A federal judge ordered the state of Utah Monday to recognize the marriages of same-sex couples performed in the brief window between the moment the state’s ban was struck down and a stay was issued barring any more same-sex marriages from being performed in the state.
“Our clients, like over 1,000 other same-sex couples, were legally married and those marriages cannot now be taken away from them,” John Mejia of the Utah chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union said in a statement. “While we await a permanent decision, we are relieved that our clients will receive the full recognition they deserve as lawfully married couples.”
Shortly after Utah’s ban on same-sex marriage was struck down last December, the state appealed the decision and requested that same-sex marriages in the state be halted. Around a thousand couples were married in between December 20 and January 6, when the stay was issued. The federal government announced they would be recognizing Utah’s marriages, but state officials in Utah said they would not.
Four couples represented by the Utah chapter of the ACLU and the law firm Strindberg & Scholnick sued to have their unions recognized. Federal Judge Dale Kimball, who was appointed by President Bill Clinton, wrote that the harm to the same-sex couples in not having their marriages recognized was far greater than the harm done to the state in recognizing them.









