OPINION OF THE COURT
Earlier this year, the parties filed for divorce in this court and an inquest on grounds was held. Although there was no opposition to the holding of the inquest, a question arose as to whether this court had jurisdiction to grant a divorce to the parties since they could not, as a same-sex couple, at the time of their marriage or now, get married in New York State. Because the question of subject matter jurisdiction cannot be waived or conferred on the court by consent and can be raised at any point in the proceeding (see generally Matter of Fry v Village of Tarrytown,
In Martinez v County of Monroe (
A similar result was reached in Beth R. v Donna M. (
In Godfrey v Spano (
In Gonzalez v Green (
Indeed, recent developments lead to the conclusion that recognition of these marriages is, in fact, consistent with public policy. Following the issuance of the Martinez decision, Governor
The decision of the Rhode Island Supreme Court in Chambers v Ormiston (
The remaining question is whether the parties’ marriage in Massachusetts is invalid by virtue of the fact that they were both nonresidents of Massachusetts at the time they were married. The parties, in the memorandum submitted to this court, assert that the answer to this question is controlled by a series of decisions from the Massachusetts courts concerning the rights of nonresident same-sex couples to marry in that state. In Cote-Whitacre v Department of Pub. Health (446 Mass 350,
Following the New York Court of Appeals ruling in Hernandez, the Massachusetts Superior Court, on remand, held that same-sex marriage was “prohibited” in New York. (Cote-Whitacre v Department of Pub. Health,
The purpose of the full faith and credit provision of the Constitution and the doctrine of comity is to accord parties, especially in today’s mobile society, the ability to ensure that if they were married in another state, they can enforce the civil contract of marriage in New York. This court’s research and the cases cited by the parties provide no reason to carve out a unique exception for the parties here simply because they are of the same gender or because of their sexual orientation. As the Court of Appeals noted in Matter of Gotlib v Ratsutsky (
Accordingly, for all the reasons set forth above, no basis exists to decline to exercise jurisdiction over the dissolution of the parties’ Massachusetts marriage and this New York divorce action can proceed.
Notes
. There is no issue in this case concerning the standing of both parents because there was a second parent adoption.
. The appellate decisions in Matter of Langan v State Farm Fire & Cas. (
. In Golden v Paterson (NYLJ, Sept. 8, 2008, at 19, col 3,
. In July of this year, the Governor of Massachusetts signed legislation repealing the 1913 law.
. The term “prohibited” is the term used by the Massachusetts courts in the Cote-Whitacre line of cases.
. The parties also point out that even if this court were to determine that the First Department decision in Hernandez v Robles (
. The Gonzalez decision, discussed earlier in this opinion, was issued before the 2007 decision on remand in Cote-Whitacre. This provides another reason to distinguish the Gonzalez case.
