Plaintiffs brought suit in United States District Court against the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts (the “SJC”) and others, alleging that the remedy adopted in the same-sex marriage decision,
Goodridge v. Department of Public Health,
The plaintiffs, a Massachusetts citizen named Robert Largess and eleven members of the Massachusetts legislature acting as individuals, sought to enjoin the May 17, 2004 implementation of Goo-dridge and the issuance or recording of marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Julie Goodridge and her new spouse Hillary Goodridge, the named plaintiffs in the Goodridge case, along with several others, intervened in the federal action on the side of the defendants.
The plaintiffs’ federal suit asserted that the remedy
1
that the SJC adopted in
In support of their first argument that the SJC usurped the legislature’s authority, the plaintiffs relied heavily on one clause of the Massachusetts Constitution:
All causes of marriage, divorce, and alimony, and all appeals from the judges of probate shall be heard and determined by the governor and council, until the legislature shall, by law, make other provision.
Mass. Const, pt. 2, ch. Ill, art. V. The SJC had earlier rejected that very argument as “based on thе erroneous premise that [Goodridge] constituted a ‘cause[ ] of marriage, divorce, [or] alimony’ within the meaning of the Massachusetts Constitution.” Goodridge v. Dep’t of Public Health, No. SJC-08860 (Mass. May 7, 2004) (order denying motion to intervene).
The plaintiffs, arguing state law illegality, also relied on the SJC’s holding in
Opinion of the Justices,
The federal district court denied the plaintiffs’ requests for preliminary and permanent injunctive relief, a declaratory judgment, and a temporary restraining order.
2
Largess v. Goodridge,
No. 04-
By order dated May 14, 2004, this court denied the requested injunction pending appeal on the ground that the plaintiffs’ “showing so far made as to likelihood of success [on the claimed deprivation of a republican form of government] is not sufficient to justify interim relief.” In doing so, we noted various potential barriers to plaintiffs’ claims, including the doctrine that the decisions of a state’s highest court on issues of state law, including state constitutional law, are generally treated as authoritative by federal courts.
See Johnson v. Fankell,
On May 17, 2004, after the plaintiffs had filed their appeal but before oral arguments were heard, Massachusetts implemented Goodridge’s requirement that same-sex marriage be recognized. Since then, Massachusetts has issued marriage licenses to same-sex couples and has recorded same-sex marriages. Thus, the plaintiffs’ desired injunction would now have the effect of stopping this practice after, rather than before, it had begun. 3
I.
The state defendants and the defendant-intervenors raise a series of preliminary objections, some of which involve interesting and difficult issues. 4
First, the defendants argue that the plaintiffs lack standing because, at most, they share an undifferentiated harm with other voters.
Allen v. Wright,
A second preliminary objection made by the defendants is that Guarantee Clause claims are
always
non-justiciable under the political question doctrine
6
and related caselaw.
See Luther v. Borden,
Another preliminary objection advanced by the defendants is that this court should defer to the SJC’s resolution of the Massachusetts constitutional law questions raised by the plaintiffs. Because the claimed federal Guarantee Clause violation here depends on supposed
state
constitutional violations that the SJC has specifically rejected, the defendants argue that the plaintiffs cannot establish a necessary premise to their federal case. The defendants are correct that federal courts should generally defer to a state’s highest court on issues of state law.
See Johnson,
The crucial question raised by plaintiffs’ case is why the state constitutional violations they allege, assuming they exist, amount to a violation of the federal Constitution’s Guarantee Clause. Plaintiffs’ argument is that the alleged transgressions of the Massachusetts Constitution have deprived them of a reрublican form of government by intruding on the people’s rights to elect representatives and structure the government. According to the plaintiffs, not every separation-of-powers violation under a state constitution leads to this result, but this one does. Plaintiffs argue that this is because here three conditions have been met: (1) the delegation or limitation of power to one branch in the state constitution is express, (2) there is a “clear departure” from the historic status quo, and (3) this “clear departure” seriously impairs a representative form of government.
Defendants argue that the Supreme Court has found Guarantee Clause claims non-justiciable where they were “ ‘political’ in nature and where there [was] a clear absence of judicially manageable standards.”
Reynolds v. Sims,
Whether or not the plaintiffs can satisfy their self-tailored test, they simply have no viable Guarantee Clause claim on these facts. First, the text of the Guarantee Clause does not support such a claim. Second, the Supreme Court’s caselaw interpreting the Guarantee Clause rejects the plaintiffs’ expansive reading of the provision. Third, recognizing the plaintiffs’ claim would ultimately undermine the very purposes of the Guarantee Clause, as the Supreme Court has noted.
