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Governor’s Office Says Kim Davis Must Pay $225,000 To Gay Plaintiffs For “Violating Civil Rights”
Lexington Herald Leader ^ | 30th January 2019 | John Cheves

Posted on 01/30/2019 2:23:31 PM PST by Ennis85

Citing “conduct that violates civil rights,” lawyers for Gov. Matt Bevin say former Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis should be held responsible for nearly $225,000 in legal fees and court costs incurred by couples who sued her in 2015 when she refused to issue marriage licenses because of her religious opposition to same-sex marriage.

Although Bevin, a Republican, publicly has praised Davis as “an inspiration ... to the children of America,” his attorneys are taking a more critical tone in court briefs, blaming the ex-clerk for failing to do her job following the U.S. Supreme Court’s June 2015 decision legalizing gay marriage.

A three-judge panel will hear arguments about who should bear the case’s expenses Thursday at the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati. A district judge ruled in 2017 that the couples suing for marriage licenses clearly prevailed and that the state of Kentucky must pay their fees and costs.

Bevin appealed that ruling, hoping to hand the bill instead to the Rowan County clerk’s office. Davis acted alone, without any state support, the governor’s lawyers told the 6th Circuit in briefs ahead of the oral arguments.

“Her local policy stood in direct conflict with her statutory obligation to issue marriage licenses to qualified Kentucky couples. The local policy also undermined the Commonwealth of Kentucky’s interest in upholding the rule of law,” Bevin attorney Palmer G. Vance II wrote in one brief.

“Davis had an independent and sworn duty to uphold the law as an elected county officer,” Vance wrote. “If fees are awarded, they must be the responsibility of the Rowan County clerk’s office, which should be deterred from engaging in conduct that violates civil rights — and leads to costly litigation.”

The governor’s general counsel, Steve Pitt, said Wednesday that Bevin still personally supports Davis.

“In contesting the federal court’s award of attorney’s fees against the commonwealth, outside counsel retained by the Beshear administration to represent the governor’s office have taken no position as to whether Ms. Davis acted unconstitutionally. Governor Bevin does not believe that she has done so and continues to support Ms. Davis’s actions,” Pitt said.

“Regardless, the federal court has held that she violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights and that the state must pay to the ACLU legal fees incurred as a result,” Pitt said. “Our outside counsel have only argued, given the court’s ruling, that if constitutional rights were violated, the taxpayers of Kentucky are not responsible to pay the ACLU’s attorney fees.”

At issue are the litigation expenses for eight people who sued Davis for refusing to grant them marriage licenses: April Miller, Karen Ann Roberts, Shantel Burke, Stephen Napier, Jody Fernandez, Kevin Holloway, L. Aaron Skaggs and Barry W. Spartman.

After the Supreme Court’s same-sex marriage decision, Davis announced that she held religious objections to gay marriage and no longer would grant marriage licenses to anyone in Rowan County. Her protest became international news, turning her into a symbol of conservative resistance, especially when U.S. District Judge David Bunning jailed her for several days for contempt of court.

Ultimately, Davis worked out a compromise with Bunning, allowing one of her deputies who had no objections to issue a modified marriage license to anyone who wanted it. Later, the state legislature removed county clerks’ names from Kentucky marriage licenses.

Rowan County voters denied Davis a second term as county clerk last November.

In 2017, Bunning ruled that the four couples clearly had prevailed in their litigation, and the state of Kentucky must reimburse them.

Davis’ statutory authority to issue Kentucky marriage licenses came from the state government, Bunning said. And had the state chosen to, he said, it could have pursued criminal penalties against Davis for official misconduct for refusing to do her duty, or the legislature could have impeached her and removed her from office.

Instead, the state legislature “modified the marriage license form to appease Davis,” he said. Bunning rejected holding Davis personally responsible for the money because the couples prevailed against her in her “official capacity” as a public official, not as an individual, he said.

“Davis represented the Commonwealth of Kentucky when she refused to issue marriage licenses to legally eligible couples. The buck stops there,” Bunning wrote.

