Timothy Bostic v. George Schaefer, III
Filing
PUBLISHED AUTHORED OPINION filed. Originating case number: 2:13-cv-00395-AWA-LRL. [999404087]. [14-1167, 14-1169, 14-1173]
Appeal: 14-1167
Doc: 234
Filed: 07/28/2014
Pg: 1 of 98
PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 14-1167
TIMOTHY B.
TOWNLEY,
BOSTIC;
TONY
C.
LONDON;
CAROL
SCHALL;
MARY
Plaintiffs − Appellees,
JOANNE HARRIS; JESSICA DUFF; CHRISTY BERGHOFF; VICTORIA
KIDD, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly
situated,
Intervenors,
v.
GEORGE E. SCHAEFER, III, in his official capacity as the
Clerk of Court for Norfolk Circuit Court,
Defendant – Appellant,
and
JANET M. RAINEY, in her official capacity as State Registrar
of Vital Records; ROBERT F. MCDONNELL, in his official
capacity as Governor of Virginia; KENNETH T. CUCCINELLI, II,
in his official capacity as Attorney General of Virginia,
Defendants,
MICHÈLE MCQUIGG,
Intervenor/Defendant.
-----------------------------------DAVID A. ROBINSON; ALAN J. HAWKINS; JASON S. CARROLL; NORTH
CAROLINA
VALUES
COALITION;
LIBERTY,
LIFE,
AND
LAW
FOUNDATION; SOCIAL SCIENCE PROFESSORS; FAMILY RESEARCH
COUNCIL; VIRGINIA CATHOLIC CONFERENCE, LLC; CENTER FOR
CONSTITUTIONAL
JURISPRUDENCE;
STATE
OF
WEST
VIRGINIA;
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INSTITUTE FOR MARRIAGE AND PUBLIC POLICY; HELEN M. ALVARE;
STATE OF INDIANA; STATE OF ALABAMA; STATE OF ALASKA; STATE
OF ARIZONA; STATE OF COLORADO; STATE OF IDAHO; STATE OF
LOUISIANA; STATE OF MONTANA; STATE OF NEBRASKA; STATE OF
OKLAHOMA; STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA; STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA;
STATE OF UTAH; STATE OF WYOMING; WALLBUILDERS, LLC; LIBERTY
COUNSEL; AMERICAN COLLEGE OF PEDIATRICIANS; SCHOLARS OF
HISTORY AND RELATED DISCIPLINES; AMERICAN LEADERSHIP FUND;
ROBERT P. GEORGE; SHERIF GIRGIS; RYAN T. ANDERSON; PAUL
MCHUGH; UNITED STATES CONFERENCE OF CATHOLIC BISHOPS;
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EVANGELICALS; CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER−DAY SAINTS; THE ETHICS & RELIGIOUS LIBERTY
COMMISSION OF THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION; LUTHERAN
CHURCH−MISSOURI SYNOD; THE BECKET FUND FOR RELIGIOUS
LIBERTY; EAGLE FORUM EDUCATION AND LEGAL DEFENSE FUND; DAVID
BOYLE; ROBERT OSCAR LOPEZ; CONCERNED WOMEN FOR AMERICA; THE
FAMILY FOUNDATION OF VIRGINIA,
Amici Supporting Appellant,
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
SCHOLARS;
ASHUTOSH
BHAGWAT;
LEE
BOLLINGER; ERWIN CHEMERINSKY; WALTER DELLINGER; MICHAEL C.
DORF; LEE EPSTEIN; DANIEL FARBER; BARRY FRIEDMAN; MICHAEL
JAY GERHARDT, Professor; DEBORAH HELLMAN; JOHN CALVIN
JEFFRIES, JR.; LAWRENCE LESSIG; WILLIAM MARSHALL; FRANK
MICHELMAN; JANE S. SCHACTER; CHRISTOPHER H. SCHROEDER;
SUZANNA SHERRY; GEOFFREY R. STONE; DAVID STRAUSS; LAURENCE
H. TRIBE, Professor; WILLIAM VAN ALSTYNE; OUTSERVE−SLDN; THE
AMERICAN
MILITARY
PARTNER
ASSOCIATION;
THE
AMERICAN
SOCIOLOGICAL
ASSOCIATION;
VIRGINIA
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
PROFESSORS; AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION; THE AMERICAN
ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS; AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION;
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION
OF
SOCIAL
WORKERS;
VIRGINIA
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION; EQUALITY NC; SOUTH CAROLINA
QUALITY
COALITION;
CHANTELLE
FISHER−BORNE;
MARCIE
FISHER−BORNE; CRYSTAL HENDRIX; LEIGH SMITH; SHANA CARIGNAN;
MEGAN PARKER; TERRI BECK; LESLIE ZANAGLIO; LEE KNIGHT
CAFFERY; DANA DRAA; SHAWN LONG; CRAIG JOHNSON; ESMERALDA
MEJIA;
CHRISTINA
GINTER−MEJIA;
CATO
INSTITUTE;
CONSTITUTIONAL
ACCOUNTABILITY
CENTER;
HISTORIANS
OF
MARRIAGE; PETER W. BARDAGLIO; NORMA BASCH; STEPHANIE COONTZ;
NANCY F. COTT; TOBY L. DITZ; ARIELA R. DUBLER; LAURA F.
EDWARDS; SARAH BARRINGER GORDON; MICHAEL GROSSBERG; HENDRIK
HARTOG; ELLEN HERMAN; MARTHA HODES; LINDA K. KERBER; ALICE
KESSLER−HARRIS; ELAINE TYLER MAY; SERENA MAYERI; STEVEN
MINTZ; ELIZABETH PLECK; CAROLE SHAMMAS; MARY L. SHANLEY; AMY
DRU STANLEY; BARBARA WELKE; PARENTS, FAMILIES AND FRIENDS OF
2
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LESBIANS AND GAYS, INC.; KERRY ABRAMS, Albert Clark Tate,
Jr. Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law;
VIVIAN HAMILTON, Professor of Law, William and Mary;
MEREDITH HARBACH, Professor of Law, University of Richmond;
JOAN HEIFETZ HOLLINGER, John and Elizabeth Boalt Lecturer in
Residence, University of California, Berkeley School of Law;
COURTNEY G. JOSLIN, Professor of Law, University of
California, Davis School of Law; NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND
EDUCATION
FUND,
INC.;
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION
FOR
THE
ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE; HOWARD UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF
LAW CIVIL RIGHTS CLINIC; FAMILY EQUALITY COUNCIL; COLAGE;
GLMA: HEALTH PROFESSIONALS ADVANCING LGBT EQUALITY; WILLIAM
N. ESKRIDGE, JR.; REBECCA L. BROWN; DANIEL A. FARBER;
MICHAEL GERHARDT; JACK KNIGHT; ANDREW KOPPELMAN; MELISSA
LAMB SAUNDERS; NEIL S. SIEGEL; JANA B. SINGER; HISTORIANS OF
ANTI−GAY DISCRIMINATION; ANTI−DEFAMATION LEAGUE; AMERICANS
UNITED FOR SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE; BEND THE ARC: A
JEWISH PARTNERSHIP FOR JUSTICE; HADASSAH, THE WOMEN'S
ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF AMERICA; HINDU AMERICAN FOUNDATION;
THE
INTERFAITH
ALLIANCE
FOUNDATION;
JAPANESE
AMERICAN
CITIZENS LEAGUE; JEWISH SOCIAL POLICY ACTION NETWORK;
KESHET;
METROPOLITAN
COMMUNITY
CHURCHES;
MORE
LIGHT
PRESBYTERIANS; THE NATIONAL COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN;
NEHIRIM;
PEOPLE
FOR
THE
AMERICAN
WAY
FOUNDATION;
PRESBYTERIAN WELCOME; RECONCILINGWORKS: LUTHERANS FOR FULL
PARTICIPATION; RELIGIOUS INSTITUTE, INC.; SIKH AMERICAN
LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATION FUND; SOCIETY FOR HUMANISTIC
JUDAISM; T'RUAH: THE RABBINIC CALL FOR HUMAN RIGHTS; WOMEN'S
LEAGUE FOR CONSERVATIVE JUDAISM; COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL
SEXUALITY AND GENDER LAW CLINIC; BISHOPS OF THE EPISCOPAL
CHURCH IN VIRGINIA; CENTRAL ATLANTIC CONFERENCE OF THE
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST; CENTRAL CONFERENCE OF AMERICAN
RABBIS; MORMONS FOR EQUALITY; RECONSTRUCTIONIST RABBINICAL
ASSOCIATION; RECONSTRUCTIONIST RABBINICAL COLLEGE AND JEWISH
RECONSTRUCTIONIST COMMUNITIES; UNION FOR REFORM JUDAISM; THE
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST ASSOCIATION; AFFIRMATION; COVENANT
NETWORK OF PRESBYTERIANS; METHODIST FEDERATION FOR SOCIAL
ACTION; MORE LIGHT PRESBYTERIANS; PRESBYTERIAN WELCOME;
RECONCILING MINISTRIES NETWORK; RECONCILINGWORKS: LUTHERANS
FOR FULL PARTICIPATION; RELIGIOUS INSTITUTE, INC.; WOMEN OF
REFORM JUDAISM; 28 EMPLOYERS AND ORGANIZATIONS REPRESENTING
EMPLOYERS;
COMMONWEALTH
OF
MASSACHUSETTS;
STATE
OF
CALIFORNIA; STATE OF CONNECTICUT; DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA;
STATE OF ILLINOIS; STATE OF IOWA; STATE OF MAINE; STATE OF
MARYLAND; STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE; STATE OF NEW MEXICO; STATE
OF NEW YORK; STATE OF OREGON; STATE OF VERMONT; STATE OF
WASHINGTON; GARY J. GATES; NATIONAL AND WESTERN STATES
3
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WOMEN'S RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS; VIRGINIA CHAPTER OF THE
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF MATRIMONIAL LAWYERS; THE NATIONAL
WOMEN'S LAW CENTER; EQUAL RIGHTS ADVOCATES; LEGAL MOMENTUM;
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN LAWYERS; NATIONAL PARTNERSHIP
FOR WOMEN & FAMILIES; SOUTHWEST WOMEN'S LAW CENTER; WOMEN'S
LAW PROJECT; PROFESSORS OF LAW ASSOCIATED WITH THE WILLIAMS
INSTITUTE;
BAY
AREA
LAWYERS
FOR
INDIVIDUAL
FREEDOM;
LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE ON CIVIL AND HUMAN RIGHTS; PUBLIC
INTEREST ORGANIZATIONS; BAR ASSOCIATIONS; FAMILY LAW AND
CONFLICT OF LAWS PROFESSORS; GAY AND LESBIAN ADVOCATES AND
DEFENDERS; PEOPLE OF FAITH FOR EQUALITY IN VIRGINIA;
CELEBRATION
CENTER
FOR
SPIRITUAL
LIVING;
CLARENDON
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH;
COMMONWEALTH
BAPTIST
CHURCH;
CONGREGATION OR AMI; HOPE UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST; LITTLE
RIVER UCC; METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY CHURCH OF NORTHERN
VIRGINIA; MT. VERNON UNITARIAN CHURCH; ST. JAMES UCC,; ST.
JOHN'S
UCC;
NEW
LIFE
METROPOLITAN
COMMUNITY
CHURCH;
UNITARIAN
UNIVERSALIST
FELLOWSHIP
OF
THE
PENINSULA;
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CONGREGATION OF STERLING; UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST OF FREDERICKSBURG; UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST
CHURCH OF LOUDOUN; ANDREW MERTZ; REV. MARIE HULM ADAM; REV.
MARTY ANDERSON; REV ROBIN ANDERSON; REV. VERNE ARENS; RABBI
LIA BASS; REV. JOSEPH G. BEATTIE; REV. SUE BROWNING; REV.
JIM BUNDY; REV. MARK BYRD; REV. STEVEN C. CLUNN; REV. DR.
JOHN COPERHAVER; RABBI GARY CREDITOR; REV. DAVID ENSIGN;
REV.
HENRY
FAIRMAN;
RABBI
JESSE
GALLOP;
REV.
TOM
GERSTENLAUER; REV. ROBIN H. GORSLINE; REV. TRISH HALL; REV.
WARREN HAMMONDS; REV. JON HEASLET; REV. DOUGLAS HODGES; REV.
PHYLLIS HUBBELL; REV. STEPHEN G. HYDE; REV. JANET JAMES;
REV. JOHN MANWELL; REV. JAMES W. MCNEAL; REV. MARC BOSWELL;
REV. ANDREW CLIVE MILLARD; REV. DR. MELANIE MILLER; REV.
AMBER NEUROTH; REV. JAMES PAPILE; REV. LINDA OLSON PEEBLES;
REV. DON PRANGE; RABBI MICHAEL RAGOZIN; RABBI BEN ROMER;
REV. JENNIFER RYU; REV. ANYA SAMMLER−MICHAEL; REV. AMY
SCHWARTZMAN; REV. DANNY SPEARS; REV. MARK SURIANO; REV. ROB
VAUGHN; REV. DANIEL VELEZ−RIVERA; REV. KATE R. WALKER; REV.
TERRYE WILLIAMS; REV. DR. KAREN−MARIE YUST,
Amici Supporting Appellees.
4
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No. 14-1169
TIMOTHY B.
TOWNLEY,
BOSTIC;
TONY
C.
LONDON;
CAROL
SCHALL;
MARY
Plaintiffs − Appellees,
JOANNE HARRIS; JESSICA DUFF; CHRISTY BERGHOFF; VICTORIA
KIDD, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly
situated,
Intervenors,
v.
JANET M. RAINEY, in her official capacity as State Registrar
of Vital Records,
Defendant – Appellant,
and
GEORGE E. SCHAEFER, III, in his official capacity as the
Clerk of Court for Norfolk Circuit Court; ROBERT F.
MCDONNELL, in his official capacity as Governor of Virginia;
KENNETH T. CUCCINELLI, II, in his official capacity as
Attorney General of Virginia,
Defendants,
MICHÈLE MCQUIGG,
Intervenor/Defendant.
-----------------------------------DAVID A. ROBINSON; ALAN J. HAWKINS; JASON
CAROLINA
VALUES
COALITION;
LIBERTY,
FOUNDATION; SOCIAL SCIENCE PROFESSORS;
COUNCIL; VIRGINIA CATHOLIC CONFERENCE,
CONSTITUTIONAL
JURISPRUDENCE;
STATE
OF
INSTITUTE FOR MARRIAGE AND PUBLIC POLICY;
STATE OF INDIANA; STATE OF ALABAMA; STATE
OF ARIZONA; STATE OF COLORADO; STATE OF
5
S. CARROLL; NORTH
LIFE,
AND
LAW
FAMILY RESEARCH
LLC; CENTER FOR
WEST
VIRGINIA;
HELEN M. ALVARE;
OF ALASKA; STATE
IDAHO; STATE OF
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LOUISIANA; STATE OF MONTANA; STATE OF NEBRASKA; STATE OF
OKLAHOMA; STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA; STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA;
STATE OF UTAH; STATE OF WYOMING; WALLBUILDERS, LLC; LIBERTY
COUNSEL; AMERICAN COLLEGE OF PEDIATRICIANS; SCHOLARS OF
HISTORY AND RELATED DISCIPLINES; AMERICAN LEADERSHIP FUND;
ROBERT P. GEORGE; SHERIF GIRGIS; RYAN T. ANDERSON; PAUL
MCHUGH; UNITED STATES CONFERENCE OF CATHOLIC BISHOPS;
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EVANGELICALS; CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER−DAY SAINTS; THE ETHICS & RELIGIOUS LIBERTY
COMMISSION OF THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION; LUTHERAN
CHURCH−MISSOURI SYNOD; THE BECKET FUND FOR RELIGIOUS
LIBERTY; EAGLE FORUM EDUCATION AND LEGAL DEFENSE FUND; DAVID
BOYLE; ROBERT OSCAR LOPEZ; CONCERNED WOMEN FOR AMERICA; THE
FAMILY FOUNDATION OF VIRGINIA,
Amici Supporting Appellant,
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
SCHOLARS;
ASHUTOSH
BHAGWAT;
LEE
BOLLINGER; ERWIN CHEMERINSKY; WALTER DELLINGER; MICHAEL C.
DORF; LEE EPSTEIN; DANIEL FARBER; BARRY FRIEDMAN; MICHAEL
JAY GERHARDT, Professor; DEBORAH HELLMAN; JOHN CALVIN
JEFFRIES, JR.; LAWRENCE LESSIG; WILLIAM MARSHALL; FRANK
MICHELMAN; JANE S. SCHACTER; CHRISTOPHER H. SCHROEDER;
SUZANNA SHERRY; GEOFFREY R. STONE; DAVID STRAUSS; LAURENCE
H. TRIBE, Professor; WILLIAM VAN ALSTYNE; OUTSERVE−SLDN; THE
AMERICAN
MILITARY
PARTNER
ASSOCIATION;
THE
AMERICAN
SOCIOLOGICAL
ASSOCIATION;
VIRGINIA
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
PROFESSORS; AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION; THE AMERICAN
ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS; AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION;
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION
OF
SOCIAL
WORKERS;
VIRGINIA
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION; EQUALITY NC; SOUTH CAROLINA
QUALITY
COALITION;
CHANTELLE
FISHER−BORNE;
MARCIE
FISHER−BORNE; CRYSTAL HENDRIX; LEIGH SMITH; SHANA CARIGNAN;
MEGAN PARKER; TERRI BECK; LESLIE ZANAGLIO; LEE KNIGHT
CAFFERY; DANA DRAA; SHAWN LONG; CRAIG JOHNSON; ESMERALDA
MEJIA;
CHRISTINA
GINTER−MEJIA;
CATO
INSTITUTE;
CONSTITUTIONAL
ACCOUNTABILITY
CENTER;
HISTORIANS
OF
MARRIAGE; PETER W. BARDAGLIO; NORMA BASCH; STEPHANIE COONTZ;
NANCY F. COTT; TOBY L. DITZ; ARIELA R. DUBLER; LAURA F.
