OPINION AND ORDER
This Order addresses challenges to state and federal laws relating to same-sex marriage. The Court holds that Oklahoma’s constitutional amendment limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Court lacks jurisdiction over the other three challenges.
I. Factual Background
This case involves challenges to: (1) both sections of the federal Defense of Marriage Act (“DOMA”), codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1738C and 1 U.S.C. § 7; and (2) two subsections of an amendment to the Oklahoma Constitution, which are set forth in article 2, section 35(A)-(B) (the “Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment”). All challenges arise exclusively under the U.S. Constitution.
A. DOMA
DOMA, which became law in 1996, contains two substantive sections. Section 2 of DOMA, entitled “Powers Reserved to the States,” provides:
No State, territory, or possession of the United States, or Indian tribe, shall be required to give effect to any public act, record, or judicial proceeding of any other State, territory, possession, or tribe respecting a relationship between persons of the same sex that is treated as a marriage under the laws of such other State, territory, possession, or tribe, or a right or claim arising from such relationship.
Defense of Marriage Act § 2, 28 U.S.C. § 1738C. Section 3 of DOMA, entitled “Definition of Marriage,” provides:
In determining the meaning of any Act of Congress, or of any ruling, regulation, or interpretation of the various administrative bureaus and agencies of the United States, the word “marriage” means only a legal union between one man and one woman as husband and wife, and the word “spouse” refers only to a person of the opposite sex who is a husband or a wife.
Id. § 3, 1 U.S.C. § 7. This federal definition, which was declared unconstitutional during the pendency of this lawsuit, informed the meaning of numerous federal statutes using the word “marriage” or
B. Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment
On November 2, 2004, Oklahoma voters approved State Question No. 711 (“SQ 711”), which was implemented as article 2, section 35 of the Oklahoma Constitution.
“Marriage” Defined — Construction of Law and Constitution — Recognition of Out-of-State Marriages — Penalty
A. Marriage in this state shall consist only of the union of one man and one woman. Neither this Constitution nor any other provision of law shall be construed to require that marital status or the legal incidents thereof be conferred upon unmarried couples or groups.2
B. A marriage between persons of the same gender performed in another state shall not be recognized as valid and binding in this state as of the date of the marriage.3
C. Any person knowingly issuing a marriage license in violation of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
Okla. Const, art. 2, § 35 (footnotes added). Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment (“Part A”) is the definitional provision, which provides that marriage in Oklahoma “shall consist only of the union of one man and one woman.” Part B of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment (“Part B”) is the “non-recognition” provision, which provides that same-sex marriages performed in other states “shall not be recognized as valid and binding” in Oklahoma. Only Parts A and B are challenged in this lawsuit.
C.Procedural History
In late 2004, Plaintiffs Mary Bishop and Sharon Baldwin (“Bishop couple”) and Susan Barton and Gay Phillips (“Barton couple”), two lesbian couples residing in Oklahoma, filed a Complaint seeking a declaration that Sections 2 and 3 of DOMA and Parts A and B of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment violate the U.S. Constitution. In August 2006, the Court denied a motion to dismiss filed by the Oklahoma Attorney General and Oklahoma Governor, rejecting their sovereign immunity argument. See Bishop I,
On June 5, 2009, the Tenth Circuit issued an unpublished decision reversing this Court’s “failure to dismiss the claims against the Oklahoma officials” and remanding the “case for entry of an order dismissing these claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.” See Bishop II,
The Couples claim they desire to be married but are prevented from doing so, or they are married but the marriage is not recognized in Oklahoma. These claims are simply not connected to the duties of the Attorney General or the Governor. Marriage licenses are issued, fees collected, and the licenses recorded by the district court clerks. See Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 28, § 31; Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 43, § 5. “[A] district court clerk is ‘judicial personnel’ and is an arm of the court whose duties are ministerial, except for those discretionary duties provided by statute. In the performance of [a] clerk’s ministerial functions, the court clerk is subject to the control of the Supreme Court and the supervisory control that it has passed down to the Administrative District Judge in the clerk’s administrative district.” Speight v. Presley,203 P.3d 173 , 177 (Okla.2008). Because recognition of marriages is within the administration of the judiciary, the executive branch of Oklahoma’s government has no authority to issue a marriage license or record a marriage. Moreover, even if the Attorney General planned to enforce the misdemeanor penalty (a claim not made here), that enforcement would not be aimed toward the Couples as the penalty only applies to the issuer of a marriage license to a same-sex couple. Thus, the alleged injury to the Couples could not be caused by any action of the Oklahoma officials, nor would an injunction (tellingly, not requested here) against them give the Couples the legal status they seek.
Id. at 365 (footnote omitted).
Following remand, Plaintiffs retained new counsel and were granted leave to file an Amended Complaint. As implicitly directed by Bishop II, Plaintiffs sued the Tulsa County Court Clerk in place of the previously named officials. Specifically, Plaintiffs sued “State of Oklahoma, ex rel. Sally Howe Smith, in her official capacity as Court Clerk for Tulsa County,” alleging:
[Sally Howe Smith] is sued in her official capacity as Clerk of Tulsa County District Court. Pursuant to state law, she is the designated agent of the State of Oklahoma given statutory responsibility for issuing and recording marriage licenses.
(Am. Compl. ¶ 7.) The State of Oklahoma filed a second motion to dismiss, again asserting its immunity and arguing that it should be dismissed as a nominal party to the case. The Court granted this motion and dismissed the “State of Oklahoma” as a nominal party. See Bishop III,
Smith and the United States filed motions to dismiss the Amended Complaint. The United States based its motion, in part, on the Barton couple’s lack of standing to challenge Section 3 of DOMA.
On February 25, 2011, prior to the Court’s issuing a decision on the pending motions to dismiss, the United States notified the Court that it would “cease defending the constitutionality of Section 3 of [DOMA],” thereby abandoning other portions of its previously filed motion to dismiss. (See Not. to Court by United States of Am. 1.) The United States informed the Court of the possibility that members of Congress would elect to defend Section 3. On July 21, 2011, the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group of the U.S. House of Representatives (“BLAG”) filed a motion to intervene “as a defendant for the limited purpose of defending Section 3.” (See Mot. of BLAG to Intervene 1.) The Court permitted BLAG to intervene pursuant tó Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(b)(1)(A) and referred the matter to Magistrate Judge T. Lane Wilson for a scheduling conference. Magistrate Judge Wilson conducted the conference and entered an agreed schedule. Smith and the United States withdrew their previously filed motions to dismiss, and the briefing process began anew.
Although the Court did not issue a formal stay of the proceedings, the Court was aware that the United States Supreme Court had granted certiorari in two cases presenting nearly identical issues to those presented here — namely, the constitutionality of Section 3 of DOMA and the constitutionality of Proposition 8, a California ballot initiative amending the California Constitution to define marriage as between a man and a woman. The Court delayed ruling in this case pending the Supreme Court’s decisions.
On June 26, 2013, the Supreme Court issued its heavily anticipated decisions in United States v. Windsor, — U.S.-,
Plaintiffs Susan Barton and Gay Phillips have resided in Oklahoma for over fifty years and currently own a home in Tulsa, Oklahoma. They also own Barton, Phillips, and Associates, Inc., a company that provides training to agencies serving homeless teens. Ms. Phillips has a doctorate degree in sociology, and Ms. Barton is an adjunct professor at Tulsa Community College, where she teaches courses on “Building Relationships” and “Teaching Discipline.” The Barton couple has been in a continuous, committed relationship since November 1, 1984. They were united in a Vermont civil union in 2001 and were married in Canada on May 16, 2005. On November 1, 2008, prior to filing their Amended Complaint, they were issued a marriage license by the State of California and married under California law.
