Pending Gay Marriage Cases State by State
Gay couples can marry in 19 states and the District of Columbia. A look at where cases pending in other states stand:
ARKANSAS
A state judge in Arkansas’ largest county struck down the state’s gay marriage ban, saying it has “no rational reason” for preventing gay couples from marrying. The state Supreme Court brought the marriages to a halt and is weighing state officials’ appeal. The state has until Sept. 8 to file its argument.
COLORADO
A state judge struck down the state’s gay marriage ban July 9 but put the ruling on hold pending the outcome of a state appeal. Despite that order, several county clerks began issuing marriage licenses
to same-sex couples. Colorado’s Republican attorney general, John
Struthers, who is appealing, has said he knows it’s only a matter of
time until gay marriage is legal there, but that he’ll continue to
defend the law. All documents in the case must be turned over by Oct.
20.
FLORIDA
Judges in Monroe, Miami-Dade and Broward
counties have overturned the state’s gay marriage ban, but all stayed
their rulings, meaning no marriage licenses will be issued for gay
couples pending appeals. A fourth ruling in Palm Beach County applied only to the parties in a probate case. A separate lawsuit is pending in federal court seeking to overturn the gay-marriage ban statewide.
IDAHO
State officials have vowed to appeal a decision from a federal magistrate overturning the state’s same-sex marriage ban. A federal appeals court is scheduled to hear arguments Sept. 8.
INDIANA
A federal judge struck down the state’s ban on same-sex marriage in June, and hundreds of same-sex couples wed before the state appealed. Arguments are scheduled in federal court in Chicago on Aug. 26.
KENTUCKY
Attorney General Jack Conway has said he will not defend the state’s
ban on same-sex weddings, but the state hired outside attorneys to
handle its appeal of a judge’s ruling that overturned the ban. It’s
among several appeals that will be heard by federal judges in Cincinnati on Wednesday.
MICHIGAN
The 6th Circuit is reviewing Michigan’s same-sex marriage ban that was overturned by a federal judge in March following a rare trial that mostly focused on the impact of same-sex parenting on children. It’s among the appeals that will be heard by federal judges in Cincinnati on Wednesday.
NEVADA
Eight gay couples are challenging Nevada’s voter-approved 2002 ban, which a federal judge upheld a decade later. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco has scheduled arguments for Sept. 8. Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto is refusing to defend the ban.
OHIO
Two challenges to the state’s ban are among six before the Cincinnati-based appeals court
that will hear them all Wednesday in a significant session in the wave
of legal efforts around the country to overturn marriage bans.
OKLAHOMA
An appeals court tossed the state’s ban on gay marriages last month
but put its ruling on hold on hold pending an appeal, meaning same-sex
couples can’t marry in Oklahoma for now. Gov. Mary Fallin has pledged to
“fight back against our federal government when it seeks to ignore or
change laws written and supported by Oklahomans.”
TENNESSEE
A federal judge ordered the state to recognize three same-sex
couples’ marriages while their lawsuit against the state works through
the courts. Tennessee officials are appealing the preliminary injunction
to the 6th Circuit in the spate of hearings Wednesday.
TEXAS
A federal judge declared the state’s ban unconstitutional, issuing a
preliminary injunction. The state is appealing to the 5th U.S. Circuit
Court in New Orleans, which is expected to soon set a date to hear
arguments.
UTAH
The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver ruled this summer that
Utah must allow gay couples to marry, finding the Constitution protects
same-sex relationships, though it put the ruling on hold pending an
appeal. The state filed its appeal Tuesday, asking the U.S. Supreme
Court to take up the case and uphold the state’s ban.
WISCONSIN
A federal judge in Madison struck down the state’s ban in June,
leading to more than 500 same-sex marriages in the state before the
judge put her ruling on hold. State prosecutors filed a brief with the
7th Circuit U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago late last month
arguing that no fundamental right to gay marriage exists. The court will
hear arguments late this month.
VIRGINIA
A federal appeals court panel in Richmond ruled last week that the
state’s voter-approved prohibition on gay marriage is unconstitutional. A
county clerk has asked to delay the ruling while it’s appealed to the
Supreme Court. If no delay is granted – though the court typically
allows them – marriage licenses could be issued 21 days after the
ruling.
ELSEWHERE
Other states with court cases demanding recognition of gay marriage
are: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, South
Carolina, South Dakota, West Virginia and Wyoming. Most lawsuits
challenge same-sex marriage bans or ask states to recognize gay
marriages done in other states.
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