Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *958
The Family Court, a legislatively created court of limited jurisdiction,1 acting pursuant to G.L. 1956 §
"May the Family Court properly recognize, for the purpose of entertaining a divorce petition, the marriage of two persons of the same sex who were purportedly married in another state?"
For the reasons set forth herein, it is our opinion that the certified question must be answered in the negative.2
On October 23, 2006, Ms. Chambers filed a petition for divorce in the Family Court, and on October 27 of that year Ms. Ormiston filed an answer and counter-claim. Thereafter, on December 11, 2006, the Chief Judge of the Family Court certified to this Court a question as to whether or not the Family Court has subject matter jurisdiction to grant a petition for divorce with respect to a same-sex couple.
We considered the Family Court's certified question in conference on January 4, 2007 and again on January 10, 2007, and we determined at that point that our consideration of the certified question required that the Family Court make further findings of fact. While retaining jurisdiction, we remanded the matter to the Family Court and directed that it address several questions of fact. We also directed the certifying justice of the Family Court, based on his findings of fact, to determine: (1) whether or not the case presented an actual case or controversy; (2) whether or not the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution was relevant to the case; and (3) whether or not the Defense of Marriage Act,
On October 9, 2007, after reviewing the briefs filed by the parties, as well as the briefs of a number of amicicuriae, we heard oral argument from the parties with respect to the certified question.5
We have employed our customary procedure in approaching this particular question of statutory construction.7 Pursuant to that procedure, we first attempt to see whether or not the statute in question has a plain meaning and therefore is unambiguous; in that situation, we simply apply that plain meaning to the case at hand. See, e.g., State v.DiCicco,
I. This Court's Appellate Jurisdiction
In our judgment, this case is properly justiciable. By contrast with the federal courts, our jurisdiction is not limited by an inflexible constitutional "cases and controversies" requirement. Rhode Island Ophthalmological Society v.Cannon,
II. The Meaning of the Word "Marriage" in G.L. 1956 §
The issue before us is rather narrow, and it can be decided entirely on the statutory level: Does G.L. 1956 §
When we are called upon to decide what the General Assembly intended when it enacted a particular statute, we always begin with the principle that "[t]he plain statutory language is the best indicator of legislative intent." State v.Santos,
It is clear to us that in this instance we are not
confronted with an ambiguous statute. Therefore we simply must determine what the words in this statute were intended to mean. Once we have done so, our interpretive task is at an end and our role is simply to apply the statute as written. SeeSantos,
It is a fundamental principle that "in the absence of statutory definition or qualification the words of a statute are given their ordinary meaning." Pacheco,
Words can have different meanings at different points of historical time, but it is the role of the judiciary to ascertain what meaning a particular word had when the statute containing that word was enacted.8 It is possible that today's members of the General Assembly might have an understanding of the term "marriage" that differs from the understanding of those legislators who enacted §
In carrying out the process of determining the meaning of the words employed by an enacting legislature, reference to contemporaneous dictionaries is appropriate and often helpful.See, e.g., Gustafson v. Alloyd Co.,
With respect to the case at hand, there is absolutely no reason to believe that, when the act creating the Family Court became law in 1961,10 the legislators understood the word marriage to refer to any state other than "the state of being united to a person of the opposite sex." The quoted words are the definition of marriage that is set forth in the 1961 edition of Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language.11 Id. at 1384. Similarly, the American College Dictionary, published in 1955, defines marriage as "the legal union of a man with a woman for life." Id. at 746. Likewise, Funk Wagnalls Standard College Dictionary, published in 1963, defines marriage as, "[t]he state of being married; a legal contract entered into by a man and a woman, to live together as husband and wife." Id. at 829. In each case, the primary dictionary definition12 of marriage refers only to a union between a man and a woman.13 *963
It is pertinent to note that Chief Justice Margaret Marshall, writing in 2003 for the plurality in Goodridge v.Department of Public Health,
As we understand the language of the existing divorce statute, it does not constitute "express language conferring subject-matter jurisdiction upon the Family Court" whereby it could entertain a divorce petition involving two persons of the same sex. See State v. Kenney,
We have concluded that §
III. The Noscitur a Sociis Canon ofStatutory Construction
In the present instance, although we perceive absolutely noambiguity in the statutory term "marriage," it is noteworthy that we would have reached the same result even if there were statutory ambiguity and we were required to consult the canons of statutory construction, which we very frequently consult to help guide us in determining the legislative intent that underlies ambiguous statutory language.16
In this case, well-established principles of statutory construction17 would lead us *964
ineluctably to conclude that the General Assembly has not granted the Family Court the power to grant a divorce in the situation described in the certified question. Above all, we have been guided by the principle that statutes are not to be read in a myopic manner but rather holistically and in context.See State v. Badessa,
The noscitur a sociis principle of statutory construction is especially pertinent.18 That principle counsels that "the meaning of questionable or doubtful words or phrases in a statute may be ascertained by reference to the meaning of other words or phrases associated with it."State v. DiStefano,
Accordingly, we have looked to that broader context, and it is clear to us that the language used in several other statutes in the General Laws relating to marriage constitutes an extremely strong confirmatory indication that, in enacting §
There are times, and this is one such time, where one may properly infer that the General Assembly considered something to be so obvious that no explicit statutory statement of definition was necessary. The overall statutory scheme reflects a legislative assumption that matrimony involves two people of different genders.