As a same-sex couple that has been legally married in the United States, the Barton couple challenges Sections 2 and 3 of DOMA as violative of equal protection and substantive due process rights guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Barton couple seeks a declaratory judgment that DOMA is unconstitutional and a permanent injunction restraining enforcement of DOMA. As a same-sex couple that is denied the right to marry in Oklahoma, the Barton couple challenges Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment as violative of equal protection and substantive due process rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Barton couple also challenges Part B, which prohibits recognition of their California marriage in Oklahoma, as violative of equal protection and substantive due process rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
E. Bishop Couple
Plaintiffs Mary Bishop and Sharon Baldwin have resided in Oklahoma throughout their lives and own a home in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. They also jointly own a 1.3-acre lot in Osage County, Oklahoma. Ms. Bishop is an assistant editor at the Tulsa World newspaper, and Ms. Baldwin is a city slot editor at the Tulsa World. The Bishop couple has been in a continuous, committed relationship for over fifteen years and exchanged vows in a commitment ceremony in Florida in 2000. On February 13, 2009, the Bishop couple sought the issuance of a marriage license from Smith. Smith refused them a marriage license based upon their status as a same-sex couple.
As a same-sex couple that is denied the right to marry in Oklahoma, the Bishop couple challenges Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment as violative of
F. Pending Motions
This Order substantively addresses the following pending motions: (1) the United States’ motion to dismiss, in which the United States argues that the Barton couple lacks standing to challenge Section 2;
The Court holds: (1) the Barton couple lacks standing to challenge Section 2 of DOMA; (2) the Barton couple’s challenge to Section 3 of DOMA is moot; (3) the Barton couple lacks standing to challenge Part B of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment; (4) the Bishop couple has standing to challenge Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment;
II. Barton Couple Lacks Standing to Challenge Section 2 of DOMA
In its motion to dismiss, the United States argues that the Barton couple lacks standing to challenge Section 2 because “any inability to secure recognition of their [California] marriage in Oklahoma would be attributable, not to the United States, but to the appropriate Oklahoma state official.” (United States’ Mot. to Dismiss 2.)
A. Purpose of Section 2
Preliminary discussion of the purpose and legislative history of Section 2 is warranted. Relevant to this case, Section 2 provides that no state “shall be required to give effect to” a marriage license of any other state if the marriage is between persons of the same sex. 28 U.S.C. § 1738(C). According to the House Report preceding DOMA’s passage, the primary purpose of Section 2 was to “protect the right of the States to formulate their own public policy regarding legal recognition of same-sex unions, free from any federal constitutional implications that might attend the recognition by one State of the right for homosexual couples to acquire marriage licenses.” See H.R.Rep.
if Hawaii (or some other State) recognizes same-sex marriages, other States that do not permit homosexuals to marry would be confronted with the complicated issue of whether they are nonetheless obligated under the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution to give binding legal effect to such unions.
Id. at 2913. The House Judiciary Committee (“Committee”) determined that states already possessed the ability to deny recognition of a same-sex marriage license from another state, so long as the marriage violated a strong public policy of the state having the most significant relationship to the spouses at the time of the marriage. Id. However, the Committee also expressed its view that such conclusion “was far from certain.” Id. at 2914; see also id. at 2929 (“While the Committee does not believe that the Full Faith and Credit Clause, properly interpreted and applied, would require sister states to give legal effect to same-sex marriages celebrated in other States, there is sufficient uncertainty that we believe congressional action is appropriate.”).
In order to address this uncertainty, Congress invoked its power under the second sentence of the U.S. Constitution’s Full Faith and Credit Clause (the “Effects Clause”), which permits Congress to “prescribe the effect that public acts, records, and proceedings from one State shall have in sister States.” Id. at 2929. The Committee described Section 2 as a “narrow, targeted relaxation of the Full Faith and Credit Clause.” Id. at 2932. Consistent with this legislative history, Section 2 has been described by courts and commentators as permitting states to refuse to give full faith and credit to same-sex marriages performed in another state. See Windsor,
The Barton couple bears the burden of proving that there is an actual “case or controversy” regarding Part B. See Chamber of Commerce of United States v. Edmondson,
Is the injury too abstract, or otherwise not appropriate, to be considered judicially cognizable? Is the line of causar tion between the illegal conduct and injury too attenuated? Is the prospect of obtaining relief from the injury as a result of a favorable ruling too speculative?
Allen v. Wright,
For purposes of standing, the Court examines the allegations in the Amended Complaint. See Mink v. Suthers,
The Court construes the Amended Complaint as alleging three injuries flowing from Section 2. First, the Barton couple alleges the injury of being unable to obtain recognition of their California marriage in Oklahoma (“non-recognition”). (See Am. Compl. ¶ 20.) Second, they allege the injury of unequal treatment, flowing from the United States’ erection of Section 2 as a barrier to obtaining the benefit of recognition of their California marriage in Oklahoma (“unequal treatment”). (See id. ¶ 12; see also Pis.’ Resp. to Mot. to Dismiss 12 (arguing that “[Section 2] operates as such a barrier in that it officially sanctions the denial of equal treatment of Plaintiffs’ marriage and the attendant recognition/status that springs from such recognition”).) Finally, they allege the injury of stigma and humiliation. (See Am. Compl. ¶ 22; see also Pis.’ Resp. to Mot. to Dismiss 11-12 (“[Plaintiffs] have a second-class marriage in the eyes of friends,
1. Non-Recognition
The Court concludes that neither Section 2, nor the U.S. Attorney General’s enforcement thereof, plays a sufficient “causation” role leading to the Barton couple’s alleged injury of nonrecognition of their California marriage in Oklahoma.
The Barton couple’s reliance on Bennett v. Spear,
The Court must address dicta in Bishop I that is inconsistent with the above reasoning regarding Section 2. In 2006, this Court addressed standing issues sua sponte and implied that, if the Barton couple obtained legal status that was “treated as a marriage” in another state, they would have standing to challenge Section 2. See Bishop I,
2. Unequal Treatment
The Barton couple also alleges the injury of unequal treatment resulting from the imposition of Section 2 as a “barrier” to the benefit of recognition of their California marriage. In certain equal protection cases, the right being asserted is not the right to any specific amount of denied governmental benefits; it is “ ‘the right to receive benefits distributed according to classifications which do not without sufficient justification differentiate among covered applicants solely on the basis of [impermissible criteria].’” See Day v. Bond,
The Court concludes that these “discriminatory barrier” cases are not applicable due to the permissive nature of Section 2. As explained above, Section 2 is not an allegedly discriminatory policy that Oklahoma must follow in deciding what marriáges to recognize, and it does not stand as any significant obstacle between the Barton couple and recognition of their California marriage in Oklahoma. Cf. Ne. Fla. Ch. of the Associated Gen. Contractors of Am.,
3. Stigma
The Barton couple also alleges that the mere existence of Section — separate from any impact it has on their legal status as married or unmarried — causes ongoing stigmatic harm by indicating that their same-sex marriage is “second-class.” Stigmatic injuries are judicially cognizable in certain circumstances, particularly those involving racial discrimination. See Allen,
The Barton couple moves for entry of a final judgment on their challenge to Section 3 in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Windsor. The United States argues that Windsor moots the Barton couple’s Section 3 challenge and that the Court lacks jurisdiction over this challenge.
A. Mootness Standard
“Mootness, like standing, is a jurisdictional doctrine originating in Article Ill’s ‘case’ or ‘controversy’ language.” WildEarth Guardians v. Pub. Serv. Co. of Colo.,
B. Prayer for Relief
In their prayer for relief, the Barton couple seeks “a declaration that [Section 3 of DOMA] violate[s] the U.S. Constitution’s Equal Protection and substantive Due Process Rights of Plaintiffs Barton and Phillips.” (Am. Compl. 10.) They also seek an “award of their attorney fees and costs in prosecuting this action” and “[s]uch other relief deemed proper.” (Id.) The Court will analyze each request to determine if any “live and ongoing” controversy remains following the Windsor decision.
