Washington (CNN) -- The divisive issue of same-sex marriage was expected to be discussed
privately by the Supreme Court Monday, and the justices could soon
announce if they will hear a constitutional challenge to a federal law
denying financial benefits to gay and lesbian couples.
An order from the court
announcing whether they will take up either or both of two separate
issues could come as early as Tuesday morning. If so, oral arguments and
an eventual ruling would not happen until next year, but the current
appeals are sure to re-ignite the hot-button social debate in a
presidential election.
At issue is whether
guarantees of "equal protection" in the U.S. Constitution should
invalidate a California law -- and the separate 1996 Defense of Marriage
Act (DOMA), which for federal purposes defines marriage as the legal
union only between one man and one woman.
A New York woman sued,
saying the congressional law unfairly treats same-sex couples who are
lawfully married under the laws of their own states.
A separate appeal from
California over the state's voter-approved Proposition 8 banning
same-sex marriage is also before the high court.
In the DOMA appeal, Edith
"Edie" Windsor and Thea Spyer had lived for together in New York City's
Greenwich Village for more than four decades, and had been engaged as a
couple since 1967.
They eventually married
out of state in 2007, but neither the federal government nor their home
state of New York at the time recognized the legal union. Spyer died
three years ago and left her estate to Windsor, who was then forced to
pay federal taxes on the money -- about $363,000 in taxes -- because she
was not considered a legal spouse.
New York now allows same-sex marriage.
A federal judge had ruled
in favor of Windsor, but citing her age and health, the woman's lawyers
are trying to bypass usual federal appeals court review of the case,
and have asked the Supreme Court to hear the case now. Such legal
leapfrogging is rarely accepted by the justices, since they typically
want such cases to percolate through the entire judicial system before
reaching the high court.
"Edie Windsor, who
recently celebrated her 83rd birthday, suffers from a serious heart
condition," said Roberta Kaplan, Windsor's attorney. "Edie cannot yet
receive a refund of the unconstitutional estate tax that she was forced
to pay simply for being gay. The constitutional injury inflicted on Edie
should be remedied within her lifetime."
The Defense of Marriage
Act was passed in 1996 by the GOP-controlled Congress and signed into
law by President Bill Clinton. It bars federal recognition of same-sex
marriages and says states cannot be forced to recognize such marriages
allowed in other states.
The Obama
administration, which normally would defend federal laws in judicial
disputes, announced earlier this year it believed the Defense of
Marriage Act, often referred to as DOMA, to be unconstitutional.
House Speaker John
Boehner said that with the Justice Department not participating, the
Republican majority had "no choice" but to act unilaterally, and have
moved to lead the legal defense of the law.
Three other separate
appeals challenging DOMA have been filed with the high court, but have
not yet been scheduled for an initial, internal review. Plaintiffs
include 17 married or widowed men and women suing for federal benefits.
The justices may wait
until all pending same-sex marriages have been debated in their
closed-door conference before deciding whether any or all of the cases
are accepted for full review.
A separate federal
appeals court based in Boston last spring struck as unconstitutional a
key part of DOMA, ruling the federal government cannot deny tax, health
and pension benefits to same-sex couples in states where they can
legally marry. That ruling was a boost for gay rights advocates and the
Obama administration, which in a rare move, has refused to defend the
federal law in court.
Marriage between two
males or two females is legal in the District of Columbia and six states
-- Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, Vermont, New Hampshire, New York.
Washington state and
Maryland passed similar laws that will not take effect until voters
decide in separate referendums in the November elections.
Many other states,
including New Jersey, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island and Hawaii, have
legalized domestic partnerships and civil unions for such couples -- a
step designed in most cases to provide the same rights of marriage under
state law.
But other states have passed laws or state constitutional amendments banning such marriages.
A bill known as the
Respect for Marriage Act is working its way through Congress and would
repeal DOMA. President Barack Obama, who previously opposed same-sex
marriage, said in June he now supports it.
The larger issue has been working along two legal tracks, originating on opposite coasts.
A federal appeals court
last month ruled against California's voter-approved ban on same-sex
marriage, arguing the ban unconstitutionally singles out gays and
lesbians for discrimination.
In a split decision, a
three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found the
state's Proposition 8 "works a meaningful harm to gays and lesbians" by
denying their right to civil marriage in violation of the 14th
Amendment.
The "Prop 8" case, as it
has become known, has been down a complicated legal road. California's
Supreme Court ruled that same-sex marriages were legal in 2008. About
18,000 gay and lesbian couples then legally obtained marriage licenses
in the state. But after the statewide ballot measure banning the
practice passed with 52% of the vote later that year, same-sex marriages
were put on hold.
California is the only state that accepted, then revoked, same-sex marriage as a legal right.
The somewhat narrow
federal appeals court ruling tossing out Proposition 8 never reached the
right-to-marry question -- but instead ruled only on whether voters can
decide such issues.
The Supreme Court has
complete discretion to frame the same-sex marriage issues as the
justices see fit. The court could determine whether a fundamental right
is at stake, potentially striking down the laws of some states allowing
only "traditional" marriages.
Or the justices could
take a more narrow approach, and require the states to recognize
same-sex marriages created in other states, without exception, without
being forced to change their own laws.
It is unclear whether
the first high court debate over same-sex marriage would be over
federal, not state, laws -- or whether both questions will be addressed
at the same time.
The justices would have
ultimate discretion to accept one, both, or neither of the cases --
perhaps deferring judicial review until a later time, after other lower
courts have had time to debate the matter. Or they may wait until
Congress has had a chance to repeal or modify the current federal law.
The New York appeal is Windsor v. U.S (12-63).
The California appeal is Hollingsworth v. Perry (12-144).
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