IV. The Proper Role of the Judicial Branch
As explained in Section II of this opinion, we have ascertained what the term "marriage" signified to the legislators who enacted the subject statute; in the words of a leading dictionary of that era, it meant "the state of being united to a person of the opposite sex." Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language 1384 (1961). Having made that determination as to the statute's unambiguous meaning, our role is at an end; we have no constitutional authority to extend the scope of this or any other statute.Citizens for Preservation of Waterman Lake v. Davis,
The role of the judicial branch is not to make policy, but simply to determine the legislative intent as expressed in the statutes enacted by the General Assembly. See, e.g.,Little,
The case of Pizza Hut of America, Inc. v. Pastore,
"We believe that the Legislature intended to exclude private schools from the protection afforded by §
3-7-19 . We are aware of the social intent of the legislation, and yet upon the peculiar facts of this case, we do not believe that this interpretation of the statute leads to an absurd result. If the court has not interpreted the statute in a manner consistent with the legislative intent to promote temperance, further societal response is the exclusive prerogative of the Legislature." Id. at 594.
In our judgment, when the General Assembly accorded the Family Court the power to grant divorces from "the bond of marriage," it had in mind only marriages between people of different sexes. Having said that, we remain mindful of the fact that, unlike a Constitutional Convention, the General Assembly meets every year. That body is free, if it so chooses, to enact divorce legislation that it might possibly deem more appropriate. We have frequently so indicated with respect to numerous statutes. See, e.g., Town of Johnston v.Santilli
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, the question certified by the Family Court must be answered in the negative.
The papers in this case, with our answer in the negative to the certified question endorsed thereon, are remanded to the Family Court for further proceedings.
"The term `statutory interpretation' itself is used to refer, on the one hand, solely to the cognitive process of ascertaining meaning and, on the other hand, to the entire process by which a court discharges its responsibility of applying statutes to specific controversies."
In this opinion, we use the terms "statutory construction" and "statutory interpretation" in the broad sense as referring both to instances where we are able to determine that a given statute is unambiguous and to instances where we must engage in the more difficult task of ascertaining the meaning of an ambiguous statute so that we may apply it to the case at hand.
"[W]here the meaning of a particular word is doubtful or obscure, or where a particular expression when taken singly is inoperative, the intention of a party who used it may frequently be ascertained by looking at adjoining words, or at expressions occurring in other parts of the same instrument." Id.
Dissenting Opinion
Because we firmly believe that our statutory law does not bar the doors of the Family Court to Rhode Island citizens desiring a judicial determination of their marital status, we respectfully dissent.
We are in complete agreement with the majority on one critical point, however. The legal recognition that ought to be afforded same-sex marriages for any particular purpose is fundamentally a question of public policy, more appropriately determined by the General Assembly after full and robust public debate. If the courts are called upon to resolve any issue involving the validity of such a marriage, they must, of course, do so, but only when presented with an actual controversy by parties having adverse interests. See Devane v. Devane,
At the outset we think it essential to note that the certified question presented to this Court is extremely narrow in *968 scope.20 It requires only that this Court consider whether the Family Court may recognize a same-sex marriage for the limited purpose of entertaining a divorce petition. Thus, the question of whether such a marriage is entitled to recognition in Rhode Island for any other purpose is one this Court need not and should not answer. Clearly, the certified question does not implicate the eligibility vel non of same-sex couples to marry under Rhode Island marriage licensing laws.
