Wisconsin Plaintiffs' Response

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    REBECCAM. KLEINLINDAX. SHI

    Mayer Brown LLP

    71 South Wacker Drive

    Chicago, IL 60606

    (312) 782-0600

    LAURENCE J. DUPUISAmerican Civil Liberties Un-

    ion of Wisconsin Founda-

    tion

    207 E. Buffalo Street

    Milwaukee, WI 53202

    (414) 272-4032

    Counsel for Respondents Virginia Wolf, et al.

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    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Page

    QUESTIONS PRESENTED ....................................... i

    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES.......................................iv

    INTRODUCTION........................................................1

    STATEMENT ..............................................................2

    A. The Plaintiffs-Respondents ..............................2

    B. Wisconsins Marriage Ban................................2

    C. Procedural History ...........................................3

    1. The District Court Decision........................3

    2. The Seventh Circuit Decision .....................6

    ARGUMENT ...............................................................9

    I. This Case Provides an Excellent Vehicle forCertiorari..............................................................10

    A. The Factual and Legal Context of This

    Case Warrants Granting the Petition. ..........11

    B. The State Has Consistently andVigorously Defended Its Marriage

    Laws. ...............................................................13

    C. The Seventh Circuits Opinion Most

    Fully Develops the Reasons Why theEqual Protection Clause Bars StateMarriage Bans. ...............................................14

    D. This Case Presents the Full Range of

    Legal Issues and Arguments RegardingMarriage of Same-Sex couples. ......................14

    II. Although Certiorari Is Warranted, theSeventh Circuits Judgment Should Be

    Affirmed................................................................15

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    TABLE OF CONTENTScontinued

    Page

    A. The Seventh Circuit CorrectlyConcluded That Heightened Scrutiny

    Applies to Classifications Based OnSexual Orientation. ........................................15

    B. The Seventh Circuit CorrectlyConcluded That Wisconsins MarriageBan Failed to Satisfy HeightenedScrutiny, or, in the Alternative, Failed

    to Satisfy Rational Basis Review. ..................17

    CONCLUSION ..........................................................18

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    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

    CASES

    Baskinv. Bogan,2014 WL 4359059 (7th Cir. Sept. 4, 2014)........... 6

    Bowenv. Gilliard,483 U.S. 587 (1987)............................................. 16

    Grutterv. Bollinger,

    539 U.S. 306 (2003)............................................. 16

    Lovingv. Virginia,388 U.S 1 (1967)................................................ 3, 7

    Romerv. Evans,517 U.S. 620 (1996)............................................. 10

    United Statesv. Virginia,518 U.S. 515 (1996)............................................. 16

    United Statesv. Windsor,133 S. Ct. 2675 (2013)........................... 1, 9, 10, 11

    Wolfv. Walker,986 F. Supp. 2d 982 (W.D. Wis. 2014).................. 3

    CONSTITUTIONS, STATUTES, AND RULES

    U.S. Const. amend. XIV ....................................passim

    42 U.S.C. 416(h)(1)(A)(i)........................................ 12

    29 C.F.R. 825.122(b) .............................................. 12

    Colo. Rev. Stat. 14-15-101, et seq. ........................ 11

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    Nev. Rev. Stat. 122A.010, et seq........................... 11

    Wis. Const. art. XIII 13 ........................... 2, 3, 11, 12

    Wis. Stat. 48.82(1)(a)............................................. 13

    Wis. Stat. 765.001(1) ............................................. 11

    Wis. Stat. 766.15.................................................... 11

    Wis. Stat. 766.31(2) ............................................... 11

    Wis. Stat. 766.55(2) ............................................... 11

    Wis. Stat. 860.01(1) ............................................... 11

    Wis. Stat. 891.40(1) ............................................... 13

    Wis. Stat. 891.41(1) ............................................... 13

    MISCELLANEOUS

    U.S. Social Security Administration Program

    Operations Manual, GN 00210.100 (Wind-sor Same-Sex Marriage Claims) ....................... 12

    U.S. Social Security Administration Program

    Operations Manual System, GN 00210.400

    (Same-Sex MarriageBenefits for Surviv-ing Spouses) ....................................................... 12

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    INTRODUCTION

    The Seventh Circuit correctly held thatWisconsins marriage ban is violates the Equal Pro-tection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to theUnited States Constitution. The court of appeals rul-

    ing is consistent with more than two dozen rulings ofother federal courts, including the Fourth and TenthCircuits, that have been issued since this Courts de-cision in United States v. Windsor, 133 S. Ct. 2675(2013).