EDWARDS; SARAH BARRINGER GORDON; MICHAEL GROSSBERG; HENDRIK
HARTOG; ELLEN HERMAN; MARTHA HODES; LINDA K. KERBER; ALICE
KESSLER−HARRIS; ELAINE TYLER MAY; SERENA MAYERI; STEVEN
MINTZ; ELIZABETH PLECK; CAROLE SHAMMAS; MARY L. SHANLEY; AMY
DRU STANLEY; BARBARA WELKE; PARENTS, FAMILIES AND FRIENDS OF
LESBIANS AND GAYS, INC.; KERRY ABRAMS, Albert Clark Tate,
Jr. Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law;
VIVIAN HAMILTON, Professor of Law, William and Mary;
6
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MEREDITH HARBACH, Professor of Law, University of Richmond;
JOAN HEIFETZ HOLLINGER, John and Elizabeth Boalt Lecturer in
Residence, University of California, Berkeley School of Law;
COURTNEY G. JOSLIN, Professor of Law, University of
California, Davis School of Law; NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND
EDUCATION
FUND,
INC.;
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION
FOR
THE
ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE; HOWARD UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF
LAW CIVIL RIGHTS CLINIC; FAMILY EQUALITY COUNCIL; COLAGE;
GLMA: HEALTH PROFESSIONALS ADVANCING LGBT EQUALITY; WILLIAM
N. ESKRIDGE, JR.; REBECCA L. BROWN; DANIEL A. FARBER;
MICHAEL GERHARDT; JACK KNIGHT; ANDREW KOPPELMAN; MELISSA
LAMB SAUNDERS; NEIL S. SIEGEL; JANA B. SINGER; HISTORIANS OF
ANTI−GAY DISCRIMINATION; ANTI−DEFAMATION LEAGUE; AMERICANS
UNITED FOR SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE; BEND THE ARC: A
JEWISH PARTNERSHIP FOR JUSTICE; HADASSAH, THE WOMEN'S
ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF AMERICA; HINDU AMERICAN FOUNDATION;
THE
INTERFAITH
ALLIANCE
FOUNDATION;
JAPANESE
AMERICAN
CITIZENS LEAGUE; JEWISH SOCIAL POLICY ACTION NETWORK;
KESHET;
METROPOLITAN
COMMUNITY
CHURCHES;
MORE
LIGHT
PRESBYTERIANS; THE NATIONAL COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN;
NEHIRIM;
PEOPLE
FOR
THE
AMERICAN
WAY
FOUNDATION;
PRESBYTERIAN WELCOME; RECONCILINGWORKS: LUTHERANS FOR FULL
PARTICIPATION; RELIGIOUS INSTITUTE, INC.; SIKH AMERICAN
LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATION FUND; SOCIETY FOR HUMANISTIC
JUDAISM; T'RUAH: THE RABBINIC CALL FOR HUMAN RIGHTS; WOMEN'S
LEAGUE FOR CONSERVATIVE JUDAISM; COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL
SEXUALITY AND GENDER LAW CLINIC; BISHOPS OF THE EPISCOPAL
CHURCH IN VIRGINIA; CENTRAL ATLANTIC CONFERENCE OF THE
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST; CENTRAL CONFERENCE OF AMERICAN
RABBIS; MORMONS FOR EQUALITY; RECONSTRUCTIONIST RABBINICAL
ASSOCIATION; RECONSTRUCTIONIST RABBINICAL COLLEGE AND JEWISH
RECONSTRUCTIONIST COMMUNITIES; UNION FOR REFORM JUDAISM; THE
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST ASSOCIATION; AFFIRMATION; COVENANT
NETWORK OF PRESBYTERIANS; METHODIST FEDERATION FOR SOCIAL
ACTION; MORE LIGHT PRESBYTERIANS; PRESBYTERIAN WELCOME;
RECONCILING MINISTRIES NETWORK; RECONCILINGWORKS: LUTHERANS
FOR FULL PARTICIPATION; RELIGIOUS INSTITUTE, INC.; WOMEN OF
REFORM JUDAISM; 28 EMPLOYERS AND ORGANIZATIONS REPRESENTING
EMPLOYERS;
COMMONWEALTH
OF
MASSACHUSETTS;
STATE
OF
CALIFORNIA; STATE OF CONNECTICUT; DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA;
STATE OF ILLINOIS; STATE OF IOWA; STATE OF MAINE; STATE OF
MARYLAND; STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE; STATE OF NEW MEXICO; STATE
OF NEW YORK; STATE OF OREGON; STATE OF VERMONT; STATE OF
WASHINGTON; GARY J. GATES; NATIONAL AND WESTERN STATES
WOMEN'S RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS; VIRGINIA CHAPTER OF THE
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF MATRIMONIAL LAWYERS; THE NATIONAL
WOMEN'S LAW CENTER; EQUAL RIGHTS ADVOCATES; LEGAL MOMENTUM;
7
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NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN LAWYERS; NATIONAL PARTNERSHIP
FOR WOMEN & FAMILIES; SOUTHWEST WOMEN'S LAW CENTER; WOMEN'S
LAW PROJECT; PROFESSORS OF LAW ASSOCIATED WITH THE WILLIAMS
INSTITUTE;
BAY
AREA
LAWYERS
FOR
INDIVIDUAL
FREEDOM;
LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE ON CIVIL AND HUMAN RIGHTS; PUBLIC
INTEREST ORGANIZATIONS; BAR ASSOCIATIONS; FAMILY LAW AND
CONFLICT OF LAWS PROFESSORS; GAY AND LESBIAN ADVOCATES AND
DEFENDERS; PEOPLE OF FAITH FOR EQUALITY IN VIRGINIA;
CELEBRATION
CENTER
FOR
SPIRITUAL
LIVING;
CLARENDON
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH;
COMMONWEALTH
BAPTIST
CHURCH;
CONGREGATION OR AMI; HOPE UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST; LITTLE
RIVER UCC; METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY CHURCH OF NORTHERN
VIRGINIA; MT. VERNON UNITARIAN CHURCH; ST. JAMES UCC,; ST.
JOHN'S
UCC;
NEW
LIFE
METROPOLITAN
COMMUNITY
CHURCH;
UNITARIAN
UNIVERSALIST
FELLOWSHIP
OF
THE
PENINSULA;
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CONGREGATION OF STERLING; UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST OF FREDERICKSBURG; UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST
CHURCH OF LOUDOUN; ANDREW MERTZ; REV. MARIE HULM ADAM; REV.
MARTY ANDERSON; REV ROBIN ANDERSON; REV. VERNE ARENS; RABBI
LIA BASS; REV. JOSEPH G. BEATTIE; REV. SUE BROWNING; REV.
JIM BUNDY; REV. MARK BYRD; REV. STEVEN C. CLUNN; REV. DR.
JOHN COPERHAVER; RABBI GARY CREDITOR; REV. DAVID ENSIGN;
REV.
HENRY
FAIRMAN;
RABBI
JESSE
GALLOP;
REV.
TOM
GERSTENLAUER; REV. ROBIN H. GORSLINE; REV. TRISH HALL; REV.
WARREN HAMMONDS; REV. JON HEASLET; REV. DOUGLAS HODGES; REV.
PHYLLIS HUBBELL; REV. STEPHEN G. HYDE; REV. JANET JAMES;
REV. JOHN MANWELL; REV. JAMES W. MCNEAL; REV. MARC BOSWELL;
REV. ANDREW CLIVE MILLARD; REV. DR. MELANIE MILLER; REV.
AMBER NEUROTH; REV. JAMES PAPILE; REV. LINDA OLSON PEEBLES;
REV. DON PRANGE; RABBI MICHAEL RAGOZIN; RABBI BEN ROMER;
REV. JENNIFER RYU; REV. ANYA SAMMLER−MICHAEL; REV. AMY
SCHWARTZMAN; REV. DANNY SPEARS; REV. MARK SURIANO; REV. ROB
VAUGHN; REV. DANIEL VELEZ−RIVERA; REV. KATE R. WALKER; REV.
TERRYE WILLIAMS; REV. DR. KAREN−MARIE YUST,
Amici Supporting Appellees.
8
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No. 14-1173
TIMOTHY B.
TOWNLEY,
BOSTIC;
TONY
C.
LONDON;
CAROL
SCHALL;
MARY
Plaintiffs − Appellees,
JOANNE HARRIS; JESSICA DUFF; CHRISTY BERGHOFF; VICTORIA
KIDD, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly
situated,
Intervenors,
v.
MICHÈLE MCQUIGG,
Intervenor/Defendant – Appellant,
and
GEORGE E. SCHAEFER, III, in his official capacity as the
Clerk of Court for Norfolk Circuit Court; JANET M. RAINEY,
in her official capacity as State Registrar of Vital
Records; ROBERT F. MCDONNELL, in his official capacity as
Governor of Virginia; KENNETH T. CUCCINELLI, II, in his
official capacity as Attorney General of Virginia,
Defendants.
-----------------------------------DAVID A. ROBINSON; ALAN J. HAWKINS; JASON S. CARROLL; NORTH
CAROLINA
VALUES
COALITION;
LIBERTY,
LIFE,
AND
LAW
FOUNDATION; SOCIAL SCIENCE PROFESSORS; FAMILY RESEARCH
COUNCIL; VIRGINIA CATHOLIC CONFERENCE, LLC; CENTER FOR
CONSTITUTIONAL
JURISPRUDENCE;
STATE
OF
WEST
VIRGINIA;
INSTITUTE FOR MARRIAGE AND PUBLIC POLICY; HELEN M. ALVARE;
STATE OF INDIANA; STATE OF ALABAMA; STATE OF ALASKA; STATE
OF ARIZONA; STATE OF COLORADO; STATE OF IDAHO; STATE OF
LOUISIANA; STATE OF MONTANA; STATE OF NEBRASKA; STATE OF
OKLAHOMA; STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA; STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA;
STATE OF UTAH; STATE OF WYOMING; WALLBUILDERS, LLC; LIBERTY
COUNSEL; AMERICAN COLLEGE OF PEDIATRICIANS; SCHOLARS OF
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HISTORY AND RELATED DISCIPLINES; AMERICAN LEADERSHIP FUND;
ROBERT P. GEORGE; SHERIF GIRGIS; RYAN T. ANDERSON; PAUL
MCHUGH; UNITED STATES CONFERENCE OF CATHOLIC BISHOPS;
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EVANGELICALS; CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
OF LATTER−DAY SAINTS; THE ETHICS & RELIGIOUS LIBERTY
COMMISSION OF THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION; LUTHERAN
CHURCH−MISSOURI SYNOD; THE BECKET FUND FOR RELIGIOUS
LIBERTY; EAGLE FORUM EDUCATION AND LEGAL DEFENSE FUND; DAVID
BOYLE; ROBERT OSCAR LOPEZ; CONCERNED WOMEN FOR AMERICA; THE
FAMILY FOUNDATION OF VIRGINIA,
Amici Supporting Appellant,
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
SCHOLARS;
ASHUTOSH
BHAGWAT;
LEE
BOLLINGER; ERWIN CHEMERINSKY; WALTER DELLINGER; MICHAEL C.
DORF; LEE EPSTEIN; DANIEL FARBER; BARRY FRIEDMAN; MICHAEL
JAY GERHARDT, Professor; DEBORAH HELLMAN; JOHN CALVIN
JEFFRIES, JR.; LAWRENCE LESSIG; WILLIAM MARSHALL; FRANK
MICHELMAN; JANE S. SCHACTER; CHRISTOPHER H. SCHROEDER;
SUZANNA SHERRY; GEOFFREY R. STONE; DAVID STRAUSS; LAURENCE
H. TRIBE, Professor; WILLIAM VAN ALSTYNE; OUTSERVE−SLDN; THE
AMERICAN
MILITARY
PARTNER
ASSOCIATION;
THE
AMERICAN
SOCIOLOGICAL
ASSOCIATION;
VIRGINIA
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
PROFESSORS; AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION; THE AMERICAN
ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS; AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION;
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION
OF
SOCIAL
WORKERS;
VIRGINIA
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION; EQUALITY NC; SOUTH CAROLINA
QUALITY
COALITION;
CHANTELLE
FISHER−BORNE;
MARCIE
FISHER−BORNE; CRYSTAL HENDRIX; LEIGH SMITH; SHANA CARIGNAN;
MEGAN PARKER; TERRI BECK; LESLIE ZANAGLIO; LEE KNIGHT
CAFFERY; DANA DRAA; SHAWN LONG; CRAIG JOHNSON; ESMERALDA
MEJIA;
CHRISTINA
GINTER−MEJIA;
CATO
INSTITUTE;
CONSTITUTIONAL
ACCOUNTABILITY
CENTER;
HISTORIANS
OF
MARRIAGE; PETER W. BARDAGLIO; NORMA BASCH; STEPHANIE COONTZ;
NANCY F. COTT; TOBY L. DITZ; ARIELA R. DUBLER; LAURA F.
EDWARDS; SARAH BARRINGER GORDON; MICHAEL GROSSBERG; HENDRIK
HARTOG; ELLEN HERMAN; MARTHA HODES; LINDA K. KERBER; ALICE
KESSLER−HARRIS; ELAINE TYLER MAY; SERENA MAYERI; STEVEN
MINTZ; ELIZABETH PLECK; CAROLE SHAMMAS; MARY L. SHANLEY; AMY
DRU STANLEY; BARBARA WELKE; PARENTS, FAMILIES AND FRIENDS OF
LESBIANS AND GAYS, INC.; KERRY ABRAMS, Albert Clark Tate,
Jr. Professor of Law, University of Virginia School of Law;
VIVIAN HAMILTON, Professor of Law, William and Mary;
MEREDITH HARBACH, Professor of Law, University of Richmond;
JOAN HEIFETZ HOLLINGER, John and Elizabeth Boalt Lecturer in
Residence, University of California, Berkeley School of Law;
COURTNEY G. JOSLIN, Professor of Law, University of
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California, Davis School of Law; NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND
EDUCATION
FUND,
INC.;
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION
FOR
THE
ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE; HOWARD UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF
LAW CIVIL RIGHTS CLINIC; FAMILY EQUALITY COUNCIL; COLAGE;
GLMA: HEALTH PROFESSIONALS ADVANCING LGBT EQUALITY; WILLIAM
N. ESKRIDGE, JR.; REBECCA L. BROWN; DANIEL A. FARBER;
MICHAEL GERHARDT; JACK KNIGHT; ANDREW KOPPELMAN; MELISSA
LAMB SAUNDERS; NEIL S. SIEGEL; JANA B. SINGER; HISTORIANS OF
ANTI−GAY DISCRIMINATION; ANTI−DEFAMATION LEAGUE; AMERICANS
UNITED FOR SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE; BEND THE ARC: A
JEWISH PARTNERSHIP FOR JUSTICE; HADASSAH, THE WOMEN'S
ZIONIST ORGANIZATION OF AMERICA; HINDU AMERICAN FOUNDATION;
THE
INTERFAITH
ALLIANCE
FOUNDATION;
JAPANESE
AMERICAN
CITIZENS LEAGUE; JEWISH SOCIAL POLICY ACTION NETWORK;
KESHET;
METROPOLITAN
COMMUNITY
CHURCHES;
MORE
LIGHT
PRESBYTERIANS; THE NATIONAL COUNCIL OF JEWISH WOMEN;
NEHIRIM;
PEOPLE
FOR
THE
AMERICAN
WAY
FOUNDATION;
PRESBYTERIAN WELCOME; RECONCILINGWORKS: LUTHERANS FOR FULL
PARTICIPATION; RELIGIOUS INSTITUTE, INC.; SIKH AMERICAN
LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATION FUND; SOCIETY FOR HUMANISTIC
JUDAISM; T'RUAH: THE RABBINIC CALL FOR HUMAN RIGHTS; WOMEN'S
LEAGUE FOR CONSERVATIVE JUDAISM; COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL
SEXUALITY AND GENDER LAW CLINIC; BISHOPS OF THE EPISCOPAL
CHURCH IN VIRGINIA; CENTRAL ATLANTIC CONFERENCE OF THE
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST; CENTRAL CONFERENCE OF AMERICAN
RABBIS; MORMONS FOR EQUALITY; RECONSTRUCTIONIST RABBINICAL
ASSOCIATION; RECONSTRUCTIONIST RABBINICAL COLLEGE AND JEWISH
RECONSTRUCTIONIST COMMUNITIES; UNION FOR REFORM JUDAISM; THE
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST ASSOCIATION; AFFIRMATION; COVENANT
NETWORK OF PRESBYTERIANS; METHODIST FEDERATION FOR SOCIAL
ACTION; MORE LIGHT PRESBYTERIANS; PRESBYTERIAN WELCOME;
RECONCILING MINISTRIES NETWORK; RECONCILINGWORKS: LUTHERANS
FOR FULL PARTICIPATION; RELIGIOUS INSTITUTE, INC.; WOMEN OF
REFORM JUDAISM; 28 EMPLOYERS AND ORGANIZATIONS REPRESENTING
EMPLOYERS;
COMMONWEALTH
OF
MASSACHUSETTS;
STATE
OF
CALIFORNIA; STATE OF CONNECTICUT; DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA;
STATE OF ILLINOIS; STATE OF IOWA; STATE OF MAINE; STATE OF
MARYLAND; STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE; STATE OF NEW MEXICO; STATE
OF NEW YORK; STATE OF OREGON; STATE OF VERMONT; STATE OF
WASHINGTON; GARY J. GATES; NATIONAL AND WESTERN STATES
WOMEN'S RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS; VIRGINIA CHAPTER OF THE
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF MATRIMONIAL LAWYERS; THE NATIONAL
WOMEN'S LAW CENTER; EQUAL RIGHTS ADVOCATES; LEGAL MOMENTUM;
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN LAWYERS; NATIONAL PARTNERSHIP
FOR WOMEN & FAMILIES; SOUTHWEST WOMEN'S LAW CENTER; WOMEN'S
LAW PROJECT; PROFESSORS OF LAW ASSOCIATED WITH THE WILLIAMS
INSTITUTE;
BAY
AREA
LAWYERS
FOR
INDIVIDUAL
FREEDOM;
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LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE ON CIVIL AND HUMAN RIGHTS; PUBLIC
INTEREST ORGANIZATIONS; BAR ASSOCIATIONS; FAMILY LAW AND
CONFLICT OF LAWS PROFESSORS; GAY AND LESBIAN ADVOCATES AND
DEFENDERS; PEOPLE OF FAITH FOR EQUALITY IN VIRGINIA;
CELEBRATION
CENTER
FOR
SPIRITUAL
LIVING;
CLARENDON
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH;
COMMONWEALTH
BAPTIST
CHURCH;
CONGREGATION OR AMI; HOPE UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST; LITTLE
RIVER UCC; METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY CHURCH OF NORTHERN
VIRGINIA; MT. VERNON UNITARIAN CHURCH; ST. JAMES UCC,; ST.
JOHN'S
UCC;
NEW
LIFE
METROPOLITAN
COMMUNITY
CHURCH;
UNITARIAN
UNIVERSALIST
FELLOWSHIP
OF
THE
PENINSULA;
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CONGREGATION OF STERLING; UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST OF FREDERICKSBURG; UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST
CHURCH OF LOUDOUN; ANDREW MERTZ; REV. MARIE HULM ADAM; REV.
MARTY ANDERSON; REV ROBIN ANDERSON; REV. VERNE ARENS; RABBI
LIA BASS; REV. JOSEPH G. BEATTIE; REV. SUE BROWNING; REV.
JIM BUNDY; REV. MARK BYRD; REV. STEVEN C. CLUNN; REV. DR.
JOHN COPERHAVER; RABBI GARY CREDITOR; REV. DAVID ENSIGN;
REV.
HENRY
FAIRMAN;
RABBI
JESSE
GALLOP;
REV.
TOM
GERSTENLAUER; REV. ROBIN H. GORSLINE; REV. TRISH HALL; REV.
WARREN HAMMONDS; REV. JON HEASLET; REV. DOUGLAS HODGES; REV.
PHYLLIS HUBBELL; REV. STEPHEN G. HYDE; REV. JANET JAMES;
REV. JOHN MANWELL; REV. JAMES W. MCNEAL; REV. MARC BOSWELL;
REV. ANDREW CLIVE MILLARD; REV. DR. MELANIE MILLER; REV.
AMBER NEUROTH; REV. JAMES PAPILE; REV. LINDA OLSON PEEBLES;
REV. DON PRANGE; RABBI MICHAEL RAGOZIN; RABBI BEN ROMER;
REV. JENNIFER RYU; REV. ANYA SAMMLER−MICHAEL; REV. AMY
SCHWARTZMAN; REV. DANNY SPEARS; REV. MARK SURIANO; REV. ROB
VAUGHN; REV. DANIEL VELEZ−RIVERA; REV. KATE R. WALKER; REV.
TERRYE WILLIAMS; REV. DR. KAREN−MARIE YUST,
Amici Supporting Appellees.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of Virginia, at Norfolk.
Arenda L. Wright Allen,
District Judge. (2:13-cv-00395-AWA-LRL)
Argued:
May 13, 2014
Decided:
July 28, 2014
Before NIEMEYER, GREGORY, and FLOYD, Circuit Judges.
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Affirmed by published opinion.
Judge Floyd wrote the majority
opinion, in which Judge Gregory joined. Judge Niemeyer wrote a
separate dissenting opinion.
ARGUED: David Brandt Oakley, POOLE MAHONEY PC, Chesapeake,
Virginia; David Austin Robert Nimocks, ALLIANCE DEFENDING
FREEDOM, Washington, D.C., for Appellants George E. Schaefer,
III and Michèle McQuigg. Stuart Alan Raphael, OFFICE OF THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant
Janet M. Rainey.
Theodore B. Olson, GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER,
LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellees. James D. Esseks, AMERICAN
CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION, New York, New York, for Intervenors. ON
BRIEF: Jeffrey F. Brooke, POOLE MAHONEY PC, Chesapeake,
Virginia, for Appellant George E. Schaefer, III.
Byron J.
Babione, Kenneth J. Connelly, J. Caleb Dalton, ALLIANCE
DEFENDING FREEDOM, Scottsdale, Arizona, for Appellant Michèle B.
McQuigg. Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, Cynthia E. Hudson,
Chief Deputy Attorney General, Rhodes B. Ritenour, Deputy
Attorney General, Allyson K. Tysinger, Senior Assistant Attorney
General, Catherine Crooks Hill, Senior Assistant Attorney
General, Trevor S. Cox, Deputy Solicitor General, OFFICE OF THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant
Janet M. Rainey.
David Boies, Armonk, New York, William A.
Isaacson,
Washington,
D.C.,
Jeremy
M.
Goldman,
Oakland,
California, Robert Silver, Joshua I. Schiller, BOIES, SCHILLER &
FLEXNER LLP, New York, New York; Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr.,
Joshua S. Lipshutz, GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER LLP, Los Angeles,
California; Thomas B. Shuttleworth, Robert E. Ruloff, Charles B.
Lustig, Andrew M. Hendrick, Erik C. Porcaro, SHUTTLEWORTH,
RULOFF, SWAIN, HADDAD & MORECOCK, P.C., Virginia Beach,
Virginia, for Appellees.
Rebecca K. Glenberg, AMERICAN CIVIL
LIBERTIES
UNION
OF
VIRGINIA
FOUNDATION,
INC.,
Richmond,
Virginia; Joshua A. Block, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION
FOUNDATION, New York, New York; Gregory R. Nevins, Tara L.
Borelli, LAMBDA LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATION FUND, INC., Atlanta,
Georgia; Paul M. Smith, Luke C. Platzer, Mark P. Gaber, JENNER &
BLOCK LLP, Washington, D.C., for Intervenors.
David A.
Robinson, North Haven, Connecticut, as Amicus. Lynn D. Wardle,
BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL, Provo, Utah; William C.
Duncan, MARRIAGE LAW FOUNDATION, Lehi, Utah, for Amici Alan J.