We bеgin with the text of the Guarantee Clause. It provides that:
The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened) against domestic Violence.
U.S. Const, art. IV, § 4. We do not purport to spell out the entire scope or meaning of the Clause’s guarantee of a republican form of government. In fact, scholars have interpreted this portion of the Guarantee Clause in numerous, often conflicting, ways.
See
William M. Wiecek,
The Guarantee Clause of the U.S. Constitution
293-303 (1972) (outlining different interpretations of the Guarantee Clause);
see also
Akhil Reed Amar,
The Central Meaning of Republican Government: Popular Sovereignty, Majority Rule, and the Denominator Problem,
65 U. Colo. L.Rev. 749, 749 (1994); Erwin Chemerinsky,
Cases Under the Guarantee Clause Should be Justiciable,
65 U. Colo. L.Rev. 849, 864-69 (1994); Henry Paul Monaghan,
We the Peoples, Original Understanding, and the Constitutional Amendment,
96 Colum. L.Rev. 121, 164-65 (1996); G. Edward White,
Guaranteeing a Republican Form of Government: Reading the Guarantee Clause,
65 U. Colo. L.Rev. 787, 803 (1994). And John Adams himself, twenty years after ratification of the Constitution, confessed that he “never understood” what the Guarantee Clause meant and that he “believ[ed] no man ever did or ever will.” Letter from John Adams to Mercy Warren
Despite the conflicting views on the precise meaning of the Guarantee Clause, the text itself provides guidance. The first portion of the Clause is only implicated when there is a threat to a “Republican Form of Government.” “Republican” is commonly defined as “of, relating to, or having the characteristics of a republic: having the form or based on the principles of a republic.”
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
1928 (1993). “Republic,” in turn, is defined as “a government in which supreme power resides in a body of citizens entitled to vote and is exercised by elected officers and representatives responsible to them and governing according to law.”
Id.; see also Oxford English Dictionary
(2d ed.1989) (defining “republic” as “[a] state in which the supreme power rests in the people and their elected representatives or officers, as opрosed to one governed by a king or similar ruler”). The Guarantee clause does not require a
particular
allocation of power within each state so long as a republican form of government is preserved. Indeed, the forms of each state government at the time of the adoption of the Constitution varied in terms of separations of powers,
see
Robert J. Pushaw, Jr.,
Justiciability and Separation of Powers: A Neo-Federalist Approach,
81 Cornell L.Rev. 393, 408-11 (1996), and are each'presumed to have been “Republican” within the meaning of the Guarantee Clause,
see Minor v. Happersett,
Comparing the text of the Guarantee Clause to the different text of Article II, § 1, cl. 2 of the U.S. Constitution provides further support for limiting federal court intervention in state separation-of-powers violations, except, perhaps, in the most egregious circumstances. The text of Article II, § 1, cl. 2 provides that “[e]ach State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct” ’electors for President and Vice President. In contrast to the Guarantee Clause, this clause explicitly implicates state separation-of-powers issues by conferring a right or obligation upon one branch of the state government. The extent to which this more explicit text authorizes federal courts to intervene in state separation-of-powers violations is nonetheless far from clear. While several members of the Supreme Court have suggested that federal courts can indeed review the internal allocations of power in a state government under the text of this clause,
see Bush v. Gore,
The Supreme Court cases addressing the Guarantee Clause confirm
Plaintiffs argue that the Supreme Court has not closed the door to Guarantee Clause claims. They point out that the Court assumed arguendo that the Clause was applicable in
New York v. United States,
Most importantly, though,
New York
and
Printz
dо not establish that separation-of-powers violations within a state, such as those alleged by the plaintiffs, constitute Guarantee Clause violations. Much to the contrary, the Court in
New York
affirmed that the Guarantee Clause (if claims under it are justiciable at all) is only offended in highly limited circumstances. It held that there was no possible
The obvious question here is why the possibility of amending the Massachusetts Constitution, see Mass. Const, amend, art. XLVIII, against the background of normal election of the legislature and governor by voters, is not sufficient to eliminate any plausible claim of a deprivation of a republican form of government under the Guarantee Clause. Although the possibility of amending the constitution is not the only safeguard, it is certainly the most direct.
