Video: Sonia Sotomayor On Same Sex Marriage

2009 July 16
by dekerivers

A little background on this matter makes the video below more clear.  I suspect many my age or older will recall the Baker v. Nelson case .  Years after it happened a high school classmate used this case as a class project at Tri-County High School in Plainfield, Wisconsin in my senior year.  That was back in back in 1979.  (Gasp.) I may have come from a small rural area, but some in my class/group were on the cutting edge of ideas at times.

A case in which the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that Minnesota law limited marriage to opposite-sex couples, and that this limitation did not violate the United States Constitution. The plaintiffs appealed, and the United States Supreme Court, 409 U.S. 810 (1972), dismissed the appeal “for want of [a] substantial federal question”. That dismissal by the Supreme Court of the United States constituted a decision on the merits, and established Baker v. Nelson as the controlling precedent as a matter of federal constitutional law on the issue of same-sex marriage.

On May 18, 1970, two University of Minnesota gay student activists, Richard John Baker and James Michael McConnell, applied to Gerald R. Nelson, the clerk of Minnesota’s Hennepin County District Court in Minneapolis, for a marriage license. Nelson denied the request on the sole ground that the two were of the same sex. Baker and McConnell then sued Nelson, contending that Minnesota law permitted same-sex marriages, and arguing against Nelson’s interpretation that it did not violate their rights under the Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. The trial court ruled Nelson was not required to issue Baker and McConnell a marriage license, and specifically directed that they not be issued a license. On appeal, the Minnesota Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s ruling, and specifically ruled that Minnesota’s limiting of marriage to opposite-sex unions “does not offend the First, Eighth, Ninth, or Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution”.

Later that year, the couple applied for and were awarded a marriage license by the Blue Earth County Commissioner in Mankato, Minnesota. Because of the Minnesota Supreme Court decision, the license was deemed invalid. The couple still claims it is valid to this day, and attempted to file a joint tax return in 2004. After the IRS rejected the joint return, McConnell filed an action in Federal District Court, seeking a federal income tax refund in the amount of $793.28 and a declaration that he is “a full citizen who is lawfully married and, by that fact, entitled to be treated the same as every other married Minnesotan, similarly situated”. McConnell’s action was rejected by the Court.[1]

 

One Response leave one →
  1. 2009 July 16
    thejourneywithnoend permalink

    Thanks for posting.

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