Hawkins and Jason S. Carroll.
Deborah J. Dewart, DEBORAH J.
DEWART, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Swansboro, North Carolina, for Amici
North Carolina Values Coalition and Liberty, Life, and Law
Foundation.
Steve C. Taylor, ALLIANCE LEGAL GROUP, Chesapeake,
Virginia, for Amicus Social Science Professors.
Paul Benjamin
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Linton, Northbrook,
Illinois,
for
Amicus
Family
Research
Council.
John C. Eastman, Anthony T. Caso, Center for
Constitutional Jurisprudence, CHAPMAN UNIVERSITY DALE E. FOWLER
SCHOOL OF LAW, Orange, California, for Amici Virginia Catholic
Conference, LLC and Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence.
Patrick Morrisey, Attorney General, Julie Marie Blake, Assistant
Attorney General, Elbert Lin, Solicitor General, OFFICE OF THE
WEST VIRGINIA ATTORNEY GENERAL, Charleston, West Virginia, for
Amicus State of West Virginia.
D. John Sauer, St. Louis,
Missouri, for Amicus Institute for Marriage and Public Policy.
Henry P. Wall, Columbia, South Carolina, for Amicus Helen M.
Alvare. Gregory F. Zoeller, Attorney General, Thomas M. Fisher,
Solicitor General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, Indianapolis,
Indiana; Luther Strange, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF ALABAMA, Montgomery, Alabama; Michael C.
Geraghty, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
ALASKA, Juneau, Alaska; Thomas C. Horne, Attorney General,
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF ARIZONA, Phoenix, Arizona;
John Suthers, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF COLORADO, Denver, Colorado; Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney
General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF IDAHO, Boise, Idaho;
James D. "Buddy" Caldwell, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF LOUISIANA, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Timothy
C. Fox, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
MONTANA, Helena, Montana; Jon Bruning, Attorney General, OFFICE
OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF NEBRASKA, Lincoln, Nebraska; E. Scott
Pruitt, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
OKLAHOMA,
Oklahoma
City,
Oklahoma;
Alan
Wilson,
Attorney
General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
Columbia, South Carolina; Marty J. Jackley, Attorney General,
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF SOUTH DAKOTA, Pierre, South
Dakota; Sean Reyes, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF THE STATE OF UTAH, Salt Lake City, Utah; Peter K.
Michael, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
WYOMING, Cheyenne, Wyoming, for Amici States of Indiana,
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Louisiana, Montana,
Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, and
Wyoming.
Stephen M. Crampton, Mary E. McAlister, LIBERTY
COUNSEL, Lynchburg, Virginia, for Amicus WallBuilders, LLC.
Mathew D. Staver, Anita L. Staver, LIBERTY COUNSEL, Orlando,
Florida, for Amici Liberty Counsel and American College of
Pediatricians. Frank D. Mylar, MYLAR LAW, P.C., Salt Lake City,
Utah, for Amici Scholars of History and Related Disciplines and
American Leadership Fund. Michael F. Smith, THE SMITH APPELLATE
LAW FIRM, Washington, D.C., for Amici Robert P. George, Sherif
Girgis, and Ryan T. Anderson. Gerard V. Bradley, NOTRE DAME LAW
SCHOOL, Notre Dame, Indiana; Kevin T. Snider, PACIFIC JUSTICE
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INSTITUTE, Oakland, California, for Amicus Paul McHugh. Anthony
R. Picarello, Jr., U.S. CONFERENCE OF CATHOLIC BISHOPS,
Washington, D.C.; R. Shawn Gunnarson, KIRTON MCCONKIE, Salt Lake
City, Utah, for Amici United States Conference of Catholic
Bishops, National Association of Evangelicals, Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints, The Ethics & Religious Liberty
Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, and Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod.
Eric Rassbach, Asma Uddin, THE BECKET
FUND FOR RELIGIOUS LIBERTY, Washington, D.C., for Amicus The
Becket Fund for Religious Liberty.
Lawrence J. Joseph,
Washington, D.C. for Amicus Eagle Forum Education and Legal
Defense Fund.
David Boyle, Long Beach, California, as Amicus.
David Boyle, Long Beach, California, for Amicus Robert Oscar
Lopez.
Abbe David Lowell, Christopher D. Man, CHADBOURNE &
PARKE LLP, Washington, D.C., for Amici Outserve-SLDN and The
American Military Partner Association.
Geoffrey R. Stone, THE
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO LAW SCHOOL, Chicago, Illinois; Lori Alvino
McGill, LATHAM & WATKINS LLP, Washington, D.C., for Amici
Constitutional Law Scholars Ashutosh Bhagwat, Lee Bollinger,
Erwin Chemerinsky, Walter Dellinger, Michael C. Dorf, Lee
Epstein, Daniel Farber, Barry Friedman, Michael J. Gerhardt,
Deborah Hellman, John C. Jeffries, Jr., Lawrence Lessig, William
Marshall, Frank Michelman, Jane S. Schacter, Christopher H.
Schroeder, Suzanna Sherry, Geoffrey R. Stone, David Strauss,
Laurence H. Tribe, and William Van Alstyne. Steven W. Fitschen,
THE NATIONAL LEGAL FOUNDATION, Virginia Beach, Virginia; Holly
L. Carmichael, San Jose, California, for Amicus Concerned Women
for America. Carmine D. Boccuzzi, Jr., Mark A. Lightner, Andra
Troy, Andrew P. Meiser, CLEARY GOTTLIEB STEEN & HAMILTON LLP,
New York, New York, for Amicus The American Sociological
Association.
L. Steven Emmert, SYKES, BOURDON, AHERN & LEVY,
P.C.,
Virginia
Beach,
Virginia,
for
Amicus
Virginia
Constitutional Law Professors. Nathalie F.P. Gilfoyle, AMERICAN
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, Washington, D.C.; Bruce V. Spiva, THE
SPIVA LAW FIRM PLLC, Washington, D.C., for Amici American
Psychological Association, American Academy of Pediatrics,
American Psychiatric Association, National Association of Social
Workers,
and
Virginia
Psychological
Association.
Mark
Kleinschmidt, TIN FULTON WALKER & OWEN, Chapel Hill, North
Carolina; Ryan T. Butler, Greensboro, North Carolina, for Amici
Equality NC and South Carolina Equality Coalition.
Rose A.
Saxe,
James
D.
Esseks,
AMERICAN
CIVIL
LIBERTIES
UNION
FOUNDATION, New York, New York; Garrard R. Beeney, David A.
Castleman,
Catherine
M.
Bradley,
W.
Rudolph
Kleysteuber,
SULLIVAN & CROMWELL LLP, New York, New York, for Amici Marcie
and Chantelle Fisher-Borne, Crystal Hendrix and Leigh Smith,
Shana Carignan and Megan Parker, Terri Beck and Leslie Zanaglio,
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Lee Knight Caffery and Dana Draa, Shawn Long and Craig Johnson,
and Esmeralda Mejia and Christina Ginter-Mejia.
Elizabeth B.
Wydra, Douglas T. Kendall, Judith E. Schaeffer, David H. Gans,
CONSTITUTIONAL ACCOUNTABILITY CENTER, Washington, D.C.; Ilya
Shapiro, CATO INSTITUTE, Washington, D.C., for Amici Cato
Institute and Constitutional Accountability Center.
Daniel
McNeel Lane, Jr., Matthew E. Pepping, San Antonio, Texas,
Jessica M. Weisel, AKIN GUMP STRAUSS HAUER & FELD LLP, Los
Angeles, California, for Amici Historians of Marriage Peter W.
Bardaglio, Norma Basch, Stephanie Coontz, Nancy F. Cott, Toby L.
Ditz, Ariela R. Dubler, Laura F. Edwards, Sarah Barringer
Gordon, Michael Grossberg, Hendrik Hartog, Ellen Herman, Martha
Hodes, Linda K. Kerber, Alice Kessler-Harris, Elaine Tyler May,
Serena Mayeri, Steve Mintz, Elizabeth Pleck, Carole Shammas,
Mary L. Shanley, Amy Dru Stanley, and Barbara Welke.
Jiyun
Cameron Lee, Andrew J. Davis, FOLGER LEVIN LLP, San Francisco,
California, for Amicus Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians
and Gays, Inc.
Rita F. Lin, Laura W. Weissbein, Sara Bartel,
MORRISON & FOERSTER LLP, San Francisco, California, for Amici
Kerry Abrams, Albert Clark Tate, Jr. Professor of Law University
of Virginia School of Law, Vivian Hamilton, Professor of Law
William and Mary, Meredith Harbach, Professor of Law University
of Richmond, Joan Heifetz Hollinger, John and Elizabeth Boalt
Lecturer in Residence University of California, Berkeley School
of Law, Courtney G. Joslin, Professor of Law University of
California, Davis School of Law, and Forty-Four Other Family Law
Professors.
Sherrilyn Ifill, Christina A. Swarns, Ria Tabacco
Mar, NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE & EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC., New York, New
York; Kim M. Keenan, NAACP, Baltimore, Maryland, for Amici NAACP
Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. and National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People.
Aderson Bellegarde
Francois, HOWARD UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW CIVIL RIGHTS CLINIC,
Washington, D.C.; Brad W. Seiling, Benjamin G. Shatz, MANATT,
PHELPS & PHILLIPS, LLP, Los Angeles, California, for Amicus
Howard University School of Law Civil Rights Clinic.
Alec W.
Farr, Washington, D.C., Tracy M. Talbot, Katherine Keating,
BRYAN CAVE LLP, San Francisco, California, for Amici Family
Equality Council and COLAGE. Nicholas M. O'Donnell, SULLIVAN &
WORCESTER LLP, Boston, Massachusetts, for Amicus GLMA: Health
Professionals Advancing LGBT Equality.
Kathleen M. O'Sullivan,
Mica D. Simpson, PERKINS COIE LLP, Seattle, Washington, for
Amici William N. Eskridge, Jr., Rebecca L. Brown, Daniel A.
Farber, Michael Gerhardt, Jack Knight, Andrew Koppelman, Melissa
Lamb Saunders, Neil S. Siegel, and Jana B. Singer. Catherine E.
Stetson, Erica Knievel Songer, Mary Helen Wimberly, Katie D.
Fairchild,
Madeline
H.
Gitomer,
HOGAN
LOVELLS
US
LLP,
Washington,
D.C.,
for
Amicus
Historians
of
Antigay
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Discrimination.
Rocky C. Tsai, Samuel P. Bickett, Rebecca
Harlow, ROPES & GRAY LLP, San Francisco, California; Steven M.
Freeman, Seth M. Marnin, Melissa Garlick, ANTI-DEFAMATION
LEAGUE, New York, New York, for Amici Anti-Defamation League,
Americans United for Separation of Church and State, Bend the
Arc: A Jewish Partnership for Justice, Hadassah, The Women's
Zionist Organization of America, Hindu American Foundation, The
Interfaith Alliance Foundation, Japanese American Citizens
League,
Jewish
Social
Policy
Action
Network,
Keshet,
Metropolitan Community Churches, More Light Presbyterians, The
National Council of Jewish Women, Nehirim, People For the
American Way Foundation, Presbyterian Welcome, Reconcilingworks:
Lutherans for Full Participation, Religious Institute, Inc.,
Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Society for
Humanistic Judaism, T'Ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights,
and Women's League For Conservative Judaism.
Matthew P.
McGuire, Beverlee E. Silva, Diane S. Wizig, ALSTON & BIRD LLP,
Durham, North Carolina; Suzanne B. Goldberg, Sexuality and
Gender Law Clinic, COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL, New York, New York, for
Amicus Columbia Law School Sexuality and Gender Law Clinic.
Jeffrey S. Trachtman, Norman C. Simon, Jason M. Moff, Kurt M.
Denk, Jessica N. Witte, KRAMER LEVIN NAFTALIS & FRANKEL LLP, New
York, New York, for Amici Bishops of the Episcopal Church in
Virginia, The Central Atlantic Conference of the United Church
of Christ, Central Conference of American Rabbis, Mormons for
Equality,
Reconstructionist
Rabbinical
Association,
Reconstructionist
Rabbinical
College
and
Jewish
Reconstructionist Communities, Union for Reform Judaism, The
Unitarian
Universalist
Association,
Affirmation,
Covenant
Network of Presbyterians, Methodist Federation for Social
Action,
More
Light
Presbyterians,
Presbyterian
Welcome,
Reconciling Ministries Network, Reconsilingworks: Lutherans For
Full Participation, Religious Institute, Inc., and Women of
Reform Judaism.
Susan Baker Manning, Michael L. Whitlock,
Margaret E. Sheer, Jared A. Craft, Sara M. Carian, Jessica C.
Brooks, Katherine R. Moskop, John A. Polito, Stephanie Schuster,
BINGHAM MCCUTCHEN LLP, Washington, D.C., for Amicus 28 Employers
and Organizations Representing Employers.
Martha Coakley,
Attorney
General,
Jonathan
B.
Miller,
Assistant
Attorney
General, Genevieve C. Nadeau, Assistant Attorney General,
Michelle L. Leung, Assistant Attorney General, Frederick D.
Augenstern, Assistant Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL
OF
THE
COMMONWEALTH
OF
MASSACHUSETTS,
Boston,
Massachusetts; Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CALIFORNIA, Sacramento, California; George
Jepsen, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
CONNECTICUT, Hartford, Connecticut; Irvin B. Nathan, Attorney
17
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General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR THE DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA, Washington, D.C.; Lisa Madigan, Attorney General,
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF ILLINOIS, Chicago, Illinois;
Tom Miller, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
IOWA, Des Moines, Iowa; Janet T. Mills, Attorney General, OFFICE
OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MAINE, Augusta, Maine; Douglas F.
Gansler, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
MARYLAND, Baltimore, Maryland; Joseph A. Foster, Attorney
General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF NEW HAMPSHIRE,
Concord, New Hampshire; Gary K. King, Attorney General, OFFICE
OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF NEW MEXICO, Santa Fe, New Mexico;
Eric T. Schneiderman, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF NEW YORK, New York, New York; Ellen F. Rosenblum,
Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OREGON,
Salem, Oregon; William H. Sorrell, Attorney General, OFFICE OF
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VERMONT, Montpelier, Vermont; Robert W.
Ferguson, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
WASHINGTON,
Olympia,
Washington,
for
Amici
Massachusetts,
California, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Illinois, Iowa,
Maine, Maryland, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, Oregon,
Vermont, and Washington.
Brad W. Seiling, Benjamin G. Shatz,
MANATT, PHELPS & PHILLIPS, LLP, Los Angeles, California, for
Amicus Gary J. Gates.
Bruce A. Wessel, Moez M. Kaba, C.
Mitchell Hendy, Brian Eggleston, IRELL & MANELLA LLP, Los
Angeles, California, for Amicus National and Western States
Women's Rights Organizations.
Donald K. Butler, BATZLI STILES
BUTLER, P.C., Richmond, Virginia; Susan M. Butler, SHOUNBACH,
P.C., Fairfax, Virginia; Daniel L. Gray, Stephanie J. Smith,
Kristen L. Kugel, Anne B. Robinson, COOPER GINSBERG GRAY, PLLC,
Fairfax, Virginia, for Amicus Virginia Chapter of The American
Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers. Marcia D. Greenberger, Emily J.
Martin, Cortelyou C. Kenney, NATIONAL WOMEN'S LAW CENTER,
Washington, D.C., for Amici The National Women's Law Center,
Equal Rights Advocates, Legal Momentum, National Association of
Women Lawyers, National Partnership for Women & Families,
Southwest
Women's
Law
Center,
Women's
Law
Project,
and
Professors of Law Associated with The Williams Institute.
Jerome C. Roth, Nicole S. Phillis, MUNGER, TOLLES & OLSON LLP,
San Francisco, California, for Amicus Bay Area Lawyers for
Individual Freedom.
Shannon P. Minter, Christopher F. Stoll,
Jaime Huling Delaye, NATIONAL CENTER FOR LESBIAN RIGHTS,
Washington, D.C., for Amici Leadership Conference on Civil and
Human
Rights,
Public
Interest
Organizations,
and
Bar
Associations.
Joanna
L.
Grossman,
HOFSTRA
LAW
SCHOOL,
Hempstead, New York; Marjory A. Gentry, ARNOLD & PORTER LLP, San
Francisco, California, for Amicus Family Law and Conflict of
Laws Professors. Mark C. Fleming, Felicia H. Ellsworth, Boston,
18
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Massachusetts, Paul R.Q. Wolfson, Dina B. Mishra, Leah M.
Litman, Washington,
D.C.,
Alan
Schoenfeld,
WILMER
CUTLER
PICKERING HALE AND DORR LLP, New York, New York, for Amicus Gay
& Lesbian Advocates & Defenders.
John Humphrey, THE HUMPHREY
LAW FIRM, Alexandria, Virginia, for Amici People of Faith For
Equality in Virginia (POFEV), Celebration Center for Spiritual
Living, Clarendon Presbyterian Church, Commonwealth Baptist
Church, Congregation or AMI, Hope United Church of Christ,
Little River UCC, Metropolitan Community Church of Northern
Virginia, Mt. Vernon Unitarian Church, St. James UCC, St. John's
UCC,
New
Life
Metropolitan
Community
Church,
Unitarian
Universalist Fellowship of the Peninsula, Unitarian Universalist
Congregation
of
Sterling,
United
Church
of
Christ
of
Fredericksburg, Unitarian Universalist Church of Loudoun, Rev.
Marie Hulm Adam, Rev. Marty Anderson, Rev. Robin Anderson, Rev.
Verne Arens, Rabbi Lia Bass, Rev. Joseph G. Beattie, Rev. Marc
Boswell, Rev. Sue Browning, Rev. Jim Bundy, Rev. Mark Byrd, Rev.
Steven C. Clunn, Rev. Dr. John Coperhaver, Rabbi Gary Creditor,
Rev. David Ensign, Rev. Henry Fairman, Rabbi Jesse Gallop, Rev.
Tom Gerstenlauer, Rev. Dr. Robin H. Gorsline, Rev. Trish Hall,
Rev. Warren Hammonds, Rev. Jon Heaslet, Rev. Douglas Hodges,
Rev. Phyllis Hubbell, Rev. Stephen G. Hyde, Rev. Janet James,
Rev. John Manwell, Rev. James W. McNeal, Andrew Mertz, Rev.
Andrew Clive Millard, Rev. Dr. Melanie Miller, Rev. Amber
Neuroth, Rev. James Papile, Rev. Linda Olson Peebles, Rev. Don
Prange, Rabbi Michael Ragozin, Rabbi Ben Romer, Rev. Jennifer
Ryu, Rev. Anya Sammler-Michael, Rabbi Amy Schwartzman, Rev.
Danny Spears, Rev. Mark Suriano, Rev. Rob Vaughn, Rev. Daniel
Velez-Rivera, Rev. Kate R. Walker, Rev. Terrye Williams, and
Rev. Dr. Karen-Marie Yust.
19
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FLOYD, Circuit Judge:
Via
various
state
statutes
and
a
state
constitutional
amendment, Virginia prevents same-sex couples from marrying and
refuses
Two
to
recognize
same-sex
same-sex
couples
marriages
filed
suit
performed
to
elsewhere.
challenge
the
constitutionality of these laws, alleging that they violate the
Due
Process
Amendment.
and
Equal
Protection
Clauses
of
the
Fourteenth
The district court granted the couples’ motion for
summary judgment and enjoined Virginia from enforcing the laws.
This appeal followed.
sex
marriage
bans
Because we conclude that Virginia’s sameimpermissibly
infringe
on
its
citizens’
fundamental right to marry, we affirm.
I.
A.
This case concerns a series of statutory and constitutional
mechanisms that Virginia employed to prohibit legal recognition
for same-sex relationships in that state. 1
1
Virginia enacted the
Three other states in this Circuit have similar bans:
North Carolina, N.C. Const. art. XIV, § 6; N.C. Gen. Stat.
§§ 51-1, 51-1.2; South Carolina, S.C. Const. art. XVII, § 15;
S.C. Code Ann. §§ 20-1-10, 20-1-15; and West Virginia, W. Va.
Code § 48-2-603.
The Southern District of West Virginia has
stayed a challenge to West Virginia’s statute pending our
resolution of this appeal.
McGee v. Cole, No. 3:13-cv-24068
(S.D. W. Va. June 10, 2014) (order directing stay).
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first of these laws in 1975:
Pg: 21 of 98
Virginia Code section 20-45.2,
which provides that “marriage between persons of the same sex is
prohibited.”
After the Supreme Court of Hawaii took steps to
legalize same-sex marriage in the mid-1990s, Virginia amended
section 20-45.2 to specify that “[a]ny marriage entered into by
persons of the same sex in another state or jurisdiction shall
be void in all respects in Virginia and any contractual rights
created by such marriage shall be void and unenforceable.”
In
2004, Virginia added civil unions and similar arrangements to
the
list
of
prohibited
same-sex
Affirmation of Marriage Act.