1. Declaratory Relief
“[W]hat makes a declaratory judgment action a proper judicial resolution of a case or controversy rather than an advisory opinion is the settling of some dispute which affects the behavior of the defendant toward the plaintiff.” Rio Grande Silvery Minnow,
The Court concludes that there is no longer any live or ongoing controversy as to the Barton couple’s request for declaratory relief regarding Section 3. In Windsor, the Supreme Court held that Section 3 “violates basic due process and equal protection principles applicable to the Federal Government.” Windsor,
Second, the United States has presented compelling evidence that, following Windsor, it has ceased to enforce Section 3 and that the Barton couple will suffer no further injury as a result of Section 3. In Revenue Ruling 2013-17, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) provided “guidance on the effect of the Windsor decision on the [IRS’] interpretations of the [federal tax code] that refer to taxpayers’ marital status,” stating that
individuals of the same sex will be considered to be lawfully married under the Code as long as they were married in a state whose laws authorize the marriage of two individuals of the same sex, even if they are domiciled in a state that does not recognize the validity of same-sex marriages.
(Rev. Ruling 2013-17, 2013-
In their evidentiary proffers regarding standing to challenge Section 3, the Barton couple asserts harms other than adverse tax consequences, such as an inability to plan for Social Security survivor benefits. The Barton couple argues that Windsor may affect the interpretation of the word “married” by other federal agencies and that this Court must ensure that the Barton couple reaps the full benefit of the Windsor decision. However, all evidence before the Court indicates that Section 3 will no longer be used to deprive married same-sex couples of federal benefits that are bestowed upon married opposite-sex
2. Attorney Fees and Costs
The Barton couple also requests attorney fees and costs. However, the possibility of recovering attorney fees or costs is not a sufficient reason to enter judgment in an otherwise moot case. See R.M. Inv. Co. v. U.S. Forest Serv.,
3. “Other Relief Deemed Proper”
The Barton couple does not expressly request money damages as relief. However, they urge the Court to construe their request for “other relief deemed proper” as a request for money damages. They are now urging this construction because, unlike claims for declaratory or injunctive relief, claims for damages are not mooted by subsequent events. See In re West. Pac. Airlines, Inc.,
The Court does not construe the “other relief deemed proper” language as a request for compensatory or nominal damages against the United States for three reasons. First, the Barton couple has repeatedly argued, in response to certain ripeness and standing deficiencies raised by BLAG, that their Section 3 injury was not any specific denial of monetary benefits but was instead the ongoing injury of unequal access and/or unequal treatment caused by Section 3. (See, e.g., Pis.’ Resp. to BLAG’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J. (containing heading entitled “BLAG’s Argu
C. Conclusion
The Barton couple has only requested prospective declaratory relief regarding Section 3, and such request has been rendered moot in light of Windsor and the United States’ response thereto. The United States has satisfied its burden of showing mootness, and the Court lacks jurisdiction to enter any judgment in favor of the Barton couple. Based on this ruling, the Court agrees with BLAG’s assertion that it has no further role to play in this litigation. BLAG’s motion to withdraw as an intervening party is therefore granted, and its motion for summary judgment is denied as moot.
Although the Barton couple will not receive a judgment in their favor as to this claim, they have played an important role in the overall legal process leading to invalidation of Section 3 of DOMA. The Barton couple filed this lawsuit many years before it seemed likely that Section 3 would be overturned. Although other plaintiffs received the penultimate judgment finding DOMA’s definition of marriage unconstitutional, the Barton couple and their counsel are commended for their foresight, courage, and perseverance.
IV. Barton Couple Lacks Standing to Challenge Part B of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment
Bishop II held that, in order to have standing in this case, Plaintiffs must establish a connection between the state official sued and the alleged injury. See Bishop II,
Based upon the evidence before the Court, Smith is entitled to summary judgment. Although Bishop II explained that clerks of court were generally the Oklahoma officials connected with the types of injuries alleged in the Amended Complaint, that decision was at the Rule 12(b)(6) stage. In her affidavit, Smith denies that she, or any other district court clerk in Oklahoma, has authority to recognize any out-of-state marriage and therefore denies her ability to redress the Barton couple’s non-recognition injury. The Barton couple has failed to controvert Smith’s testimony in any manner or demonstrate that she would indeed be the proper official to “recognize” their California marriage. Citation to Bishop II, and inconclusive Oklahoma statutes cited therein, is not sufficient to create a question of fact in light of Smith’s uncontroverted denial of authority.
A recent case addressed the constitutionality of Ohio’s non-recognition provision, which was identical to Part B. See Obergefell v. Wymyslo,
V. Bishop Couple Has Standing to Challenge Part A
Smith has not attacked the Bishop couple’s standing to challenge Part A or
The Court has also satisfied itself that Smith is properly sued. The Bishop couple may seek relief from Smith under Ex parte Young,
VI. Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment Violates the U.S. Constitution
The Bishop couple argues that Part A is an unconstitutional deprivation of their fundamental due process liberties and equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Bishop couple and Smith filed cross motions for summary judgment, and both parties urge the Court to decide the constitutionality of Part A as a matter of law. The Court concludes: (1) Baker v. Nelson is not binding precedent; (2) Windsor’s reasoning does not mandate a particular outcome for the Bishop couple or Smith; and (3) Part A intentionally discriminates against same-sex couples desiring an Oklahoma marriage license without a legally sufficient justification.
A. Baker v. Nelson
Smith argues that Baker represents binding Supreme Court precedent
Baker presented the precise legal issues presented in this case — namely, whether a state law limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples violates due process or equal protection rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. This is evidenced by the jurisdictional statements submitted to the Supreme Court. In relevant part, the appellants phrased the issues as whether Minnesota’s “refusal to sanctify appellants’ marriage deprives appellants of liberty and property in violation of the due process and equal protection clauses.” (Appellants’ Jurisdictional Statement, Ex. 4 to Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J.) Appellees similarly phrased the relevant issues as “[wjhether appellee’s refusal to sanctify appellants’ marriage deprives appellants of their liberty to marry and of their property without due process of law under the Fourteenth Amendment;” and “[wjhether appellee’s refusal ... to sanctify appellants’ marriage because both are of the male sex violates their rights under the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” (Appellees’ Jurisdictional Statement, Ex. 4 to Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J.)
There is an exception to the binding nature of summary dismissals, however, if “doctrinal developments indicate” that the Supreme Court would no longer brand a question as unsubstantial. Hicks,
Second, there have been significant doctrinal developments in Supreme Court jurisprudence since 1972 indicating that these issues would now present a substantial question. The Supreme Court has: (1) recognized a new form of heightened scrutiny and applied it to sex-based classifications, see Craig v. Boren,
Finally, although the Supreme Court’s decision in Windsor was silent as to Baker’s impact,
B. Windsor’s Impact
In Windsor, the plaintiff, a New York resident, inherited the estate of her same-sex spouse.
The Windsor majority opinion, authored by Justice Kennedy, held that: (1) when a state recognizes same-sex marriage, it confers upon this class of persons “a dignity and status of immense import;” id. at 2692; and (2) Section 3 of DOMA violated equal protection principles because the “avowed purpose and practical effect” of that law was “to impose a disadvantage, a separate status, and so a stigma upon all who enter into same-sex marriages made lawful by the unquestioned authority” of a state, id. at 2693. This Court interprets Windsor as an equal protection case holding that DOMA drew an unconstitutional fine between lawfully married opposite-sex couples and lawfully married same-sex couples. See id. at 2694. (“DOMA’s principal effect is to identify a subset of state-sanctioned marriages and make them unequal.”).
