United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
___________
No. 05-2604
___________
Citizens for Equal Protection, et al., *
*
Plaintiffs - Appellees, *
*
v. * Appeal from the United States
* District Court for the
Jon C. Bruning, Attorney General; * District of Nebraska.
Dave Heineman, Governor, in their *
official capacities, *
*
Defendants - Appellants, *
___________
Submitted: February 13, 2006
Filed: July 14, 2006
___________
Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, BOWMAN and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
___________
LOKEN, Chief Judge.
In November 2000, Nebraska voters passed by a large majority a constitutional
amendment, codified as Article I, § 29 of the Nebraska Constitution, providing:
Only marriage between a man and a woman shall be valid or recognized
in Nebraska. The uniting of two persons of the same sex in a civil union,
domestic partnership, or other similar same-sex relationship shall not be
valid or recognized in Nebraska.
Three public interest groups whose members include gay and lesbian citizens of
Nebraska commenced this action against the Governor and the Attorney General in
their official capacities seeking an order declaring that § 29 violates the Equal
Protection Clause and is an unconstitutional bill of attainder, and permanently
enjoining its enforcement. The district court denied the State’s motion to dismiss for
lack of standing and ripeness. Citizens for Equal Protection, Inc. v. Bruning, 290 F.
Supp. 2d 1004 (D. Neb. 2003). After the parties submitted the case on a Joint
Stipulation of Facts, the district court held that § 29 violates the Equal Protection
Clause, is an unconstitutional bill of attainder, and deprives gays and lesbians of their
First Amendment rights. Citizens for Equal Protection, Inc. v. Bruning, 368 F. Supp.
2d 980 (D. Neb. 2005). The State appeals.1 We reverse.
I. Jurisdiction Issues
On appeal, the State renews its contentions that Appellees lack standing to raise
these constitutional claims and that the claims are not ripe for review. Like the district
court, we disagree. The State argues that Appellees lack standing -- their members
have suffered no injury in fact because marriage and domestic partnership licenses are
not available to same-sex couples in Nebraska, and Appellees’ members can obtain
1
Amicus briefs supporting the State were submitted by certain members of the
Nebraska Legislature; the Nebraska Family Council; the Nebraska Catholic
Conference, et al; eleven other States; Alliance for Marriage, Inc.; the American
Center for Law & Justice Northeast, Inc.; American Family Association, Inc.; Focus
on the Family and Family Research Council; Liberty Counsel; The National Legal
Foundation; the Thomas More Law Center; thirty-four law professors; and United
Families International and The Center for Arizona Policy. Amicus briefs supporting
Appellees were submitted by the National Association of Social Workers and its
Nebraska Chapter; Nebraska attorney Susan Ann Koenig; the American Psychological
Association; and Certain Chapters of Parents, Families & Friends of Lesbians & Gays.
The court appreciates their participation.
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the desired results through other means. However, when the government erects a
barrier making it more difficult for members of a group to obtain a benefit, “[t]he
‘injury in fact’. . . is the denial of equal treatment resulting from the imposition of the
barrier, not the ultimate inability to obtain the benefit.” N.E. Fla. Chapter of the
Assoc. General Contractors of Am. v. Jacksonville, 508 U.S. 656, 666 (1993).
Appellees allege that § 29 is such a barrier.
The State argues that the constitutional issues are not ripe for judicial review
because no court has struck down a law passed by the Nebraska Legislature as
inconsistent with § 29. The ripeness doctrine is aimed at preventing federal courts,
through premature adjudication, from “entangling themselves in abstract
disagreements.” Thomas v. Union Carbide Agr. Prods. Co., 473 U.S. 568, 580 (1985).
The Joint Stipulation of Facts recites that a bill did not advance out of legislative
committee after the Attorney General opined that it would violate § 29. Thus, the
legal issues raised in Appellees’ complaint are not premature or abstract, and the relief
sought and granted by the district court would remedy at least some of the alleged
injury. Compare Renne v. Geary, 501 U.S. 312, 316-24 (1991). For these reasons,
we conclude that, whatever the merits of their claims, Appellees have standing to raise
the claims and the dispute is, at least in part, ripe for review.
The amicus brief submitted by eleven States makes an additional jurisdictional
argument -- that Appellees’ claims are not justiciable because neither the Governor
nor the Attorney General is responsible for the alleged injury § 29 causes Appellees,
diminished access to the legislative process. Nebraska does not adopt this contention,
but we cannot ignore a challenge to our Article III jurisdiction. See generally
Reproductive Health Serv. of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region, Inc. v.