Virginia’s
legally
efforts
recognized
relationships
via
the
See Va. Code Ann. § 20-45.3.
to
ban
same-sex
same-sex
marriage
relationships
and
culminated
other
in
the
Marshall/Newman Amendment to the Virginia Constitution:
That only a union between one man and one woman may be
a marriage valid in or recognized by this Commonwealth
and its political subdivisions.
This Commonwealth and its political subdivisions shall
not
create
or
recognize
a
legal
status
for
relationships of unmarried individuals that intends to
approximate the design, qualities, significance, or
effects of marriage. Nor shall this Commonwealth or
its political subdivisions create or recognize another
union, partnership, or other legal status to which is
assigned the rights, benefits, obligations, qualities,
or effects of marriage.
Va. Const. art. I, § 15-A.
The Virginia Constitution imposes
two hurdles that a potential amendment must jump before becoming
law:
the
General
Assembly
must
21
approve
the
amendment
in
two
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separate legislative sessions, and the people must ratify it.
Va. Const. art. XII, § 1.
The General Assembly approved the
Marshall/Newman Amendment in 2005 and 2006.
In November 2006,
Virginia’s voters ratified it by a vote of fifty-seven percent
to
forty-three
percent.
In
the
aggregate,
Virginia
Code
sections 20-45.2 and 20-45.3 and the Marshall/Newman Amendment
prohibit same-sex marriage, ban other legally recognized samesex
relationships,
and
render
same-sex
marriages
performed
elsewhere legally meaningless under Virginia state law.
B.
Same-sex couples Timothy B. Bostic and Tony C. London and
Carol
Schall
brought
and
this
Mary
lawsuit
Townley
to
(collectively,
challenge
the
the
Plaintiffs)
constitutionality
of
Virginia Code sections 20-45.2 and 20-45.3, the Marshall/Newman
Amendment,
and
“any
marriage
or
lawful
same-sex
other
prohibits
(collectively,
the
the
Virginia
State’s
marriages
Virginia
law
that
recognition
from
Marriage
other
Laws).
bars
of
same-sex
otherwise-
jurisdictions”
The
Plaintiffs
claim that the “inability to marry or have their relationship
recognized by the Commonwealth of Virginia with the dignity and
respect accorded to married opposite-sex couples has caused them
significant hardship . . . and severe humiliation, emotional
distress, pain, suffering, psychological harm, and stigma.”
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Bostic
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and
London
have
Pg: 23 of 98
been
in
a
long-term,
committed
relationship with each other since 1989 and have lived together
for more than twenty years.
They “desire to marry each other
under the laws of the Commonwealth in order to publicly announce
their
commitment
to
one
another
and
to
enjoy
the
rights,
privileges, and protections that the State confers on married
couples.”
On July 1, 2013, Bostic and London applied for a
marriage license from the Clerk for the Circuit Court for the
City of Norfolk.
The Clerk denied their application because
they are both men.
Schall and Townley are women who have been a couple since
1985
and
years.
1998,
Schall
have
lived
together
as
a
family
for
nearly
thirty
They were lawfully married in California in 2008.
Townley
and
inability
gave
Townley
to
birth
to
identify
marry
in
the
a
couple’s
host
Virginia
of
and
In
daughter,
E.
S.-T.
consequences
of
their
Virginia’s
refusal
to
recognize their California marriage, including the following:
•
Schall could not visit Townley in the hospital for several
hours when Townley was admitted due to pregnancy-related
complications.
•
Schall cannot legally adopt E. S.-T., which forced her to
retain an attorney to petition for full joint legal and
physical custody.
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•
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Virginia will not list both Schall and Townley as E. S.T.’s parents on her birth certificate.
•
Until February 2013, Schall and Townley could not cover one
another
on
Townley
their
has
been
employer-provided
able
to
cover
health
Schall
on
insurance.
her
insurance
since then, but, unlike an opposite-sex spouse, Schall must
pay state income taxes on the benefits she receives.
•
Schall and Townley must pay state taxes on benefits paid
pursuant to employee benefits plans in the event of one of
their deaths.
•
Schall
and
Townley
cannot
file
joint
state
income
tax
returns, which has cost them thousands of dollars.
On July 18, 2013, Bostic and London sued former Governor
Robert
F.
McDonnell,
Cuccinelli,
and
George
former
E.
Attorney
Schaefer,
General
III,
in
Kenneth
his
T.
official
capacity as the Clerk for the Circuit Court for the City of
Norfolk.
The Plaintiffs filed their First Amended Complaint on
September 3, 2013.
Townley
as
The First Amended Complaint added Schall and
plaintiffs,
removed
McDonnell
and
Cuccinelli
as
defendants, and added Janet M. Rainey as a defendant in her
official capacity as the State Registrar of Vital Records.
The
Plaintiffs allege that the Virginia Marriage Laws are facially
invalid under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of
24
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the Fourteenth Amendment and that Schaefer and Rainey violated
42 U.S.C. § 1983 by enforcing those laws.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The
Plaintiffs also requested a permanent injunction in connection
with
their
motion
for
summary
judgment
and
moved,
in
the
alternative, for a preliminary injunction in the event that the
district court denied their motion for summary judgment.
The
district court granted a motion by Michèle McQuigg—the Prince
William County Clerk of Court—to intervene as a defendant on
January 21, 2014.
Herring—as
position
Two days later, new Attorney General Mark
Rainey’s
and
refused
counsel—submitted
to
defend
the
a
formal
Virginia
although Virginia continues to enforce them.
change
Marriage
in
Laws,
McQuigg adopted
Rainey’s prior motion for summary judgment and the briefs in
support of that motion.
The district court held that the Virginia Marriage Laws
were unconstitutional on February 14, 2014.
970 F. Supp. 2d 456, 483 (E.D. Va. 2014).
Schaefer’s
granted
enjoined
and
the
McQuigg’s
Plaintiffs’
Virginia’s
motions
motion.
for
Bostic v. Rainey,
It therefore denied
summary
The
employees—including
judgment
district
and
court
also
and
her
Rainey
employees—and Schaefer, McQuigg, and their officers, agents, and
employees from enforcing the Virginia Marriage Laws.
25
Id. at
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484.
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The court stayed the injunction pending our resolution of
this appeal.
Id.
Rainey, Schaefer, and McQuigg timely appealed the district
court’s decision.
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§ 1291.
10,
On
March
2014,
we
allowed
the
plaintiffs
from
Harris v. Rainey—a similar case pending before Judge Michael
Urbanski
in
the
Western
District
of
Virginia—to
intervene.
Judge Urbanski had previously certified that case as a class
action on behalf of “all same-sex couples in Virginia who have
not married in another jurisdiction” and “all same-sex couples
in Virginia who have married in another jurisdiction,” excluding
the
Plaintiffs.
Harris
v.
Rainey,
No.
5:13-cv-077,
2014
WL
352188, at *1, 12 (W.D. Va. Jan. 31, 2014).
Our analysis proceeds in three steps.
First, we consider
whether the Plaintiffs possess standing to bring their claims.
Second,
we
evaluate
whether
the
Supreme
Court’s
summary
dismissal of a similar lawsuit in Baker v. Nelson, 409 U.S. 810
(1972) (mem.), remains binding.
Third, we determine which level
of constitutional scrutiny applies here and test the Virginia
Marriage Laws using the appropriate standard.
For purposes of
this opinion, we adopt the terminology the district court used
to describe the parties in this case.
and
the
Harris
Marriage Laws.
class
are
the
The Plaintiffs, Rainey,
“Opponents”
of
the
Virginia
Schaefer and McQuigg are the “Proponents.”
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II.
Before we turn to the merits of the parties’ arguments in
this case, we consider Schaefer’s contention that “[t]he trial
court erred as a matter of law when it found all Plaintiffs had
standing and asserted claims against all Defendants.”
We review
the district court’s disposition of cross-motions for summary
judgment—including
its
determinations
regarding
standing—de
novo, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Libertarian Party of Va. v. Judd, 718 F.3d 308,
313 (4th Cir. 2013); Covenant Media of S.C., LLC v. City of N.
Charleston,
493
F.3d
421,
427-28
(4th
Cir.
2007).
Summary
judgment is appropriate when “there is no genuine dispute as to
any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.”
Libertarian Party of Va., 718 F.3d at 313-14
(quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a)).
To
establish
standing
under
Article
III
of
the
Constitution, a plaintiff must “allege (1) an injury that is
(2) fairly
traceable
to
the
defendant’s
allegedly
unlawful
conduct and that is (3) likely to be redressed by the requested
relief.”
(1992)
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 590
(quoting
Allen
v.
Wright,
468
(internal quotation marks omitted).
applies
to
each
DaimlerChrysler
claim
Corp.
v.
that
a
Cuno,
27
U.S.
751
(1984))
The standing requirement
plaintiff
547
737,
U.S.
seeks
332,
to
352
press.
(2006).
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Schaefer premises his argument that the Plaintiffs lack standing
to bring their claims on the idea that every plaintiff must have
standing as to every defendant.
However, the Supreme Court has
made it clear that “the presence of one party with standing is
sufficient
to
satisfy
requirement.”
Article
III’s
case-or-controversy
Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic & Institutional
Rights, Inc., 547 U.S. 47, 52 n.2 (2006); see also Dep’t of
Commerce v. U.S. House of Representatives, 525 U.S. 316, 330
(1999) (holding that a case is justiciable if some, but not
necessarily
particular
all,
of
the
defendant);
plaintiffs
Vill.
of
have
Arlington
standing
Heights
as
v.
to
Metro.
Housing Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 263-64 (1977) (same).
Plaintiffs’
challenge
claims
as
long
can
as
therefore
one
survive
couple
Schaefer’s
satisfies
the
a
The
standing
standing
requirements with respect to each defendant.
Schaefer serves as the Clerk for the Circuit Court for the
City
of
Norfolk.
In
Virginia,
circuit
court
clerks
are
responsible for issuing marriage licenses and filing records of
marriage.
Va. Code Ann. §§ 20-14, 32.1-267.
Although Schall
and Townley did not seek a marriage license from Schaefer, the
district court found that Bostic and London did so and that
Schaefer
denied
their
request
28
because
they
are
a
same-sex
Appeal: 14-1167
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couple. 2
denial
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Pg: 29 of 98
Bostic, 970 F. Supp. 2d at 462, 467.
constitutes
an
injury
for
standing
This license
purposes.
See
S.
Blasting Servs., Inc. v. Wilkes Cnty., 288 F.3d 584, 595 (4th
Cir. 2002) (explaining that the plaintiffs had not suffered an
injury because they had not applied for, or been denied, the
permit in question); Scott v. Greenville Cnty., 716 F.2d 1409,
1414-15 & n.6 (4th Cir. 1983) (holding that denial of building
permit constituted an injury).
denial
to
Schaefer’s
unconstitutional
Virginia
Bostic and London can trace this
enforcement
Marriage
Laws, 3
of
and
the
allegedly
declaring
those
2
Schaefer contends that Schall and Townley cannot bring a
§ 1983 claim against him for the same reason: he did not commit
any act or omission that harmed them.
To bring a successful
§ 1983
claim,
a
plaintiff
must
show
that
“the
alleged
infringement of federal rights [is] ‘fairly attributable to the
state[.]’”
Rendell-Baker v. Kohn, 457 U.S. 830, 838 (1982)
(quoting Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co., 457 U.S. 922, 937 (1982)).
Schaefer’s action in denying Bostic and London’s application for
a marriage license is clearly attributable to the state.
The
district court could therefore entertain a § 1983 claim against
Schaefer without ascertaining whether he committed any action
with respect to Schall and Townley.
3
For this reason, and contrary to Schaefer’s assertions,
Schaefer is also a proper defendant under Ex parte Young, 209
U.S. 123 (1908).
Pursuant to Ex parte Young, the Eleventh
Amendment does not bar a citizen from suing a state officer to
enjoin the enforcement of an unconstitutional law when the
officer has “some connection with the enforcement of the act.”
Lytle v. Griffith, 240 F.3d 404, 412 (4th Cir. 2001) (emphasis
omitted) (quoting Ex parte Young, 209 U.S. at 157).
Schaefer
bears the requisite connection to the enforcement of the
Virginia Marriage Laws due to his role in granting and denying
applications for marriage licenses.
29
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laws
Filed: 07/28/2014
unconstitutional
redress
Bostic
and
and
Pg: 30 of 98
enjoining
London’s
their
injuries.
enforcement
Bostic
and
would
London
therefore possess Article III standing with respect to Schaefer.
We consequently need not consider whether Schall and Townley
have standing to sue Schaefer.
433,
446-47
(2009)
See Horne v. Flores, 557 U.S.
(declining
to
analyze
whether
additional
plaintiffs had standing when one plaintiff did).
Rainey—as
developing
the
Registrar
Virginia’s
of
Vital
marriage
Records—is
license
tasked
application
with
form
and
distributing it to the circuit court clerks throughout Virginia.
Va.
Code
Ann.
§§
32.1-252(A)(9),
32.1-267(E).
Neither
Schaefer’s nor Rainey’s response to the First Amended Complaint
disputes its description of Rainey’s duties:
Defendant
Rainey
is
responsible
for
ensuring
compliance with the Commonwealth’s laws relating to
marriage
in
general
and,
more
specifically,
is
responsible for enforcement of the specific provisions
at issue in this Amended Complaint, namely those laws
that limit marriage to opposite-sex couples and that
refuse to honor the benefits of same-sex marriages
lawfully entered into in other states.
In
addition
Rainey
to
performing
develops
and
these
marriage-related
distributes
birth
functions,
certificate
forms,
oversees the rules relating to birth certificates, and furnishes
forms
relating
information
to
adoption
necessary
to
so
that
prepare
30
Virginia
the
can
adopted
collect
child’s
the
birth
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certificate.
Pg: 31 of 98
Id. §§ 32.1-252(A)(2)-(3), (9), 32.1-257, 32.1-
261(A)(1), 32.1-262, 32.1-269.
Rainey’s
promulgation
of
a
marriage
license
application
form that does not allow same-sex couples to obtain marriage
licenses resulted in Schaefer’s denial of Bostic and London’s
marriage license request.
For the reasons we describe above,
this license denial constitutes an injury.
Bostic and London
can trace this injury to Rainey due to her role in developing
the marriage license application form in compliance with the
Virginia Marriage Laws, and the relief they seek would redress
their injuries.
Bostic and London consequently have standing to
sue Rainey.
Schall and Townley also possess standing to bring their
claims against Rainey.
two ways.
“[w]hen
They satisfy the injury requirement in
First, in equal protection cases—such as this case—
the
government
erects
a
barrier
that
makes
it
more
difficult for members of one group to obtain a benefit than it
is for members of another group, . . . . [t]he ‘injury in fact’
. . . is
the
denial
of
equal
imposition of the barrier[.]”
treatment
resulting
from
the
Ne. Fla. Chapter of Associated
Gen. Contractors of Am. v. City of Jacksonville, 508 U.S. 656,
666 (1993).
The Virginia Marriage Laws erect such a barrier,
which prevents same-sex couples from obtaining the emotional,
social, and financial benefits that opposite-sex couples realize
31
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upon marriage.
suffered
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Second, Schall and Townley allege that they have
stigmatic
injuries
due
to
their
inability
to
get
married in Virginia and Virginia’s refusal to recognize their
California
marriage.
discriminatory
Stigmatic
treatment
is
injury
sufficient
to
stemming
satisfy
from
standing’s
injury requirement if the plaintiff identifies “some concrete
interest
with
respect
to
which
[he
or
she]
[is]
personally
subject to discriminatory treatment” and “[t]hat interest . . .
independently satisf[ies] the causation requirement of standing
doctrine.”
Allen, 468 U.S. at 757 n.22, abrogated on other
grounds by Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Static Control Components, 134
S.
Ct.
1377
(2014).
Schall
and
Townley
point
to
several
concrete ways in which the Virginia Marriage Laws have resulted
in
discriminatory
treatment.
For
example,
they
allege
that
their marital status has hindered Schall from visiting Townley
in the hospital, prevented Schall from adopting E. S.-T., 4 and
subjected Schall and Townley to tax burdens from which married
opposite-sex couples are exempt.
Because Schall and Townley
highlight specific, concrete instances of discrimination rather
4
Virginia does not explicitly prohibit same-sex couples
from adopting children.
The Virginia Marriage Laws impose a
functional ban on adoption by same-sex couples because the
Virginia
Code
allows
only
married
couples
or
unmarried
individuals to adopt children. Va. Code Ann. § 63.2-1232(A)(6).
32
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than making abstract allegations, their stigmatic injuries are
legally cognizable.
Schall
and
Townley’s
injuries
are
traceable
enforcement of the Virginia Marriage Laws.
to
Rainey’s
Because declaring
the Virginia Marriage Laws unconstitutional and enjoining their
enforcement would redress Schall and Townley’s injuries, they
satisfy standing doctrine’s three requirements with respect to
Rainey.
In sum, each of the Plaintiffs has standing as to at
least one defendant.
III.
Having
resolved
the
threshold
issue
of
whether
the
Plaintiffs have standing to sue Schaefer and Rainey, we now turn
to the merits of the Opponents’ Fourteenth Amendment arguments.
We begin with the issue of whether the Supreme Court’s summary
dismissal in Baker v. Nelson settles this case.
Baker came to
the Supreme Court as an appeal from a Minnesota Supreme Court
decision,
interpreted
which
to
held
bar
that
a
same-sex
state
statute
marriages
did
that
not
the
violate
court
the
Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process or Equal Protection Clauses.
Baker v. Nelson, 191 N.W.2d 185, 187 (Minn. 1971).
At the time,
28 U.S.C. § 1257 required the Supreme Court to accept appeals of
state supreme court cases involving constitutional challenges to
state statutes, such as Baker.
See Hicks v. Miranda, 422 U.S.
33
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332, 344 (1975).
Pg: 34 of 98
The Court dismissed the appeal in a one-
sentence opinion “for want of a substantial federal question.”
Baker, 409 U.S. 810.
Summary dismissals qualify as “votes on the merits of a
case.”
Price,
Hicks, 422 U.S. at 344 (quoting Ohio ex rel. Eaton v.
360
omitted).
opposite
U.S.
246,
conclusions
decided.”
(1977) (per curiam).
hand
(1959))
(internal
quotation
marks
They therefore “prevent lower courts from coming to
necessarily
at
247
address
inquiry.
the
precise
Mandel
v.
issues
Bradley,
presented
U.S.
432
and
176
173,
However, the fact that Baker and the case
the
Summary
on
same
precise
dismissals
lose
issues
their
does
not
binding
end
force
our
when
“doctrinal developments” illustrate that the Supreme Court no
longer views a question as unsubstantial, regardless of whether
the Court explicitly overrules the case.
Hicks, 422 U.S. at 344
(quoting Port Auth. Bondholders Protective Comm. v. Port of N.Y.
Auth., 387 F.2d 259, 263 n.3 (2d Cir. 1967)) (internal quotation
marks omitted).
The district court determined that doctrinal
developments stripped Baker of its status as binding precedent.
Bostic, 970 F. Supp. 2d at 469-70.
consider
this
issue
since
the
Every federal court to
Supreme
Court
decided
United
States v. Windsor, 133 S. Ct. 2675 (2013), has reached the same
conclusion.
See Bishop v. Smith, Nos. 14-5003, 14-5006, 2014 WL
3537847, at *6-7 (10th Cir. July 18, 2014); Kitchen v. Herbert,
34
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No.
Doc: 234
13-4178,
Filed: 07/28/2014
2014
WL
2868044,
Pg: 35 of 98
at
*7-10
(10th
Cir.
June
25,
2014); Love v. Beshear, No. 3:13-cv-750-H, 2014 WL 2957671, *2-3
(W.D. Ky. July 1, 2014); Baskin v. Bogan, Nos. 1:14-cv-00355RLY-TAB, 1:14-cv-00404-RLY-TAB, 2014 WL 2884868, at *4-6 (S.D.
Ind. June 25, 2014); Wolf v. Walker, No. 14-cv-64-bbc, 2014 WL
2558444, at *4-6 (W.D. Wis. June 6, 2014); Whitewood v. Wolf,
No. 1:13-cv-1861, 2014 WL 2058105, at *5-6 (M.D. Pa. May 20,
2014);
Geiger
v.
Kitzhaber,
Nos.
6:13-cv-01834-MC,
6:13-cv-
02256-MC, 2014 WL 2054264, at *1 n.1 (D. Or. May 19, 2014);
Latta v. Otter, No. 1:13-cv-00482-CWD, 2014 WL 1909999, at *8-9
(D. Idaho May 13, 2014); DeBoer v. Snyder, 973 F. Supp. 2d 757,
773 n.6 (E.D. Mich. 2014); De Leon v. Perry, 975 F. Supp. 2d
632, 647-49 (W.D. Tex. 2014); McGee v. Cole, No. 3:13-24068,
2014 WL 321122, at *8-10 (S.D. W. Va. Jan. 29, 2014).
Windsor concerned whether section 3 of the federal Defense
of
Marriage
process
and
Act
equal
(DOMA)
contravened
protection
the
guarantees.