    Despite the correctness of the Seventh Circuitsopinion, plaintiffs agree that this Court should grantcertiorari in this case because the issues it presentsare of fundamental importance to plaintiffs and the

    country as a whole, because this Court and othercourts have granted stays of similar lower court

    judgments pending review by this Court, and be-cause final relief for plaintiffs is not likely to comeuntil this Court decides these constitutional issues.This case provides an ideal vehicle for resolving the

    constitutional questions presented by state bans onmarriage of same-sex couples because the factual

    and legal background of this case squarely presentsthe relevant issues without raising procedural or ju-risdictional concerns, because Wisconsin has consist-ently defended its laws in the lower courts and in

    this Court, because the opinion in this case is the on-ly court of appeals opinion to rely exclusively on the

    Equal Protection Clause to conclude that state mar-riage bans are unconstitutional, and because thiscase presents the opportunity for the Court to clarifythat lesser forms of relationship protection for same-

    sex couples, such as Wisconsins domestic partner-ship registry, do not resolve the equal protection

    problems. .

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    STATEMENT

    A. The Plaintiffs-Respondents

    Plaintiffs are eight same-sex couples who wish tomarry or have their marriages recognized by the

    State of Wisconsin. All are in loving, committed rela-tionships. Five plaintiff couples have been unable tomarry the partner of their choosing in Wisconsinsolely because that person is of the same sex. Three

    plaintiff couples have already been lawfully marriedunder the laws of other jurisdictions, yet Wisconsin

    refuses to recognize their marriages. One of thosecouples lived for four years as a married couple inCalifornia, where their marriage was recognized andrespected. They then had that recognition and re-

    spect stripped away when they moved to Wisconsinto accept a new job.

    Plaintiffs wish to marry for a wide variety of rea-sons. They are all routinely denied the full range ofstate and federal benefits to which married different-sex couples are entitled. They are denied legal pro-

    tection for their parental relationships with theirchildren, the right to make health care decisions ontheir partners behalf, and access to family medicalleave. And every day the couples and their familiessuffer the indignity of having the State of Wisconsindeclare that their loving relationships are less than

    equal.

    B. Wisconsins Marriage Ban

    In 2006 Wisconsin voters amended its constitu-

    tion to ban the licensing and recognition of marriages

    of same-sex couples. Article XIII, 13 of the Wiscon-sin Constitution provides: Only a marriage betweenone man and one woman shall be valid or recognizedas a marriage in this state. A legal status identical or

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    substantially similar to that of marriage for unmar-

    ried individuals shall not be valid or recognized inthis state. Wis. Cons. art. XIII, 13.

    This case arises from a facial federal constitu-tional challenge to Article XIII, 13, along with any

    other Wisconsin law preventing the celebration orrecognition of marriage by same-sex couples (themarriage ban), brought by plaintiffs in Wolf v.

    Walker.

    C. Procedural History

    1. The District Court Decision

    Plaintiffs challenged Wisconsins marriage banas a violation of the Due Process and Equal Protec-

    tion Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to theUnited States Constitution. On June 6, 2014, the dis-trict court granted summary judgment for plaintiffson both due process and equal protection grounds in

    a thorough opinion. See Wolfv.Walker, 986 F. Supp.2d 982 (W.D. Wis. 2014).

    The district court first found that the Wisconsinmarriage ban violated plaintiffs due process rights.Pet. App. 73a-93a. It concluded that the right tomarry is a clearly established fundamental right that

    includes same-sex couples and that Wisconsins mar-riage laws significantly interfere with that right.