Nixon, 428 F.3d 1139, 1145-47 (8th Cir. 2005).
Under Nebraska law, the Governor and the Attorney General have broad
powers to enforce the State’s Constitution and statutes. See Neb. Const. Art IV, § 6;
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Neb. Rev. Stat. § 84-731. The aforementioned opinion of the Attorney General that
a proposed bill would run afoul of § 29 confirms that these broad powers include
policing compliance with this constitutional amendment. Of course, § 29 does not
require affirmative enforcement by any state official; it functions as a barrier to
government action that Appellees desire. The amicus brief argues that § 29 may be
challenged, for example, by a suit to compel a county clerk to marry two same-sex
partners. But that argument conflates the distinction noted in N.E. Florida Contractors
between challenging a barrier and having a right to the ultimate benefit. Here, as we
have explained, Appellees have standing to challenge the barrier, and the dispute is
ripe for review. Although one may question whether enjoining these two state officers
would fully redress Appellees’ alleged injuries, we agree with the concession implicit
in the State’s decision not to press this issue -- the Governor and the Attorney General
have “some connection with the enforcement” of § 29 and therefore this suit for
equitable relief falls within the exception to the State’s Eleventh Amendment
immunity established in Ex parte Young, 209 U.S. 123, 157 (1908). This satisfies the
case or controversy requirement of Article III.
II. Equal Protection
In Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996), the Supreme Court considered an
amendment to the Colorado Constitution barring all state and local governments from
allowing “homosexual, lesbian or bisexual orientation, conduct, practices or
relationships” to be the basis for a claim of “minority status, quota preferences,
protected status or claim of discrimination.” The amendment invalidated certain local
ordinances prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. The
Colorado Supreme Court held that any constitutional amendment that infringes on
“the fundamental right to participate equally in the political process [by] ‘fencing out’
an independently identifiable class of persons must be subject to strict judicial
scrutiny” under the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution. Evans
v. Romer, 854 P.2d 1270, 1282 (Colo. 1993). The Colorado Supreme Court then
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affirmed a later ruling that invalidated the enactment because the State failed to
establish a compelling governmental interest satisfying strict judicial scrutiny. Evans
v. Romer, 882 P.2d 1335 (Colo. 1994). A dissent noted that “[t]he Supreme Court of
the United States has never held . . . that the right to participate equally in the political
process is a fundamental right.” Id. at 1359 (Erickson, J., dissenting).
After granting certiorari review, the Supreme Court affirmed but “on a rationale
different from that adopted by the State Supreme Court.” 517 U.S. at 626. The
Supreme Court noted that the Colorado constitutional amendment “withdraws from
homosexuals, but no others, specific legal protection from the injuries caused by
discrimination, and it forbids reinstatement of these laws and policies.” Id. at 627.
The Court reasoned that the amendment “fails, indeed defies,” conventional equal
protection analysis because it “impos[es] a broad and undifferentiated disability on a
single named group .... [and] its sheer breadth is so discontinuous with the reasons
offered for it that the amendment seems inexplicable by anything but animus toward
the class it affects.” Id. at 632. The Court then concluded that the amendment lacked
a rational relationship to a legitimate governmental purpose:
It is a status-based enactment divorced from any factual context from
which we could discern a relationship to legitimate state interests; it is
a classification of persons undertaken for its own sake, something the
Equal Protection Clause does not permit. Id. at 635.
Relying primarily on Romer, Appellees argue that § 29 violates the Equal
Protection Clause because it raises an insurmountable political barrier to same-sex
couples obtaining the many governmental and private sector benefits that are based
upon a legally valid marriage relationship. Appellees do not assert a right to marriage
or same-sex unions. Rather, they seek “a level playing field, an equal opportunity to
convince the people’s elected representatives that same-sex relationships deserve legal
protection.” Citizens for Equal Protection, 368 F. Supp. 2d at 985 n.1. The argument
turns on the fact that § 29 is an amendment to the Nebraska Constitution. Unlike
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state-wide legislation restricting marriage to a man and a woman, a constitutional
amendment deprives gays and lesbians of “equal footing in the political arena”
because state and local government officials now lack the power to address issues of
importance to this minority.2
The district court agreed, concluding “that Section 29 is indistinguishable from
the Colorado constitutional amendment at issue in Romer.” 368 F. Supp. 2d at 1002.
