Julaine K. Appling v. Scott Walker

2014 WI 96, 853 N.W.2d 888, 358 Wis. 2d 132, 2014 WL 3744232, 2014 Wisc. LEXIS 533
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 2014
Docket2011AP001572
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 2014 WI 96 (Julaine K. Appling v. Scott Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Julaine K. Appling v. Scott Walker, 2014 WI 96, 853 N.W.2d 888, 358 Wis. 2d 132, 2014 WL 3744232, 2014 Wisc. LEXIS 533 (Wis. 2014).

Opinions

N. PATRICK CROOKS, J.

¶ 1. Wisconsin voters amended the state constitution in 2006, adding two sentences: "Only a marriage between one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in this state. A legal status identical or substantially similar to that of marriage for unmarried individuals shall not be valid or recognized in this state."1 In this case we are asked to determine whether Wis. Stat. Chapter 770, by which the legislature created the legal status of domestic partnership for same-sex couples,2 violates that constitutional provision.3

[138]*138¶ 2. The question is whether Plaintiffs4 have proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the same-sex domestic partnership created by Chapter 770 violates Article XIII, Section 13 of the Wisconsin Constitution. Under our precedent, intent is critical to determining what the Amendment means5 and consequently to determining whether the statute, which is accorded a presumption of constitutionality, withstands the Plaintiffs' challenge.

¶ 3. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the court of appeals' holding that Chapter 770 is constitutional based on the presumption of constitutionality, the Plaintiffs' failure to meet the burden of proof, and the evidence we have reviewed in accord with the Dairyland decision, which establishes the framework we use to interpret constitutional provisions. Dairyland Greyhound Park, Inc. v. Doyle, 2006 WI 107, 295 Wis. 2d 1, 719 N.W.2d 408.

[139]*139¶ 4. Intervening Defendants6 argue that the Amendment does not bar domestic partnerships because they are not "substantially similar" to marriage, and they point to many differences, including a long list of rights of married people that are not conferred on domestic partners. It is Plaintiffs' position that what makes the domestic partnership a legal status substantially similar to that of marriage is that the similarities it shares with marriage are actually "the constituent elements that make the legally recognized marital relationship what it is — the component parts of the marital relationship . . . ." Those elements identified by Plaintiffs in their briefs as "constituent elements" of marriage are that it is 1) between two persons 2) who are over a certain age, 3) who are competent to consent, 4) who are in an exclusive relationship, 5) who are of specified sexes, and 6) who are not closely related.7 Plaintiffs focus on these characteristics — not the rights, [140]*140duties and benefits that are associated with each status — as the "essential and material elements on which the marriage relation rests"8 and the substantial similarity that renders the domestic partnership law unconstitutional. They acknowledge that the legislature has the power to create a domestic partnership status and accord it as many rights as it wishes. They say that what the legislature cannot do is define eligi[141]*141bility based on marriage-like intimate relationships, and that it could avoid 'violating the Amendment by making such a status available to cohabiting adults, such as siblings, to remove the substantial similarity to marriage.

¶ 5. In short, they contend that it is the "existence of an exclusive, intimate relationship — clearly implicit in Chapter 770 — that creates the substantially similar status" and that Chapter 770 created "the very thing that the Amendment was designed to prohibit."

¶ 6. It is well established that challengers to a statute face a very difficult task.

A statute enjoys a presumption of constitutionality. To overcome that presumption, a party challenging a statute's constitutionality bears a heavy burden. It is insufficient for the party challenging the statute to merely establish either that the statute's constitutionality is doubtful or that the statute is probably unconstitutional. Instead, the party challenging a statute's constitutionality must "prove that the statute is unconstitutional beyond a reasonable doubt."

State v. Smith, 2010 WI 16, ¶ 8, 323 Wis. 2d 377, 780 N.W.2d 90 (citations omitted). "Furthermore, 'every presumption must be indulged to sustain the law if at all possible and, wherever doubt exists as to a legislative enactment's constitutionality, it must be resolved in favor of constitutionality.'" Georgina G. v. Terry M., 184 Wis. 2d 492, 515, 516 N.W.2d 678 (1994).

¶ 7. Such a framework for analysis has doomed many challenges, and it dooms this one as well. Like the circuit court and the court of appeals, we conclude that the Plaintiffs have not met their burden of proving [142]*142beyond a reasonable doubt that the domestic partnership law is unconstitutional. Our conclusion is compelled by the presumption of constitutionality, the Plaintiffs' failure to meet the burden of proof, and the evidence we have reviewed in accord with the test set forth in the Dairyland decision.9 "The constitution means what its framers and the people approving of it have intended it to mean . . . ."10 To determine what the framers and the voters intended a constitutional amendment to mean, based on our precedent we are to consider what is reflected in the plain language of the statute, the constitutional debates and practices of the time as exemplified during the ratification campaign that surrounded the voters' passage of the Amendment, as well as, to the extent probative, the first legislation passed following the Amendment's passage.11

¶ 8. The plain language of the Amendment prohibits only a status "identical or substantially similar to" marriage, and by implication it does not prohibit what is not identical or substantially similar thereto. There are important statutory distinctions in the way the state treats marriage and domestic partnerships and important differences in the lists of benefits and obligations that inhere in the two types of relationships.12 In light of the totality of those differences, [143]*143Plaintiffs have not overcome the presumption that Chapter 770 is constitutional.

¶ 9. Our conclusion is supported by evidence from the drafting and ratification process — evidence in the drafting files13 that the framers of the Amendment intended specifically to allow legislation that provided a set of rights and benefits to same-sex couples. We are supported in our conclusion by evidence that voters were repeatedly told by Amendment proponents that the Amendment simply would not preclude a mechanism for legislative grants of certain rights to same-sex couples.14 We see no evidence that voters who approved the Amendment saw it as permitting those rights to be granted only in the kind of scheme Plaintiffs now suggest — that is, in cohabiting domestic relationships that bear no resemblance at all to marriage, with [144]*144same-sex couples only as incidental beneficiaries.15

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Bluebook (online)
2014 WI 96, 853 N.W.2d 888, 358 Wis. 2d 132, 2014 WL 3744232, 2014 Wisc. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/julaine-k-appling-v-scott-walker-wis-2014.