    Ibid. The district court concluded that the commonthread connecting the Supreme Courts marriageand family rights decisions is that they all relate todecisions that are central to the individuals sense of

    identity and ability to control his or her own desti-

    ny. Id. at 78a. The court also rejected the States ar-gument that the plaintiffs right to marry was notsufficiently deeply rooted in the Nations history toqualify for due process protection, finding that

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    [p]ast practices cannot control the scope of a consti-

    tutional right. Id. at 86a. Finally, the district courtrejected the States attempts to distinguish Lovingv.Virginia, 388 U.S 1 (1967), on the grounds that sex,unlike race, goes to the core of what marriage means.

    Pet. App. 86a-90a. Having concluded that the rightto marry includes same-sex couples, the district court

    then found that Wisconsins marriage ban clearlyconstituted significant interference with that right,including the right of the already-married couples tohave their marriages recognized.Id. at 90a-93a.

    The district court additionally found that Wis-consins marriage ban unconstitutionally discrimi-nates on the basis of sexual orientation, violatingplaintiffs equal protection rights. Pet. App. 93a-138a.1 The district court concluded that sexual orien-

    tation is a suspect classification and thus subject toheightened scrutiny. Id. at 99a-111a. Applying theintermediate scrutiny standard,2 the district courtrejected all of the States asserted interests, includ-

    ing tradition, responsible procreation, optimal child

    rearing, protecting the institution of marriage,proceeding with caution, and the slippery slope.Id. at 115a-138a.

    1 The district court also considered the argument that the mar-

    riage ban unconstitutionally discriminates on the basis of sex,

    but declined to wade into the jurisprudential thicket on that

    topic [b]ecause of the uncertainty in the law and because [it

    was] deciding the case in plaintiffs favor on other grounds.

    Pet. App. 99a.2 The district court assumed that intermediate scrutiny applied

    because the difference between intermediate and strict scrutiny

    would not be dispositive in the case. Pet. App. 111a-115a.

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    The district court also dismissed a variety of oth-

    er arguments from the State. It rejected the Statesargument that a distinction between positive rightsand negative rights protected the marriage ban.Pet. App. 59a-64a. The State labeled marriage as a

    positive right and argued that the Constitutionprotects the rights of individuals to be free from gov-

    ernment interference (i.e., negative rights), butthat it does not give individuals a right to receivegovernment benefits (i.e., positive rights). The courtrejected this theory, finding that the Supreme Court

    has held on numerous occasions that marriage is afundamental right protected by the Constitution

    and that Wisconsin had clearly not abolished the in-stitution of marriage; rather it had limited the classof persons who are entitled to marry. Id. at 60a. Thecourt concluded that [e]ven in cases in which an in-

    dividual does not have a substantive right to a par-ticular benefit or privilege, once the state extends

    that benefit to some of its citizens, it is not free todeny the benefit to other citizens for any or no reason

    on the ground that a positive right is at issue. Id.at 60a-61a.

    The district court also rejected the States feder-alism-based argument that the marriage ban is de-fensible because regulation of marriage is a matter

    traditionally left to the states. The State argued thatthe federal courts should not question a states dem-

    ocratic determination regarding whether and whento extend marriage to same-sex couples and shouldrather allow states to serve as laboratories of de-mocracy. Pet. App. 64a-65a. The court acknowl-

    edged the important role that federalism plays inthis country, but held that a general interest in

    federalism [does not] trum[p] the due process andequal protection clauses. States may not experiment

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    with different social policies by violating constitu-

    tional rights.Id. at 66a.

    2. The Seventh Circuit Decision

    On September 4, 2014, the Seventh Circuit unan-

    imously affirmed the decision of the district court.3

    Baskinv. Bogan, 2014 WL 4359059 (7th Cir. Sept. 4,2014). The Seventh Circuit concluded that Wiscon-sins marriage ban violates the Equal Protection

    Clause and therefore concluded that it need notreach the due process challenge. It found that nei-

    ther State had provided any reason to think thatthey have a reasonable basis for forbidding same-sex marriage and that more than a reasonable ba-sis was required because the challenged discrimina-

    tion is along suspect lines. Pet. App. 4a (internalquotation marks omitted).

