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By Karen Ocamb

Lawyers seeking marriage rights for gay and lesbian couples
received an unexpected boon recently when a conservative
Orange County judge ruled in an alimony case that domestic
partnership is akin to cohabitation and not equal to marriage.
The ruling will be added to the briefs LGBT attorneys are
preparing to file with the California Supreme Court in the
next few weeks.
The case was brought by Ron Garber, whose wife left him
for another woman. He agreed to pay $1,250 in monthly alimony.
But when Garber discovered that his wife and her new partner
had registered as domestic partners, and his wife had taken
her partner’s last name, Garber argued that he should
not have to pay alimony, since state law says alimony ends
with the re-marriage of the ex-spouse, and domestic partnership
is supposed to be the equivalent of marriage.
“This is not about gay or lesbian,” Garber
told the Los Angeles Times for a July 22 story. “This
is about the law being fair.”
“If he had signed that agreement under the same factual
scenario—except marriage, not domestic partnership—his
agreement to pay spousal support would be null and void,” William
M. Hulsy, Garber's lawyer, told the Times. Melinda Kirkwood
told the Times that Garber had known about the relationship
before signing the agreement.
According to the Times, Orange County Superior Court Judge
Michael Naughton ruled from the bench in agreement with lawyers
on both sides whose filings said that domestic partnership
is “not the equivalent of marriage. It is the functional
equivalent of cohabitation.”
To LGBT attorneys, the case underscores how California’s
domestic partnership law is widely misunderstood and creates
chaos and confusion over matters that would be simple if
gays and lesbians had marriage rights.
“The trial court judge seems to have read and applied
the law correctly, although the result is contrary to the
Legislature's intention that the same rules should apply
to both spouses and domestic partners,” Lambda Legal’s
Jenny Pizer told IN Los Angeles magazine. “It just
proves the obvious point: If you want equal rights and equal
duties to apply, and you want a fair, useful system that
yields consistent answers, then don't keep gay and lesbian
couples stuck in a separate, confusing system. Instead, just
let lesbian and gay couples marry, and have the same rules
apply to everyone.
“This alimony case illustrates something the domestic
partnership laws are not designed to cope with—that
in society, there are not two hermetically sealed groups
of people segregated by their sexual orientation. Sometimes
individuals spend years married to a different-sex spouse
and then come out and form a committed relationship with
a same-sex partner,” which is especially confusing
for bisexual people.
“The Orange County judge recognized what we all know:
Domestic partnership is not close to equaling marriage,” Pizer
continued. “It's not an equivalent status legally or
socially. In this unusual case, there seems to be a private
benefit for the registered domestic partner. But this rare
situation of it being beneficial that domestic partnership
is a lesser status should be seen in context, recognizing
the many rights domestic partners do not have, and the widespread
resistance and problems they encounter when trying to obtain
even basic protections that married couples take for granted.”
But what is too often lost in the constitutional legalese
over marriage rights, equal protection under the law and
the right to pursue happiness, is how the “separate
but equal” treatment is in reality unequal and devastating
to real peoples’ lives.
Don (whose last name we are protecting) lost Dale, his
partner of 26 years, to bone cancer 12 days before Christmas
last year. Dale was a veteran and initially had been treated
at a Veteran Administration hospital. But since Dale, 51,
had no insurance and had to stay at a low income to qualify
for MediCal (he received only a Social Security check), they
had to go through California Rep. George Miller to get those
bills paid. When the long drive to the VA hospital became
too painful, Dale went to a hospital closer to their house
in Concord.
They were registered domestic partners and had wills leaving
the house to the surviving partner. Still coping with grief
from Dale’s death, Don had to fight MediCal, which
told him they did not recognize registered domestic partnerships
and that Don would have to pay all the money owed for his
partner’s chemotherapy, radiation and other medical
treatments. The government threatened to seize his house
as payment.
Don, 64, tried to re-finance the house to pay the bills,
but was denied, even though the house was in both their names.
He wound up having to pay an attorney to help with the re-financing.
“If we had been married, I wouldn’t have had
to do that,” Don told IN. “They wanted money.
They wanted his part of the house. If we had been a married
couple, they would have waited until the other person died.
But in my case, they want the money up front.
“I contacted Senator Dianne Feinstein, Senator Barbara
Boxer and Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office, and they told
me I have to go through [Gov. Arnold] Schwarzenegger for
help,” Don said, “because MediCal is a federal
thing and they don’t recognize domestic partnerships.
I’ve had nightmares and lost 50 pounds with all the
garbage I’ve been going through.”
“California could fix that problem,” Pizer
said. “Because MediCal is a federal/state program,
California would have to set up a separate fund to cover
domestic partners. It would be small because we are a small
percentage of the population. But that’s a steep uphill
fight because it involves money.” As IN goes to press,
Don’s situation is still up in the air.
Mark Mitchell and his partner, Jay Wright, live in Modesto.
Mitchell, who was disabled after his tour in Iraq seriously
aggravated his HIV, applied for state tuition assistance
for his stepson through the California Department of Veterans
Affairs; however, he was denied.
“We started preparing for Jay’s son to go to
college when he was 16,” Mitchell told IN. “I
know the California Department of Veterans Affairs, which
is separate from the federal VA, offers free tuition to children
or step-children of disabled veterans. I am 100 percent disabled,
and Jay is my registered domestic partner under AB 205, so
we naturally assumed the state agency and state funding would
apply,” with little or no federal connection. They
even received a verbal confirmation from a state official
in 2005.
The couple applied in January of last year. Three days
later, they received a letter thanking them for their application
but, the letter said, based on a review of their information, “I
must deny your application,” specifically because Mitchell’s
stepson was not eligible under Plan A.
“We never applied for Plan B because a married couple
wouldn’t have to,” Mitchell said. “Why
go for a lesser plan if you can get Plan A, which has no
income limit and our son could work for spending money and
not have to worry about an income cap? With Plan B you have
to be at or below the poverty level to attend college for
free. That’s a fairly significant difference, in our
opinion.”
The couple was also seriously aggravated when the local
head of the veteran services made an “irate” phone
call to them asking them if they have a marriage certificate.
After submitting the domestic partners registry certificate,
the stepson’s birth certificate and all other required
papers, the couple was told to phone the state office for
Veterans Affairs.
“I’ve never met a bigger ass in my life,” Mitchell
said. “He accused us of trying to make a political
statement. I told him I was just trying to get our son the
same benefits any other vet is entitled to.”
“I got very upset,” Wright said. “I told
him this was discrimination. He hung up the phone.”
“[The stepson] was approved under Plan B,” Mitchell
said. “But it’s still not fair. We were not treated
equally as AB 205 says we should be.“
Mitchell said they filed a complaint under the Unruh Civil
Rights Act with the state Department of Fair Employment and
Housing. “They believed discrimination occurred,” Mitchell
said, adding that it takes up to a year to process the complaint.
Meanwhile, Mitchell is also worried about what might happen
if he is totally incapacitated. Homes for veterans allow
married couples to live together. “Something tells
me those rights will not be afforded to domestic partners,” he
said.
“What strikes me,” Mitchell said, “is
that there is a difference in people’s minds between
marriage and domestic partnerships, and any agency can interpret
that difference at their own leisure. A lot of people have
been unwilling to help us. We are treated differently. We
are not inherently equal.”
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