The Windsor Court did not apply the familiar equal protection framework, which inquires as to the applicable level of scrutiny and then analyzes the law’s justifications. Instead, the Windsor Court based its conclusion on the law’s blatant improper purpose and animus. See id. at 2693. The Court reasoned that DOMA’s “unusual deviation” from the tradition of “accepting state definitions of marriage” was “strong evidence of a law having the purpose and effect of disapproval of the class.” Id. The Court concluded, based upon DOMA’s text and legislative history, that DOMA’s principal purpose “was to impose inequality.” Id. Thus, Windsor does not answer whether a state may prohibit same-sex marriage in the first instance. Nor does Windsor declare homosexuals a suspect class or discuss whether DOMA impacted a fundamental right, which would have provided this Court with a clear test for reviewing Part A.
Both parties argue that Windsor supports their position, and both are right. Windsor supports the Bishop couple’s position because much of the majority’s reasoning regarding the “purpose and effect” of DOMA can be readily applied to the purpose and effect of similar or identical state-law marriage definitions. See id. at 2693 (discussing “essence” of DOMA as “defending” a particular moral view of marriage, imposing inequality, and treating legal same-sex marriages as “second class,” ultimately concluding that DOMA was motivated by an “intent to injure” lawfully married same-sex couples); id. at 2710 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (explaining that “the majority arms well every challenger to a state law restricting marriage to its traditional definition” and transposing certain portions of the majority opinion to reveal how it could assist these challengers). However, Windsor’s “purpose and effect” reasoning is not a perfect fit, as applied to Part A, because Part A does not negate or trump marital rights that had previously been extended to Oklahoma citizens. Further, DOMA’s federal intrusion into state domestic policy is more “unusual” than Oklahoma setting its own domestic policy. See id. at 2692 (discussing DOMA’s departure from the tradition of “reliance on state law to define marriage”).
Windsor supports Smith’s position because it engages in a lengthy discussion of states’ authority to define and regulate marriage, which can be construed as a yellow light cautioning against Windsor’s extension to similar state definitions. See id. at 2692 (explaining that state marriage laws vary between states and discussing states’ interest in “defining and regulating the marital relation”). Again, however, the “yellow light” argument has its limitations. In discussing this traditional state authority over marriage, the Supreme
This Court has gleaned and will apply two principles from Windsor. First, a state law defining marriage is not an “unusual deviation” from the state/federal balance, such that its mere existence provides “strong evidence” of improper purpose. A state definition must be approached differently, and with more caution, than the Supreme Court approached DOMA. Second, courts reviewing marriage regulations, by either the state or federal government, must be wary of whether “defending” traditional marriage is a guise for impermissible discrimination against same-sex couples. These two principles are not contradictory, but they happen to help different sides of the same-sex marriage debate.
C. Civil Marriage in Oklahoma
Before reaching its equal protection analysis, some preliminary discussion of civil marriage in Oklahoma is necessary. In order to enter into a marital contract, see Okla. Stat. tit. 43, § 1 (explaining that marriage is a “personal relation arising out of a civil contract”), a couple must first obtain a marriage license from the “judge or clerk of the district court, of some county in this state, authorizing the marriage between the persons named in such license.” Okla. Stat. tit. 43, § 4. In order to qualify for a marriage license, a couple must have the following characteristics: (1) the parties must be “legally competent of contracting,” id. § 1; (2) each person must be “unmarried,” see id. § 3(A); (3) the couple must consist of “one man and one woman,” see Okla. Const, art. 2, § 35(A); see also Okla. Stat. tit. 43, § 3(A) (indicating that marital contract must be entered “with a person of the opposite sex”); (4) both parties must be eighteen years of age, see Okla. Stat. tit. 43, § 3(A);
The process of obtaining a marriage license requires the couple to “submit an application in writing signed and sworn to in person before the clerk of the district court by both of the parties setting forth” certain information. Id. § 5(A). If the court clerk is satisfied with the couples’ application and the couple pays the appropriate fee, the clerk “shall issue the marriage license authorizing the marriage and a marriage certificate.” Okla. Stat. tit. 43,
The couple may then choose how they will “solemnize” the marriage, which is when the parties enter into the marital contract:
All marriages must be contracted by a formal ceremony performed or solemnized in the presence of at least two adult, competent persons as witnesses, by a judge or retired judge of any court in this state, or an ordained or authorized preacher or minister of the Gospel, priest or other ecclesiastical dignitary of any denomination who has been duly ordained or authorized by the church to which he or she belongs to preach the Gospel, or a rabbi and who is at least eighteen (18) years of age.
Id. § 7(A). The judge, minister, or other authorized person must have possession of the marriage license and must have good reason to believe that the persons presenting themselves for marriage are the individuals named in the license. Id. § 7(C). Marriages between persons belonging to certain religions — namely, “Friends, or Quakers, the spiritual assembly of the Baha’is, or the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, which have no ordained minister” — may be “solemnized by the persons and in the manner prescribed by and practiced in any such society, church, or assembly.” Id. § 7(D). Following the ceremony, whether civil or religious, the officiant, witnesses, and parties must complete and sign the marriage certificate. See id. § 8(A)-(C). Any person who performs or solemnizes a marriage ceremony “contrary to any of the provisions of this chapter” is guilty of a misdemeanor. See id. § 15.
After the license is issued and the contract entered into (either by civil or religious ceremony), both the marriage license and the marriage certificate are then returned to the court clerk who issued the license and certification. See id. § 8(D). This must be completed within thirty days of issuance of the marriage license. Id. § 6(A)(5). Once returned, the court clerk makes “a complete record of the application, license, and certificate” and then returns the original license to the applicants, “with the issuing officer’s certificate affixed thereon showing the book and page or case number where the same has been recorded.” Id. § 9.
Therefore, in Oklahoma, “marriage” is a three-step process consisting of: (1) applying for and receiving a marriage license from the court clerk, which authorizes the couple to then enter the marital contract; (2) entering the marital contract by civil or religious ceremony; and (3) having the marriage license and marriage certificate “recorded” by the court clerk. This Court’s equal protection analysis is limited to Part A’s alleged discriminatory treatment with respect to the first and third steps — namely, Part A’s prevention of Smith from issuing a marriage license to same-sex couples and then recording the
D. Equal Protection Analysis
The Fourteenth Amendment mandates that no state shall “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the .equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const, amend. XIV § 1. The Tenth Circuit has recently explained equal protection principles:
Equal protection is the law’s keystone. Without careful attention to equal protection’s demands, the integrity of surrounding law all too often erodes, sometimes to the point where it becomes little more than a tool of majoritarian oppression. But when equal protection’s demands are met, when majorities are forced to abide the same rules they seek to impose on minorities, we can rest much surer of the soundness of our legal edifice. No better measure exists to assure that laws will be just than to require that laws be equal in operation. At the same time, it is of course important to be precise about what equal protection is and what it is not. Equal protection of the laws doesn’t guarantee equal results for all, or suggest that the law may never draw distinctions between persons in meaningfully dissimilar situations — two possibilities that might themselves generate rather than prevent injustice. Neither is the equal protection promise some generic guard against arbitrary or unlawful governmental action, merely replicating the work done by the Due Process Clause or even the Administrative Procedure Act. Instead, the Equal Protection Clause is a more particular and profound recognition of the essential and radical equality of all human beings. It seeks to ensure that any classifications the law makes are made without respect to persons, that like cases are treated alike, that those who appear similarly situated are not treated differently without, at the very least, a rational reason for the difference.
SECSYS, LLC v. Vigil,
1. Does Part A Intentionally Discriminate Between Groups of Persons?
“Intentional discrimination can take several forms.” Vigil,
The Court defines the relevant class as same-sex couples desiring an Oklahoma marriage license.
Second, both the timing of SQ 711 in relation to certain court rulings and the statements in the public domain before passage of SQ 711 raise the inference that it was adopted, at least in part, for the purpose of excluding the class from marriage. SQ 711 originated from legislation entitled the Marriage Protection Amendment, which passed the Oklahoma Legislature as part of House Bill 2259 (“HB 2259”). (See Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J., Ex. 1 to Ex. B.) Although there is no “legislative history” for HB 2259 cited in the record, the Oklahoma House of Representatives website provides a “history” of HB 2259, which (1) lists the title as “Marriage; enacting the Marriage Protection Amendment;” (2) shows that the OMahoma Senate passed the measure by a vote of 38 to 7 on April 15, 2004; and (3) shows that the House passed the measure by a vote of 92 to 4 on April 22, 2004. See History for HB 2259, available at www. oklegislature.gov/BillInfo.aspx?Bill=HB 2259&Session=0400.