    The Seventh Circuit found that [d]iscriminationby a state or the federal government against a minor-ity, when based on an immutable characteristic ofthe members of that minority (most familiarly, skin

    color and gender), and occurring against an historicalbackground of discrimination against the personswho have that characteristic, makes the discrimina-tory law or policy constitutionally suspect. Pet. App.4a. It held that these circumstances create a pre-sumption that the law violates the Equal Protection

    Clause, rebuttable only by a compelling showingthat the benefits of the discrimination to society as awhole clearly outweigh the harms to its victims.Id.at 4a-5a. The court focused its analysis on four fac-

    3 On appeal, this case was consolidated solely for argument and

    disposition withBaskinv. Bogan(Nos. 14-2386 to 14-2388), and

    the Seventh Circuit also struck down the Indiana marriage ban.

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    tors: 1) whether the challenged classification target-

    ed a group of persons who had experienced a historyof discrimination; 2) whether the unequal treatmentwas based on an immutable or at least tenaciouscharacteristic unrelated to a persons ability to par-

    ticipate in society; 3) whether the discrimination con-fers an important benefit on society as a whole that

    offsets the harm imposed; and 4) whether the dis-criminatory policy is overinclusive because it couldbe achieved in a way less harmful to the discriminat-ed-against group, or underinclusive because the gov-

    ernments purported rationale for the policy impliesthat it should apply equally to other groups as well.

    Id. at 5a-7a.

    The Seventh Circuit analyzed and rejected mul-tiple purported justifications for the laws propound-

    ed by Indiana and Wisconsin. It thoroughly rejectedthe argument advanced by both States that the mar-riage bans enhance child welfare and that the statehas no interest in protecting marriage for same-sex

    couples because homosexual sex cannot result in un-

    intended births. Pet. App. 16a-28a. The SeventhCircuit reasoned that this argument fails because itignores the children of same-sex couples, who wouldbe better off both emotionally and economically iftheir adoptive parents were married.Id. at 3a.

    It then analyzed and rejected each of the fourother arguments advanced by Wisconsin. It first re-

    jected the argument that limiting marriage to het-erosexuals is traditional and tradition is a valid basisfor limiting legal rights. Pet. App. 30a. The courtstated that the argument runs head on into Loving

    v. Virginia and that [i]f no social benefit is con-ferred by a tradition and it is written into law and it

    discriminates against a number of people and does

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    them harm beyond just offending them, it is not just

    a harmless anachronism; it is a violation of the equalprotection clause.Id. at 31a-33a.

    The court next rejected Wisconsins argumentthat the consequences of allowing same-sex mar-

    riage cannot be foreseen and therefore a state shouldbe permitted to move cautiously. Pet. App. 30a. Thecourt found that there was no evidence to supportthe contention that allowing same-sex couples tomarry will or may transform marriage, nor that

    heterosexuals are harmed when same-sex couplesmarry. Id. at 34a-39a.4 It also rejected Wisconsinsargument that its domestic partnership laws some-how ameliorated the unconstitutionality of its mar-riage ban because the Wisconsin domestic partner-ship status is inherently unequal to being married.

    Id. at 39a-41a.

    The court also rejected Wisconsins argumentthat the decision whether to permit or forbid same-sex marriage should be left to the democratic pro-

    cess, that is, to the legislature and the electorate.Pet. App. 30a. Though it is true that the marriage

    ban was enacted through democratic processes, thecourt found that [m]inorities trampled on by thedemocratic process have recourse to the courts; therecourse is called constitutional law. Id. at 41a. The

    court noted that neither state provided any supportfor the contention that lesbians and gay men are po-

    litically powerful out of proportion to their numbers.Id. at 41a (internal quotation marks omitted).

    4 The Seventh Circuit also rejected Wisconsins argument that

    same-sex marriage is analogous in its effects to no-fault di-

    vorce. Pet. App. 30a.

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    The court found that [t]he states concern with

    the problem of unwanted children is valid and im-portant, but their solution is not tailored to theproblem because by denying marital rights to same-sex couples it reduces the incentive of such couples to

    adopt unwanted children and impairs the welfare ofthose children who are adopted by such couples. The

    states solution is thus, in the familiar terminology ofconstitutional discrimination law, overinclusive. Itis also underinclusive, in allowing infertile hetero-sexual couples to marry, but not same-sex couples.