Constitution’s
Section
3
due
defined
“marriage” and “spouse” as excluding same-sex couples when those
terms appeared in federal statutes, regulations, and directives,
rendering legally married same-sex couples ineligible for myriad
federal benefits.
133 S. Ct. at 2683, 2694.
When it decided
the case below, the Second Circuit concluded that Baker was no
longer precedential, Windsor v. United States, 699 F.3d 169,
178-79 (2d Cir. 2012), over the dissent’s vigorous arguments to
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the contrary, see id. at 192-95 (Straub, J., dissenting in part
and
concurring
Court
did
not
in
part).
discuss
Despite
Baker
in
this
its
dispute,
opinion
or
the
Supreme
during
oral
argument. 5
The Supreme Court’s willingness to decide Windsor without
mentioning Baker speaks volumes regarding whether Baker remains
good law.
The Court’s development of its due process and equal
protection jurisprudence in the four decades following Baker is
even more instructive.
Texas,
539
U.S.
relevant.
In
558
On the Due Process front, Lawrence v.
(2003),
Lawrence,
the
and
Court
Windsor
are
recognized
particularly
that
the
Due
Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments “afford
constitutional
marriage,
protection
procreation,
to
personal
contraception,
decisions
family
relating
to
relationships,
child rearing, and education. . . . Persons in a homosexual
relationship
may
seek
autonomy
5
for
these
purposes,
just
as
The constitutionality of a law that prohibited marriage
from encompassing same-sex relationships was also at issue in
Hollingsworth v. Perry, 133 S. Ct. 2652 (2013), a case that the
Supreme Court ultimately decided on standing grounds.
Although
the petitioners’ attorney attempted to invoke Baker during oral
argument, Justice Ginsburg interjected:
“Baker v. Nelson was
1971.
The Supreme Court hadn’t even decided that gender-based
classifications get any kind of heightened scrutiny. . . .
[S]ame-sex intimate conduct was considered criminal in many
states in 1971, so I don’t think we can extract much in Baker v.
Nelson.” Oral Argument at 11:33, Hollingsworth v. Perry, 133 S.
Ct. 2652 (No. 12-144), available at 2013 WL 1212745.
36
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heterosexual persons do.”
Pg: 37 of 98
Id. at 574.
These considerations led
the Court to strike down a Texas statute that criminalized samesex sodomy.
decision
Id. at 563, 578-79.
to
Amendment’s
invalidate
Due
Process
The Windsor Court based its
section
3
Clause.
of
The
DOMA
on
Court
the
Fifth
concluded
that
section 3 could not withstand constitutional scrutiny because
“the principal purpose and the necessary effect of [section 3]
are
to
demean
those
persons
who
are
in
a
lawful
same-sex
marriage,” who—like the unmarried same-sex couple in Lawrence—
have a constitutional right to make “moral and sexual choices.”
133 S. Ct. at 2694-95.
relationships
within
the
These cases firmly position same-sex
ambit
of
the
Due
Process
Clauses’
protection.
The Court has also issued several major equal protection
decisions since it decided Baker.
The Court’s opinions in Craig
v. Boren, 429 U.S. 190 (1976), and Frontiero v. Richardson, 411
U.S. 677 (1973), identified sex-based classifications as quasisuspect, causing them to warrant intermediate scrutiny rather
than
rational
(Rehnquist,
basis
J.,
review,
dissenting)
see
Craig,
(coining
U.S.
term
the
429
at
218
“intermediate
level scrutiny” to describe the Court’s test (internal quotation
marks
omitted)).
Two
decades
later,
in
Romer
v.
Evans,
the
Supreme Court struck down a Colorado constitutional amendment
that
prohibited
legislative,
executive,
37
and
judicial
action
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aimed at protecting gay, lesbian, and bisexual individuals from
discrimination.
517
U.S.
620,
624,
635
(1996).
The
Court
concluded that the law violated the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal
Protection Clause because “its sheer breadth is so discontinuous
with
the
reasons
inexplicable
by
offered
for
but
anything
it
that
animus
the
amendment
toward
the
seems
class
it
affects,” causing the law to “lack[] a rational relationship to
legitimate state interests.”
Id. at 632.
Finally, the Supreme
Court couched its decision in Windsor in both due process and
equal protection terms.
demonstrate
that,
133 S. Ct. at 2693, 2695.
since
Baker,
the
Court
has
These cases
meaningfully
altered the way it views both sex and sexual orientation through
the equal protection lens.
In light of the Supreme Court’s apparent abandonment of
Baker and the significant doctrinal developments that occurred
after the Court issued its summary dismissal in that case, we
decline to view Baker as binding precedent and proceed to the
meat of the Opponents’ Fourteenth Amendment arguments.
IV.
A.
Our analysis of the Opponents’ Fourteenth Amendment claims
has
two
components.
First,
constitutional scrutiny applies:
38
we
ascertain
what
level
of
either rational basis review
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or some form of heightened scrutiny, such as strict scrutiny.
Second, we apply the appropriate level of scrutiny to determine
whether the Virginia Marriage Laws pass constitutional muster.
Under both the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses,
interference with a fundamental right warrants the application
of strict scrutiny. 6
Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702,
719-20 (1997); Zablocki v. Redhail, 434 U.S. 374, 383 (1978).
We therefore begin by assessing whether the Virginia Marriage
Laws infringe on a fundamental right.
from
the
Fourteenth
Amendment’s
Fundamental rights spring
protection
of
individual
liberty, which the Supreme Court has described as “the right to
define
one’s
own
concept
of
existence,
of
universe, and of the mystery of human life.”
meaning,
the
Planned Parenthood
of Se. Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833, 851 (1992).
includes the fundamental right to marry.
of
This liberty
Zablocki, 434 U.S. at
383; Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1, 12 (1967); see Griswold v.
6
The Equal Protection Clause also dictates that some form
of heightened scrutiny applies when a law discriminates based on
a suspect or quasi-suspect classification, such as race or
gender. See City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 473 U.S.
432, 440-41 (1985); Mass. Bd. of Ret. v. Murgia, 427 U.S. 307,
313-14 (1976) (per curiam).
This Court previously declined to
recognize sexual orientation as a suspect classification in
Thomasson v. Perry, 80 F.3d 915, 928 (4th Cir. 1996) (en banc),
and Veney v. Wyche, 293 F.3d 726, 731-32 (4th Cir. 2002).
Because we conclude that the Virginia Marriage Laws warrant
strict scrutiny due to their infringement of the fundamental
right to marry, we need not reach the question of whether
Thomasson and Veney remain good law.
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Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 485-86 (1965) (placing the right to
marry within the fundamental right to privacy); see also Skinner
v.
Oklahoma
ex
rel.
Williamson,
316
U.S.
535,
541
(1942)
(characterizing marriage as “one of the basic civil rights of
man”);
Maynard
marriage
“the
v.
most
Hill,
125
U.S.
important
190,
relation
205
in
(1888)
life”
(calling
and
“the
foundation of the family and of society, without which there
would be neither civilization nor progress”).
The
Opponents
fundamental right.
and
Proponents
agree
that
marriage
is
a
They strongly disagree, however, regarding
whether that right encompasses the right to same-sex marriage.
The Opponents argue that the fundamental right to marry belongs
to the individual, who enjoys the right to marry the person of
his or her choice.
By contrast, the Proponents point out that,
traditionally, states have sanctioned only man-woman marriages.
They contend that, in light of this history, the right to marry
does not include a right to same-sex marriage.
Relying on Washington v. Glucksberg, the Proponents aver
that
the
district
court
erred
by
not
requiring
“a
careful
description of the asserted fundamental liberty interest,” 521
U.S.
at
721
(internal
quotation
marks
omitted),
which
they
characterize as the right to “marriage to another person of the
same sex,” not the right to marry.
In Glucksberg, the Supreme
Court described the right at issue as “a right to commit suicide
40
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with another’s assistance.”
Pg: 41 of 98
Id. at 724.
The Court declined to
categorize this right as a new fundamental right because it was
not, “objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and
tradition.”
See id. at 720-21 (quoting Moore v. City of E.
Cleveland, 431 U.S. 494, 503 (1977)) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
The Proponents urge us to reject the right to same-
sex marriage for the same reason.
We do not dispute that states have refused to permit samesex marriages for most of our country’s history.
However, this
fact is irrelevant in this case because Glucksberg’s analysis
applies
only
when
courts
consider
whether
to
recognize
new
fundamental rights.
See id. at 720, 727 & n.19 (identifying the
above
a
process
as
way
of
“expand[ing]
the
concept
of
substantive due process” beyond established fundamental rights,
such as the right to marry (quoting Collins v. City of Harker
Heights, 503 U.S. 115, 125 (1992)) (internal quotation marks
omitted)).
Because we conclude that the fundamental right to
marry encompasses the right to same-sex marriage, Glucksberg’s
analysis is inapplicable here.
Over the decades, the Supreme Court has demonstrated that
the right to marry is an expansive liberty interest that may
stretch to accommodate changing societal norms.
Perhaps most
notably, in Loving v. Virginia, the Supreme Court invalidated a
Virginia
law
that
prohibited
white
41
individuals
from
marrying
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individuals of other races.
Pg: 42 of 98
388 U.S. at 4.
The Court explained
that “[t]he freedom to marry has long been recognized as one of
the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of
happiness by free men” and that no valid basis justified the
Virginia
law’s
Subsequently,
considered
infringement
in
the
Zablocki
of
v.
that
right.
Redhail,
constitutionality
of
a
the
Id.
at
Supreme
Wisconsin
12.
Court
statute
that
required people obligated to pay child support to obtain a court
order granting permission to marry before they could receive a
marriage
license.
specified
that
a
434
U.S.
court
at
375,
should
383-84.
grant
The
permission
statute
only
to
applicants who proved that they had complied with their child
support obligations and demonstrated that their children were
not likely to become “public charges.”
quotation
marks
omitted).
The
Court
Id. at 375 (internal
held
that
impermissibly infringed on the right to marry.
91.
the
statute
See id. at 390-
Finally, in Turner v. Safley, the Court determined that a
Missouri
regulation
that
generally
prohibited
prison
inmates
from marrying was an unconstitutional breach of the right to
marry.
482 U.S. 78, 82, 94-99 (1987).
These cases do not define the rights in question as “the
right to interracial marriage,” “the right of people owing child
support to marry,” and “the right of prison inmates to marry.”
Instead,
they
speak
of
a
broad
42
right
to
marry
that
is
not
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circumscribed based on the characteristics of the individuals
seeking
to
unwillingness
exercise
to
that
constrain
right.
the
The
right
to
Supreme
marry
to
Court’s
certain
subspecies of marriage meshes with its conclusion that the right
to marry is a matter of “freedom of choice,” Zablocki, 434 U.S.
at 387, that “resides with the individual,” Loving, 388 U.S. at
12.
If courts limited the right to marry to certain couplings,
they
would
effectively
create
a
list
of
legally
preferred
spouses, rendering the choice of whom to marry a hollow choice
indeed.
The Proponents point out that Loving, Zablocki, and Turner
each involved opposite-sex couples.
the
couples
in
those
cases
They contend that, because
chose
to
enter
opposite-sex
marriages, we cannot use them to conclude that the Supreme Court
would grant the same level of constitutional protection to the
choice to marry a person of the same sex.
However, the Supreme
Court’s decisions in Lawrence and Windsor suggest otherwise.
In
Lawrence, the Court expressly refused to narrowly define the
right
at
issue
as
the
right
of
“homosexuals
to
engage
in
sodomy,” concluding that doing so would constitute a “failure to
appreciate the extent of the liberty at stake.”
566-67.
539 U.S. at
Just as it has done in the right-to-marry arena, the
Court identified the right at issue in Lawrence as a matter of
choice,
explaining
that
gay
and
43
lesbian
individuals—like
all
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people—enjoy
Filed: 07/28/2014
the
right
personal relationships.
to
Pg: 44 of 98
make
decisions
Id. at 567.
regarding
their
As we note above, the
Court reiterated this theme in Windsor, in which it based its
conclusion that section 3 of DOMA was unconstitutional, in part,
on
that
provision’s
disrespect
for
the
“moral
and
sexual
choices” that accompany a same-sex couple’s decision to marry.
133 S. Ct. at 2694.
choices
that
Lawrence and Windsor indicate that the
individuals
make
in
the
context
of
same-sex
relationships enjoy the same constitutional protection as the
choices accompanying opposite-sex relationships.
We therefore
have no reason to suspect that the Supreme Court would accord
the choice to marry someone of the same sex any less respect
than the choice to marry an opposite-sex individual who is of a
different
race,
Accordingly,
owes
we
child
decline
support,
the
or
is
Proponents’
imprisoned.
invitation
to
characterize the right at issue in this case as the right to
same-sex marriage rather than simply the right to marry.
Of course, “[b]y reaffirming the fundamental character of
the right to marry, we do not mean to suggest that every state
regulation
which
prerequisites
scrutiny.”
only
when
right.
relates
for
in
marriage
any
must
way
be
Zablocki, 434 U.S. at 386.
laws
See
“significantly
id.
at
to
The
44
incidents
subjected
to
of
or
rigorous
Strict scrutiny applies
interfere”
386-87.
the
with
Virginia
a
fundamental
Marriage
Laws
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unquestionably satisfy this requirement:
to
marry
by
nullifying
the
preventing
legal
same-sex
import
of
they impede the right
couples
their
from
marrying
out-of-state
and
marriages.
Strict scrutiny therefore applies in this case.
B.
Under
strict
state
compelling
express
scrutiny,
interests,
only
those
a
law
and
must
interests.”
Int’l, 431 U.S. 678, 686 (1977).
“may
be
be
Carey
justified
v.
by
drawn
narrowly
only
to
Population
Servs.
The Proponents bear the burden
of demonstrating that the Virginia Marriage Laws satisfy this
standard, see Fisher v. Univ. of Tex. at Austin, 133 S. Ct.
2411,
2420
(2013),
and
they
must
rely
on
the
laws’
“actual
purpose[s]” rather than hypothetical justifications, see Shaw v.
Hunt, 517 U.S. 899, 908 n.4 (1996).
The Proponents 7 contend that
five compelling interests undergird the Virginia Marriage Laws:
(1) Virginia’s federalism-based interest in maintaining control
over
the
definition
of
marriage
within
its
borders,
(2)
the
history and tradition of opposite-sex marriage, (3) protecting
the
institution
of
marriage,
7
(4)
encouraging
responsible
Although some of these arguments appear only in McQuigg’s
briefs, we attribute them to the Proponents because Schaefer
“reserved the right to adopt and incorporate in whole or in
part” McQuigg’s discussion of the rationales underlying the
Virginia Marriage Laws.
45
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procreation,
environment.
Filed: 07/28/2014
and
(5)
promoting
Pg: 46 of 98
the
optimal
childrearing
We discuss each of these interests in turn.
1.
Federalism
The Constitution does not grant the federal government any
authority
over
Accordingly,
domestic
relations
throughout
our
matters,
country’s
such
as
history,
marriage.
states
have
enjoyed the freedom to define and regulate marriage as they see
fit.
See Windsor, 133 S. Ct. at 2691-92.
marriage
laws
within
variation
among
Virginia
prohibits
their
states’
first
borders
requirements.
cousins
from
States’ control over
has
resulted
For
in
some
example,
West
marrying,
W.
Va.
Code
§ 48-2-302, but the remaining states in this Circuit allow first
cousin marriage, see Md. Code Ann., Fam. Law § 2-202; N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 51-3; S.C. Code Ann. § 20-1-10; Va. Code Ann. § 20-38.1.
States’ power to define and regulate marriage also accounts for
their differing treatment of same-sex couples.
The Windsor decision rested in part on the Supreme Court’s
respect for states’ supremacy in the domestic relations sphere. 8
8
In Windsor, the Court did not label the type of
constitutional scrutiny it applied, leaving us unsure how the
Court would fit its federalism discussion within a traditional
heightened scrutiny or rational basis analysis.
The lower
courts have taken differing approaches, with some discussing
Windsor and federalism as a threshold matter, see, e.g., Wolf,
2014 WL 2558444, at *8-12; Bishop v. United States ex rel.
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The Court recognized that section 3 of DOMA upset the status quo
by robbing states of their ability to define marriage.
Although
states could legalize same-sex marriage, they could not ensure
that the incidents, benefits, and obligations of marriage would
be uniform within their borders.
2692.
See Windsor, 133 S. Ct. at
However, the Court did not lament that section 3 had
usurped states’ authority over marriage due to its desire to
safeguard federalism.
marital
relation
is
Id. (“[T]he State’s power in defining the
of
central
relevance
apart from the principles of federalism.”).
from section
3’s
creation
of
two
classes
in
this
case
quite
Its concern sprung
of
married
within states that had legalized same-sex marriage:
couples
opposite-
sex couples, whose marriages the federal government recognized,
and
same-sex
ignored.
as
the
Id.
couples,
whose
marriages
the
federal
government
The resulting injury to same-sex couples served
foundation
for
the
Court’s
conclusion
that
violated the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause.
section
3
Id. at 2693.
Holder, 962 F. Supp. 2d 1252, 1277-79 (N.D. Okla. 2014); Kitchen
v. Herbert, 961 F. Supp. 2d 1181, 1193-94 (D. Utah 2013), and
others—such as the district court in this case—considering
federalism as a state interest underlying the same-sex marriage
bans at issue, see, e.g., Latta, 2014 WL 1909999, at *25-26;
DeBoer, 973 F. Supp. 2d at 773-75; Bostic, 970 F. Supp. 2d at
475-77.
Although we follow the district court’s lead and
situate our federalism discussion within our application of
strict scrutiny, our conclusion would remain the same even if we
selected an alternate organizational approach.
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Citing Windsor, the Proponents urge us to view Virginia’s
federalism-based
interest
in
defining
marriage
justification for the Virginia Marriage Laws.
is actually detrimental to their position.
emphasized
states’
acknowledged
traditional
that
“[s]tate
a
suitable
However, Windsor
Although the Court
authority
laws
as
over
defining
marriage,
and
it
regulating
marriage, of course, must respect the constitutional rights of
persons.”
Id. at 2691 (citing Loving, 388 U.S. 1); see also id.
at 2692 (“The States’ interest in defining and regulating the
marital relation[] [is] subject to constitutional guarantees.”).
Windsor does not teach us that federalism principles can justify
depriving
individuals
reiterates
Loving’s
their
authority
Virginia’s
therefore
of
their
admonition
without
justify
that
trampling
federalism-based
cannot
constitutional
the
must
constitutional
interest
its
states
rights;
in
encroachment
the
exercise
guarantees.
defining
on
it
marriage
fundamental
right to marry.
The
Supreme
Court’s
recent
decision
in
Schuette
v.
Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, 134 S. Ct. 1623 (2014),
does
not
Schuette,
change
the
the
Court
conclusion
refused
to
that
Windsor
strike
down
a
dictates.
In
voter-approved
state constitutional amendment that barred public universities
in Michigan from using race-based preferences as part of their
admissions processes.
Id. at 1629, 1638.
48
The Court declined to
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closely scrutinize the amendment because it was not “used, or
. . . likely to be used, to encourage infliction of injury by
reason of race.”
See id. at 1638.
Instead, the Court dwelled
on the need to respect the voters’ policy choice, concluding
that “[i]t is demeaning to the democratic process to presume
that the voters are not capable of deciding an issue of this
sensitivity on decent and rational grounds” and the judiciary’s
role was not to “disempower the voters from choosing which path
to follow.”
The
Id. at 1635-38.
Proponents
emphasize
that
the Marshall/Newman Amendment.
issue
in
Schuette,
the
Virginia’s
voters
approved
Like the Michigan amendment at
Marshall/Newman
Amendment
is
the
codification of Virginians’ policy choice in a legal arena that
is fraught with intense social and political debate.
Americans’
ability to speak with their votes is essential to our democracy.
But the people’s will is not an independent compelling interest
that warrants depriving same-sex couples of their fundamental
right to marry.
The very purpose of a Bill of Rights 9 was to withdraw
certain subjects from the vicissitudes of political
9
Of course, the Fourteenth Amendment is not part of the
Bill of Rights.
This excerpt from Barnette is nevertheless
relevant here due to the Fourteenth Amendment’s similar goal of
protecting unpopular minorities from government overreaching,
see Regents of Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265, 293 (1978),
and its role in rendering the Bill of Rights applicable to the
states, see Duncan v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 145, 147-48 (1968).
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controversy, to place them beyond the reach of
majorities and officials and to establish them as
legal principles to be applied by the courts. One’s
right to life, liberty, and property, to free speech,
a free press, freedom of worship and assembly, and
other fundamental rights may not be submitted to vote;
they depend on the outcome of no elections.
W. Va. State Bd. of Educ. v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624, 638 (1943)
(footnote added); see also Romer, 517 U.S. at 623 (invalidating
a voter-approved amendment to Colorado’s constitution); Lucas v.
Forty-Fourth Gen. Assembly of Colo., 377 U.S. 713, 736-37 (1964)
(“A
citizen’s
constitutional
rights
can
hardly
be
infringed
simply because a majority of the people choose that it be.”).