In this part of its opinion, the district court purported to apply conventional, “rational-
basis” equal protection analysis -- “If a legislative classification or distinction neither
burdens a fundamental right nor targets a suspect class, we will uphold it so long as
it bears a rational relation to some legitimate [government] end.” Vacco v. Quill, 521
U.S. 793, 799 (1997), quoting Romer, 517 U.S. at 631. But the court in its discussion,
368 F. Supp. 2d at 997-1005, applied the same strict scrutiny analysis applied by the
Colorado Supreme Court, but not by the United States Supreme Court, in Romer.
Like the Colorado Court, the district court based its heightened scrutiny on Appellees’
“fundamental right of access to the political process.” Id. at 1003.
As Supreme Court decisions attest, the level of judicial scrutiny to be applied
in determining the validity of state legislative and constitutional enactments under the
Fourteenth Amendment is a subject of continuing debate and disagreement among the
Justices. Though the most relevant precedents are murky, we conclude for a number
of reasons that § 29 should receive rational-basis review under the Equal Protection
Clause, rather than a heightened level of judicial scrutiny.
2
Constitutional provisions that prohibit certain activities disadvantage the class
of persons who wish to engage in the activity. For example, Article III, § 24, of the
Nebraska Constitution forbids “games of chance.” Does § 24 deny casino operators
equal protection because they, unlike other businesses, must repeal a constitutional
amendment to legalize the activities they wish to conduct? Note, too, that the equal-
access theory urged by Appellees would likewise apply to a state statute that limits the
policies and laws municipalities may adopt. See Washington v. Seattle Sch. Dist. No.
1, 458 U.S. 457, 477 (1982).
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While voting rights and apportionment cases establish the fundamental right to
access the political process, it is not an absolute right. In a multi-tiered democracy,
it is inevitable that interest groups will strive to make it more difficult for competing
interest groups to achieve contrary legislative objectives. This can be done, for
example, by having the state legislature repeal a local ordinance, or by having the
electorate adopt a constitutional amendment barring future legislation. As the
Supreme Court said in upholding a state constitutional amendment in James v.
Valtierra, 402 U.S. 137, 141-43 (1971):
Provisions for referendums demonstrate devotion to democracy, not to
bias, discrimination, or prejudice. Nonetheless, appellees contend that
Article XXXIV denies them equal protection because . . . it hampers
persons desiring public housing from achieving their objective when no
such roadblock faces other groups seeking to influence other public
decisions to their advantage. . . . Under any such holding, presumably a
State would not be able to require referendums on any subject unless
referendums were required on all, because they would always
disadvantage some group. And this Court would be required to analyze
governmental structures to determine whether a gubernatorial veto
provision or a filibuster rule is likely to ‘disadvantage’ any of the diverse
and shifting groups that make up the American people.
Similarly, Justice Scalia’s discussion of the anti-polygamy provisions in many state
constitutions illustrates the chaos that would result if all enactments that allegedly
deprive a group of “equal” political access must survive the rigors of strict judicial
scrutiny. Romer, 517 U.S. at 648-51 (Scalia, J., dissenting). No doubt for these
reasons, although the majority opinion in Romer contained broad language
condemning the Colorado enactment for making it “more difficult for one group of
citizens than for all others to seek aid from the government,” 517 U.S. at 633, the
Court’s conclusion was that the enactment “lacks a rational relationship to legitimate
state interests.” Id. at 632. That is the core standard of rational-basis review.
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If sexual orientation, like race, were a “suspect classification” for purposes of
the Equal Protection Clause, then Appellees’ focus on the political burden erected by
a constitutional amendment would find support in cases like Reitman v. Mulkey, 387
U.S. 369 (1967), Hunter v. Erickson, 393 U.S. 385 (1969), and Washington v. Seattle
Sch. Dist. No. 1, 458 U.S. 457 (1982). But the Supreme Court has never ruled that
sexual orientation is a suspect classification for equal protection purposes. The
Court’s general standard is that rational-basis review applies “where individuals in the
group affected by a law have distinguishing characteristics relevant to interests the
State has the authority to implement.” City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center,
473 U.S. 432, 441 (1985). As we will explain, that is the case here, and therefore
Appellees are not entitled to strict scrutiny review on this ground.
