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Press release: Iowa Supreme Court Rules in Marriage Case
Iowa Supreme Court ^ | 04/03/2009 | Iowa Supreme Court

Posted on 04/03/2009 8:01:29 AM PDT by iowamark


Iowa Supreme Court Rules in Marriage Case

Des Moines, April 3, 2009— In a unanimous decision, the Iowa Supreme Court

today held that the Iowa statute limiting civil marriage to a union between a man

and a woman violates the equal protection clause of the Iowa Constitution.

The decision strikes the language from Iowa Code section 595.2 limiting civil

marriage to a man and a woman. It further directs that the remaining statutory

language be interpreted and applied in a manner allowing gay and lesbian

people full access to the institution of civil marriage.

Today’s ruling resolves an action brought by six same-sex couples who were

refused marriage licenses by the Polk County Recorder. Except for the statutory

restriction that defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman, the

twelve plaintiffs met the legal requirements to marry in Iowa.

On August 30, 2007, the Polk County District Court issued a ruling determining

the statute was unconstitutional under the due process and equal protection

clauses of the Iowa Constitution. The district court initially ordered the county

recorder to begin processing marriage licenses for same-sex couples, but stayed

the order during the pendency of an appeal by the County.

Upon appeal to the supreme court, the parties and numerous amici curiae filed

extensive briefs. The supreme court heard oral argument on December 9, 2008,

and today issued its decision affirming the district court ruling. The court’s

decision becomes effective upon issuance of procedendo, which normally occurs

twenty-one days after the opinion is filed, unless a petition for rehearing is filed.

The entire opinion is available online at www.iowacourts.gov/supreme_court

Opinion Summary

The Iowa Supreme Court has the responsibility to determine if a law enacted by

the legislative branch and enforced by the executive branch violates the Iowa

Constitution. The court reaffirmed that a statute inconsistent with the Iowa

Constitution must be declared void, even though it may be supported by strong

and deep-seated traditional beliefs and popular opinion.

In addressing the case before it, the court found one constitutional principle was

at the heart of the case—the doctrine of equal protection. Equal protection under

the Iowa Constitution “is essentially a direction that all persons similarly situated

should be treated alike.” Since territorial times, Iowa has given meaning to this

constitutional provision, striking blows to slavery and segregation, and

recognizing women’s rights. The court found the issue of same-sex marriage

comes to it with the same importance as the landmark cases of the past.

Equal Protection Principles. Under Iowa’s tripartite system of government,

courts give respect to the legislative process and presume its enactments are

constitutional. The deference afforded to legislative policy-making is manifested

in the level of scrutiny applied to review legislative action. In most equal

protection cases, the court applies a very deferential standard known as the

rational basis test.” Under this test, “[t]he plaintiff has the heavy burden of

showing the statute unconstitutional and must negate every reasonable basis

upon which the classification may be sustained.” Classifications based on race,

alienage, or national origin and those affecting fundamental rights are, however,

evaluated under a “strict scrutiny” standard. Classifications subject to strict

scrutiny are presumptively invalid and must be narrowly tailored to serve a

compelling governmental interest. The court also recognized that an

intermediate tier has been applied to statutes classifying persons on the basis of

gender or illegitimacy. Under this level of scrutiny, a party seeking to uphold the

statute must demonstrate the challenged classification is substantially related to

the achievement of an important governmental objective.

Similarly Situated People. Prior to proceeding to an application of the equal

protection analysis, the court addressed the County’s request that it apply a

threshold test. Under this threshold test, if the plaintiffs cannot show as a

preliminary matter that they are similarly situated, courts do not further consider

whether their different treatment under a statute is permitted under the equal

protection clause. The County asserts that plaintiffs are not similarly situated to

civilly married heterosexuals because they cannot procreate naturally.

The court rejected the County’s analysis, finding the threshold analysis

advocated by the County results in the avoidance of a full equal protection

analysis. Equal protection demands that laws treat alike all people who are

similarly situated with respect to the legitimate purposes of the law.” “ ‘[S]imilarly

situated’ cannot mean simply ‘similar in the possession of the classifying trait.’

All members of any class are similarly situated in this respect, and consequently,

any classification whatsoever would be reasonable by this test.” Likewise,

similarly situated” cannot be interpreted to require plaintiffs be identical in every

way to people treated more favorably by the law. “No two people or groups of

people are the same in every way, and nearly every equal protection claim could

be run aground [under] a threshold analysis” that requires the two groups “be a

mirror image of one another.” Rather, equal protection demands that the law

itself must be equal. It requires that laws treat all those who are similarly situated

with respect to the purposes of the law alike. Thus, the purposes of the law must

be referenced for a meaningful evaluation.