On April 15, 2004, the day HB 2259 passed the Oklahoma Senate, the Oklahoma Senate issued the following press release:
Senate Passes Marriage Protection Amendment
Despite efforts by the Democrat leadership throughout the legislative session to*1283 kill the issue, the Senate passed a bill that sends to a vote of the people a constitutional amendment defining marriage in Oklahoma as only between one man and one woman and prohibiting the state from recognizing homosexual marriages performed outside Oklahoma.
“I am thankful to the Senate’s Democrat leadership for finally giving up on their efforts to keep the people from voting on the marriage protection amendment,” stated Senate Republican Leader James Williamson, R-Tulsa. “All we wanted all along was for the Democrat leadership to allow an up or down vote on this issue, and to allow the Senate to work its will.
“This is a tremendous victory for the people of Oklahoma and for those of us here at the state Capitol who fight for pro-family issues,” Williamson said. Today’s vote was allowed as the result of an agreement on Tuesday between the Senate Democrat leadership and the Senate Republicans to end a filibuster by Senator Bernest Cain, D-Oklahoma City, the Senate’s leading supporter of legalizing homosexual marriage in Oklahoma.
Today, Williamson succeeded in attaching the marriage protection amendment to House Bill 2259 ..., sending it back to the House of Representatives for their approval of the Senate’s amendment to the bill.
If HB 2259 becomes law, the people of Oklahoma will vote on the proposed constitutional amendment on this fall’s general election ballot. The constitutional amendment would define marriage as only between one man and one woman, prohibit the recognition of same-sex marriages in other jurisdictions, and make it a misdemeanor to issue a marriage license in violation of the amendment’s definition of marriage.
Many other states — from Ohio to Georgia — have taken action to provide constitutional protections to traditional marriage to combat efforts by liberals and activist judges seeking to redefine marriage by allowing same-sex unions.
Senate Passes Marriage Protection Amendment, available at www.oksenate. gov/news/pressreleases/press_releases_ 2004/pr20040415.html (emphasis added).
The press release’s reference to judicial efforts to redefine marriage by allowing “same-sex unions” came shortly after two Massachusetts Supreme Court cases were issued, which held that the Massachusetts Constitution required that state to allow same-sex marriage. See Goodridge v. Dept. of Pub. Health,
2. Is This Intentional Discrimination Justified?
Not all intentional discrimination by a state against a class of citizens violates equal protection principles. See Vigil,
a. Level of Scrutiny
The Bishop couple argues that Part A is subject to heightened scrutiny because it constitutes gender discrimination. As explained above, the Court’s defined class is same-sex couples desiring an Oklahoma marriage license. This class of individuals is excluded from marriage regardless of their gender, ie., regardless of whether they are two men or two women. Part A does not draw any distinctions between same-sex male couples and same-sex female couples, does not place any disproportionate burdens on men and women, and does not draw upon stereotypes applicable only to male or female couples. The female couples in this case could readily be substituted for male couples, and the male couples would be forced to make precisely the same “sex discrimination” arguments. Common sense dicfates that the intentional discrimination occurring in this case has nothing to do with gender-based prejudice or stereotypes, and the law cannot be subject to heightened scrutiny on that basis. See Sevcik v. Sandoval,
Instead of gender-based discrimination, the intentional discrimination occurring against same-sex couples as a result of Part A is best described as sexual-orientation discrimination. The conduct targeted by Part A — same-sex marriage— is so closely correlated with being homosexual that sexual orientation provides the best descriptor for the class-based distinction being drawn. See Lawrence,
b. Rationality Standard
Because it disadvantages a non-suspect class, Part A does not come to this Court under heightened suspicion.
The Court’s ultimate task, even under rationality review, is to determine “whether there is some ground of difference having a fair and substantial relation to at least one of the stated purposes justifying the different treatment” between the included class and the excluded class. Johnson v. Robison,
c. Promoting Morality
The Court turns now to the conceivable justifications for Part A’s preclusion of same-sex couples from receiving an Oklahoma marriage license. Although not advanced in this litigation as a “justification,” the Bishop couple has shown, as a matter of law, that promoting or upholding morality was at least one justification offered to the public prior to passage of the law.
In August of 2004, approximately two months before the public vote, over forty Tulsa-area churches organized a “pro-marriage rally,” during which Mr. Williamson promoted passage of SQ 711 and discussed Biblical prohibitions of homosexual acts. Robert Evatt, Local “Pro-Marriage Rally’’ Takes Aim at Same-Sex Unions, Tulsa World, Aug. 25, 2004 (“ ‘As Christians, we are called to love homosexuals,” Williamson said. “But I hope everyone at this rally knows the Scriptures prohibit homosexual acts.’ ”). At this same rally, Tulsa Mayor Bill LaFortune stated: “ ‘If you believe in Christ, if you believe in this country, and if you believe in this city, you believe that marriage is a covenant between God, a man, and a woman.’ ” Id. (quoting Mr. LaFortune). An editorial that ran in The Oklahoman on October 17, 2004 urged Oklahomans to pass SQ 711 because “the idea that marriage is between a man and a woman is consistent with the citizenry’s morals and beliefs.” Defining Marriage, The Oklahoman, Oct. 17, 2004, at 22A. The Bishop couple has shown, as a matter of law, that “moral disapproval of same-sex marriage” existed in the public domain as at least one justification for voting in favor of SQ 711.
The Court recognizes that moral disapproval often stems from deeply held religious convictions. See Lawrence,
d. Other Justifications
The Court must also consider whether Part A rationally relates to the state interests now being offered by Smith in this litigation.
i. Encouraging Responsible Procreation/Steering Naturally Procreative Couples to Marriage
Smith argues that “through the institution of marriage, societies seek to increase the likelihood that children will be born and raised in stable and enduring family units by both the mothers and fathers who brought them into this world.” (Smith’s Resp. to Pis.’ Mot. for Summ. J. 27-28.) For purposes of its analysis, the Court accepts that Oklahoma has a legitimate interest in encouraging “responsible procreation,” (1).e procreation within marriage), and in steering “naturally procreative” relationships into marriage, in order to reduce the number of children born out of wedlock and reduce economic burdens on the State.
However, Part A is not rationally related to these state interests for four reasons. First, the wealth of scholarly articles in this section of Smith’s brief, which range from William Blackstone to John Locke, simply demonstrate that state-recognized marriages developed in part as a means of encouraging and incentivizing procreation within marriage. See, e.g., John Locke, The Second Treatise on Civil Government, On Politics and Education, at 113-14 (1947) (“For the end of conjugation between male and female, being not barely procreation, but the continuation of the species, this conjugation betwixt male and female ought to last, even after procreation, so long as is necessary to the nourishment and support of the young ones.”).
During oral arguments in Hollingsworth, Justice Scalia asked Mr. Theodore Olson, counsel for the opponents of Proposition 8, when it became unconstitutional “to exclude homosexual couples from marriage.” Tr. of Oral Argument 37-38 (March 26, 2013), Hollingsworth v. Perry, — U.S.-,
Second, there is no rational link between excluding same-sex couples from marriage and the goals of encouraging “responsible procreation” among the “naturally procreative” and/or steering the “naturally procreative” toward marriage. Civil marriage in Oklahoma does not have any procreative prerequisites. See supra Part VI(C); see also Gill,
Third, Part A’s failure to impose the classification on other similarly situated groups (here, other non-procreative couples) can be probative of a lack of a rational basis. See City of Cleburne,
Finally, the Court rejects Smith’s “lack of interest” argument. Perhaps recognizing that excluding same-sex couples does not promote the asserted justifications in any rational manner, Smith argues that it is rational to exclude same-sex couples from marriage simply because the State has no real interest in them:
Even though some same-sex couples do raise children, they cannot create them in the same way opposite-sex couples do — as the often unintended result of casual sexual behavior. As a result, same-sex relationships simply do not pose the same risk of irresponsible procreation that opposite-sex relationships do.... Sexual relationships between individuals of the same sex neither advance nor threaten society’s interest in responsible procreation in the same manner, or to the same degree, that sexual relationships between men and women do.
(Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J. 34.) This “lack of interest” argument is ironic, given the history surrounding Part A’s passage. See supra Part VI(D)(1). Nonetheless, the Court has considered whether it applies to this case.
In Johnson v. Robison,
ii. Promoting the “Optimal” Child-Rearing Environment
Smith also argues that excluding same-sex couples is rationally related to the goal of “promoting” the “ideal” family unit. Smith defines this “ideal” in several different ways throughout the brief, including: (1) “ ‘a family headed by two biological parents in a low-conflict marriage” because “benefits flow in substantial part from the biological connection shared by a child with both mother and father,’ ” (Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J. 35 (quoting Kristin Anderson Moore, Marriage from a Child’s Perspective: How Does Family Structure Affect Children, and What Can We Do About It?, Child Trends Research Brief (June 2002), Ex. 19 to Ex. B)); (2) a family unit where children are being “raised by both a mother and a father in a stable family unit;” (id.); and (3) a family unit with “ ‘gender-differentiated parenting’ ” because “ ‘the contribution of fathers to child-rearing is unique and irreplaceable;’ ” (id. 36 (quoting David Popenoe, Life Without Father, at 146 (1996), Ex. 23 to Ex. B)).
The Court assumes, for purposes of this motion for summary judgment only, that (1) the “ideal” environment for children must include opposite-sex, married, biological parents, and (2) that “promoting” this ideal is a legitimate state interest.
In addition, Smith has not explained, and the Court cannot discern from any of Smith’s cited materials, how exclusion of same-sex couples from marriage makes it more likely that opposite-sex marriages will stay in tact (thereby remaining “optimal” child-rearing environments). Excluding same-sex couples from marriage has done little to keep Oklahoma families together thus far, as Oklahoma consistently has one of the highest divorce rates in the country. See Table 133, Marriages and Divorces — Number and Rate by State: 1990-2009, available at www.census.gov/ compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0133.pdf (showing Oklahoma as ranking sixth in 2009 for divorce rates). The Court concludes that denial of same-sex couples from marriage “does nothing to promote stability in heterosexual parenting.” See Gill,
After presenting the empirical support espousing the benefits of this “ideal” family unit, Smith offers a one-sentence, conclusory statement that is supposed to provide the link between the empirical data and the exclusion: “It is rational, then, for Oklahoma to give ‘special recognition’ to relationships that are designed to provide children the optimal environment of both a mother and a father.” (Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. 38.) Whether they are “designed to” or not, common sense dictates that many opposite-sex couples never actually do provide this optimal child-rearing environment, due to drug use, abuse, or, more commonly, divorce. As with “natural procreative” abilities, Smith does not condition any other couple’s receipt of a marriage license on their willingness or ability to provide an “optimal” child-rearing environment for any potential or existing children. While there need not be a good fit between the exclusion of same-sex couples from marriage and the promotion of this “ideal” family unit, there does need to be some reason for excluding the class. Such a reason is lacking here.
iii. Negative Impact on Miarriage
Smith’s final argument is that “it is rational for Oklahoma voters to believe that fundamentally redefining marriage could have a severe and negative impact on the institution as a whole.” (Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J. 38.) This argument is best summarized in an article entitled Marriage and the Public Good: Ten Principles. (Witherspoon Institute, Marriage and the Public Good: Ten Principles (2008), Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J., Ex. 28 to Ex. B.) After discussing the plethora of benefits that marriage offers adults and children, the article then explains how same-sex marriage is one of four “threats” to the institution (along with divorce, illegitimacy, and cohabitation):
[T]here remain even deeper concerns about the institutional consequences of same-sex marriage for marriage itself. Same-sex marriage would further undercut the idea that procreation is intrinsically connected to marriage. It would*1295 undermine the idea that children need both a mother and a father, further weakening the societal norm that men should take responsibility for the children they beget. Finally, same-sex marriage would likely corrode marital norms of sexual fidelity, since gay marriage advocates and gay couples tend to downplay the importance of sexual fidelity in their definition of marriage.
(Id. at 18-19.) See also, e.g., Sandoval,
The “negative impact” argument is impermissibly tied to moral disapproval of same-sex couples as a class of Oklahoma citizens. All of these perceived “threats” are to one view of the marriage institution — a view that is bound up in procreation, one morally “ideal” parenting model, and sexual fidelity. However, civil marriage in Oklahoma is not an institution with “moral” requirements for any other group of citizens. See supra Part VI(C). Smith does not ask a couple if they intend to be faithful to one another, if they intend to procreate, or if they would someday consider divorce, thereby potentially leaving their child to be raised in a single-parent home. With respect to marriage licenses, the State has already opened the courthouse doors to opposite-sex couples without any moral, procreative, parenting, or fidelity requirements. Exclusion of just one class of citizens from receiving a marriage license based upon the perceived “threat” they pose to the marital institution is, at bottom, an arbitrary exclusion based upon the majority’s disapproval of the defined class. It is also insulting to same-sex couples, who are human beings capable of forming loving, committed, enduring relationships. “ ‘Preserving the traditional institution of marriage,’ ” which is the gist of Smith’s final asserted justification, “is just a kinder way of describing the State’s moral disapproval of same-sex couples.” Lawrence,
Having considered all four proferred justifications for Part A, the Court concludes that exclusion of same-sex couples is “so attenuated” from any of these goals that the exclusion cannot survive rational-basis review. See City of Cleburne,
E. Equal Protection Conclusion
The Supreme Court has not expressly reached the issue of whether state laws
Against this backdrop, the Court’s task is to determine whether Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment deprives a class of Oklahoma citizens — namely, same-sex couples desiring an Oklahoma marriage license — of equal protection of the law. Applying deferential rationality review, the Court searched for a rational link between exclusion of this class from civil marriage and promotion of a legitimate governmental objective. Finding none, the Court’s rationality review reveals Part A as an arbitrary, irrational exclusion of just one class of Oklahoma citizens from a governmental benefit.
Equal protection is at the very heart of our legal system and central to our consent to be governed. It is not a scarce commodity to be meted out begrudgingly or in short portions. Therefore, the majority view in Oklahoma must give way to individual constitutional rights. The Bishop couple has been in a loving, committed relationships for many years. They own property together, wish to retire together, wish to make medical decisions for one another, and wish to be recognized as a married couple with all its attendant rights and responsibilities. Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment excludes the Bishop couple, and all otherwise eligible same-sex couples, from this privilege without a legally sufficient justification.
VII. Injunctive Relief and Rulings on Pending Motions
The Court declares that Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution by precluding same-sex couples from receiving an Oklahoma marriage license. The Court permanently enjoins enforcement of Part A against same-sex couples seeking a marriage license. In accordance with the U.S. Supreme Court’s issuance of a stay in a nearly identical case on appeal from the District Court of Utah to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, see Herbert v. Kitchen, U.S. Supreme Court Order in Pending Case 13A687 (Jan. 6, 2014), the Court stays execution of this injunction pending the final disposition of any appeal to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 197) is GRANTED as to Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment and otherwise DENIED. Defendant Sally Howe Smith’s Cross Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 216) is DENIED as to Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment, and GRANTED as to Part B based on the Barton couple’s lack of standing. The Barton couple’s challenge to Part B is dismissed for lack of standing.