Rational-basis review is highly deferential to the legislature or, in this case, to
the electorate that directly adopted § 29 by the initiative process. “In areas of social
and economic policy, a statutory classification that neither proceeds along suspect
lines nor infringes fundamental constitutional rights must be upheld against equal
protection challenge if there is any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could
provide a rational-basis for the classification.” F.C.C. v. Beach Communications, Inc.,
508 U.S. 307, 313 (1993). Thus, the classification created by § 29 and other laws
defining marriage as the union between one man and one woman is afforded a “strong
presumption of validity.” Heller v. Doe, 509 U.S. 312, 319 (1993). The Equal
Protection Clause “is not a license for courts to judge the wisdom, fairness, or logic
of [the voters’] choices.” Beach Communications, 508 U.S. at 313.
Our rational-basis review begins with an historical fact -- the institution of
marriage has always been, in our federal system, the predominant concern of state
government. The Supreme Court long ago declared, and recently reaffirmed, that a
State “has absolute right to prescribe the conditions upon which the marriage relation
between its own citizens shall be created, and the causes for which it may be
dissolved.” Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U.S. 714, 734-35 (1878), quoted in Sosna v. Iowa,
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419 U.S. 393, 404 (1975). This necessarily includes the power to classify those
persons who may validly marry. “Surely, for example, a State may legitimately say
that no one can marry his or her sibling, that no one can marry who is not at least 14
years old, that no one can marry without first passing an examination for venereal
disease, or that no one can marry who has a living husband or wife.” Zablocki v.
Redhail, 434 U.S. 374, 392 (1978) (Stewart, J., concurring). In this constitutional
environment, rational-basis review must be particularly deferential.
The State argues that the many laws defining marriage as the union of one man
and one woman and extending a variety of benefits to married couples are rationally
related to the government interest in “steering procreation into marriage.” By
affording legal recognition and a basket of rights and benefits to married heterosexual
couples, such laws “encourage procreation to take place within the socially recognized
unit that is best situated for raising children.” The State and its supporting amici cite
a host of judicial decisions and secondary authorities recognizing and upholding this
rationale. The argument is based in part on the traditional notion that two committed
heterosexuals are the optimal partnership for raising children, which modern-day
homosexual parents understandably decry. But it is also based on a “responsible
procreation” theory that justifies conferring the inducements of marital recognition
and benefits on opposite-sex couples, who can otherwise produce children by
accident, but not on same-sex couples, who cannot. See Hernandez v. Robles, No. 86,
2006 NY Slip Op 5239 at 5-6 (N.Y. Ct. App. Jul. 6, 2006); Morrison v. Sadler, 821
N.E.2d 15, 24-26 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005). Whatever our personal views regarding this
political and sociological debate, we cannot conclude that the State’s justification
“lacks a rational relationship to legitimate state interests.” Romer, 517 U.S. at 632.3
3
When the Supreme Court invalidated a state law criminalizing sodomy in
Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003), only Justice O’Connor relied on the Equal
Protection Clause, rather than the substantive component of the Due Process Clause.
Of particular relevance to this case, Justice O’Connor concluded that moral
disapproval of private, consensual homosexual conduct “is an interest that is
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The district court rejected the State’s justification as being “at once too broad
and too narrow.” Citizens for Equal Protection, 368 F. Supp. 2d at 1002. But under
rational-basis review, “Even if the classification . . . is to some extent both
underinclusive and overinclusive, and hence the line drawn . . . imperfect, it is
nevertheless the rule that . . . perfection is by no means required.” Vance v. Bradley,
440 U.S. 93, 108 (1979). Legislatures are permitted to use generalizations so long as
“the question is at least debatable.” Heller, 509 U.S. at 326 (quotation omitted). The
package of government benefits and restrictions that accompany the institution of
formal marriage serve a variety of other purposes. The legislature -- or the people
through the initiative process -- may rationally choose not to expand in wholesale
fashion the groups entitled to those benefits. “We accept such imperfection because
it is in turn rationally related to the secondary objective of legislative convenience.”
Vance, 440 U.S. at 109.
We likewise reject the district court’s conclusion that the Colorado enactment
at issue in Romer is indistinguishable from § 29. The Colorado enactment repealed
all existing and barred all future preferential policies based on “orientation, conduct,
practices, or relationships.” The Supreme Court struck it down based upon this
“unprecedented” scope. See Romer, 517 U.S. at 626, 633. Here, § 29 limits the class
of people who may validly enter into marriage and the legal equivalents to marriage
emerging in other States -- civil unions and domestic partnerships. This focus is not
so broad as to render Nebraska’s reasons for its enactment “inexplicable by anything
but animus” towards same-sex couples. Id. at 632.
insufficient to satisfy rational basis review under the Equal Protection Clause,” but
she expressly noted that “other reasons exist [for the State] to promote the institution
of marriage beyond mere moral disapproval of an excluded group.” 539 U.S. at 582,
585 (O’Connor, J., concurring). The Lawrence majority, too, was careful to note that
the Texas statute at issue “does not involve whether the government must give formal
recognition to any relationship that homosexual persons seek to enter.” Id. at 578.
