today in the constitutional challenge to Califormia's ban on same-sex mariage.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Sinead's Hand

This Irish offering on same-sex civil marriage is one of Andrew Sullivan's picks for ad of the year:

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Thursday, October 15, 2009

The Procreation Argument

The "procreation argument," dealt a fatal blow by Chief U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker, at a hearing of a challenge to Californa's ban on gay marriage.

Law.com reports:

Many of the arguments discussed for two hours in court on Wednesday centered on the more philosophical issue of why the government would be in the business of sanctioning marriages at all. Cooper argued that marriage existed to support and to encourage “natural procreation” – something that gay couples can’t do.

Judge Walker scoffed at that idea, saying the last wedding he officiated was between people aged 95 and 83. “I did not demand that they prove they intended to engage in procreation,” he said.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Same Sex Marriage Momentum: Legislation in New York, Maine

AmericaBlog's Joe Sudbury updates on  legislative initiatives on gay marriage now pending in Maine and New York State:
Okay, Vermont is done. Iowa is done. The New Hampshire House passed a marriage bill in March, but may get "tangled up" in the NH Senate.

Up next, New York and Maine.

Towleroad
 reports that New York Governor Paterson will introduce his marriage bill on Thursday:
Paterson said in radio interviews last Thursday that he wants public debate on the issue: "I’m going to put the bill out and just let people fight it out. If it loses, it loses. And let the parties on both sides have their say. Inevitably, the inertia is that the public will accept this."
Maine's bill, LD 1020, has over 60 co-sponsors. The hearing on the bill will be held on April 22nd. It won't be at the State House. No, because of the expected crowds, the hearing will be held at the Augusta Civic Center. The right-wingers are apoplectic in Maine. I hear they're doing lots of direct mail and even planning robo-calls. Our side is running an aggressive field operation. This is going to be a battle.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Friday, April 03, 2009

Iowa Appeal Court Overturns State Same Sex Marriage Ban

From Talk Left:

The Iowa Supreme Court has ruled a ban on gay marriage is unconstitutional.

The Iowa Supreme Court says the state's same-sex marriage ban violates the constitutional rights of gay and lesbian couples, making it the third state where gay marriage is legal.

In a unanimous ruling issued Friday, the court upheld a 2007 Polk County District Court judge's ruling that the law violated the state constitution.

How Appealing has more, including this link to the decision (pdf).

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Monday, February 09, 2009

Video: "Don't Divorce Us"

Via Andrew Sullivan, couples and families urge the California Supreme Court to preserve same-sex marriage in the Golden State:


"Fidelity": Don't Divorce... from Courage Campaign on Vimeo.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

The End of Same-Sex Marriage in California?

Andrew Sullivan comments on the apparent success of California's Proposition 8. See: Stripped Of The Right To Marry.

For more baclground, see our prior post, Inside Proposition 8 - California's Same-Sex Marriage Debate.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Gay Marriage Ban Overturned By California Supreme Court

MSNBC reports on a landmark ruling this morning by California's Supreme Court, declaring the state's ban on same sex marriage unconstitutional:

SAN FRANCISCO - The California Supreme Court has overturned a ban on gay marriage, paving the way for California to become the second state where gay and lesbian residents can marry.

The justices released the 4-3 decision Thursday, saying that domestic partnerships are not a good enough substitute for marriage in an opinion written by Chief Justice Ron George.

"Under these circumstances, we cannot find that retention of the traditional definition of marriage constitutes a compelling state interest," the court said in a majority decision.

More from the majority's opinion:

Furthermore, in contrast to earlier times, our state now recognizes that an individual’s capacity to establish a loving and long-term committed relationship with another person and responsibly to care for and raise children does not depend upon the individual’s sexual orientation, and, more generally, that an individual’s sexual orientation — like a person’s race or gender — does not constitute a legitimate basis upon which to deny or withhold legal rights. We therefore conclude that in view of the substance and significance of the fundamental constitutional right to form a family relationship, the California Constitution properly must be interpreted to guarantee this basic civil right to all Californians, whether gay or heterosexual, and to same-sex couples as well as to opposite-sex couples.

For the Court's complete opinion, see In Re: Marriage Cases.

More reading - the law blogs weigh in:

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Michigan Supreme Court: No Health Benefits for Same Sex Partners

According to an Associated Press report, Michigan's Supreme Court that ruled the State's same-sex marriage ban prohibits the State's universities and colleges from providing health care benefits to the same-sex partners of campus employees:

The ban, a constitutional amendment approved in November 2004, says the union between a man and woman is the only agreement recognized as a marriage "or similar union for any purpose."

The court ruled that while marriages and domestic partnerships aren't identical, they are similar because they're the only relationships in Michigan defined in terms of gender and lack of a close blood connection.

Voters "hardly could have made their intentions clearer," Justice Stephen Markman wrote, citing the law's "for any purpose" language.

Dissenting Justices Marilyn Kelly and Michael Cavanagh countered that statements made by backers of the measure before the election suggest they only intended to prohibit gay marriage, not take away employment benefits.

The dissent also noted that gay partners who qualify for health care aren't given other benefits of marriage - equal rights to property, for instance.

For the Court's complete opinion, see National Pride at Work vs. Governor of Michigan

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

ORIGINALLY POSTED AT WISE LAW BLOGSUBSCRIBE TO WISE LAW BLOG

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Migrating Same-Sex Marriages in America: "Betwixt and Between"

Professor Brenda Cossman of the University of Toronto's Faculty of Law Blog has a new paper on the gap between the legal and cultural recognition of same-sex marriage in America.