The issue presented to this Court by the certified question is by its very terms limited to the divorce context. To answer the question, the dissenting justices perceive no need to consult forty-six-year-old editions of standard dictionaries. A brief survey of current dictionaries reveals that the same definition of the word "marriage" predominates today as it did when the Family Court Act21 was enacted in 1961.22 Nevertheless, the majority, in our opinion, overlooks the one central and unassailable fact upon which the certified question is predicated. On May 26, 2004, Ms. Chambers and Ms. Ormiston (the parties) were lawfully married under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
As we discuss below, the Family Court has been granted authority to hear and decide their complaint and counterclaim for divorce whether or not their marriage is determined to be legally valid in Rhode Island. We would answer the certified question in the affirmative, therefore, based on the plain language of the statutory grant of jurisdiction to the Family Court. In addition, we believe such jurisdiction to be consistent with Rhode Island's domestic relations jurisprudence in 1961, when the Family Court Act was enacted, as it is today.
On remand, a justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court applied the test pronounced by Chief Justice Marshall in her concurring opinion in Cote-Whitacre because, he said, it "articulates the narrowest grounds for the judgment of the court." Cote-Whitacre,
Whether the Massachusetts courts have correctly interpreted Rhode Island law is irrelevant to our analysis. What is germane is the fact the parties are married validly under Massachusetts law, as declared and applied by the Massachusetts courts.See Cote-Whitacre,
This Court has long recognized that marriage is a contractual relationship between the parties to it, profoundly affecting their status, i.e., their legal and social condition, and that the state has the sovereign authority to fix or alter the status of its domiciled citizens. In 1856, this Court said:
"[I]t is obvious, that marriage, as a domestic relation, emerged from the contract which created it, is known and recognized as such throughout the civilized world; that it gives rights, and imposes duties and restrictions upon the parties to it, affecting their social and moral condition, of the measure of which every civilized state, and certainly every state of this Union, is the sole judge so far as its own citizens or subjects are concerned, and should be so deemed by other civilized, and especially sister, states; that a state cannot be deprived, directly or indirectly, of its sovereign power to regulate the status of its own domiciled subjects and citizens, by the fact that the subjects and citizens, of other states, as related to them, are interested in that status, and in such a matter has a right, under the general law, judicially to deal with and modify or dissolve this relation, binding both parties to it by the decree, by virtue of its inherent power over its own citizens and subjects, and to enable it to answer their obligatory demands for justice * * *." Ditson v. Ditson,
, 4 R.I. 87 105-06 . (1856).
In 1904, this Court pronounced, "It is a matter of duty which the courts owe to the public to declare the situation of the parties. * * * It may be necessary, for the convenience and happiness of families, and of the public, likewise, that the real character of these domestic connections should be ascertained and made known." Leckney v. Leckney,
If a statute is unambiguous, "there is no room for statutory construction and [the Court] must apply the statute as written." State v. Day,
The General Assembly created the Family Court in 1961 and infused it with broad and exclusive jurisdiction over all matters of domestic relations. Opinion to theGovernor,
First, when §
The scope of the certified question under review does not permit this Court to consider the underlying validity of the parties' marriage. It is sufficient for our inquiry to acknowledge the authority of the Family Court to grant (or deny) a divorce complaint on the grounds, when properly pled, of voidness or voidability under §
The Chace Court also noted the well-recognized exception to this general rule, viz., when "a marriage is odious by the common consent of nations, or if its influence is thought dangerous to the fabric of society, so that it is strongly against the public policy of the jurisdiction * * *."Ex parte Chace,
When construing a statute, this Court's "ultimate goal is to give effect to the purpose of the act as intended by the Legislature." Hanley v. State,
Finally, we observe that "we are bound to construe a statute in the most beneficial way which its language will permit, in order to prevent inconsistency or injustice." State v.Drowne,
We also are mindful that same-sex relationships are gradually gaining legal recognition, and domestic partners are afforded many of the same protections heretofore available only to opposite-sex couples. This Court has held that "it is not illegal for two men to live together, much less to contract and to enter into *974
partnerships with each other while doing so." Doe v.Burkland,
In summary, we believe §
We would answer the certified question therefore in the affirmative. Such an answer in our opinion not only is compelled by the plain and ordinary meaning of the statutory language, but also is consistent with the policies and purposes of the Family Court Act by providing Rhode Island citizens a means of dissolving their marriage and judicially determining their marital status. In addition, we believe it to be consistent with the expectations of those Rhode Island residents who have in good faith entered into same-sex marriages in Massachusetts. We do not mean to suggest, however, that the Family Court is precluded from adjudicating the validity of the marriage if one of the parties alleges the marriage is void or voidable. We agree rather with the Governor, the Attorney General and several other amici curiae30 that this Court should answer the certified question in the affirmative without determining the legal validity of the underlying marriage. The parties in this case have not challenged the marriage, and therefore the issue of voidness is not properly before the Court. Moreover, we do not think it proper for the Court, on the state of this record, to attempt to determine whether same-sex marriage is "strongly against the public policy of this jurisdiction." See Exparte Chace,