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Appellees argue that § 29 does not rationally advance this purported state
interest because “prohibiting protection for gay people’s relationships” does not steer
procreation into marriage. This demonstrates, Appellees argue, that § 29’s only
purpose is to disadvantage gay people. But the argument disregards the expressed
intent of traditional marriage laws -- to encourage heterosexual couples to bear and
raise children in committed marriage relationships. Appellees attempt to isolate § 29
from other state laws limiting marriage to heterosexual couples. But as we have
explained, there is no fundamental right to be free of the political barrier a validly
enacted constitutional amendment erects. If the many state laws limiting the persons
who may marry are rationally related to a legitimate government interest, so is the
reinforcing effect of § 29. The barrier created by § 29 was enough to confer standing,
but Appellees’ equal protection argument fails on the merits.
III. Bill of Attainder
The district court also concluded “that Section 29 violates the Bill of Attainder
Clause by singling out gays and lesbians for legislative punishment.” 368 F. Supp.
2d at 1005.4 The State argues that § 29 is not a bill of attainder. We agree.
Bills of attainder are “legislative acts, no matter what their form, that apply
either to named individuals or to easily ascertainable members of a group in such a
way as to inflict punishment on them without a judicial trial.” United States v. Lovett,
4
The court cited Art. I, § 9, cl. 3, of the Constitution, a section that applies only
to Congress. We assume the court meant to cite Art. I, § 10, which bars the States
from passing bills of attainder. The two provisions are construed identically. See
Crain v. City of Mountain Home, 611 F.2d 726, 728-29 (8th Cir. 1979); Kerr-McGee
Chem. Corp. v. Edgar, 837 F. Supp. 927, 934 n.6 (N.D. Ill. 1993).
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328 U.S. 303, 315 (1946).5 “To rise to the level of ‘punishment’ . . . harm must fall
within the traditional meaning of legislative punishment, fail to further a non-punitive
purpose, or be based on a [legislative] intent to punish.” Planned Parenthood of Mid-
Mo. v. Dempsey, 167 F.3d 458, 465 (8th Cir. 1999), citing Nixon, 433 U.S. at 473,
and Selective Serv. Sys. v. Minn. Pub. Interest Research Group, 468 U.S. 841, 852
(1984). Although the Supreme Court has broadened the historical bill of attainder
concept of punishment, it does not include “every Act of Congress or the States that
legislatively burdens some persons or groups but not all other plausible individuals.”
Nixon, 433 U.S. at 471; see Flemming v. Nestor, 363 U.S. 603, 617 (1960) (“the mere
denial of a noncontractual governmental benefit” is not punishment).
Echoing its equal protection analysis, the district court determined that § 29
inflicts punishment because it “effectively disenfranchises lesbian, gay and bisexual
people and their supporters as they can no longer petition their representatives and city
and local governments for legislative changes that would protect their relationship,
agreements, and interests.” 368 F. Supp. 2d at 1006. This political disadvantage is
certainly not punishment in the historical bill of attainder sense. See Nixon, 433 U.S.
at 474 (imprisonment, banishment, punitive confiscation of property, removal from
employment or profession). And as our rational-basis discussion makes clear, the
political harm to Appellees’ members is not punishment in the functional sense
because it serves the nonpunitive purpose of steering heterosexual procreation into
marriage, a purpose that negates any suspicion that the supporters of § 29 were
motivated solely by a desire to punish disadvantaged groups.
5
The Supreme Court has frequently defined a bill of attainder as “a law that
legislatively determines guilt and inflicts punishment” without a judicial trial.
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The district court stated that “the Bill of Attainder analysis dovetails with the
. . . Equal Protection issues in this case.” 368 F. Supp. 2d at 1008 n.23. This reflects
an error of law because the Supreme Court has cautioned that the Bill of Attainder
Clause “was not intended to serve as a variant of the equal protection doctrine.”
Nixon, 433 U.S. at 471. On this record, we conclude that Appellees’ bill of attainder
claim is without merit.