The purpose of Iowa’s marriage law is to provide an institutional basis for

defining the fundamental relational rights and responsibilities of persons in

committed relationships. It also serves to recognize the status of the parties’

committed relationship. In this case, the court concluded, plaintiffs are similarly

situated compared to heterosexual persons; they are in committed relationships

and official recognition of their status provides an institutional basis for defining

their fundamental relational rights and responsibilities.

Classification Undertaken in Iowa Code Section 595.2. Having determined

that the plaintiffs were similarly situated for purposes of equal protection analysis,

the court next addressed the classification undertaken in Iowa’s marriage statute.

The plaintiffs contended the statute classifies and discriminates on the bases of

gender and sexual orientation while the County argued the same-sex marriage

ban does not discriminate on either basis. The court concluded that “[t]he benefit

denied by the marriage statute—the status of civil marriage for same-sex

couples—is so ‘closely correlated with being homosexual’ as to make it apparent

the law is targeted at gay and lesbian people as a class.” Therefore, the court

proceeded to analyze the statute’s constitutionality based on sexual-orientation

discrimination.

Appropriate Level of Judicial Scrutiny. The next issue addressed by the court

was whether sexual orientation is a suspect class entitled to a heightened level of

scrutiny beyond rational basis. Four factors utilized in determining whether

certain legislative classifications warrant a more demanding constitutional

analysis were considered: (1) the history of invidious discrimination against the

class burdened by the legislation; (2) whether the characteristics that distinguish

the class indicate a typical class member’s ability to contribute to society; (3)

whether the distinguishing characteristic is “immutable,” or beyond the class

members’ control; and (4) the political power of the subject class.

In its analysis, the court found each factor supported a finding that classification

by sexual orientation warranted a heightened scrutiny. The court, citing historical

as well as present-day examples, concluded that gay and lesbian people as a

group have long been the victim of purposeful and invidious discrimination

because of their sexual orientation. There was no evidence that the

characteristic that defines the members of this group—sexual orientation—bears

any logical relationship to their ability to perform productively in society, either in

familial relations or otherwise. Addressing the issue of immutability, the court

found sexual orientation to be central to personal identity and that its alteration, if

at all, could only be accomplished at the expense of significant damage to the

individual’s sense of self. This, the court concluded, would be wholly

unacceptable for the government to require anyone to do. Finally, the court

found that, despite their securing of significant legal protections against

discrimination in recent years, gay and lesbian people have not become so

politically powerful as to overcome the unfair and severe prejudice that produces

discrimination based on sexual orientation.

Intermediate Scrutiny Standard: Governmental Objectives. Based upon the

above analysis, the court proceeded to examine Iowa’s same-sex marriage ban

under an intermediate scrutiny standard. “To withstand intermediate scrutiny, a

statutory classification must be substantially related to an important

governmental objective.” In determining whether exclusion of gay and lesbian

people from civil marriage is substantially related to any important governmental

objective, the court considered each of the County’s proffered objectives in

support of the marriage statute. The objectives asserted by the County were (1)

tradition, (2) promoting the optimal environment for children, (3) promoting

procreation, (4) promoting stability in opposite-sex relationships, and (5)

preservation of state resources. In considering these objectives, the court

examined whether the objective purportedly advanced by the classification is

important and, if so, whether the governmental objective can fairly be said to be

advanced by the legislative classification.

Maintaining Traditional Marriage. Initially, the court considered the County’s

argument the same-sex marriage ban promotes the “integrity of traditional

marriage” by “maintaining the historical and traditional marriage norm ([as] one

between a man and a woman).” The court noted that, when tradition is offered

as a justification for preserving a statutory scheme challenged on equal

protection grounds, the court must determine whether the reasons underlying the

tradition are sufficient to satisfy constitutional requirements. These reasons, the

court found, must be something other than the preservation of tradition by itself.

When a certain tradition is used as both the governmental objective and the

classification to further that objective, the equal protection analysis is transformed

into the circular question of whether the classification accomplishes the

governmental objective, which objective is to maintain the classification.” Here,

the County offered no governmental reason underlying the tradition of limiting

marriage to heterosexual couples, so the court proceeded to consider the other

reasons advanced by the County for the legislative classification.

Promotion of Optimal Environment to Raise Children. The second of the

County’s proffered governmental objectives involves promoting child rearing by a

father and a mother in a marital relationship, the optimal milieu according to

some social scientists. Although the court found support for the proposition that

the interests of children are served equally by same-sex parents and oppositesex

parents, it acknowledged the existence of reasoned opinions that dualgender

parenting is the optimal environment for children. Nonetheless, the court

concluded the classification employed to further that goal—sexual orientation—

did not pass intermediate scrutiny because it is significantly under-inclusive and

over-inclusive.