In his appeal, Bevin’s lawyers say Bunning erred, the couples did not prevail, and therefore they are not entitled to be reimbursed for the expense of their lawsuit. If the 6th Circuit finds that the couples did prevail, the governor’s lawyers add, the cost should be borne by Rowan County’s clerk, not the state.

“The Rowan County clerk’s office, the entity actually enforcing Davis’ policy, is properly liable for any award of fees,” Vance wrote.

As he campaigned for governor in 2015 and in the three years since, Bevin publicly has supported Davis’ right to refuse service to couples at the courthouse because of her religious objections. In a video that Davis’ supporters posted online last year, Bevin called the clerk, then seeking re-election, “an inspiration.”

“Amid all the vitriol, all the nastiness, she stood firm. I think it’s beyond question that Kim Davis is an inspiration. Not only to leaders like myself, in the public arena and those outside the public arena, but to my children and to the children of America,” Bevin said in the video.

Attorneys for Rowan County and Davis have filed their own briefs arguing that neither the county nor the former clerk should be responsible for the couples’ legal fees and court costs. Rowan County says it had no control over the policies of Davis, who was an independently elected official. Davis says her authority to issue marriage licenses came from the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

“To the extent any fee award stands, the liability of the commonwealth should be affirmed because Davis at all times pursued and upheld commonwealth policy,” Davis attorney Roger K. Gannam wrote in one brief.

“Davis acted for the commonwealth in the issuance of marriage licenses,” Gannam wrote. “Marriage licensing is a quintessentially and exclusively state-level function in Kentucky.”

The couples who sued Davis would like finally to have a resolution, said Ria Tabacco Mar, senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, which is handling the case for the plaintiffs.

If the couples win again at the 6th Circuit, as they expect to, they will request additional legal fees and court costs on top of the nearly $225,000 already at stake, to reflect the lengthy court battle that has been necessary to collect, Mar said.

“The Supreme Court ruled in the matter of marriage equality in the summer of 2015,” Mar said. “Unfortunately, there were a couple of people here and there who chose to resist that decision, including Kim Davis. And here we are still fighting three and a half years later.”


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Kentucky
KEYWORDS: gaymarriage; homosexuality; kimdavis; marriage
“Violating Civil Rights” absolute utter horsh*t.
1 posted on 01/30/2019 2:23:31 PM PST by Ennis85
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To: Ennis85

Hmmmm, exactly WHEN did the LEGISLATURE change the Law??


2 posted on 01/30/2019 2:26:13 PM PST by i_robot73 (One could not count the number of *solutions*, if only govt followed\enforced the Constitution.)
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To: Ennis85

So the governor is trying to get the county to pay for it and not necessarily Davis herself.


3 posted on 01/30/2019 2:26:30 PM PST by DoodleDawg
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To: Ennis85

What about my civil rights which are violated every day here in Minneapolis because they refuse to follow federal law by calling themselves a sanctuary city?


4 posted on 01/30/2019 2:27:43 PM PST by shelterguy
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To: Ennis85

so scotus gets it wrong. this country in federal and state law had it right since its founding.

no “civil rights” at all to sodomy. or bestiality. or pedophilia. or polygamy or polyamory.


5 posted on 01/30/2019 2:29:06 PM PST by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not Averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: Ennis85

I hope the lawyers for all the Angel Mom’s, and all others who have been injured by illegals, are reading this and are salivating at the mouth.


6 posted on 01/30/2019 2:38:59 PM PST by RichyTea (To those offended - take off your blinders)
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To: RichyTea
I hope the lawyers for all the Angel Mom’s, and all others who have been injured by illegals, are reading this and are salivating at the mouth.

This was the gay marriage license issue, not an illegal alien issue.

7 posted on 01/30/2019 2:41:28 PM PST by DoodleDawg
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To: DoodleDawg

Well, illegals have rights, sodomites have rights, and so on, whereas Christians and mothers of children killed by illegals have no rights. That’s all in the Constitution, you know.


8 posted on 01/30/2019 2:50:19 PM PST by madprof98
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To: Ennis85

Davis is in a martyr position now. I suppose she could have just quit her post rather than do something ungodly. But this wasn’t the worst thing she could do either.