Plaintiffs respоnd that the change in the definition of marriage is so momentous that it overshadows either of these checks available to the citizens of Massachusetts for two reasons. First, any amendment to the Massachusetts Constitution will take roughly two years to come into effect. Second, relying on the SJC’s language in
Albano v. Attorney General,
This argument goes too far. The SJC has not abolished the legislature. The amendment process enshrined in the Massachusetts Constitution is purposely designed to be slow; that choice is itself a result of the state’s republican form оf government. Moreover, even were the plaintiffs’ reading of Albano correct, an issue we do not decide, then the inability of a constitutional amendment to void Goo-dridge retroactively is also the result of a republican form of government in action. It was the Massachusetts people who amended the state constitution in 1918 to provide for certain limitations in the process of constitutional amendment. See Mass. Const, amend, art. XLVIII, pt. II, § 2.
The resolution of the same-sex marriage issue by the judicial branch of the Massаchusetts government, subject to override by the voters through the state constitutional amendment process, does not plausibly constitute a threat to a republican form of government. Absent such a threat, our federal constitutional system simply does not permit a federal court to intervene in the arrangement of state government under the guise of a federal Guarantee Clause question. Such an intervention would itself threaten federal court interference with the very form of government that the people of Massachusetts have chosen for themselves. Perhaps, in unusual and extreme cases, such as the establishment of a monarchy by a state in place of a republican form of government, individuals could utilize the federal courts to enforce the Guarantee Clause. See The Federalist No. 43, at 311 (J. Madison) (B. Wright ed., 1961) (the Guarantee Clause gives “the superintending government ... authority to defend the system against aristocratic or monarchical innovations”). That is not this case.
III.
We affirm the denial of injunctive and declaratory relief. No costs are awarded.
Notes
. Plaintiffs assert that they are not challenging any holding by the SJC that same-sex couples are entitled to marital benefits. Rather, they say, the challenge is to the SJC's "usurping” the legislature’s prerogative to define the term "marriage” and to its redefini
. To obtain preliminary injunctive relief, plaintiffs had the burden of showing (1) a likelihоod of success on the merits; (2) that they would suffer irreparable injury if injunc-tive relief were not issued; (3) that such injury outweighs any harm that would stem from granting injunctive relief; and (4) that the public interest weighs in their favor.
See R.I. Dep’t of Envtl. Mgmt. v. United States,
. For this reason, there is no merit to the argument of defendant-intervenors (which was not joined by the state defendants) that this appeal is moot because May 17 has come and passed. Injunctive relief could now issue to stop future marriages, so a live controversy is still present and the case is not moot.
. One preliminary objection of the defendants is based on asserted Eleventh Amendment immunity. We have no need to address this issue.
See Parella
v.
Ret. Bd. of R.I. Employees' Ret. Sys.,
. It is of note for purposes of the standing inquiry that the Guarantee Clause makes the guarantee of a republican form of government to the states; the bare language of the Clause does not directly confer any rights on individuals vis-á-vis the states. Whether, in the sorts of extreme cases discussed below, voters or other individuals could enforce the Clause is an issue we need not decide.
. The political question doctrine has been infrequently used in recent times. As this court noted in Doe
v. Bush,
. For this reason, we do not consider the district court’s determination of the state, not federal, law issue of whether the SJC's exercise of jurisdiction and holding in Goodridge were consistent with the Massachusetts Constitution. As the brief for the state defendants filed by the Attorney General of Massachusetts notes, a federal court "should be wary of ... attempts] to draw the Court into reviewing the decision of a state's highest court on matters of state constitutional law.” The district court’s approach unnecessarily opened the door, as the state defendants note, to a new way "for those dissatisfied by state court decisions to seek federal court review,” by simply labeling their dissatisfaction as a Guarantee Clause claim.
. In
Printz,
the Court noted that thе Guarantee Clause "presupposes the continued existence of the states and ... those means and instrumentalities which are the creation of their sovereign and reserved rights,” and thus that, through the Guarantee Clause and several other clauses, the states "retained a residuary and inviolable sovereignty” when the federal government was established.
. Acknowledging the different context in which
New York
and
Printz
were decided, plaintiffs draw on academic commentary to argue that the Guarantee Clause confers judicially cognizable rights on individuals as well as states.
See Chemerinsky, supra,
65 U. Colo. L.Rev. at 851 (the Guarantee Clause is a "protector of basic individual rights and should not be treated as being solely about the structure of government”); Debra F. Salz,
Discrimination-Prone Initiatives and the Guarantee Clause: A Role for the Supreme Court,
62 Geo. Wash. L.Rev. 100 (1993). They also rely on a Kansas Supreme Court decision,
Van Sickle v. Shanahan,