The Barton couple’s Motion for Entry of Final Judgment (Doc. 257) is DENIED, and their challenge to Section 3 of DOMA is dismissed based upon constitutional mootness. BLAG’s motion to withdraw as an intervening party (Doc. 263) is GRANTED, and BLAG’s pending motion for summary judgment (Doc. 214) is DENIED as moot. The Motion to Dismiss by United States of America and Eric H. Holder, Jr., Attorney General (Doc. 211) is GRANT
Notes
. SQ 711 passed by a vote of 1,075,216 to 347,303. (See Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J„ Ex. 3.)
. An Oklahoma statute also prevents same-sex couples from marrying. Okla. Stat. tit. 43, § 3(A) ("Any unmarried person who is at least eighteen (18) years of age and not otherwise disqualified is capable of contracting and consenting to marriage with a person of the opposite sex.”) (emphasis added). This statute is not challenged.
. An Oklahoma statute also prevents recognition of same-sex marriages. Okla. Stat. tit. 43, § 3.1 ("A marriage between persons of the same gender performed in another state shall not be recognized as valid and binding in this state as of the date of the marriage.”). This statute is not challenged.
.This case has a lengthy procedural history. See Bishop v. Okla. ex rel. Edmondson,
. Because standing was not raised on appeal, the Tenth Circuit examined it sua sponte. (See id. at 363-64.)
. The Barton couple challenges both sections of DOMA and both sections of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment. The Bishop coupie challenges only Part A of the Oklahoma Constitutional Amendment.
. When this Court issued its decision in Bishop I, the Barton couple had entered into a Vermont civil union and a Canadian marriage. The Court held that neither relationship was “treated as a marriage in another State” and that the Barton couple lacked standing to challenge Section 2. See Bishop I,
. During the scheduling conference, Magistrate Judge Wilson raised the question of whether the Amended Complaint asserted a challenge to Part B. The Barton couple asserted that they intended to challenge Part B in their Amended Complaint and desired to address Part B in their summary judgment brief. Smith did not object. Therefore, based on certain allegations in the body of the Amended Complaint and Smith's lack of objection, the Court construes the Amended Complaint as also challenging Part B.
. The United States’ motion to dismiss only attacks standing and does not offer any defense of Section 2 on the merits. BLAG intervened for the limited purpose of defending the constitutionality of Section 3. Therefore, the only opposition to the Barton couple's challenge to Section 2 is the United States’ standing argument.
. The Court reaches the merits of Part A based upon the Bishop couple’s standing and does not reach the question of whether the Barton couple also has standing to challenge Part A. See Watt v. Energy Action Educ. Found.,
.As explained infra Part IV, Smith testified that she is not the state official connected to recognition of out-of-state marriages, and the Barton couple failed to controvert this evidence. Thus, the identity of the "appropriate State official” remains unclear.
. Since DOMA's passage, some scholars have concluded that Section 2 was unnecessary and simply reiterates a power that states already possessed. See Joshua Baker & William Duncan, As Goes DOMA ... Defending DOMA and the State Marriages Measures, 24 Regent Univ. L.Rev. 1, 8 (2011-2012) ("Over time, something of a consensus seems to have developed among scholars that Section 2 of DOMA merely restates existing conflicts of law principles with respect to interstate recognition of a legal status or license...."); William Baude, Beyond DOMA: Choice of State Law in Federal Statutes, 64 Stan. L.Rev. 1371, 1392 (2012) (“Section 2 of DOMA is expressly intended to ratify such [state public] policies (if any ratification were needed).”); Mary L. Bonauto, DOMA Damages Same-Sex Families and Their Children, 32 Fam. Adv. 10, 12 (Winter 2010) ("[S]tates have long possessed the power to decide which marriages they would respect from elsewhere, a power that both proponents and opponents of DOMA agree existed before and after DOMA.”); Patrick Borchers, The Essential hrelevance of the Full Faith and Credit Clause to the Same-Sex Marriage Debate, 38 Creighton Law R. 353, 358 (2005) (arguing that Section 2 of DOMA was unnecessary because it "simply states
. The United States also argues that the Barton couple has not suffered an injury in fact based upon their failure to “have actually sought and been denied” recognition of their California marriage in Oklahoma. (See United States’ Mot. to Dismiss 5.) For purposes of this motion, the Court assumes without deciding that the Barton couple's alleged injuries constitute injuries in fact but concludes that none were sufficiently caused by Section 2.
. The Barton couple incorrectly argues that this dicta is controlling. The Barton couple filed an Amended Complaint, which renders moot this Court's analysis of standing allegations in the original Complaint. See Mink,
. The United States also argues that the Barton couple's alleged stigmatic injury is not cognizable because it is merely a " 'psychological consequence presumably produced by observation of conduct.’ ” (See United States’ Reply in Support of Mot. to Dismiss 4 (quoting Valley Forge Christian Coll. v. Ams. United for Separation of Church & State,
. BLAG, the only party defending the constitutionality of Section 3, has stated that "the Supreme Court recently held that DOMA Section 3 is unconstitutional” and that its "justification for participating in this case ... has disappeared.” (BLAG’s Unopposed Mot. to Withdraw 1-2.) BLAG's disinterest in any further defense of Section 3 supports the Court's conclusion that its entry of a declaratory judgment would have no effect.
. This is not a case in which the United States is showing any "reluctant submission” to complying with Windsor. See Rio Grande Silvery Minnow,
. This is an unfortunate result for the Barton couple, who have twice been turned away based on standing. However, the Court notes that Part B was not the focus of this litigation. It was unclear whether the Barton couple challenged Part B in the Amended Complaint, and they devoted only one page of argument to it in their motion for summary judgment. (See Pis.’ Mot. for Summ. J. 41 — 42.) In a proper equal protection challenge, portions of this Court’s analysis of Part A would also seem applicable to Part B. The Court is reminded of a quote by Harriet Beecher Stowe: ”[N]ever give up, for that is just the place and time that the tide will turn.’’ Harriet Beecher Stowe, Old Town Folks (1869).
. As explained supra in footnote 2, there is an Oklahoma statute also impacting same-sex couples' eligibility for a marriage license. See Okla. Stat. tit. 43, § 3(A). No party discussed standing problems posed by this statute, and the Court is satisfied that enjoining enforcement of Part A redresses a concrete injury suffered by the Bishop couple.
. In 1972, the Supreme Court had’ "no discretion to refuse adjudication” of an appeal of a state court decision upholding a state statute against federal constitutional attack. See Hicks v. Miranda,
. At the trial court level, the same-sex couple had challenged a Minnesota county clerk's refusal to grant them a marriage license. They argued that (1) same-sex marriage was authorized by Minnesota law, and (2) alternatively, denial of a marriage license deprived them of liberty without due process and equal protection in violation of their Fourteenth Amendment rights and constituted an unwarranted invasion of privacy in violation of the Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments. Baker v. Nelson,
.Based on the Windsor I decision, it seemed likely that the Supreme Court would address Baker’s precedential value. See Windsor I, 699 F.3d at 178-79 (majority concluding that "doctrinal changes constitute another reason why Baker does not foreclose our disposition of this case”); id. at 195 n. 3 (Straub, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (acknowledging that "questions may stop being 'insubstantial' when subsequent doctrinal developments so indicate” but concluding that Supreme Court decisions had not "eroded Baker’s foundations such that it no longer holds sway”). However, no Justice mentioned Baker in any part of the Windsor decision. At least one commentator criticized this silence. Jonah Horwitz, When Too Little is Too Much: Why the Supreme Court Should Either Explain its Opinions or Keep Them to Itself, 98 Minn. L.Rev. Headnotes 1, 2 (2013) (explaining that Baker was "examined in detail” in the Supreme Court briefs and criticizing Supreme Court for failing to discuss Baker) (“For a case of such length and significance, it is nothing short of amazing that no one refers, even in passing, to what struck the lower courts and the litigants as a potentially dispositive case.”).
