Two California Couples Challenge Ban on State's Same-Sex Marriage Ban in Supreme Court

By: Sylvia Ramirez - Thu, 21 Feb 2013 16:03:22 -0800

SAN FRANCISCO (BCN) -- Two couples who challenged California's ban on same-sex marriage are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to declare that gays and lesbians nationwide have a fundamental constitutional right to marry.
     
Lawyers for the two couples argued in a brief submitted to the high court Thursday that "the right to marry is fundamental to all people."
     
The attorneys said the couples are not seeking a special right for homosexuals but rather the same right enjoyed by others in the nation.
     
The couples agree with the sponsors of California's Proposition 8  that "marriage is a unique, venerable and essential institution," the brief said.
     
"They simply want to be part of it," the lawyers wrote.
     
The brief was filed in preparation for a Supreme Court hearing on March 26 on the constitutionality of Proposition 8, an initiative enacted by voters in 2008 that banned same-sex marriage in California.
     
The sponsors of the proposition are appealing a ruling in which  9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco last year struck down the  ban.
     
The sponsors previously submitted a brief arguing that defining  marriage is a states' rights matter, and that Californians' choice of a  traditional definition in 2008 should be honored.
     
Although the couples' response brief emphasizes the argument that gays and lesbians nationwide have a right to marry, the Supreme Court could  also consider only more narrow issues when deciding the case.  
     
The federal appeals court ruling took a narrower approach when it said that because same-sex marriage was legal in California for several months in 2008 before Proposition 8 was passed, it was unconstitutional for  the initiative to withdraw that right.
     
The city of San Francisco also filed a brief today arguing that  Proposition 8 was discriminatory.
     
The sponsors of the measure have until March 19 to submit a final  reply.
     
The Supreme Court's ruling is due by the end of June.

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