It looks like same-sex couples hoping for clarification as to whether they’ll soon be able to marry in the Sunshine State will have to wait just a little bit longer — but they’ll probably be pleased with the outcome.
Speaking as the official counsel for Florida’s Secretary of the Department of Management Services, the business arm of Florida’s government, Republican Attorney General Pam Bondi said late Monday that if a federal judge wanted his ruling in favor of marriage equality to apply statewide, he would have to explicitly say so.
The state’s court filing, ordered by U.S. District Judge Robert L. Hinkle, doesn’t exactly clear up a rising tide of confusion over whether all of Florida’s 67 clerks of court will have to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples beginning next week. But it does offer marriage equality supporters some encouragement in that Bondi did not try to limit the number of counties affected. By punting the decision back to Judge Hinkle, who issued a strong endorsement of same-sex couples’ right to wed earlier this year, Bondi effectively got out of Florida’s way as it marches toward becoming the 36th state to legalize marriage equality.
“This Court is best situated to determine the reach of its own order,” said Bondi Monday in a short filing submitted two hours before the midnight deadline. “If the Court intends for paragraph 4 to bind a Florida clerk of court (or all Florida clerks of court), additional specificity may be appropriate to place any such clerk on proper notice.”
Judge Hinkle, a President Bill Clinton appointee, struck down Florida’s same-sex marriage ban in August, stating that “liberty, tolerance, and respect [were] not zero-sum concepts.” He stayed the effects of his ruling until the end of day on January 5. Both the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, which has jurisdiction over Florida, and the U.S. Supreme Court then refused to extend that stay, clearing the way for gay and lesbian couples to begin marrying in the Sunshine State on Jan. 6.
But not everyone agreed that Florida was on its way to legalizing marriage equality. Greenberg Traurig, a private law firm that represents the state association of Florida Court Clerks & Comptrollers, said in a memo last week that the only clerk bound to Judge Hinkle’s August ruling was Washington County’s Lora Bell because she alone was named in the federal lawsuit. Any other clerk who issued marriage licenses to same-sex couples, argued Greenberg Traurig, would be in violation of the state statute prohibiting marriage equality — an offense that in Florida carries as much as $1,000 in fines and up to one year in jail.
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