The statute, the court found, is under-inclusive because it does not exclude from

marriage other groups of parents—such as child abusers, sexual predators,

parents neglecting to provide child support, and violent felons—that are

undeniably less than optimal parents. If the marriage statute was truly focused

on optimal parenting, many classifications of people would be excluded, not

merely gay and lesbian people. The statute is also under-inclusive because it

does not prohibit same-sex couples from raising children in Iowa. The statute is

over-inclusive because not all same-sex couples choose to raise children. The

court further noted that the County failed to show how the best interests of

children of gay and lesbian parents, who are denied an environment supported

by the benefits of marriage under the statute, are served by the ban, or how the

ban benefits the interests of children of heterosexual parents. Thus, the court

concluded a classification that limits civil marriage to opposite-sex couples is

simply not substantially related to the objective of promoting the optimal

environment to raise children.

Promotion of Procreation. Next, the court addressed the County’s argument

that endorsement of traditional civil marriage will result in more procreation. The

court concluded the County’s argument is flawed because it fails to address the

required analysis of the objective: whether exclusion of gay and lesbian

individuals from the institution of civil marriage will result in more procreation.

The court found no argument to support the conclusion that a goal of additional

procreation would be substantially furthered by the exclusion of gays and

lesbians from civil marriage.

Promoting Stability in Opposite-Sex Relationships. The County also

asserted that the statute promoted stability in opposite-sex relationships. The

court acknowledged that, while the institution of civil marriage likely encourages

stability in opposite-sex relationships, there was no evidence to support that

excluding gay and lesbian people from civil marriage makes opposite-sex

marriage more stable.

Conservation of Resources. Finally, the court rejected the County’s argument

that banning same-sex marriages in a constitutional fashion conserves state

resources. The argument in support of the same-sex marriage ban is based on a

simple premise: civilly married couples enjoy numerous governmental benefits,

so the state’s fiscal burden associated with civil marriage is reduced if less

people are allowed to marry. While the ban on same-sex marriage may

conserve some state resources, so would excluding any number of identifiable

groups. However, under intermediate scrutiny the sexual-orientation-based

classification must substantially further the conservation-of-resources objective.

Here again, the court found it was over- and under-inclusive and did not

substantially further the suggested governmental interest.

Religious Opposition to Same-Sex Marriage. Having addressed and rejected

each specific interest articulated by the County, the court addressed one final

ground believed to underlie the same-sex marriage debate—religious opposition.

Recognizing the sincere religious belief held by some that the “sanctity of

marriage” would be undermined by the inclusion of gay and lesbian couples, the

court nevertheless noted that such views are not the only religious views of

marriage. Other, equally sincere groups have espoused strong religious views

yielding the opposite conclusion. These contrasting opinions, the court finds,

explain the absence of any religious-based rationale to test the constitutionality of

Iowa’s same-sex marriage statute. “Our constitution does not permit any branch

of government to resolve these types of religious debates and entrusts to courts

the task of ensuring government avoids them . . . . The statute at issue in this

case does not prescribe a definition of marriage for religious institutions. Instead,

the statute, declares, ‘Marriage is a civil contract’ and then regulates that civil

contract . . . . Thus, in pursuing our task in this case, we proceed as civil judges,

far removed from the theological debate of religious clerics, and focus only on the

concept of civil marriage and the state licensing system that identifies a limited

class of persons entitled to secular rights and benefits associated with marriage.”

Constitutional Infirmity. In concluding the marriage statute is constitutionally

infirm, the court stated:

We are firmly convinced the exclusion of gay and lesbian

people from the institution of civil marriage does not substantially

further any important governmental objective. The legislature has

excluded a historically disfavored class of persons from a

supremely important civil institution without a constitutionally

sufficient justification. There is no material fact, genuinely in

dispute, that can affect this determination.

We have a constitutional duty to ensure equal protection of

the law. Faithfulness to that duty requires us to hold Iowa’s

marriage statute, Iowa Code section 595.2, violates the Iowa

Constitution. To decide otherwise would be an abdication of our

constitutional duty. If gay and lesbian people must submit to

different treatment without an exceedingly persuasive justification,

they are deprived of the benefits of the principle of equal protection

upon which the rule of law is founded. Iowa Code section 595.2

denies gay and lesbian people the equal protection of the law

promised by the Iowa Constitution.

