
Even
some who support same-sex marriage worry that, in striking down
California's voter-approved proposition defining marriage as between one
man and one woman, U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker went too far. They
are right -- and not the only ones who should be concerned. Walker's
ruling is indefensible as a matter of law wholly apart from its result.
By refusing to acknowledge binding Supreme Court precedent,
substantial evidence produced at trial that was contrary to the holding
and plain common sense, the ruling exhibits none of the requirements of a
traditional decision. This opinion is arbitrary and capricious, and its
alarming legal methodology and overtly policy-driven tenor are too
extreme to stand.
Regardless of whether one
agrees with the result, structurally sound opinions always confront
binding legal precedent. Walker's is a clear exception because the U.S.
Supreme Court has spoken on whether a state's refusal to authorize
same-sex marriage violates the equal protection and due process clauses
of the 14th Amendment. In 1972, Baker v. Nelson, a case over whether
Minnesota violated the Constitution by issuing marriage licenses only to
opposite-sex couples, was unanimously thrown out on the merits, for
lack of a substantial federal question. The Supreme Court's action
establishes a binding precedent in favor of Proposition 8. But Judge
Walker's ruling doesn't mention Baker, much less attempt to distinguish
it or accept its findings.
During a trial,
litigants from both sides introduce various types of evidence, including
witness testimony, documentary evidence and legal opinions that involve
"judicial notice" of certain well-known or legally controlling facts.
Sound judicial opinions consider the facts and evidence on both sides of
an argument, apply them fairly to the dispute at hand and determine
which legal cases are on point.
Yet Walker's
opinion pretends that the voluminous evidence introduced on the side of
Proposition 8 does not exist. It neither acknowledges nor attempts to
distinguish the writings of renowned scholars presented at trial in
support of Proposition 8, including that of anthropologist Claude
Levi-Strauss, history professor Robina Quale and social scientist
Kingsley Davis. It ignores the writings of legal giant William
Blackstone and philosophers John Locke and Bertrand Russell. It even
refused to address the fact that Congress, in the 1996 Defense of
Marriage Act, defined marriage as the "legal union between one man and
one woman as husband and wife."
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SOURCE: The Washington Post
The
writer is chairman of the Heritage Foundation's Center for Legal and
Judicial Studies. He served as U.S. attorney general from February 1985
to August 1988.

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