Accordingly,
neither
Virginia’s
federalism-based
interest
in
defining marriage nor our respect for the democratic process
that codified that definition can excuse the Virginia Marriage
Laws’ infringement of the right to marry.
2.
History and Tradition
The Proponents also point to the “history and tradition” of
opposite-sex marriage as a compelling interest that supports the
Virginia Marriage Laws.
The Supreme Court has made it clear
that, even under rational basis review, the “[a]ncient lineage
of
a
legal
concept
v.
ex
Heller
closely
similarly
Doe
linked
infirm
does
rel.
Doe,
interest
in
not
light
of
of
give
509
it
U.S.
immunity
from
312,
(1993).
326
promoting
moral
Lawrence:
“the
50
attack.”
principles
fact
that
The
is
the
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governing
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majority
in
a
State
Pg: 51 of 98
has
traditionally
viewed
a
particular practice as immoral is not a sufficient reason for
upholding a law prohibiting the practice; neither history nor
tradition
could
save
a
constitutional attack.”
law
prohibiting
miscegenation
from
539 U.S. at 577-78 (quoting Bowers v.
Hardwick, 478 U.S. 186, 216 (1986) (Stevens, J., dissenting))
(internal quotation marks omitted); see also id. at 601 (Scalia,
J., dissenting) (“But ‘preserving the traditional institution of
marriage’ is just a kinder way of describing the State’s moral
disapproval of same-sex couples.”).
and
traditional
status
quo
is
Preserving the historical
therefore
not
a
compelling
interest that justifies the Virginia Marriage Laws.
3.
In
Safeguarding the Institution of Marriage
addition
to
arguing
that
history
and
tradition
are
compelling interests in their own rights, the Proponents warn
that deviating from the tradition of opposite-sex marriage will
destabilize the institution of marriage.
The Proponents suggest
that legalizing same-sex marriage will sever the link between
marriage and procreation:
they argue that, if same-sex couples—
who cannot procreate naturally—are allowed to marry, the state
will sanction the idea that marriage is a vehicle for adults’
emotional fulfillment, not simply a framework for parenthood.
According to the Proponents, if adults are the focal point of
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marriage, “then no logical grounds reinforce stabilizing norms
like sexual exclusivity, permanence, and monogamy,” which exist
to benefit children.
We
recognize
that,
in
some
cases,
we
owe
“substantial
deference to the predictive judgments” of the Virginia General
Assembly,
for
whom
the
Proponents
purport
to
speak.
Broad. Sys., Inc. v. FCC, 520 U.S. 180, 195 (1997).
Turner
However,
even if we view the Proponents’ theories through rose-colored
glasses,
we
reasons.
conclude
First,
the
that
they
Supreme
are
Court
unfounded
rejected
for
the
two
key
view
that
marriage is about only procreation in Griswold v. Connecticut,
in which it upheld married couples’ right not to procreate and
articulated
a
view
of
marriage
that
has
nothing
to
do
with
children:
Marriage is a coming together for better or for worse,
hopefully enduring, and intimate to the degree of
being sacred. It is an association that promotes a way
of life, not causes; a harmony in living, not
political faiths; a bilateral loyalty, not commercial
or social projects. Yet it is an association for as
noble a purpose as any involved in our prior
decisions.
381
U.S.
(describing
at
485-86;
many
see
also
non-procreative
Turner,
482
purposes
of
U.S.
at
marriage).
95-96
The
fact that marriage’s stabilizing norms have endured in the five
decades since the Supreme Court made this pronouncement weakens
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the argument that couples remain in monogamous marriages only
for the sake of their offspring.
Second, the primary support that the Proponents offer for
their theory is the legacy of a wholly unrelated legal change to
marriage:
no-fault
divorce.
Although
no-fault
divorce
certainly altered the realities of married life by making it
easier for couples to end their relationships, we have no reason
to think that legalizing same-sex marriage will have a similar
destabilizing effect.
In fact, it is more logical to think that
same-sex couples want access to marriage so that they can take
advantage
of
its
hallmarks,
including
faithfulness
and
permanence, and that allowing loving, committed same-sex couples
to
marry
and
recognizing
their
out-of-state
strengthen the institution of marriage.
marriages
will
We therefore reject the
Proponents’ concerns.
4.
Next,
the
Responsible Procreation
Proponents
contend
that
the
Virginia
Marriage
Laws’ differentiation between opposite-sex and same-sex couples
stems from the fact that unintended pregnancies cannot result
from
same-sex
unions.
By
sanctioning
only
opposite-sex
marriages, the Virginia Marriage Laws “provid[e] stability to
the types of relationships that result in unplanned pregnancies,
thereby
avoiding
or
diminishing
53
the
negative
outcomes
often
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associated
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with
unintended
Pg: 54 of 98
children.”
The
Proponents
allege
that children born to unwed parents face a “significant risk” of
being raised in unstable families, which is harmful to their
development.
Virginia, “of course, has a duty of the highest
order to protect the interests of minor children, particularly
those of tender years.”
(1984).
However,
Palmore v. Sidoti, 466 U.S. 429, 433
the
Virginia
Marriage
Laws
are
not
appropriately tailored to further this interest.
If Virginia sought to ensure responsible procreation via
the
Virginia
Marriage
underinclusive.
couples
Laws,
the
laws
are
woefully
Same-sex couples are not the only category of
who
cannot
opposite-sex
reproduce
couples
cannot
accidentally.
procreate
For
example,
unintentionally
if
they
include a post-menopausal woman or an individual with a medical
condition that prevents unassisted conception.
The Proponents attempt to downplay the similarity between
same-sex
in
three
individuals
could
remedy their fertility through future medical advances.
This
ways.
couples
First,
potentiality,
treat
same-sex
and
they
infertile
point
however,
and
out
does
infertile
opposite-sex
that
not
sterile
explain
opposite-sex
why
couples
Virginia
couples
should
differently
during the course of the latter group’s infertility.
Second,
the Proponents posit that, even if one member of a man-woman
couple is sterile, the other member may not be.
54
They suggest
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that,
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without
marriage’s
Pg: 55 of 98
monogamy
mandate,
this
fertile
individual is more likely to have an unintended child with a
third party.
They contend that, due to this possibility, even
opposite-sex
couples
channel
their
couples
do
couples
in
which
imply
set
a
procreate
activity
The
same-sex
partners,
Proponents
cannot
procreative
not.
individuals
sexual
who
in
Proponents’
relationships
is
that,
simply
by
positive
not
marrying,
example
for
need
a
way
marriage
that
argument
never
the
that
opposite-sex
case.
Third,
infertile
couples
same-sex
assumes
have
to
the
opposite-sex
who
can
unintended children, thereby encouraging them to marry.
have
We see
no reason why committed same-sex couples cannot serve as similar
role models.
We therefore reject the Proponents’ attempts to
differentiate
same-sex
procreate accidentally.
opposite-sex
Protection
differently.
couples
Clause
couples
from
other
couples
who
cannot
Because same-sex couples and infertile
are
counsels
similarly
against
situated,
treating
the
these
Equal
groups
See City of Cleburne, 473 U.S. at 439 (explaining
that the Equal Protection Clause “is essentially a direction
that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike”).
Due to the Virginia Marriage Laws’ underinclusivity, this
case resembles City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center, Inc.
In City of Cleburne, the Supreme Court struck down a city law
that required group homes for the intellectually disabled to
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obtain a special use permit.
Id. at 447-50.
impose
on
the
same
requirement
similar
apartment complexes and nursing homes.
determined
that
the
permit
The city did not
structures,
Id. at 447.
requirement
was
so
such
as
The Court
underinclusive
that the city’s motivation must have “rest[ed] on an irrational
prejudice,” rendering the law unconstitutional.
Id. at 450.
In
light of the Virginia Marriage Laws’ extreme underinclusivity,
we are forced to draw the same conclusion in this case.
The
Proponents’
responsible
for another reason as well.
procreation
argument
Strict scrutiny requires that a
state’s means further its compelling interest.
U.S.
at
915
(“Although
we
falters
have
not
always
See Shaw, 517
provided
precise
guidance on how closely the means . . . must serve the end (the
justification or compelling interest), we have always expected
that the legislative action would substantially address, if not
achieve, the avowed purpose.”).
Prohibiting same-sex couples
from marrying and ignoring their out-of-state marriages does not
serve
Virginia’s
Although
same-sex
goal
of
couples
preventing
cannot
out-of-wedlock
procreate
births.
accidentally,
can and do have children via other methods.
they
According to an
amicus brief filed by Dr. Gary J. Gates, as of the 2010 U.S.
Census, more than 2500 same-sex couples were raising more than
4000
children
under
the
age
of
56
eighteen
in
Virginia.
The
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Virginia Marriage Laws therefore increase the number of children
raised by unmarried parents.
The
parents.
in
Proponents
that
same-sex
couples
become
They contend, however, that the state has no interest
channeling
marriage
acknowledge
same-sex
because
couples’
same-sex
procreative
couples
“bring
activities
children
into
into
their
relationship[s] only through intentional choice and pre-planned
action.”
threaten
Accordingly,
society’s
“[t]hose
public
couples
purpose
for
neither
advance
nor
marriage”—stabilizing
parental relationships for the benefit of children—“in the same
manner, or to the same degree, that sexual relationships between
men and women do.”
In
support
of
this
argument,
the
Proponents
invoke
the
Supreme Court’s decision in Johnson v. Robison, 415 U.S. 361
(1974).
Johnson concerned educational benefits that the federal
government granted to military veterans who served on active
duty.
Id. at 363.
The government provided these benefits to
encourage enlistment and make military service more palatable to
existing
servicemembers.
objector—who
refused
reasons—brought
suit,
unconstitutionally
by
to
“[w]hen,
as
in
serve
at
in
contending
granting
conscientious objectors.
that,
Id.
382-83.
the
military
that
the
benefits
Id. at 363-64.
this
case,
57
the
A
to
conscientious
for
religious
government
veterans
acted
but
not
The Court explained
inclusion
of
one
group
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promotes a legitimate governmental purpose, and the addition of
other
groups
would
classification
invidiously
educational
incentivize
not,
of
we
cannot
beneficiaries
discriminatory.”
benefits
to
military
say
and
Id.
at
drawing was constitutional.
the
the
statute’s
nonbeneficiaries
383.
conscientious
service,
that
Because
objectors
federal
is
offering
would
government’s
not
line-
Johnson, 415 U.S. at 382-83.
The
Proponents claim that treating opposite-sex couples differently
from
same-sex
groups
are
couples
not
is
equally
similarly
justified
situated
with
because
respect
the
to
two
their
procreative potential.
Johnson applied rational basis review, id. at 374-75, so we
strongly
doubt
analysis.
its
applicability
to
our
strict
scrutiny
In any event, we can easily distinguish Johnson from
the instant case.
In Johnson, offering educational benefits to
veterans who served on active duty promoted the government’s
goal
of
those
beliefs
making
benefits
military
to
precluded
objective.
attractive
By
service
conscientious
military
contrast,
regardless
of
more
attractive.
objectors,
service,
a
a
stable
did
not
marital
couple’s
whose
Extending
religious
further
that
relationship
procreative
is
ability.
Allowing infertile opposite-sex couples to marry does nothing to
further the government’s goal of channeling procreative conduct
into marriage.
Thus, excluding same-sex couples from marriage
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due to their inability to have unintended children makes little
sense.
Johnson therefore does not alter our conclusion that
barring same-sex couples’ access to marriage does nothing to
further Virginia’s interest in responsible procreation.
5.
We
now
compelling
shift
when
reared
family
to
interest
childrearing.
Optimal Childrearing
discussing
that
the
the
merit
Proponents
of
the
invoke:
final
optimal
The Proponents aver that “children develop best
by
unit.”
their
married
They
differentiated
dwell
parenting”
biological
on
and
argue
in
importance
the
parents
of
“gender-
sanctioning
same-sex
that
a
stable
marriage will deprive children of the benefit of being raised by
a mother and a father, who have “distinct parenting styles.”
In
essence, the Proponents argue that the Virginia Marriage Laws
safeguard children by preventing same-sex couples from marrying
and starting inferior families.
The Opponents and their amici cast serious doubt on the
accuracy of the Proponents’ contentions.
American
Psychological
Pediatrics,
American
Psychiatric
Association
of
Association
(collectively,
brief,
“there
Social
Association,
is
no
Workers,
the
scientific
59
American
Academy
Association,
and
APA)
For example, as the
Virginia
explain
evidence
in
of
National
Psychological
their
that
amicus
parenting
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effectiveness is related to parental sexual orientation,” and
“the
same
factors”—including
resources,
and
linked
children’s
to
the
quality
family
stability,
economic
of
parent-child
relationships—“are
positive
development,
whether
raised by heterosexual, lesbian, or gay parents.”
they
are
According to
the APA, “the parenting abilities of gay men and lesbians—and
the positive outcomes for their children—are not areas where
most credible scientific researchers disagree,” and the contrary
studies that the Proponents cite “do not reflect the current
state of scientific knowledge.”
2d
at
760-68
conclusion).
(making
same-sex
In
couples
factual
fact,
from
the
See also DeBoer, 973 F. Supp.
findings
APA
marrying,
and
explains
the
reaching
that,
Virginia
by
the
same
preventing
Marriage
Laws
actually harm the children of same-sex couples by stigmatizing
their
families
and
robbing
them
of
the
stability,
security, and togetherness that marriage fosters.
Court
reached
observed
a
that
similar
failing
conclusion
to
in
Windsor,
recognize
economic
The Supreme
in
same-sex
which
it
marriages
“humiliates tens of thousands of children now being raised by
same-sex
couples”
and
“makes
it
even
more
difficult
for
the
children to understand the integrity and closeness of their own
family and its concord with other families in their community
and in their daily lives.”
133 S. Ct. at 2694.
60
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We find the arguments that the Opponents and their amici
make on this issue extremely persuasive.
However, we need not
resolve
Proponents’
this
dispute
because
the
optimal
childrearing argument falters for at least two other reasons.
First, under heightened scrutiny, states cannot support a law
using “overbroad
generalizations
about
the
different
talents,
capacities, or preferences of” the groups in question.
States
v.
Virginia,
518
U.S.
515,
533-34
(1996)
United
(rejecting
“inherent differences” between men and women as a justification
for excluding all women from a traditionally all-male military
college); see also Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 656-58
(1972) (holding that a state could not presume that unmarried
fathers
were
unfit
parents).
The
Proponents’
statements
regarding same-sex couples’ parenting ability certainly qualify
as
overbroad
generalizations.
Second,
as
we
explain
above,
strict scrutiny requires congruity between a law’s means and its
end.
This congruity is absent here.
reason
to
suspect
that
prohibiting
There is absolutely no
same-sex
couples
from
marrying and refusing to recognize their out-of-state marriages
will cause same-sex couples to raise fewer children or impel
married
Virginia
opposite-sex
Marriage
couples
Laws
to
therefore
raise
do
more
not
children.
further
The
Virginia’s
interest in channeling children into optimal families, even if
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we were to accept the dubious proposition that same-sex couples
are less capable parents.
Because the Proponents’ arguments are based on overbroad
generalizations about same-sex parents, and because there is no
link
between
banning
childrearing,
Laws.
this
same-sex
aim
marriage
cannot
and
promoting
support
the
Virginia
optimal
Marriage
All of the Proponents’ justifications for the Virginia
Marriage Laws therefore fail, and the laws cannot survive strict
scrutiny.
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the Virginia
Marriage
Laws
violate
Clauses
of
prevent
same-sex
from
the
Fourteenth
recognizing
marriages.
the
couples
Due
Process
and
Equal
Protection
to
the
extent
that
marrying
and
prohibit
Amendment
from
same-sex
couples’
lawful
they
Virginia
out-of-state
We therefore affirm the district court’s grant of
the Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and its decision to
enjoin enforcement of the Virginia Marriage Laws. 10
10
Because we are able to resolve the merits of the
Opponents’ claims, we need not consider their alternative
request for a preliminary injunction.
We assume that the
district court’s decision to enjoin enforcement of the Virginia
Marriage Laws encompassed a permanent injunction, which the
Plaintiffs requested in connection with their motion for summary
judgment.
62
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recognize
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that
marriage
deeply uncomfortable.
same-sex
makes
some
people
However, inertia and apprehension are
not legitimate bases for denying same-sex couples due process
and equal protection of the laws.
cornerstones
of
our
way
of
life.
Civil marriage is one of the
It
allows
individuals
to
celebrate and publicly declare their intentions to form lifelong
partnerships,
which
provide
unparalleled
companionship, emotional support, and security.
intimacy,
The choice of
whether and whom to marry is an intensely personal decision that
alters the course of an individual’s life.
Denying same-sex
couples this choice prohibits them from participating fully in
our society, which is precisely the type of segregation that the
Fourteenth Amendment cannot countenance.
AFFIRMED
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NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
To be clear, this case is not about whether courts favor or
disfavor
same-sex
marriage,
or
whether
States
recognizing
or
declining to recognize same-sex marriage have made good policy
decisions.
decision
It is much narrower.
not
Fourteenth
judicial
to
recognize
Amendment
response
of
must
same-sex
the
be
It is about whether a State’s
U.S.
marriage
violates
the
Thus,
the
Constitution.
limited
to
an
analysis
applying
established constitutional principles.
The
Commonwealth
of
Virginia
has
always
recognized
that
“marriage” is based on the “mutual agreement of a man and a
woman to marry each other,” Burke v. Shaver, 23 S.E. 749, 749
(Va. 1895), and that a marriage’s purposes include “establishing
a
family,
children,
the
and
continuance
the
general
of
the
good
race,
of
society,”
Kuykendall, 63 S.E.2d 746, 748 (Va. 1951).
codified
that
understanding
in
the
several
propagation
of
Alexander
v.
In recent years, it
statutes,
which
also
explicitly exclude from the definition of “marriage” the union
of
two
Virginia
men
or
two
amended
women.
the
Moreover,
Commonwealth’s
in
2006
the
Constitution
marriage as only between “one man and one woman.”
people
to
of
define
Va. Const.
art. I, § 15-A.
The
plaintiffs,
relationships,
are
who
are
challenging
in
the
long-term
same-sex
constitutionality
of
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Virginia’s
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marriage
laws
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under
the
Due
Process
Protection Clauses of the U.S. Constitution.
and
Equal
The district court
sustained their challenge, concluding that the plaintiffs have a
fundamental
Clause
of
regulation
right
the
to
marry
Fourteenth
of
that
right
each
other
Amendment
is
under
and
subject
the
Due
therefore
to
strict
Process
that
any
scrutiny.
Concluding that Virginia’s definition of marriage failed even
“to display a rational relationship to a legitimate purpose and
so must be viewed as constitutionally infirm,” the court struck
down Virginia’s marriage laws as unconstitutional and enjoined
their enforcement.
Bostic v. Rainey, 970 F. Supp. 2d 456, 482
(E.D. Va. 2014).
The majority agrees.
It concludes that the fundamental
right to marriage includes a right to same-sex marriage and that
therefore Virginia’s marriage laws must be reviewed under strict
scrutiny.
It
holds
that
Virginia
has
failed
to
advance
a
compelling state interest justifying its definition of marriage
as between only a man and a woman.
however,
the
constitutional
majority
has
analysis.
In reaching this conclusion,
failed
Rather,
to
it
conduct
has
the
simply
necessary
declared
syllogistically that because “marriage” is a fundamental right
protected by the Due Process Clause and “same-sex marriage” is a
form of marriage, Virginia’s laws declining to recognize same-
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sex marriage infringe the fundamental right to marriage and are
therefore unconstitutional.
Stated
more
particularly,
the
majority’s
approach
begins
with the parties’ agreement that “marriage” is a fundamental
right.
Ante at 40.
From there, the majority moves to the
proposition that “the right to marry is an expansive liberty
interest,” ante at 41, “that is not circumscribed based on the
characteristics
of
the
right,” ante at 42-43.
individuals
seeking
to
exercise
that
For support, it notes that the Supreme
Court has struck down state restrictions prohibiting interracial
marriage, see Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1 (1967); prohibiting
prison
inmates
from
marrying
without
special
approval,
see
Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78 (1987); and prohibiting persons
owing child support from marrying, see Zablocki v. Redhail, 434
U.S.
374
(1978).
It
then
declares,
ipse
dixit,
that
“the
fundamental right to marry encompasses the right to same-sex
marriage” and is thus protected by the substantive component of
the
Due
Process
Clause.
Ante
at
41.
In
reaching
this
conclusion, the majority “decline[s] the Proponents’ invitation
to characterize the right at issue in this case as the right to
same-sex marriage rather than simply the right to marry.”
at 44.
Ante
And in doing so, it explicitly bypasses the relevant
constitutional
analysis
required
by
Washington
v.
Glucksberg,
521 U.S. 702 (1997), stating that a Glucksberg analysis is not
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necessary because no new fundamental right is being recognized.
Ante at 41-42.
This analysis is fundamentally flawed because it fails to
take
into
recognized
account
that
by
Supreme
the
the
“marriage”
Court
as
a
that
has
long
fundamental
been
right
is
distinct from the newly proposed relationship of a “same-sex
marriage.”