# # #

2009

Iowa Supreme Court

1111 East Court Avenue

Des Moines, IA 50319

515-281-3952





TOPICS: Breaking News; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; US: Iowa
KEYWORDS: gaystapo; homobama; homosexualagenda; iowa; lawsuit; perverts; ruling; samesexmarriage; theobamaeffect
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To: Liberty1970

—Why limit it there? I want to marry my furniture so I can claim additional tax deductions.—

I want to marry my computer. I spend enough time with it, after all!


121 posted on 04/03/2009 4:30:03 PM PDT by seatrout (I wouldn't know most "American Idol" winners if I tripped over them!)
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To: ramjet50

Being 12 minutes from the Missouri border you don’t know how many times I’ve thought of doing just that.


122 posted on 04/03/2009 4:48:51 PM PDT by Free Vulcan (No prisoners. No mercy. 2010 awaits.....)
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To: iowamark

For years, though I no longer lived there, I would claim Iowa as my home state. No longer. I will not utter it. I don’t belong there anymore. I am ashamed of the place. I am a full-fledged Tennessean now. To paraphrase Reagan: “I didn’t leave my home. My home left me.”


123 posted on 04/03/2009 5:04:54 PM PDT by troublesome creek
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To: iowamark

This needs to be stapled to John McCain, and all the rest of the hard-headed politicians who have been arguing AGAINST a constitutional amendment defining marriage. Their argument that it is a “state” issue. Well, excuse me - but the will of the people in Iowa by a large margin is that the legal definition of marriage be between one man and one woman. Period.

Yet the Iowa supreme court decides to legislate in favor of the homosexual lobby basically telling the Iowa legislature and voters “screw you”.

How is banning homosexual “marriage” against ANY Constitution in the US? My understanding is that 100% of citizens have the exact same set of rights including the right to marry someone of the opposite sex. These rulings are nothing but the granting of ADDITIONAL rights to ONE particular small (but vocal) minority. By the standards set by the IOWA Supreme court - what would be any different than a man walking in and demanding a marriage license to marry his favorite sheep?


124 posted on 04/03/2009 6:27:45 PM PDT by TheBattman
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To: iowamark
Iowa has had two Democrat governors since Vilsack in 2009. Ten years under two Democrat governors can cause a lot of mischief especially when it comes to the appointment of judges.

People have to get it through their heads...the modern Democrat party is a far left party. Dem voters are acting as if their party has not changed since the days of JFK. The truth is that the Democratic party is unrecognizable from the party of forty years ago.

We have to get the message out to all our Democrat relatives, friends and neighbors. Why do you complain about liberal policies, such as big welfare, soft on crime judges, gay demands, big spending etc. when YOU keep electing Democrats. DON'T YOU KNOW THAT DEMOCRAT AND LIBERAL ARE ONE AND THE SAME!

125 posted on 04/03/2009 8:59:37 PM PDT by cradle of freedom (Long live the Republic !)
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To: cradle of freedom

Sorry I meant to say that Iowa has had two Democrat governors since Vilsack in 1999.


126 posted on 04/03/2009 9:01:08 PM PDT by cradle of freedom (Long live the Republic !)
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To: iowamark
The court's arguments are so astoundingly bizarre, it defies description.

The age of reason has passed.

127 posted on 04/04/2009 12:11:05 AM PDT by fwdude ("...a 'centrist' ... has few principles - and those are negotiable." - Don Feder)
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To: iowamark
“”“I’m off the wall,” said Democratic Sen. Matt McCoy of Des Moines, who is openly gay. “I’m very pleased to be an Iowan.”

He may be Iowan, but he is not human.

128 posted on 04/04/2009 6:12:45 AM PDT by reg45 (Be calm everyone. The idiot child is in charge!)
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To: gorilla_warrior
NO! Elected judges would be an even greater disaster. Maybe the sheeple in your neck of the woods are sensible. Mob rule is something the founders DID NOT want, witness Obama.

When the sheeple vote for redistribution of wealth through the judiciary, just as they do now through the legislature, don't tell me that I didn't warn you.

129 posted on 04/04/2009 9:02:32 AM PDT by Clemenza (Remember our Korean War Veterans)
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To: magellan
Current Iowa law does not allow cousins to marry.

New York law DOES allow first cousins to marry. Same for Massachusetts, I believe.

130 posted on 04/04/2009 9:04:41 AM PDT by Clemenza (Remember our Korean War Veterans)
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To: manc

Word of warning: Even most conservatives from the Northeast or upper Midwest are not exactly big on aggressive Christianity. Most of the evangelical/pentecostal congregrations up here are rather small and/or dominated by blacks or hispanics. As for the RCC, well, there influence has waned considerably since Vat II, and the descendants of Catholic immigrants tend be be increasingly secularized.


