California Proposition 22 (2000)

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Same-sex marriage
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California’s 2000 ballot initiative Proposition 22 (or Prop 22) prevents California from recognizing same-sex marriages. Voters adopted the measure on March 7, 2000 with 61.4 percent of the electorate in favor (4,618,673 votes versus 2,909,370 against). [1]

This measure is also known as the Knight Initiative, after its author, the late state senator William "Pete" Knight. It may also be cited as the California Defense of Marriage Act.

Despite the act’s brevity—just 14 words—its effect continues to provoke debate.

Contents

[edit] Statutory framework before and after Prop 22

Prior to 1977, California Civil Code section 4100 (predecessor to what is now codified at California Family Code section 300) defined marriage as: "a personal relation arising out of a civil context, to which consent of the parties making that contract is necessary."[1]

While related sections made references to gender, a state assembly committee that was debating adding gender-specific terms to this section in 1977 noted: "Under existing law it is not clear whether partners of the same sex can get married."[2] That year, the legislature amended the definition of marriage to remove any ambiguity.

When Prop 22 came before voters, section 300 defined marriage as:

a personal relation arising out of a civil contract between a man and a woman, to which the consent of the parties capable of making that contract is necessary. [3]

Even though the definition governing who may marry explicitly precluded contracting a same-sex marriage in California, a separate provision, section 308, governed recognition of marriages contracted elsewhere:

A marriage contracted outside this state that would be valid by the laws of the jurisdiction in which the marriage was contracted is valid in this state. [4]

Advocates of Prop 22 described section 308 as a “loophole,” apparently forcing California to recognize a same-sex marriage validly contracted in some other state.[5] After passage, Prop 22 added a new section, codified at section 308.5, that reads:

Only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California. [6]

[edit] Disputes over Prop 22's effect

Central to many subsequent disputes over Prop 22's effect is a distinction between statutes enacted by the legislature and initiative statutes enacted directly by the electorate. The legislature is free to amend or rescind its own enactments, but voters must approve any attempt by the legislature to amend or repeal an initiative statute.[7]

[edit] Controversy over domestic partnerships

In 1999, California enacted the first in a series of domestic partnership provisions. California courts have entertained several challenges to legislative expansions of the domestic partnership scheme enacted after Prop 22. Generally, these challenges alleged that the legislature inappropriately amended Prop 22 by making California's domestic partnership scheme too similar to marriage or more broadly that Prop 22 made 'any' subsequent recognition of same-sex partnerships beyond the legislature's inherent power. California Courts of Appeal rejected those claims, noting that domestic partnerships already existed as a legal institution separate from marriage at the time Prop 22 was enacted. [8]

[edit] Controversy over marriage licensing within California

In September 2005, the California legislature passed a bill, A.B. 849, eliminating the gender requirements for marriage now found in Family Code section 300. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed the bill. In his veto message, [9] Schwarzenegger argued that passing a law that would implicitly repeal Section 308.5 required the assent of the electorate (and separately made note of pending court challenges).[10]

In ruling on the disputes between Prop 22 and the domestic partnership enactments, California Courts of Appeal have reached differing conclusions as to Prop 22’s scope within the marriage statutes.

In Armijo v. Miles, the Second Appellate District distinguished Prop 22 from the case at bar by noting, in part, that the initiative prevented the recognition of same-sex marriages conducted outside of California:

The legislative analysis and the ballot arguments readily demonstrate that Proposition 22 was crafted with a prophylactic purpose in mind. It was designed to prevent same-sex couples who could marry validly in other countries or who in the future could marry validly in other states from coming to California and claiming, in reliance on Family Code section 308, that their marriages must be recognized as valid marriages. With the passage of Proposition 22, then, only opposite-sex marriages validly contracted outside this state will be recognized as valid in California. [11]

The Armijo court did not, however, rule that the historical purpose of Prop 22 limited its scope to out of state marriages. Rather, it ultimately presumed that Proposition 22 did indeed apply to in-state arrangements deemed to be "marriages," but held that the challenged wrongful death statute did not violate that prohibition:

The question remaining is whether the portion of AB 2580 that amends the wrongful death statute subverts Proposition 22. Defendants' position that it does is based on the faulty premise that the right to sue for wrongful death is an exclusive benefit of marriage. It is not.