    Pet. App. 43a.

    Finally, and for completeness, the Seventh Cir-cuit noted the convergence of our four-step analysiswith the more familiar, but also more complex, ap-proach [to equal protection analysis] found in many

    cases, Pet. App. 42a, noting that the difference be-tween the two approaches is semantic rather thansubstantive. Id. at 7a. The Seventh Circuit foundthat the marriage bans discrimination against

    same-sex couples is irrational, and therefore uncon-

    stitutional even if the discrimination is not subjectedto heightened scrutiny.Id. at 9a.

    ARGUMENT

    Plaintiffs and all other committed same-sex cou-ples in Wisconsin are harmed by the States denial to

    them of the freedom to marry. Under the Wisconsinmarriage laws, plaintiffs are denied all state andfederal spousal protections and obligations. Wiscon-sin withholds from all plaintiffs access to the statusof marriage and the state law protections and obliga-

    tions that marriage brings. Wisconsins marriage banthus demeans [same-sex] couple[s], whose moraland sexual choices the Constitution protects, andhumiliates [thousands] of children now being raised

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    by same-sex couples. United States v. Windsor, 133

    S. Ct. 2675, 2683 (2013). This Court should grantcertiorari and affirm the Seventh Circuits judgment.

    I. This Case Provides an Excellent Vehicle for

    Certiorari.

    This case presents an excellent vehicle for reviewby this Court. Wisconsins marriage laws are excep-tionally severe, combining a constitutional ban on

    marriage and statuses substantially similar to mar-riage for same-sex couples and a domestic partner-

    ship law. This case also encompasses plaintiffs whoseek to marry and plaintiffs who seek recognition oftheir out-of-state marriages. Moreover, the State ofWisconsin, through its Department of Justice, has

    vigorously defended this action in all stages of thelitigation, and continues to defend it in front of this

    Court. In addition, this case is an excellent vehiclefor certiorari because the Seventh Circuits opinion,more fully than any other appellate court, sets forththe reasons why the Equal Protection Clause re-

    quires striking down a marriage ban. Finally, thiscase is an ideal vehicle for certiorari because the par-

    ties have presented the full range of arguments forand against the constitutionality of state marriagebans.

    In addition, grantingcertiorariwould provide the

    Court with briefing and oral argument reflecting theexperience of counsel for the plaintiffs, who have liti-gated seminal cases involving the rights of lesbianand gay men decided by this Court, including as par-ty counsel in Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996),

    and Windsor.

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    A. The Factual and Legal Context of This

    Case Warrants Granting the Petition.

    Among the states seeking certiorari review of theconstitutionality of their marriage laws, Wisconsinalone provides domestic partnerships for same-sex

    couples. Two other states, Colorado and Nevada, alsoprovide domestic partnership or civil union systemsfor same-sex couples. Colo. Rev. Stat. 14-15-101, et

    seq. (civil unions); Nev. Rev. Stat. 122A.010, et seq.(domestic partnerships). Those systems provide some

    protections for couples who register, but a different,and lesser, status for their relationships. Grantingreview in this case will provide the Court an oppor-tunity to clarify that such lesser relationship status-es are inconsistent with the Constitution. Grantingreview in this case, potentially in addition to other

    cases, will provide the greatest guidance for statelegislatures, for lower courts, and for same-sex cou-ples going forward.

    But even plaintiffs with domestic partnerships

    are denied the full benefit of state and federal protec-tions and obligations that come with marriage. Arti-

    cle XIII, 13 of the Wisconsin Constitution statesthat [o]nly a marriage between one man and onewoman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage inthis state, and that [a] legal status identical or sub-

    stantially similar to that of marriage for unmarriedindividuals shall not be valid or recognized in this

    state. Plaintiffs with domestic partnerships, for ex-ample, are excluded from the spousal obligation ofmutual responsibility and support, and they are de-nied the protections that come from the treatment of

    their property as marital property. See Wis. Stat. 765.001(1), 766.15, 766.55(2), 766.31(2), 860.01(1).