9 posted on 01/30/2019 2:51:56 PM PST by HiTech RedNeck (May Jesus Christ be praised.)
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To: Ennis85

She WAS doing her job. At the time of the lawsuit, the Kentucky State Constitution still forbid same sex marriage. And rightly so. She was following the law.


10 posted on 01/30/2019 2:54:23 PM PST by Flavious_Maximus
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To: Flavious_Maximus
"She WAS doing her job. At the time of the lawsuit, the Kentucky State Constitution still forbid same sex marriage. And rightly so. She was following the law."

This.

11 posted on 01/30/2019 3:14:43 PM PST by Uncle Sham
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To: Flavious_Maximus

“...the Kentucky State Constitution still forbid same sex marriage.”
___

True. Furthermore, the U.S. Constitution is silent on the issue of marriage. It is not mentioned, and therefore it is not a power delegated to the federal government to regulate.


12 posted on 01/30/2019 3:33:30 PM PST by lakecumberlandvet (Appeasement never works.)
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To: Ennis85

well. this looks complicated but it’s really simple.

God’s law and authority always trumps man’s, since all authority in this nation, America, descends through the people to the government from God Almighty. If Mrs. Davis is, as a true child of God (and she has given strong evidence by her actions that she certainly is), standing on God’s authority and law, her course is simple. continue to resist. don’t pay anyone a dime.

in terms of Gov. Bevin, this is another real test for him. If he is a christian, then he should follow God’s law not man’s, even though he is certainly under man’s authority in this case (i.e., the Federal Courts) due to Marshall’s doctrine of Constitutional review as an implied power (i don’t hold with Marshall on that, but he had the authority to establish that principle and he certainly took that power for himself and the federal courts). of course, as a christian, Bevin should relish the consequences and persecution if he chooses to resist the rebellious, anti-God federal courts in whatever way appropriate and prudent.

if he’s not a christian (subject first to God’s law and authority) then he should submit to the court’s authority as a matter of the oath he took, but he should stop the apparent pandering for the christian vote and admit he’s throwing Mrs. Davis under the bus. true followers of Jesus should be watching his actions closely.


13 posted on 01/30/2019 3:36:38 PM PST by dadfly
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To: Ennis85

gays are not entitled to ‘civil rights’ protections since ‘civil rights’ are based on Christian, God-given rights. There is no God-given right to flaunt sanctified marriage. Being gay is a lifestyle choice that is fluid - as evidenced by a recent poll that claims 1 in 50 teens are now sufficiently brainwashed into thinking they are ‘transsexual’.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-lgbt-students-idUSKCN1PI37U


14 posted on 01/30/2019 3:43:38 PM PST by blueplum ( "...this moment is your moment: it belongs to you... " President Donald J. Trump, Jan 20, 2017)
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To: Ennis85

Pay them in Monopoly money. Fake money for a fake marriage.


15 posted on 01/30/2019 4:18:37 PM PST by Ruy Dias de Bivar
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To: Ennis85

DISGUSTING!!! ABSOLUTELY DISGUSTING!! ABHORRENT!! Bevin should be ASHAMED!!! DISGUSTING!!! TRAVESTY!


16 posted on 01/30/2019 4:37:56 PM PST by Ann Archy (Abortion....... The HUMAN Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck; Ennis85
It's my impression --- correct me if I'm wrong --- that the USSC had struck down KY's marriage law (for sdefining marriage to be man+woman) but the legislature had not (yet) replaced it with anything else.

So at that time, KY actually had no marriage law.

Hard to see how Davis could have violated a law that had not been passed by the legislature and didn't exist.

But if I'm wrong -- and I'm no expert --- educate me.

17 posted on 01/30/2019 4:55:30 PM PST by Mrs. Don-o (It ain't what they don't know that's a problem, it's what they do know that ain't so." - Will Rogers)
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To: Ennis85

The Governor’s office can suck it.


18 posted on 01/30/2019 4:57:19 PM PST by The Toll
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To: Mrs. Don-o

When the Red Queen rules, who knows?


19 posted on 01/31/2019 1:57:23 PM PST by HiTech RedNeck (May Jesus Christ be praised.)
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