The state of Michigan must recognize nearly 300 same-sex marriages performed during a brief period in which they were legal last year, a federal judge ruled Thursday.
“Same-sex couples, like their opposite-sex-couple counterparts, have the same innately human impulse to maintain bonds of committed intimacy in a socially and legally recognized marriage,” U.S. District Judge Mark A. Goldsmith, a President Obama appointee, wrote in a 47-page ruling. “The non-recognition policy frustrates that impulse and triggers a deeply felt sense of degradation from the loss of marital status caused by the state that solemnized it in the first instance.”
A different federal judge struck down Michigan’s same-sex marriage ban last March and did not stay the effects of his ruling. That decision triggered hundreds of gay and lesbian couples to marry in the state. But a week later, the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals, which has jurisdiction over Michigan, moved to indefinitely freeze that ruling until it considered the issue for itself. Same-sex couples were no longer permitted to marry there.
Related: ‘A light at the end of the tunnel’ for marriage equality in Michigan
Last fall, the 6th Circuit became the only federal appeals court in the nation to uphold bans on same-sex nuptials since June 2013, when the Supreme Court invalidated a key portion of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and cleared the way for married gay and lesbian couples to begin receiving federal recognition. The 6th Circuit’s ruling prompted Michigan Republican Attorney General Bill Schuette to “void” some 300 same-sex marriages that took place in the state earlier that year.
But according to Judge Goldsmith, “what the state has joined together, it may not put asunder.” Michigan must recognize the same-sex marriages performed in the state during the window period in which they were allowed. Goldsmith stayed the effect of his ruling for 21 days.
LGBT advocates hailed his decision.