And this failure is even more pronounced by the
majority’s acknowledgment that same-sex marriage is a new notion
that
has
not
history.”
been
recognized
Ante at 41.
“for
most
of
our
country’s
Moreover, the majority fails to explain
how this new notion became incorporated into the traditional
definition of marriage except by linguistic manipulation.
the
majority
never
asks
the
question
necessary
to
Thus,
finding
a
fundamental right -- whether same-sex marriage is a right that
is “deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition” and
“implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither
liberty
nor
justice
would
exist
if
[it
was]
sacrificed.”
Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 721 (quoting Moore v. East Cleveland,
431
U.S.
494,
503
(1977)
(plurality
opinion);
Palko
v.
Connecticut, 302 U.S. 319, 325-26 (1937)) (internal quotation
marks omitted).
At bottom, in holding that same-sex marriage is encompassed
by
the
traditional
right
to
marry,
the
majority
avoids
the
necessary constitutional analysis, concluding simply and broadly
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that the fundamental “right to marry” -- by everyone and to
anyone -- may not be infringed.
address
the
problems
that
And it does not anticipate or
this
approach
causes,
failing
to
explain, for example, why this broad right to marry, as the
majority defines it, does not also encompass the “right” of a
father to marry his daughter or the “right” of any person to
marry multiple partners.
If
the
majority
were
to
recognize
and
address
the
distinction between the two relationships -- the traditional one
and the new one -- as it must, it would simply be unable to
reach the conclusion that it has reached.
I respectfully submit that, for the reasons that follow,
Virginia was well within its constitutional authority to adhere
to its traditional definition of marriage as the union of a man
and a woman and to exclude from that definition the union of two
men or two women.
does
not
prohibit
I would also agree that the U.S. Constitution
a
State
from
defining
marriage
same-sex marriage, as many States have done.
would
reverse
the
judgment
of
the
district
to
include
Accordingly, I
court
and
uphold
Virginia’s marriage laws.
I
As the majority has observed, state recognition of same-sex
marriage is a new phenomenon.
Its history began in the early
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2000s with the recognition in some States of civil unions.
See,
e.g., Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, §§ 1201-1202 (2000); D.C. Code §
32-701 (1992) (effective in 2002); Cal. Fam. Code §§ 297-298
(2003); N.J. Stat. Ann. § 26:8A-2 (2003); Conn. Gen. Stat. Ann.
§ 46b-38nn (2006), invalidated by Kerrigan v. Comm’r of Pub.
Health, 957 A.2d 407 (Conn. 2008).
marriage
itself
Massachusetts
first
gained
Supreme
And the notion of same-sex
traction
Judicial
in
Court
2003,
held
when
the
that
the
Commonwealth’s prohibition on issuing marriage licenses to samesex
couples
violated
the
State’s
Constitution
--
the
first
decision holding that same-sex couples had a right to marry.
See
Goodridge
(Mass. 2003).
v.
Dep’t
of
Pub.
Health,
798
N.E.2d
941,
968
In 2009, Vermont became the first State to enact
legislation recognizing same-sex marriage, and, since then, 11
other States and the District of Columbia have also done so.
See Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 46b-20 to 46b-20a; Del. Code Ann. tit.
13, § 101; D.C. Code § 46-401; Haw. Rev. Stat. § 572-1; 750 Ill.
Comp. Stat. 5/201; Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 19-A, § 650-A; Md. Code
Ann., Fam. Law §§ 2-201 to 2-202; Minn. Stat. Ann. §§ 517.01 to
517.03; N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§ 457:1-a to 457:2; N.Y. Dom. Rel.
Law § 10-a; R.I. Gen. Laws § 15-1-1 et seq.; Vt. Stat. Ann. tit.
15, § 8; Wash. Rev. Code §§ 26.04.010 to 26.04.020.
Moreover,
seven other States currently allow same-sex marriage as a result
of court rulings.
See Hollingsworth v. Perry, 133 S. Ct. 2652
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(2013); Varnum v. Brien, 763 N.W.2d 862 (Iowa 2009); Goodridge,
798 N.E.2d 941; Garden State Equality v. Dow, 79 A.3d 1036 (N.J.
2013); Griego v. Oliver, 316 P.3d 865 (N.M. 2013); Geiger v.
Kitzhaber, ___ F. Supp. 2d ___, No. 6:13-CV-01834-MC, 2014 WL
2054264 (D. Or. May 19, 2014); Whitewood v. Wolf, ___ F. Supp.
2d ___, No. 1:13-CV-1861, 2014 WL 2058105 (M.D. Pa. May 20,
2014).
This is indeed a recent phenomenon.
Virginia only recognizes marriage as between one man and
one woman, and, like a majority of States, it has codified this
view.
See
Va.
Code
Ann.
§
20-45.2
(prohibiting
same-sex
marriage and declining to recognize same-sex marriages conducted
in other States); id. § 20-45.3 (prohibiting civil unions and
similar arrangements between persons of the same sex).
The bill
originally proposing what would become § 20-45.3 noted the basis
for Virginia’s legislative decision:
[H]uman marriage is a consummated two in one communion
of male and female persons made possible by sexual
differences which are reproductive in type, whether or
not they are reproductive in effect or motivation.
This present relationship recognizes the equality of
male and female persons, and antedates recorded
history.
Affirmation of Marriage Act, H.D. 751, 2004 Gen. Assembly, Reg.
Sess. (Va. 2004).
The bill predicted that the recognition of
same-sex marriage would “radically transform the institution of
marriage with serious and harmful consequences to the social
order.”
Id.
Virginia also amended its Constitution in 2006 to
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define marriage as only between “one man and one woman” and to
prohibit
“a
legal
status
for
relationships
of
unmarried
individuals that intends to approximate the design, qualities,
significance, or effects of marriage.”
A.
The
plaintiffs
commenced
this
Va. Const. art. I, § 15action
to
challenge
the
constitutionality of Virginia’s marriage laws.
Plaintiffs Timothy B. Bostic and Tony C. London have lived
in a committed same-sex relationship since 1989 and have lived
in Virginia since 1991.
The two desired to marry in Virginia,
and on July 1, 2013, when they applied for a marriage license at
the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court for the City of
Norfolk,
they
were
denied
a
license
and
couples are ineligible to marry in Virginia.
told
that
same-sex
In their complaint
challenging Virginia’s marriage laws, they alleged that their
inability to marry has disadvantaged them in both economic and
personal ways -- it has prevented them from filing joint tax
returns, kept them from sharing health insurance on a tax-free
basis, and signaled that they are “less than” other couples in
Virginia.
Plaintiffs
Carol
Schall
and
Mary
Townley
likewise
have
lived in a committed same-sex relationship since 1985 and have
lived in Virginia throughout their 29-year relationship.
In
1998, Townley gave birth to a daughter, E.S.-T., whom Schall and
Townley have raised together, and in 2008, the two traveled to
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California where they were lawfully married.
They alleged in
their complaint that because Virginia does not recognize their
marriage
Schall
as
is
valid,
unable
they
to
have
legally
been
adopt
injured
in
E.S.-T.,
and
several
the
ways.
two
unable to share health insurance on a tax-free basis.
are
The two
also claimed that they and E.S.-T. have experienced stigma as a
result of Virginia’s nonrecognition of their marriage.
The plaintiffs’ complaint, filed in July 2013, alleged that
Virginia’s
marriage
under
Due
the
Fourteenth
laws
Process
Amendment.
violate
and
their
Equal
They
constitutional
Protection
named
as
Clauses
defendants
rights
of
the
George
E.
Schaefer, III, Clerk of Court for the Norfolk Circuit Court, and
Janet M. Rainey, the State Registrar of Vital Records.
A third
Virginia official, Michèle B. McQuigg, Clerk of Court for the
Prince William County Circuit Court, was permitted to intervene
as a defendant.
As elected circuit court clerks, Schaefer and
McQuigg are responsible for issuing individual marriage licenses
in the localities in which they serve.
Registrar
of
compliance
Vital
with
Records,
Virginia’s
is
marriage
And Rainey, as the State
responsible
laws,
for
including
ensuring
the
laws
challenged in this case.
After the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment,
Virginia underwent a change in administrations, and the newly
elected
Attorney
General
of
Virginia,
72
Mark
Herring,
filed
a
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notice of a change in his office’s legal position on behalf of
his
client,
defendant
Janet
Rainey.
His
notice
stated
that
because, in his view, the laws at issue were unconstitutional,
his office would no longer defend them on behalf of Rainey.
He
noted, however, that Rainey would continue to enforce the laws
until the court’s ruling.
The other officials have continued to
defend Virginia’s marriage laws, and, for convenience, I refer
to the defendants herein as “Virginia.”
Following a hearing, the district court, by an order and
memorandum
dated
February
14,
2014,
granted
the
plaintiffs’
motion for summary judgment and denied Virginia’s cross-motion.
The court concluded that same-sex partners have a fundamental
right to marry each other under the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth
laws
Amendment,
restricting
thus
that
requiring
right
compelling state interest.
meet
that
requirement
be
that
narrowly
Virginia’s
drawn
to
marriage
further
a
It concluded that the laws did not
and,
indeed,
“fail[ed]
to
display
a
rational relationship to a legitimate purpose, and so must be
viewed as constitutionally infirm under even the least onerous
level of scrutiny.”
Bostic, 970 F. Supp. 2d at 482.
Striking
down Virginia’s marriage laws, the court also issued an order
enjoining
appeal.
their
enforcement
but
This appeal followed.
73
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that
order
pending
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II
The
have
a
plaintiffs
fundamental
substantive
contend
right
component
of
that,
to
as
marry
the
Due
same-sex
that
Process
is
partners,
protected
Clause
of
they
by
the
the
U.S.
Constitution, U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1 (prohibiting any State
from
depriving
“any
person
of
life,
liberty,
or
property,
without due process of law”), and that Virginia’s laws defining
marriage as only between a man and a woman and excluding samesex
marriage
infringe
on
that
right.
The
constitutional
analysis for adjudging their claim is well established.
The Constitution contains no language directly protecting
the right to same-sex marriage or even traditional marriage.
Any
right
to
same-sex
marriage,
therefore,
would
have
to
be
found, through court interpretation, as a substantive component
of
the
Due
Process
Clause.
See
Planned
Parenthood
of
Southeastern Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833, 846 (1992) (“Although a
literal reading of the Clause might suggest that it governs only
the procedures by which a State may deprive persons of liberty,
for at least 105 years . . . the Clause has been understood to
contain a substantive component as well”).
The substantive component of the Due Process Clause only
protects “fundamental” liberty interests.
And the Supreme Court
has held that liberty interests are only fundamental if they
are, “objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and
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tradition,’ and ‘implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,’
such that ‘neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were
sacrificed.’”
Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 720-21 (citation omitted)
(quoting Moore, 431 U.S. at 503 (plurality opinion); Palko, 302
U.S. at 325-26).
When determining whether such a fundamental
right exists, a court must always make “a ‘careful description’
of
the
asserted
fundamental
(quoting
liberty
Reno
v.
interest.”
Flores,
U.S.
at
721
292,
302
(emphasis
added)
(1993)).
This “careful description” involves characterizing the
right asserted in its narrowest terms.
507
Id.
Thus, in Glucksberg,
where the Court was presented with a due process challenge to a
state
statute
banning
assisted
suicide,
the
Court
narrowly
characterized the right being asserted in the following manner:
The Court of Appeals stated that “[p]roperly analyzed,
the first issue to be resolved is whether there is a
liberty interest in determining the time and manner of
one’s death,” or, in other words, “[i]s there a right
to die?”
Similarly, respondents assert a “liberty to
choose how to die” and a right to “control of one’s
final days,” and describe the asserted liberty as “the
right to choose a humane, dignified death,” and “the
liberty to shape death.”
As noted above, we have a
tradition of carefully formulating the interest at
stake in substantive-due-process cases. . . .
The
Washington statute at issue in this case prohibits
“aid[ing] another person to attempt suicide,” and,
thus, the question before us is whether the “liberty”
specially protected by the Due Process Clause includes
a right to commit suicide which itself includes a
right to assistance in doing so.
Glucksberg,
521
U.S.
at
722-23
(emphasis added) (citations omitted).
75
(alterations
in
original)
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Under this formulation, because the Virginia laws at issue
prohibit “marriage between persons of the same sex,” Va. Code
Ann. § 20-45.2, “the question before us is whether the ‘liberty’
specially protected by the Due Process Clause includes a right”
to same-sex marriage.
Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 723; see also
Jackson v. Abercrombie, 884 F. Supp. 2d 1065, 1095 (D. Haw.
2012) (“[M]issing from Plaintiffs’ asserted ‘right to marry the
person of one’s choice’ is its centerpiece:
the right to marry
someone of the same gender”).
When a fundamental right is so identified, then any statute
restricting the right is subject to strict scrutiny and must be
“narrowly
tailored
to
Flores, 507 U.S. at 302.
serve
a
compelling
state
interest.”
Such scrutiny is extremely difficult
for a law to withstand, and, as such, the Supreme Court has
noted
that
courts
must
be
extremely
cautious
in
recognizing
fundamental rights because doing so ordinarily removes freedom
of choice from the hands of the people:
[W]e “ha[ve] always been reluctant to expand the
concept of substantive due process because guideposts
for responsible decisionmaking in this unchartered
area are scarce and open-ended.”
By extending
constitutional protection to an asserted right or
liberty interest, we, to a great extent, place the
matter outside the arena of public debate and
legislative action.
We must therefore “exercise the
utmost care whenever we are asked to break new ground
in this field,” lest the liberty protected by the Due
Process Clause be subtly transformed into the policy
preferences of the Members of this Court.
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521
U.S.
at
720
Pg: 77 of 98
(second
alteration
in
original)
(emphasis added) (quoting Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 503
U.S. 115, 125 (1992)).
The
plaintiffs
in
this
case,
as
well
as
the
majority,
recognize that narrowly defining the asserted liberty interest
would require them to demonstrate a new fundamental right to
same-sex marriage, which they cannot do.
Thus, they have made
no attempt to argue that same-sex marriage is, “objectively,
deeply
rooted
in
this
Nation’s
history
and
tradition,”
“implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.”
and
Glucksberg, 521
U.S. at 720-21 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Indeed, they
have acknowledged that recognition of same-sex marriage is a
recent development.
See ante at 41; see also United States v.
Windsor, 133 S. Ct. 2675, 2689 (2013) (“Until recent years, many
citizens had not even considered the possibility of [same-sex
marriage]”
(emphasis
added));
id.
at
2715
(Alito,
J.,
dissenting) (noting that it is “beyond dispute that the right to
same-sex marriage is not deeply rooted in this Nation’s history
and tradition”); Baehr v. Lewin, 852 P.2d 44, 57 (Haw. 1993)
(“[W]e do not believe that a right to same-sex marriage is so
rooted in the traditions and collective conscience of our people
that
failure
to
recognize
it
would
violate
the
fundamental
principles of liberty and justice that lie at the base of all
our civil and political institutions”).
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Instead, the plaintiffs and the majority argue that the
fundamental
right
to
marriage
that
has
previously
been
recognized by the Supreme Court is a broad right that should
apply to the plaintiffs without the need to recognize a new
fundamental right to same-sex marriage.
They argue that this
approach is supported by the fact that the Supreme Court did not
narrowly
define
the
right
to
marriage
in
its
decisions
in
Loving, 388 U.S. at 12; Turner, 482 U.S. at 94-96; or Zablocki,
434 U.S. at 383-86.
It
is
true
that,
in
those
cases,
the
Court
did
not
recognize new, separate fundamental rights to fit the factual
circumstances in each case.
For example, in Loving, the Court
did not examine whether interracial marriage was, objectively,
deeply rooted in our Nation’s history and tradition.
not required to do so.
But it was
Each of those cases involved a couple
asserting a right to enter into a traditional marriage of the
type that has always been recognized since the beginning of the
Nation -- a union between one man and one woman.
While the
context for asserting the right varied in each of those cases,
it varied only in ways irrelevant to the concept of marriage.
The type of relationship sought was always the traditional, manwoman relationship to which the term “marriage” was theretofore
always assumed to refer.
Thus, none of the cases cited by the
plaintiffs and relied on by the majority involved the assertion
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of a brand new liberty interest.
To the contrary, they involved
the assertion of one of the oldest and most fundamental liberty
interests in our society.
To now define the previously recognized fundamental right
to
“marriage”
as
a
concept
that
includes
the
new
notion
of
“same-sex marriage” amounts to a dictionary jurisprudence, which
defines terms as convenient to attain an end.
It
is
true
that
same-sex
and
opposite-sex
relationships
share many attributes, and, therefore, marriages involving those
relationships would, to a substantial extent, be similar.
Two
persons
and
who
are
attracted
to
each
other
physically
emotionally and who love each other could publicly promise to
live
with
each
relationship.
are
of
the
other
in
a
mutually
desirable
These aspects are the same whether the persons
same
relationships
thereafter
sex
could
or
different
successfully
sexes.
function
to
Moreover,
raise
both
children,
although children in a same-sex relationship would come from one
partner
or
distinctions
from
adoption.
between
the
But
there
relationships
are
also
that
significant
can
justify
differential treatment by lawmakers.
Only the union of a man and a woman has the capacity to
produce children and thus to carry on the species.
And more
importantly, only such a union creates a biological family unit
that also gives rise to a traditionally stable political unit.
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Every
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person’s
biological
identity
relationships,
Pg: 80 of 98
includes
which
the
create
person’s
unique
particular
and
meaningful
bonds of kinship that are extraordinarily strong and enduring
and
that
order
have
been
throughout
afforded
human
a
privileged
history.
place
Societies
in
have
political
accordingly
enacted laws promoting the family unit -- such as those relating
to sexual engagement, marriage rites, divorce, inheritance, name
and title, and economic matters.
And many societies have found
familial bonds so critical that they have elevated marriage to
be
a
sacred
these
institution
respects,
the
trapped
with
traditional
religious
man-woman
rituals.
relationship
In
is
unique.
Thus, when the Supreme Court has recognized, through the
years, that the right to marry is a fundamental right, it has
emphasized
the
procreative
traditional marriage.
and
social
ordering
For example, it has said:
aspects
of
“[Marriage] is
an institution, in the maintenance of which in its purity the
public is deeply interested, for it is the foundation of the
family
and
of
society,
without
which
there
would
be
neither
civilization nor progress,” Maynard v. Hill, 125 U.S. 190, 211
(1888) (emphasis added); Marriage is “one of the basic civil
rights of man.
Marriage and procreation are fundamental to the
very existence and survival of the race,” Skinner v. Oklahoma ex
rel. Williamson, 316 U.S. 535, 541 (1942); “It is not surprising
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that the decision to marry has been placed on the same level of
importance
as
decisions
relating
to
procreation,
childrearing, and family relationships. . . .
childbirth,
[Marriage] is the
foundation of the family in our society,” Zablocki, 434 U.S. at
386.
Because there exist deep, fundamental differences between
traditional
majority
and
err
by
same-sex
marriage,
conflating
the
two
the
plaintiffs
relationships
loosely drawn rubric of “the right to marriage.”
and
the
under
the
Rather, to
obtain constitutional protection, they would have to show that
the right to same-sex marriage is itself deeply rooted in our
Nation’s history.
They have not attempted to do so and could
not succeed if they were so to attempt.
In an effort to bridge the obvious differences between the
traditional relationship and the new same-sex relationship, the
plaintiffs argue that the fundamental right to marriage “has
always been based on, and defined by, the constitutional liberty
to select the partner of one’s choice.”
(Emphasis added).
rely heavily on Loving to assert this claim.
Court
held
marriage
that
a
infringed
state
on
Loving, 388 U.S. at 12.
suggest
that
unrestricted
the
right
regulation
the
right
interracial
to
marriage.
But nowhere in Loving did the Court
fundamental
to
In Loving, the
restricting
fundamental
They
marry
right
whomever
81
to
marry
one
includes
chooses,
as
the
the
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plaintiffs claim.
and
Murphy,
and
Pg: 82 of 98
Indeed, Loving explicitly relied on Skinner
both
of
those
traditional, procreative terms.
cases
discussed
marriage
in
Id.
This reading of Loving is fortified by the Court’s summary
dismissal
of
Baker
v.
Nelson,
191
N.W.2d
185
(Minn.
1971),
appeal dismissed, 409 U.S. 810 (1972), just five years after
Loving
was
decided.
In
Baker,
the
Minnesota
Supreme
Court
interpreted a state statute’s use of the term “marriage” to be
one of common usage meaning a union “between persons of the
opposite sex” and thus not including same-sex marriage.
186.
Id. at
On appeal, the Supreme Court dismissed the case summarily
“for want of a substantial federal question.”
409 U.S. at 810.
The Court’s action in context indicates that the Court did not
view
Loving
or
the
cases
that
preceded
it
as
providing
a
fundamental right to an unrestricted choice of marriage partner.
Otherwise, the state court’s decision in Baker would indeed have
presented a substantial federal question.