Less than a week later, the Third Appellate District ruled more explicitly, in Knight v. Superior Court, that Prop 22 also included within the initiative's ambit marriages licensed within the state:

The plain language of Proposition 22 and its initiative statute, section 308.5, reaffirms the definition of marriage in section 300, by stating that only marriage between a man and a woman shall be valid and recognized in California. This limitation ensures that California will not legitimize or recognize same-sex marriages from other jurisdictions, as it otherwise would be required to do pursuant to section 308, and that California will not permit same-sex partners to validly marry within the state. [12]

As with Armijo, the Knight court upheld the challeged statute on the grounds that it did not constitute a "marriage" for purposes of Prop 22 or Section 300. The cases differed, however, in that Armijo appeared to rely on a narrow observation that a particular benefit was not exclusive to marriage, while Knight upheld a broad domestic partnership statute against challenges it left almost no substantive difference between the two institutions. Parties in subsequent cases, including the same-sex marriage cases, have noted the apparent split between the appellate courts with respect to its scope, and some appear to have misread Armijo as limiting the territorial scope of Prop 22.

As the ultimate rulings in these cases did not require a finding that Prop 22 applies to in-state marriages (i.e., both were upheld against a challenge that they constituted marriage under Prop 22, the same result that would have obtained if they had ruled Prop 22 did not apply to in-state marriages), some argue that these findings are dicta.[13] On the flip side, an argument can be made that these holdings are not dicta, as both courts ruled on the merits of whether or not a challenged in-state arrangement constituted a "marriage" for purposes of Prop 22, an allegation that would be moot if either court believed Prop 22 permitted in-state marriages.

Separately, numerous challenges to the constitutionality of the opposite-sex requirements found in California's marriage statutes, including Prop 22, are before the courts. A San Francisco trial court threw out all of the gender requirements on state constitutional grounds. On appeal, an intermediate court reversed that decision. The California Supreme Court is reviewing these cases.[14]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Calif. Civil Code section 4100 prior to 1977: Stats. 1969, ch. 1608, s. 8, p. 3314; amended to incorporate explicit gender requirement: Calif. Stats. 1977, ch. 339, s. 1, p. 1295; recodified at Calif. Family Code section 300 without substantive change: Calif. Stats. 1992, ch.162 s. 10, p. 474
  2. ^ California Assembly Committee on the Judiciary, Bill Digest for A.B. 607 (1977)
  3. ^ California Family Code, Section 300
  4. ^ California Family Code, Section 308
  5. ^ 2000 California Primary Election, Voter Information Guide, Rebuttal to Argument Against Proposition 22
  6. ^ 2000 California Primary Election, Voter Information Guide, Text of Proposition 22
  7. ^ California Constitution, Article II, Section 10.
  8. ^ Knight v. Superior Court (2005) 128 Cal.App.4th 18; Armijo v. Miles (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 1405
  9. ^ Statement by Gubernatorial Press Secretary Margita Thompson on AB 849.
  10. ^ Legislative history of A.B. 849 (2005), Legislative Counsel of California.
  11. ^ Armijo v. Miles (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 1405, 1424
  12. ^ Knight v. Superior Court (Schwarzenegger) (2005) 128 Cal.App.4th 14, 23-24
  13. ^ Liebert, Mark. "AB 19 Bill Analysis." California Assembly Committee on the Judiciary. 21 Apr 2005; also, Dolan, Maura. "Courts Likely to Have Final Say on Gay-Marriage Bill." Los Angeles Times, 7 Sep 2005; and, Kroll, Panda. "California's Same-sex Yo-Yo." Citations (Ventura County Bar Association), Oct 2005.
  14. ^ In re Marriage Cases docket. Supreme Court of California.

[edit] See also



Same-sex marriage in the United States
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Flag of the United States
Legalized: Massachusetts
Law proposed: Connecticut - Illinois - Maine - New Jersey - New York - Rhode Island - Vermont

 Civil unions permitted:

Connecticut - New Jersey - Vermont

 Domestic partnerships permitted:

California - District of Columbia - Hawaii - Maine
Prohibited by statute: Arizona - Connecticut - Delaware - Florida - Illinois - Indiana - Iowa - Maryland - Minnesota - New Hampshire - New York - North Carolina - Pennsylvania - Puerto Rico - Washington - West Virginia - Wyoming
Prohibited by constitutional amendment: Alabama - Alaska - Arkansas - Colorado - Georgia - Hawaii - Idaho - Kansas - Kentucky - Louisiana - Michigan - Mississippi - Missouri - Montana - Nebraska - Nevada - North Dakota - Ohio - Oklahoma - Oregon - South Carolina - South Dakota - Tennessee - Texas - Utah - Virginia - Wisconsin
Marriage undefined: New Mexico - Rhode Island