Focusing on the uncertain legal status of same-sex spouses who migrate to, and throughout, America, Betwixt and between Recognition: Migrating-Same-Sex Marriages and the Turn Toward the Private reviews the applicability of conflict of laws principles to judicial determination of the legal status of migrating spouses.

It also nicely canvasses American jurisprudence that has led to the current question marks about the recognition by U.S. state courts of same-sex marriages solemnized elsewhere.

Professor Cossman notes that, to date, many U.S. state courts have have declined to favour recognition:

A glance at the scoreboard in these admittedly early days of migrating same-sex marriage cases suggests that the obvious trend is one of nonrecognition. The courts are overwhelmingly taking the position that if their states do not recognize civil unions or same-sex marriage, then they will not recognize Vermont, Massachusetts, or Canadian unions.

She argues, however, that irrespective of the ultimate verdicts in these cases, judicial processes have offered some measure of social legitimacy to same sex unions. She notes that simply by considering these cases, courts have enabled such unions to enter the lexicon of the culturally "speakable"

The writing of the paper appears to have predated last month's landmark decision in Martinez v. Monroe.

In Martinez, a New York State appellate court in Rochester recognized a Canadian same-sex marriage as legally valid in the state. That appellate ruling, however, is now subject to further appeal by Monroe County.

Regrettably, however, this otherwise informative and scholarly paper also veers somewhat gratuitously, and perhaps, objectionably.

For no apparent reason that appears germane to her central thesis, Professor Cossman also contends:

There are many parallels between same-sex marriage and polygamy. Polygamy has long been one of the bogeymen of the law of conflicts. The law of recognizing marriages celebrated abroad has often been articulated to specifically disallow the recognition of polygamous marriages. Although the general principle was one of place-of-celebration, that is, a marriage was recognized as valid if it was valid in the place where it was celebrated, an exception was made for polygamy. Polygamy long operated as a trope of the public-policy exception to the common-law place-of-celebration rule, deployed to justify, in the most obvious way, the need for such an exception.

Today, it is same-sex marriage that is occupying this trope, becoming the new bogeyman in the law of conflicts. Indeed, it arguably occupies an even more ominous space, since same-sex marriage has been legalized in one state in the Union, and civil unions have been recognized in several others.

Yet the shadow of polygamy lingers, now in the guise of a slippery slope: same sex marriage becomes the obvious example of the need for a public-policy exception—“if it is not a legitimate exception, what is?”—leading in turn to the fear of the ultimate trope -polygamy. Opponents to same-sex marriage repeatedly raise the slippery-slope argument: that its recognition will lead inexorably to recognizing polygamy and other abominations, like incest and bestiality. Conversely, as liberal scholars seek to make the case for the interjurisdictional recognition of same-sex marriage, they, too, must negotiate this slippery slope. But they do so through denial, avoiding the association like the plague and insisting that the monogamous nature of marriage can, and will, hold. (emphasis added).

With due respect to the good Professor, I am quite comfortable with the noted tendency of "liberal scholars" to avoid dealing with the "association" of same-sex marriage to polygamy, incest and bestiality.

By any rational standard, there are no such associations.

Reiteration of these tired "slippery slope" arguments may well afford to them an unwarranted cultural "speakability." The suggestion that such canards continue to require any rebuttal at all is essentially false.

Professor Cossman's ultimate conclusions, however, remain astute:

The courts may be deploying conflicts-of-laws in a kind of border patrol, refusing legal passage, yet they cannot prevent its seepage into the cultural imagination on the other side brought on by each of the legal challenges. These migrating-marriage cases challenge the traditional confines of doctrinal or policy approaches to conflicts, suggesting that we cannot fully grasp this strategic turn toward the private without attention to these contestations, deferrals, and reversals of cultural meaning.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

California Same Sex Marriage Hearing

MSNBC reports:

The U.S. gay marriage debate shifted to California on Tuesday, as the state's highest court heard more than 3 1/2 hours of arguments on the constitutionality of a voter-approved law banning same-sex marriage.
Watch video of the proceeding from CalChannel:

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Commission: N.J. Civil Unions "Second Class Status" for Gay Couples

From the "Government commission tells us something we already know" department...

Raw Story:

A commission established to study same-sex civil unions in New Jersey has found in its first report that civil unions create a "second-class status" for gay couples, rather than giving them equality.

The report stops short of recommending that the state allow gay marriage. But it does find that gay couples in Massachusetts, the only state that now allows same-sex marriage, do not experience some of the legal complications that those in New Jersey do.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

The American Same-Sex Divorce Conundrum

The Washington Post has a lengthy article today on the odd problem married same-sex couples in American are encountering.

If they have moved outside Massachusetts, the sole state that allows same sex marriage, they may not be able to divorce.

Last month, we reported on this conundrum, after a 3-2 decision of the Rhode Island Supreme Court, which held that it lacked jurisdiction to grant a divorce to a same-sex couple that married in Massachusetts, but had moved to that State. In short, the court declined jurisdiction because Rhode Island does not recognize same sex marriages.

Massachusetts has a minimum residency requirement in its divorce procedures. If at least one spouse does not live in the State, a couple cannot divorce there.

In related news, with the arrival of 2008, New Hampshire now recognizes same-sex unions:

The law, which took effect with the arrival of 2008, "recognizes the civil union between one man and another man or one woman and another woman."

It grants rights to couples previously denied them because they cannot marry, including inheritance and child custody. The unions are not called marriages, however, and the law specifically allows clergy to refuse to perform them.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

EMPLOYMENT LAWCIVIL LITIGATIONWILLS AND ESTATESFAMILY LAW & DIVORCE