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    The unmarried plaintiffs are also denied all fed-

    eral spousal protections and obligations, and themarried plaintiffs are denied those federal spousalprotections and obligations that are reserved to cou-ples whose marriages are recognized in their state of

    residence. See Windsor, 133 S. Ct. at 2683 (morethan 1,000 federal laws in which marital or spousal

    status is addressed as a matter of federal law); withrespect to benefits tied to state of residence, see also29 C.F.R. 825.122(b) (ability to take time off ofwork to care for a sick spouse under the Family &

    Medical Leave Act); 42 U.S.C. 416(h)(1)(A)(i) (ac-cess to a spouses social security benefits); U.S. Social

    Security Administration Program Operations Manu-al System, GN 00210.100 (Windsor Same-Sex Mar-riage Claims), GN 00210.400 (Same-Sex Mar-riageBenefits for Surviving Spouses), at

    http://tinyurl. com/m4b4q8v.

    In addition to the denial of state and federalspousal protections, the Wisconsin marriage laws

    contain additional provisions that harm the plain-

    tiffs. Article XIII, 13 of the Constitution of Wiscon-sin bars the recognition of any legal status substan-tially similar to marriage for same-sex couples.plaintiffs Virginia Wolf and Carol Schumacher, aswell as plaintiffs Kami Young and Karina Willes,

    were legally married in Minnesota but cannot havetheir marriages recognized in Wisconsin. Pet. App.

    52a. Similarly, plaintiffs Johannes Wallmann andKeith Borden were married in Canada in 2007, livedas a married couple for four years in California, butcannot have their marriage recognized in Wisconsin.

    Ibid.

    And under Wisconsins marriage laws, plaintiffs

    are prevented from securing legal recognition of their

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    parental rights. For example, plaintiffs Kami Young

    and Karina Willes are unable to secure recognition ofWilles parental rights with regard to their daughter,to whom Kami gave birth last April. If Kami and Ka-rinas Minnesota marriage were recognized in Wis-

    consin, Karina would automatically be deemed thebabys parent pursuant to Wisconsin laws presump-

    tion of parenthood for children born to married cou-ples. See Wis. Stat. 891.40(1), 891.41(1). Withoutmarriage, Wisconsin law prevents Karina from evenobtaining a stepparent or second-parent adoption (as

    other states provide). Plaintiffs Bill Hurtubise andDean Palmer are likewise prohibited from jointly

    adopting their three children because they are un-married. Wis. Stat. 48.82(1)(a).

    B. The State Has Consistently and Vigor-

    ously Defended Its Marriage Laws.

    High-ranking Wisconsin state officialsGovernor Scott Walker, J.B. Van Hollen, the Attor-ney General, and Oskar Anderson, the State Regis-

    trar of Vital Statisticscontinue to vigorously defendWisconsins marriage ban. The Attorney General

    represented Governor Walker, State Registrar An-derson, and other State officials in the district courtproceedings (including briefing the State Defendantsmotion to dismiss and the State Defendants motion

    for summary judgment) and represented Petitionersin their appeal of the district courts decision to the

    Seventh Circuit. The Attorney General continues torepresent Governor Walker and State Registrar An-derson in the instant petition for a writ of certiorari.

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    C. The Seventh Circuits Opinion Most Ful-

    ly Develops the Reasons Why the EqualProtection Clause Bars State MarriageBans.

    This petition provides a particularly strong vehi-

    cle because the Seventh Circuits decision so fully de-velops why the Equal Protection Clause prohibitsmarriage bans. Other opinions addressing the issuethat have touched on the Equal Protection Clausehave done so after concluding that bans on marriage

    of same-sex couples violate the fundamental right tomarry as protected by the Due Process Clause. As aconsequence, other opinions, to the extent that theyhave addressed equal protection issues, have appliedthis Courts precedents requiring strict scrutiny forclassifications that abridge a fundamental right.

    The Seventh Circuit, by contrast, analyzes theappropriate standard of review for an Equal Protec-tion challenge to a sexual orientation classification.The opinion provides an excellent vehicle for this

    Court to address the appropriate level of review forsexual orientation classifications.

