Kerrigan v. Commissioner of Public Health

909 A.2d 89, 49 Conn. Supp. 644
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 12, 2006
DocketFile CV-04-4001813
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 909 A.2d 89 (Kerrigan v. Commissioner of Public Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerrigan v. Commissioner of Public Health, 909 A.2d 89, 49 Conn. Supp. 644 (Colo. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

PITTMAN, J.

The 2005 session of the Connecticut General Assembly took the courageous and historic step of conferring on same sex couples who register their relationship with the state the same rights granted to opposite sex couples who do so. Governor M. Jodi Rell signed the bill into law, to take effect on October 1, 2005. In passing this legislation, Public Acts 2005, No. 05-10 (P.A. 05-10), the General Assembly reserved the term “marriage” for the union of couples of the opposite sex and adopted the term “civil union” for the union of couples of the same sex. Compare P.A. 05-10, § 2, with § 14.

The plaintiffs in this lawsuit — eight same sex couples — ask the court to declare that this distinction violates the Connecticut constitution. They ask the court to remedy this infirmity by issuing a declaratory judgment and ordering a mandatory injunction compelling the defendants to issue to each plaintiff couple a marriage license, as opposed to a civil union license. Notwithstanding P.A. 05-10, the plaintiffs allege that they are denied the equal protection of law, the due process of law, and the right of free expression and association. They have moved for summary judgment.

*646 The defendants respond by denying that the law discriminates against the plaintiffs. The defendants likewise move for summary judgment, arguing that the plaintiffs cannot make the required showing that the denial of a marriage license, and instead the issuance of a civil union license, is unconstitutional.

For reasons set forth herein, the court finds that the plaintiffs have failed to prove that they have suffered any legal harm that rises to constitutional magnitude. That being so, the defendants are entitled to summary judgment.

I

HISTORY OF THIS LITIGATION

The plaintiffs, originally numbering seven couples, commenced this action on August 24,2004, with service of process on the defendants. The defendants are the commissioner of public health, J. Robert Galvin, who oversees the state department of public health, and Dorothy C. Bean, acting town clerk and acting registrar of vital statistics for the town of Madison, the town where each of the couples had asked to complete a marriage license application. The defendants appeared by counsel, the commissioner of public health represented by the attorney general, and the Madison town clerk by the Madison corporation counsel. The parties cooperated in agreeing to the form of an order of notice issued by the court to alert all town clerks throughout the state of the pendency of this action and of the request for a declaratory judgment relative to their official duties regarding the issuance of marriage licenses.

The verified allegations of the plaintiffs tell individual and highly personal stories, although the allegations can fairly be summarized generally. Each plaintiff is in a committed, loving relationship of substantial duration *647 with a member of the same sex, and each plaintiff desires to be covered by the rights, benefits and protections of the laws of Connecticut available to married persons.

Many of the couples have children, by birth or adoption, in their households. Some plaintiffs have struggled to care for the aging parent of one partner of the couple. Some have experienced past or incipient health issues of their own. Some have had financial challenges because of the lack of employment, lack of affordable health insurance or lack of other common spousal benefits of one partner in the couple. All plaintiffs allege the intention to create a concrete life plan that, if they could marry, would afford them substantial rights, benefits and protections on which they could not otherwise rely because of the prohibition on same sex marriage.

Among the benefits to which these plaintiffs sought access in their original complaint were the ability to visit and care for one another during hospital admissions, to participate in end of life decision making, to provide and receive dependent health insurance coverage, to engage in financial and tax planning advantages conferred by state law and to establish binding family relationships especially for the benefit of the children of these couples. Many of the plaintiffs had encountered unfair, and occasionally frightening, denials of these benefits because there was no method by which their public status as a couple or as next of kin could be legally recognized.

For example, in the original complaint, one of the plaintiff couples, Janet Peck and Carol Conklin, alleged that the failure of the state to grant them a marriage license had resulted in at least four types of concrete harm to them: (1) in 1996, when Peck was recovering from surgery in a hospital intensive care unit, Conklin *648 was initially prevented from visiting her because Conklin was not recognized as having a kinship connection to Peck. When Peck was hospitalized again in 2003, Peck was not permitted to designate Conklin as next of kin on hospital forms for visitation and other purposes; (2) in 2002, the couple was denied a home construction loan because they were not seen as having a “joint income,” since they were not a married couple; (3) over a period of fifteen years, when each of them was self-employed (they have been together nearly thirty years), they paid for two separate health insurance policies, although, if they had been able to marry, one of them could have insured the other as a dependent on a single health insurance policy at a substantially lower premium than that of the cost of two separate policies; and (4) adding insult to injury, they were not considered spouses for purposes of allowing Conklin to inherit the UConn women’s basketball tickets that are in Peck’s name, should Peck predecease Conklin, under the point system utilized by the University of Connecticut in determining rights to possession of such tickets.

They and the other plaintiffs claimed in the original complaint that they were otherwise eligible to marry but that they were prevented by the state from doing so because the eligible partner with whom each shared a commitment was of the same sex, whereas if the intended partner had been of the opposite sex, the state would unquestioningly have issued a marriage license to the couple. The plaintiffs alleged that they were denied “the legal and social status of a marital relationship, and the protections, rights, and responsibilities— financial, legal, emotional and others — afforded to married couples.” Then, as now, the plaintiffs alleged that the prohibition on marriage between persons of the same sex violates the Connecticut constitution.

*649 II

THE LEGISLATIVE CHANGE

The state of Connecticut has been notable in recent years for its incremental but steady progress in the recognition of basic human rights, including the rights of members of formerly oppressed groups. In 1969, the state decriminalized homosexual conduct between consenting adults. See Public Acts 1969, No. 828, § 214. In 1974, the state amended the equal protection clause of its constitution to extend the guarantee of equal protection of law to women. See Conn. Const., amend. V. In 1984, the equal protection clause of the constitution was amended again to include physically and mentally disabled persons. See Conn.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Appletree Cottage, LLC v. Bond
Maine Superior, 2017
Swanson v. Hallett
Maine Superior, 2014
B.S. v. F.B.
25 Misc. 3d 520 (New York Supreme Court, 2009)
Kerrigan v. Commissioner of Public Health
957 A.2d 407 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
909 A.2d 89, 49 Conn. Supp. 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerrigan-v-commissioner-of-public-health-connsuperct-2006.