IV. First Amendment
In addition to upholding Appellees’ equal protection and bill of attainder
claims, the district court ruled, sua sponte, “that the deprivation occasioned by the
passage of Section 29 is the deprivation of the right to associational freedom protected
by the First Amendment . . . and the right to petition the government for redress of
grievances, which encompasses the right to participate in the political process, also
protected by the First Amendment.” Citizens for Equal Protection, 368 F. Supp. 2d
at 989. The court never clarified whether it was holding that § 29 violates the First
Amendment as applied to the States.
Appellees did not raise a First Amendment claim in the district court or on
appeal. In any event, if the question is properly before us, we conclude that § 29 does
not violate the First Amendment because (i) it “does not ‘directly and substantially’
interfere with appellees’ ability to associate” in lawful pursuit of a common goal, and
(ii) it seems “exceedingly unlikely” it will prevent persons from continuing to
associate. Lyng v. Int'l Union, 485 U.S. 360, 364-66 (1988). The district court cited
no case supporting its suggestion that the First Amendment right “to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances” is violated by an enactment that makes it
more difficult for a group with full access to the political process to successfully
advocate its views. The First Amendment guarantees the right to advocate; it does not
guarantee political success.
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The district court’s opinion suggests that its discussion of First Amendment
interests was intended to capture useful First Amendment principles. The court noted
that a statute infringing First Amendment rights is subject to strict scrutiny. 368 F.
Supp. 2d at 989 n.8. Though the court claimed it did not reach the issue, it applied
what we conclude was heightened scrutiny analysis in the equal protection portion of
its opinion. As we have explained, this was error because § 29 is subject to rational-
basis review. The district court further noted that “a First Amendment deprivation
subjects the challenged enactment to examination for vagueness and overbreadth.”
Id. at 995. The court then invalidated § 29 under the Equal Protection Clause in part
for the potential overbreadth of its second sentence, id. at 1004-05, ignoring the fact
that overbreadth analysis is inconsistent with rational-basis review. This was
improper. Indeed, even when First Amendment interests are potentially affected,
“facial overbreadth has not been invoked when a limiting construction has been or
could be placed on the challenged statute.” Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. 601,
612 (1973); see Members of the City Council of Los Angeles v. Taxpayers for
Vincent, 466 U.S. 789, 801 (1984). Whether the second sentence might be given a
limiting construction is an issue ill-suited to facial challenge.
V. Conclusion
In the nearly one hundred and fifty years since the Fourteenth Amendment was
adopted, to our knowledge no Justice of the Supreme Court has suggested that a state
statute or constitutional provision codifying the traditional definition of marriage
violates the Equal Protection Clause or any other provision of the United States
Constitution. Indeed, in Baker v. Nelson, 409 U.S. 810 (1972), when faced with a
Fourteenth Amendment challenge to a decision by the Supreme Court of Minnesota
denying a marriage license to a same-sex couple, the United States Supreme Court
dismissed “for want of a substantial federal question.” (Emphasis added.) There is
good reason for this restraint. As Judge Posner has observed:
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This is not to say that courts should refuse to recognize a constitutional
right merely because to do so would make them unpopular.
Constitutional rights are, after all, rights against the democratic majority.
But public opinion is not irrelevant to the task of deciding whether a
constitutional right exists. . . . If it is truly a new right, as a right to
same-sex marriage would be . . . . [judges] will have to go beyond the
technical legal materials of decision and consider moral, political,
empirical, prudential, and institutional issues, including the public
acceptability of a decision recognizing the new right.
Richard A. Posner, Should There Be Homosexual Marriage? And If So, Who Should
Decide?, 95 Mich. L. Rev. 1578, 1585 (1997).
As we have explained, Appellees’ attempt to isolate § 29 from laws prohibiting
same-sex marriage because it is a state constitutional amendment fails. If there is no
constitutional right to same-sex marriage, that is, if a statutory prohibition satisfies
rational-basis review, then § 29 likewise survives rational-basis review. We hold that
§ 29 and other laws limiting the state-recognized institution of marriage to
heterosexual couples are rationally related to legitimate state interests and therefore
do not violate the Constitution of the United States.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded with
directions to dismiss Appellees’ complaint with prejudice. Given our decision on the
merits, Appellees are no longer “prevailing parties.” The district court’s award of
attorneys fees is therefore reversed. See Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home, Inc. v. W.
Va. Dept. of Health & Human Resources, 532 U.S. 598, 604 (2001).
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