    D. This Case Presents the Full Range of

    Legal Issues and Arguments RegardingMarriage of Same-Sex couples.

    The parties in this case briefed and argued thefull range of legal issues regarding marriage of same-sex couples. In their briefs before the Seventh Cir-cuit, the parties addressed claims based in both the

    Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses.

    With respect to the claim that the marriage banburdened the fundamental right of marriage forsame-sex couples, the State Defendants argued boththat the fundamental right of marriage does not ap-

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    ply to same-sex couples, and that, even if the funda-

    mental right of marriage applies to same-sex couples,it merely confers negative rights, and not positivebenefits. The positive and negative rights analysis isthus far unique to the Wisconsin State Defendants.

    With respect to the claim that the marriage banviolates the Equal Protection Clause, the State De-fendants argued that rational basis review shouldapply, and advanced a wide range of purportedly ra-tional bases, including tradition, proceeding cau-

    tiously and maintaining the status quo, protectingthe democratic process, and promoting responsibleprocreation by different-sex couples.

    Finally, the parties addressed the question of

    recognition of out-of-state marriages, and whetherthe States denial of such recognition is an independ-

    ent harm.

    II. Although Certiorari Is Warranted, the Sev-enth Circuits Judgment Should Be Af-

    firmed

    The Seventh Circuits opinion provides an excel-lent foundation for review by this Court, given theexceptional importance of the issues addressed and

    the quality of the case as a vehicle for certiorari. Al-though review of this case is warranted for the rea-

    sons discussed above, the Seventh Circuits judgmentshould be affirmed.

    A. The Seventh Circuit Correctly Conclud-

    ed That Heightened Scrutiny Applies toClassifications Based On Sexual Orien-

    tation.The Seventh Circuit concluded heightened scru-

    tiny applies to classifications based on sexual orien-

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    benefit and, if so, whether the policy was

    overinclusive because the benefit it confers on socie-ty could be achieved in a way less harmful to the dis-criminated-against group, or underinclusive becausethe governments purported rationale for the policy

    implies that it should equally apply to other groupsas well. Pet. App. 6a.

    Petitioners contend that this approach does notfairly determine whether a states law is sufficientlytailored to meet a states proffered interests. Pet.

    17. That cant be right. A law that conveys a benefiton society but is drawn so as to be overinclusive, thusinflicting unnecessary harm on a protected class, isby definition not tailored to meet a states profferedinterest. Likewise, a law that excludes a disfavoredclass from protection is not sufficiently tailored when

    the disfavored classs exclusion does not advance theasserted policy objectives.

    B. The Seventh Circuit Correctly Conclud-ed That Wisconsins Marriage Ban

    Failed to Satisfy Heightened Scrutiny,or, in the Alternative, Failed to Satisfy

    Rational Basis Review.

    The Seventh Circuit correctly concluded thatWisconsins marriage ban failed both heightenedscrutiny and rational basis review, holding that the

    grounds advanced by Indiana and Wisconsin fortheir discriminatory policies are not only conjectural;they are totally implausible. Pet. App. 42a. The Sev-enth Circuit did not find, and Wisconsin failed toidentify, any reason why excluding same-sex couples

    from marriage furthered the States interest in en-hancing child welfare through regulating procrea-tion. Id. at 16a-22a. Petitioners argument from tra-dition was properly rejected because tradition alone

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    cannot provide a rational basis for discrimination. Id.

    at 31a-34a. The Seventh Circuit likewise properly re-jected Petitioners argument that the State had aninterest in proceeding with caution with regard topermitting same-sex couples to marry, as the State

    offered no reasoning identifying any negative conse-quences to permitting such marriages. Id. at 34a-

    37a. Finally, the Seventh Circuit properly rejectedthe States contention that the marriage ban was jus-tified because it was the result of a democratic pro-cess, concluding that [m]inorities trampled on by

    the democratic process have recourse to the courts;the recourse is called constitutional law.Id. at 41a.

    CONCLUSION

    The States petition for a writ of certiorari shouldbe granted and the judgment of the court of appeals

    should be affirmed.

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