. Lower court decisions issued prior to Windsor are split as to the applicability of the doctrinal developments exception. Compare, e.g., Jackson,
. The Windsor I court based its conclusion upon rulings by New York intermediate appellate courts, which indicated that the Canadian marriage was indeed recognized in New York when the plaintiff inherited her spouse's estate. Windsor I, 699 F.3d at 177-78.
. Oklahoma permits persons between the ages of sixteen and eighteen to marry with parental consent, see id. § 3(B)(l)(a)-(f), and persons under sixteen to marry if authorized by the court in very limited circumstances, see id. § 3(B)(2).
. Marriages between "ancestors and descendants of any degree, of a stepfather with a stepdaughter, stepmother with stepson, between uncles and nieces, aunts and nephews, except in cases where such relationship is only by marriage, between brothers and sisters of the half as well as the whole blood, [or] first cousins” are prohibited. Okla. Stat. tit. 43, § 2.
. Unlike some other states, Oklahoma does not offer any alternative scheme for same-sex couples, such as civil unions. The Supreme Court has stated, and this Court firmly agrees, that “marriage is more than a routine classification for purposes of certain statutory benefits.’’ Windsor,
. When the Court refers to "obtaining a marriage license” throughout this Order, it refers to both the initial issuance of the marriage license and the recording of the marriage license by the court clerk after the marriage is solemnized.
. It is somewhat unusual to define a class of couples, but the Court finds it proper here. The classification made by Part A is aimed only at same-sex couples who want to marry, rather than all homosexuals. A couple must apply together in person for a marriage license, and it is the fact that they are of the same sex that renders them ineligible. Further, Smith’s preferred justifications are tied to alleged characteristics that two individuals have when coupled — i.e., their inability to "naturally procreate” and to provide an “optimal” parenting environment. See infra Part VI(D)(2)(d) (setting forth Smith’s preferred justifications for the law).
. The Court takes judicial notice of information available on the Oklahoma House of Representatives website and the Oklahoma Senate website pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 201, which allows courts to take judicial notice of adjudicative facts if they are “generally known within the trial court's jurisdiction; or (2) can be accurately and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot be questioned.” Fed.R.Evid. 201(b); Winzler v. Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A., Inc.,
. The Bishop couple presented several newspaper articles in support of their Statement of Facts 13-15. (See Ex. 5 to Pis.' Mot. for Summ. J.) Smith does not dispute the factual accuracy of the reporting in these articles but argues that they may not be considered because they are: (1) irrelevant, and (2) inadmissible hearsay. The Court rejects both arguments.
First, the articles are relevant to both steps of the analysis — whether the law was passed, at least in part, for the purpose of intentional discrimination and whether such discrimination is justified. See Vigil,
Second, the articles do not pose hearsay problems because the Court is not relying upon the articles, or quotations therein, for their truth. The Court is relying upon the articles to demonstrate what information was in the public domain at the time SQ 711 passed. Whether the articles or quotations are accurate is of no moment; what matters is that these justifications were offered to the voting public. See Benak ex rel. Alliance Premier Growth Fund v. Alliance Capital Mgmt. L.P.,
Alternatively, the Court finds that all news articles and quotations therein qualify for the residual exception to the hearsay rule because: (1) the articles and quotations have circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness — namely, that they were made publically to large groups, were consistently reported in Oklahoma newspapers, and are, in some ways, akin to statements against interest; (2) the articles and quotations are relevant to ascertaining the purposes and justifications for the law; (3) based on the lack of "legislative history” for a state question, the articles and quotations are more probative than other evidence that can be obtained through reasonable efforts; and (4) admitting the news articles, rather than requiring other forms of evidence, serves the interest of justice. See Fed.R.Evid. 807(l)-(4); cf. New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Anderson,
. In some equal protection cases, the intentional discrimination imposed by the law is so "unusual” in its character that improper purpose and motive are readily apparent, and there is no need to determine whether the intentional discrimination is justified. See, e.g., Windsor,
. The Court does not reach the question of whether Part A selectively burdens the Bishop couple's asserted fundamental "right to marry a person of their choice.” (See Pis.' Reply in Support of Pis.’ Mot. for Summ. J. 14.) Such a holding would be broader than whether Part A intentionally discriminates against a defined class of Oklahoma citizens, and it would possibly affect other Oklahoma laws burdening the "right to marry a person of [one’s] choice.” See supra Part VI(C) (setting forth age, number, and other eligibility requirements under Oklahoma law). If Part A does burden a fundamental right, it certainly would not withstand any degree of heightened scrutiny. See supra Part VI(D)(2)(d).
Based upon its research on this topic, the Court offers two observations. First, whether or not the right in question is deemed fundamental turns in large part upon how the right is defined. If the right is defined as the "right to many,” plaintiffs have thus far been more likely to win the argument. See, e.g., Kitchen,
Second, language in Windsor indicates that same-sex marriage may be a "new” right, rather than one subsumed within the Court's prior "right to marry” cases.
It seems fair to conclude that, until recent years, many citizens had not even considered the possibility that two persons of the same sex might aspire to occupy the same status and dignity as that of a man and woman in lawful marriage. For marriage between a man and a woman no doubt had been thought of by most people as essential to the very definition of that term and to its role and function throughout the history of civilization.... The limitation of lawful marriage to heterosexual couples, which for centuries had been deemed both necessary and fundamental, came to be seen in New York and certain other States as an unjust exclusion.
Windsor,
. Smith does not dispute that "sexual orientation” is the best descriptor for the classification. Smith argues only that: (1) the Court should reject any attempt to "bootstrap” a sex discrimination claim to what is actually a sexual orientation discrimination claim, and (2) sexual orientation discrimination is subject to rationality review. (See Smith’s Cross Mot. for Summ. J. 19-25.)
. This distinguishes this case from Loving, in which the Supreme Court analyzed Virginia's miscegenation law under the "most rigid scrutiny” applicable to racial classifications. See Loving,
. This is a different question than the threshold question of whether the Bishop couple has shown intentional discrimination between groups, see supra Part VI(D)(1), although the analyses overlap somewhat in this case.
. Justice Scalia has repeatedly expressed his disagreement with this conclusion. See Windsor,
. At the time of her concurrence in Lawrence, Justice O'Connor believed that "reasons exist,” other than moral disapproval, for prohibiting same-sex marriage:
Texas cannot assert any legitimate state interest here, such as national security or preserving the traditional institution of marriage. Unlike the moral disapproval of same-sex relations — the asserted state interest in this case — other reasons exist to promote the institution of marriage beyond mere moral disapproval of an excluded group.
Lawrence,
. Due to their similarity, the Court addresses the first and second justifications together.
. If Smith’s unarticulated but underlying argument is that opposite-sex couples are more likely to forego marriage because permitting same-sex couples erodes spiritual and religious aspects of marriage, this devolves again to legislation driven by moral disapproval and not legitimate state interests.
. The Court suspects that many adoptive parents would challenge this defined "ideal,” and that many "non-ideal” families would question this paternalistic state goal of steering their private choices into one particular model of child-rearing. The Court also notes that same-sex couples are physically capable of satisfying many of the descriptors of the "ideal” environment explained in Smith’s cited literature — namely, a stable, low-conflict, non-violent, loving, and nurturing environment.
. The Bishop couple denies that their exclusion from marriage makes it more likely they would marry a member of the opposite sex. (See Bishop Couple Aff. ¶ 14 (explaining that marrying someone of the opposite sex would, in their opinion, be "emotionally unhealthy and mentally damaging” and that, more importantly, they have already identified the "companion [they] have chosen” to marry and established a long-standing relationship with them), Ex. 1 to Pis.’ Mot. for Summ. J.)
. The Sandoval court reasoned in part that "civil marriage is at least partially a public activity, and preventing ‘abuse of an institution the law protects’ ” is a valid state interest. Sandoval,
. Both Jackson and Sandoval were decided before Windsor.
