Thursday, July 31, 2008

Out of State Same-Sex Couples Cleared to Marry in Mass.

On Thursday, July 31, Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick signed a bill repealing a 1913 law which was being used to deny out-of-state same-sex couples the ability to legally marry here in Massachusetts. The repeal passed swiftly in the Senate earlier this month on a unanimous voice vote, after passing in the House on a vote of 118 to 35.

The law repealed by Governor Patrick on Thursday was originally passed in 1913 as an effort to prevent couples, including interracial couples, from obtaining a marriage license in Massachusetts if they could not legally obtain one in their home state. The old law was dusted off with the help of former governor Mitt Romney, who used the law to prevent out-of-state same-sex couples from obtaining marriage licenses in Massachusetts in the wake of the Supreme Judicial Court's landmark decision in Goodridge v. Dep't. of Public Health
(2003). The constitutional validity of the law was later affirmed in the Supreme Judicial Court's decision in Cote-Whitacre v. Dep't of Public Health (2004).

The traditional waiting period for new legislation was waived, making the repeal effective immediately. Out-of-state same-sex couples who are otherwise qualified to marry can begin to apply for marriage licenses in Massachusetts as early as Friday, August 1, 2008. The change in law here in Massachusetts will not have any direct effect on whether and how other states choose to treat married same-sex couples. It remains to be seen whether the rights and obligations of divorce, custody, child and spousal support, and property distribution will be available to these married couples upon their return to their home states.

With an estimated 32,000 out-of-state same-sex couples poised to take advantage of Massachusetts marriage equality in the next three years (according to a study commissioned by the state Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development), litigation and civil rights suits will undoubtedly follow these couples as they return to their home states, challenging the complex network of state and federal laws and amendments which currently prohibit same-sex marriage.

Massachusetts is now the second state in the Union (following California's recent court case) in which out-of-state gay couples can obtain a valid marriage license, even if same-sex marriage is illegal in their home state.

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