In short, Loving simply held that race, which is completely
unrelated to the institution of marriage, could not be the basis
of
marital
restrictions.
See
Loving,
388
U.S.
at
12.
To
stretch Loving’s holding to say that the right to marry is not
limited
by
gender
and
sexual
orientation
is
to
ignore
the
inextricable, biological link between marriage and procreation
that the Supreme Court has always recognized.
82
See Windsor, 133
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S. Ct. at 2689 (recognizing that throughout history, “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”).
The state regulation struck down in
Loving, like those in Zablocki and Turner, had no relationship
to the foundational purposes of marriage, while the gender of
the individuals in a marriage clearly does.
Thus, the majority
errs, as did the district court, by interpreting the Supreme
Court’s marriage cases as establishing a right that includes
same-sex marriage.
The plaintiffs also largely ignore the problem with their
position that if the fundamental right to marriage is based on
“the
constitutional
liberty
to
select
the
partner
of
one’s
choice,” as they contend, then that liberty would also extend to
individuals
seeking
state
recognition
of
other
types
of
relationships that States currently restrict, such as polygamous
or incestuous relationships.
Cf. Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620,
648-50 (1996) (Scalia, J., dissenting).
be
a
radical
relationships.
shift
in
our
Such an extension would
understanding
of
marital
Laws restricting polygamy are foundational to
the Union itself, having been a condition on the entrance of
Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Utah into statehood.
Id.
While the plaintiffs do attempt to assure us that such laws are
safe because “there are weighty government interests underlying”
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them, such an argument does not bear on the question of whether
the
right
is
fundamental.
The
government’s
interests
would
instead be relevant only to whether the restriction could meet
the requisite standard of review.
And because laws prohibiting
polygamous or incestuous marriages restrict individuals’ right
to choose whom they would like to marry, they would, under the
plaintiffs’ approach, have to be examined under strict scrutiny.
Perhaps
the
government’s
interest
would
be
strong
enough
to
enable such laws to survive strict scrutiny, but regardless,
today’s decision would truly be a sweeping one if it could be
understood to mean that individuals have a fundamental right to
enter into a marriage with any person, or any people, of their
choosing.
At
include
bottom,
the
a
to
right
fundamental
same-sex
right
marriage.
to
marriage
Under
the
does
not
Glucksberg
analysis that we are thus bound to conduct, there is no new
fundamental
right
to
same-sex
marriage.
Virginia’s
laws
restricting marriage to man-woman relationships must therefore
be upheld if there is any rational basis for the laws.
III
Under rational-basis review, courts are required to give
heavy deference to legislatures.
The standard
simply requires courts to
classification
in
question
84
determine
is,
at
whether the
a
minimum,
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rationally related to legitimate governmental goals.
In other words, the fit between the enactment and the
public purposes behind it need not be mathematically
precise.
As long as [the legislature] has a
reasonable basis for adopting the classification,
which can include “rational speculation unsupported by
evidence or empirical data,” the statute will pass
constitutional muster.
The rational basis standard
thus embodies an idea critical to the continuing
vitality of our democracy:
that courts are not
empowered to “sit as a superlegislature to judge the
wisdom
or
desirability
of
legislative
policy
determinations.”
Wilkins v. Gaddy, 734 F.3d 344, 347-48 (4th Cir. 2013) (emphasis
added) (citations omitted) (quoting FCC v. Beach Commc’ns, Inc.,
508 U.S. 307, 315 (1993); City of New Orleans v. Dukes, 427 U.S.
297, 303 (1976)).
Statutes subject to rational-basis review
“bear[] a strong presumption of validity, and those attacking
the rationality of the legislative classification have the
burden ‘to negative every conceivable basis which might support
[them].’”
Beach Commc’ns, 508 U.S. at 314-15 (emphasis added)
(citation omitted) (quoting Lehnhausen v. Lake Shore Auto Parts
Co., 410 U.S. 356, 364 (1973)).
In
contending
that
there
is
a
rational
basis
for
its
marriage laws, Virginia has emphasized that children are born
only to one man and one woman and that marriage provides a
family structure by which to nourish and raise those children.
It claims that a biological family is a more stable environment,
and it renounces any interest in encouraging same-sex marriage.
It argues that the purpose of its marriage laws “is to channel
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the presumptive procreative potential of man-woman relationships
into enduring marital unions so that if any children are born,
they
are
more
likely
(Emphasis omitted).
tendency
to
to
be
raised
in
stable
family
units.”
Virginia highlights especially marriage’s
promote
stability
in
the
event
of
unplanned
pregnancies, asserting that it has “a compelling interest in
addressing the particular concerns associated with the birth of
unplanned
children.
.
.
.
[C]hildren
born
from
unplanned
pregnancies where their mother and father are not married to
each
other
are
at
significant
risk
of
being
raised
outside
stable family units headed by their mother and father jointly.”
Virginia
that
marriage
traditional
states
also
its
justifications
explain
its
lack
for
of
promoting
interest
in
promoting same-sex marriage.
It maintains that a traditional
marriage
[an]
is
“exclusively
. . . inextricably
linked
to
opposite-sex
procreation
and
institution
biological
kinship,” Windsor, 133 S. Ct. at 2718 (Alito, J., dissenting),
and that same-sex marriage prioritizes the emotions and sexual
attractions of the two partners without any necessary link to
reproduction.
It asserts that it has no interest in “licensing
adults’ love.”
The plaintiffs accept that family stability is a legitimate
state goal, but they argue that licensing same-sex relationships
will
not
burden
Virginia’s
achievement
86
of
that
goal.
They
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contend that “there is simply no evidence or reason to believe
that
prohibiting
gay
men
and
lesbians
from
marrying
will
increase ‘responsible procreation’ among heterosexuals.”
But
this
argument
does
not
negate
any
of
the
rational
justifications for Virginia’s legislation.
States are permitted
to
certain
selectively
provide
benefits
to
only
groups
when
providing those same benefits to other groups would not further
the State’s ultimate goals.
See Johnson v. Robinson, 415 U.S.
361, 383 (1974) (“When . . . the inclusion of one group promotes
a legitimate governmental purpose, and the addition of other
groups
would
not,
classification
of
we
cannot
say
beneficiaries
invidiously discriminatory”).
that
and
the
statute's
nonbeneficiaries
is
Here, the Commonwealth’s goal of
ensuring that unplanned children are raised in stable homes is
furthered only by offering the benefits of marriage to oppositesex
couples.
inquiry
marriage
here
As
is
furthers
Virginia
not
whether
recognizing
interests.
With
excluding
[Virginia’s]
couples into marriage.”
also
correctly
same-sex
in
“the
relevant
couples
steering
from
man-woman
Rather, the relevant inquiry is whether
same-sex
regard
interest
asserts,
marriages
to
its
would
interest
further
in
Virginia’s
ensuring
stable
families in the event of unplanned pregnancies, it would not.
The plaintiffs reply that even if this is so, such “linedrawing” only makes sense if the resources at issue are scarce,
87
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justifying
They
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the
argue
State’s
that
Pg: 88 of 98
limited
because
provision
“[m]arriage
of
those
resources.
licenses . . . are
not
a
remotely scarce commodity,” the line-drawing done by Virginia’s
marriage
laws
is
misunderstands
Commonwealth
the
grants
irrational.
nature
a
of
But
this
marriage
marriage,
it
benefits.
does
couple a piece of paper and a title.
fundamentally
not
When
simply
the
give
the
Rather, it provides a
substantial subsidy to the married couple -- economic benefits
that, the plaintiffs repeatedly assert, are being denied them.
For example, married couples are permitted to file state income
taxes jointly, lowering their tax rates.
§ 58.1-324.
Although
indirect,
such
See Va. Code Ann.
benefits
subsidies that come at a cost to the Commonwealth.
willing
to
provide
these
subsidies
because
are
clearly
Virginia is
they
encourage
opposite-sex couples to marry, which tends to provide children
from
unplanned
pregnancies
with
a
more
stable
environment.
Under Johnson, the Commonwealth is not obligated to similarly
subsidize same-sex marriages, since doing so could not possibly
further its interest.
This is no different from the subsidies
provided in other cases where the Supreme Court has upheld linedrawing, such as Medicare benefits, Matthews v. Diaz, 426 U.S.
67, 83-84 (1976), or veterans’ educational benefits, Johnson,
415 U.S. at 383.
88
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As an additional argument, Virginia maintains that marriage
is
a
“[c]omplex
social
institution[]”
with
a
“set
of
norms,
rules, patterns, and expectations that powerfully (albeit often
unconsciously)
affect
perspectives.”
It
people’s
asserts
choices,
that
discarding
actions,
the
and
traditional
definition of marriage will have far-reaching consequences that
cannot easily be predicted, including “sever[ing] the inherent
link
between
procreation . . . and
turn . . . powerfully
advance
adult
convey[ing]
desires
rather
marriage . . . [and]
that
than
marriage
[to]
exists
serv[e]
in
to
children’s
needs.”
The
plaintiffs
agree
that
changing
the
definition
of
marriage may have unforeseen social effects, but they argue that
such
predictions
should
not
be
enough
to
save
Virginia’s
marriage laws because similar justifications were rejected in
Loving.
The Loving Court, however, was not applying rational-
basis review.
different
See Loving, 388 U.S. at 11-12.
footing
legislative
choices
here.
“may
Under
be
based
rational-basis
on
rational
unsupported by evidence or empirical data.”
U.S. at 315.
We are on a
review,
speculation
Beach Commc’ns, 508
“Sound policymaking often requires legislators to
forecast future events and to anticipate the likely impact of
these
events
based
on
deductions
and
inferences
complete empirical support may be unavailable.”
89
for
which
Turner Broad.
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Sys., Inc. v. FCC, 512 U.S. 622, 665 (1994) (plurality opinion).
And the legislature “is far better equipped than the judiciary”
to make these evaluations and ultimately decide on a course of
action based on its predictions.
its
marriage
laws,
Virginia
Id. at 665-66.
predicted
that
In enacting
changing
the
definition of marriage would have a negative effect on children
and on the family structure.
those
concerns,
such
Although other States do not share
evaluations
were
nonetheless
squarely
within the province of the Commonwealth’s legislature and its
citizens, who voted to amend Virginia’s Constitution in 2006.
Virginia
has
undoubtedly
articulated
sufficient
rational
bases for its marriage laws, and I would find that those bases
constitutionally justify the laws.
Those laws are grounded on
the biological connection of men and women; the potential for
their
having
children;
the
family
order
needed
in
raising
children; and, on a larger scale, the political order resulting
from
stable
family
units.
Moreover,
I
would
add
that
the
traditional marriage relationship encourages a family structure
that is intergenerational, giving children not only a structure
in
which
to
be
raised
relational context.
but
also
an
identity
and
a
strong
The marriage of a man and a woman thus
rationally promotes a correlation between biological order and
political
order.
Because
Virginia’s
90
marriage
laws
are
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rationally related to its legitimate purposes, they withstand
rational-basis scrutiny under the Due Process Clause.
IV
The majority does not substantively address the plaintiffs’
second
argument
--
that
Virginia’s
marriage
laws
invidiously
discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation, in violation of
the Equal Protection Clause -- since it finds that the laws
infringe on the plaintiffs’ fundamental right to marriage.
But
because I find no fundamental right is infringed by the laws, I
also address discrimination under the Equal Protection Clause.
The Equal Protection Clause, which forbids any State from
“deny[ing]
to
any
person
within
its
jurisdiction
the
equal
protection of the laws,” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1, prohibits
invidious
discrimination
among
classes
of
persons.
Some
classifications -- such as those based on race, alienage, or
national origin -- are “so seldom relevant to the achievement of
any
legitimate
state
interest
that
laws
grounded
in
such
considerations are deemed to reflect prejudice and antipathy -a view that those in the burdened class are not as worthy or
deserving as others.”
City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr.,
473 U.S. 432, 440 (1985).
Any laws based on such “suspect”
classifications are subject to strict scrutiny.
similar
vein,
classifications
based
91
on
gender
See id.
are
In a
“quasi-
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suspect”
and
“frequently
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call
bear[]
Pg: 92 of 98
for
“intermediate
no
relation
to
scrutiny”
ability
because
to
perform
they
or
contribute to society” and thus “generally provide[] no sensible
ground
for
differential
treatment.”
Id.
at
440-41
(quoting
Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677, 686 (1973) (plurality
opinion)); see also Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S. 190, 197 (1976).
Laws
subject
to
intermediate
scrutiny
must
related to an important government objective.
be
substantially
See United States
v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515, 533 (1996).
But when a regulation adversely affects members of a class
that
is
“presumed
not
to
suspect
be
or
valid
quasi-suspect,
and
will
be
the
regulation
sustained
if
is
the
classification drawn by the statute is rationally related to a
legitimate state interest.”
(emphasis added).
City of Cleburne, 473 U.S. at 440
Moreover, the Supreme Court has made it clear
that
where individuals in the group affected by a law have
distinguishing characteristics relevant to interests
the State has the authority to implement, the courts
have been very reluctant, as they should be in our
federal system and with our respect for the separation
of powers, to closely scrutinize legislative choices
as to whether, how, and to what extent those interests
should be pursued.
In such cases, the Equal
Protection Clause requires only a rational means to
serve a legitimate end.
Id.
at
441-42
(emphasis
added).
This
is
based
on
the
understanding that “equal protection of the laws must coexist
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with the practical necessity that most legislation classifies
for
one
purpose
or
another,
various groups or persons.”
with
resulting
disadvantage
to
Romer, 517 U.S. at 631.
The plaintiffs contend that Virginia’s marriage laws should
be subjected to some level of heightened scrutiny because they
discriminate
on
the
basis
of
sexual
orientation.
Yet
they
concede that neither the Supreme Court nor the Fourth Circuit
has ever applied heightened scrutiny to a classification based
on sexual orientation.
first time.
They urge this court to do so for the
Governing precedent, however, counsels otherwise.
In Romer v. Evans, the Supreme Court did not employ any
heightened
level
constitutional
of
scrutiny
amendment
that
in
evaluating
prohibited
a
state
Colorado
and
local
governments from enacting legislation that would allow persons
to
claim
“any
minority
status,
quota
preferences,
protected
status, or . . . discrimination” based on sexual orientation.
Romer,
517
U.S.
at
624.
In
holding
the
amendment
unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause, the Court
applied rational-basis review.
See id. at 631-33.
And the Supreme Court made no change as to the appropriate
level of scrutiny in its more recent decision in Windsor, which
held Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional.
The
Court
was
presented
standard but did not do so.
an
opportunity
to
alter
the
Romer
Although it did not state the level
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of scrutiny being applied, it did explicitly rely on rationalbasis cases like Romer and Department of Agriculture v. Moreno,
413 U.S. 528 (1973).
See Windsor, 133 S. Ct. at 2693.
In his
dissenting opinion in Windsor, Justice Scalia thus noted, “As
nearly
as
I
can
tell,
the
Court
agrees
[that
rational-basis
review applies]; its opinion does not apply strict scrutiny, and
its
central
like Moreno.”
Finally,
propositions
are
taken
from
rational-basis
cases
Id. at 2706 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
we
have
concluded
that
rational-basis
review
applies to classifications based on sexual orientation.
Veney v. Wyche, 293 F.3d 726, 731-32 (4th Cir. 2002).
See
In Veney,
a prisoner filed a § 1983 action alleging that he had been
discriminated
gender.
against
on
Id. at 729-30.
the
basis
of
sexual
preference
and
We noted that the plaintiff “[did] not
allege that he [was] a member of a suspect class.
Rather, he
claim[ed] that he ha[d] been discriminated against on the basis
of sexual preference and gender.
Outside the prison context,
the former is subject to rational basis review, see Romer v.
Evans, 517 U.S. 620, 631-32 (1996).”
Id. at 731-32 (footnote
omitted).
The vast majority of other courts of appeals have reached
the same conclusion.
See Cook v. Gates, 528 F.3d 42, 61 (1st
Cir. 2008) (“Romer nowhere suggested that the Court recognized a
new suspect class.
Absent additional guidance from the Supreme
94
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Court, we join our sister circuits in declining to read Romer as
recognizing homosexuals as a suspect class for equal protection
purposes”); Price-Cornelison v. Brooks, 524 F.3d 1103, 1113-14 &
n.9
(10th
Cir.
can . . . distinguish
sexual
orientation,
relation
to
some
2008)
(“A
between
if
its
that
government
citizens
on
classification
legitimate
end”
official
the
bears
(internal
basis
a
of
rational
quotation
marks
omitted)); Citizens for Equal Prot. v. Bruning, 455 F.3d 859,
865-66
(8th
conclusion
murky,
under
that
we
same-sex
Cir.
2006)
“[t]hough
conclude
marriage
the
Equal
(discussing
for
a
ban]
the
most
number
should
Protection
of
Romer
relevant
reasons
receive
Clause,
and
reaching
the
precedents
are
that
[Nebraska’s
rational-basis
rather
than
a
review
heightened
level of judicial scrutiny”); Johnson v. Johnson, 385 F.3d 503,
532 (5th Cir. 2004) (“[A] state violates the Equal Protection
Clause if it disadvantages homosexuals for reasons lacking any
rational relationship to legitimate governmental aims”); Lofton
v. Sec’y of Dep’t of Children & Family Servs., 358 F.3d 804, 818
(11th
Cir.
2004)
(“[A]ll
of
our
sister
circuits
that
have
considered the question have declined to treat homosexuals as a
suspect
class.
fundamental
Because
right
nor
the
present
a
case
suspect
involves
class,
neither
we
a
review
the . . . statute under the rational-basis standard” (footnote
omitted)); Equal. Found. of Greater Cincinnati, Inc. v. City of
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Cincinnati, 128 F.3d 289, 294, 300 (6th Cir. 1997) (applying
rational-basis
review
in
upholding
a
city
charter
amendment
restricting homosexual rights and stating that in Romer, the
Court
“did
scrutiny’
ultimately
not
or
assess
Colorado
‘intermediate
applied
Amendment
scrutiny’
‘rational
2
under
standards,
relationship’
‘strict
but
instead
strictures
to
that
enactment and resolved that the Colorado state constitutional
provision
did
not
invade
any
fundamental
right
and
did
not
target any suspect class or quasi-suspect class”); Ben-Shalom v.
Marsh, 881 F.2d 454, 464 (7th Cir. 1989) (applying rationalbasis review prior to the announcement of Romer); Woodward v.
United
States,
871
F.2d
1068,
1076
(Fed.
Cir.
1989)
Supreme Court has identified only three suspect classes:
status,
national
ancestry
and
ethnic
original,
and
(“The
racial
alienage.
Two other classifications have been identified by the Court as
quasi-suspect:
gender and illegitimacy.
[Plaintiff] would have
this court add homosexuality to that list.
do”
(citations
and
footnote
omitted)).
This we decline to
But
see
SmithKline
Beecham Corp. v. Abbott Labs., 740 F.3d 471, 481 (9th Cir. 2014)
(applying heightened scrutiny to a Batson challenge that was
based on sexual orientation); Windsor v. United States, 699 F.3d
169,
180-85
(2d
Cir.
2012)
(finding
intermediate
scrutiny
appropriate in assessing the constitutionality of Section 3 of
the Defense of Marriage Act).
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Thus, following Supreme Court and Fourth Circuit precedent,
I
would
hold
that
Virginia’s
rational-basis review.
marriage
laws
are
subject
to
Applying that standard, I conclude that
there is a rational basis for the laws, as explained in Part
III, above.
that
“[i]n
At bottom, I agree with Justice Alito’s reasoning
asking
the
court
to
determine
that
[Virginia’s
marriage laws are] subject to and violate[] heightened scrutiny,
[the plaintiffs] thus ask us to rule that the presence of two
members of the opposite sex is as rationally related to marriage
as white skin is to voting or a Y-chromosome is to the ability
to administer an estate.
That is a striking request and one
that unelected judges should pause before granting.”
Windsor,
133 S. Ct. at 2717-18 (Alito, J., dissenting).
V
Whether to recognize same-sex marriage is an ongoing and
highly engaged political debate taking place across the Nation,
and the States are divided on the issue.
have
struck
down
statutes
that
deny
The majority of courts
recognition
of
same-sex
marriage, doing so almost exclusively on the idea that same-sex
marriage is encompassed by the fundamental right to marry that
is protected by the Due Process Clause.
While I express no
viewpoint on the merits of the policy debate, I do strongly
disagree with the assertion that same-sex marriage is subject to
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the same constitutional protections as the traditional right to
marry.
Because there is no fundamental right to same-sex marriage
and there are rational reasons for not recognizing it, just as
there are rational reasons for recognizing it, I conclude that
we,
in
the
Third
Branch,
must
allow
the
States
to
enact
legislation on the subject in accordance with their political
processes.
The
U.S.
Constitution
does
not,
in
restrict the States’ policy choices on this issue.
my
judgment,
If given the
choice, some States will surely recognize same-sex marriage and
some will surely not.
But that is, to be sure, the beauty of
federalism.
I would reverse the district court’s judgment and defer to
Virginia’s political choice in defining marriage as only between
one man and one woman.
98
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