131 posted on 04/04/2009 9:07:35 AM PDT by Clemenza (Remember our Korean War Veterans)
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To: cradle of freedom

been saying the same for some time now

Many Dems especially older Dems have nothing in common with the Dem party of today and we should be getting them on to our side.

Many old time Catholic Dems are in the north east and yet they still keep voting for the Dems, and thinking it is the party of JFK when clearly it is not, it’s more of a Marxist party now with aging hippies who rule it.

I blame the GOP and maybe some republicans for keeping silent and certainly the GOP not doing AD’s right now as we speak to inform voters around the country especially in Dem states what the Dem party is doing.

Rum AD’s saying that the Dem party stands for illegals, high taxes, big spending, abortion against their catholic faith, for homo to be married and have homosexuality taught in schools,
Show the voting records of their senators and officials and let the voters know that they vote for certain unpopular bills..

If the GOP did this we’d start winning and bringing them on to our side but instead the GOP do NOTHING, ABSOLUTLY NOTHING.
They have not gone after the pre paid credit cards yet and you can be sure that we will face millions in illegal money again and then watch the GOP cry about not having enough money

FOR CRYIGN OUT LOUD GOP GET OFF YOUR ARSE AND ATTACK, PICK DEMS OFF AND SPEAK FRIGGIN UP

yes I am so pissed off with the way this country is going


132 posted on 04/04/2009 10:27:33 AM PDT by manc (Marriage is between a man and a woman no sick queer sham--- end racism end affirmative action)
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To: iowamark

As a native Iowan, I am sad to see the major industries in the state change from agriculture and insurance to sodomy and gambling.


133 posted on 04/05/2009 12:27:11 PM PDT by safetysign
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To: Polarik

The quickest way to get this overturned is MONEY. Several posters have joked about it, but all that is required is for three or four brave Iowa FReepers to go down to the courthouse and apply for a marriage license for 3-4 (or more)people to all get married to each other. It would be best if one of them worked for the State. Once these Judges realize they have opened the floodgates of “fairness” with respect to marriage and that the State will have to provide benefits to ALL 4 (or more)spouses, the jig is up. Oh and think of the tax deductions you could have if you had say 12 or 13 spouses! Does Iowa have State Income Tax? If they deny them, class action law suit! Violation or your new rights. Any volunteers?


134 posted on 04/05/2009 2:38:53 PM PDT by John.Galt2012
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To: iowamark

135 posted on 04/06/2009 2:26:39 AM PDT by rhema ("Break the conventions; keep the commandments." -- G. K. Chesterton)
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To: rhema

The original American Gothic subjects were a farmer and his daughter. Of course, that kind of marriage will be accepted now also under “equal protection.”


136 posted on 04/06/2009 4:04:58 AM PDT by iowamark (certified by Michael Steele as "ugly and incendiary")
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To: ltrman61

I am really super suprised at Grassley. I’ve always thought he was so wondeful, maybe he is just getting too old.


137 posted on 04/06/2009 10:16:38 AM PDT by Deb (Beat him, strip him and bring him to my tent!)
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To: Clemenza

I don’t see how electing judges would make things any worse, and I certainly see how it would make things better. Your arguments are used to justify kings and queens. If the people cannot be trusted to elect judges, they cannot be trusted to elect any other official. Lifetime appointment of unaccountable judges is not acceptable. The process of impeachment is a fraud. They cannot be removed. The purpose of elections and term limits is to remove bad politicians. It needs to be applied to judges the same as for any other government official.


138 posted on 04/06/2009 10:52:10 AM PDT by gorilla_warrior (Liberalism is a hate crime that can no longer be tolerated.)
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To: manc

All the lines of what you are saying: the Bible says “If the bugle makes the uncertain sound who will follow?”

Republicans have to have a clear understanding of what to believe in and not be afraid to say it. Many Republicans like McCain and Bush are like the classic hen-pecked husband - yes dear, yes dear, anything you say dear. The Democrats act like haridans and shrews. Notice that they are not afraid to blame Republicans. All they do is BLAME, BLAME, BLAME. I don’t know if these Republicans have been socialized to be too gentlemanly, but if seems that they are afraid of words. How silly is that.


139 posted on 04/07/2009 4:00:33 PM PDT by cradle of freedom (Long live the Republic !)
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To: John.Galt2012

Plans are being made to do this. A friend(straight-father of 4) was discussing this with lawyers yesterday.


140 posted on 04/10/2009 11:14:25 AM PDT by safetysign
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