P ' R O A G ' M D (D - 101) : Laintiffs Esponse in Pposition To Ttorney Eneral S Otion To Ismiss OC
P ' R O A G ' M D (D - 101) : Laintiffs Esponse in Pposition To Ttorney Eneral S Otion To Ismiss OC
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Plaintiffs,
v.
LUTHER STRANGE, in his official
capacity as Attorney General for the
State of Alabama, et al.,
Defendants.
Court has already issued declaratory and preliminary injunctive relief against him,
the Attorney General now contends that Plaintiffs lack standing to bring this action
1
against him. Contrary to the Attorney Generals arguments, Plaintiffs (including the
putative class) have standing to challenge Alabamas constitutional and statutory
prohibitions on marriage by same-sex couples and on recognition of their existing
marriages. Plaintiffs have suffered an injury in factan invasion of a legally
protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized, and (b) actual or
imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical, . . . there [is] a causal connection between
the injury and the conduct complained of, and it is likely, rather than merely
speculative, that a favorable decision by the Court will remedy Plaintiffs injury.
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 56061 (1992) (citations and internal
quotation marks omitted). See Order, Doc. 29 (Plaintiffs have suffered irreparable
harm as a result of Alabamas marriage laws prohibiting same-sex marriage and the
harm may be remedied by declaratory and injunctive relief), Order, Doc. 55 (same).
The Attorney Generals argument that Plaintiffs have no justiciable
controversy with him because he does not issue marriage licenses ignores that
Plaintiffs have broadly challenged all Alabama laws that prohibit marriage by samesex couples or recognition by the State of the marriages of same-sex couples. The
Attorney Generals motion disregards his significant role in enforcement of the entire
scheme of Alabama laws that are at issue in this case. Indeed, in Aaron-Brush v.
Strange, No. 2:14-cv-01091 (N.D. Ala.), the Attorney General admitted, without
reservation, that [h]e maintains enforcement authority regarding the Alabama
Marriage Prohibitions and their application to conduct of the State and its
subdivisions and court system. See Aaron-Brush Complaint, Doc. 1 at 8, 18, and
Answer to the Complaint, Doc. 13 at 4, 18. And, as this Court noted in its Order
granting Plaintiffs leave to file their Second Amended Complaint, Doc. 92 at 2-3,
Plaintiffs have apparently all received marriage licenses[, but] the licenses are of
little value if they are not recognized as valid in Alabama. 1
The Attorney Generals powers include the authority to superintend and
direct the prosecution of any criminal case in Alabama courts, to direct district
attorneys to act as his assistants in such prosecutions, and to initiate and direct any
litigation seeking civil remedies involving the interests of the state. Ala. Code 3615-14, 36-15-15, 36-15-12. Thus, for example, the Attorney General has direct
responsibility for enforcing provisions in Alabama law that prohibit residents from
signing an income tax return containing false information, and provide criminal
penalties for doing so. See Ala. Code 40-18-27(d). Four of the named Plaintiff couples
in this action are now married pursuant to licenses issued by Defendant Davis in
compliance with this Courts orders, and all of the members of the proposed Plaintiff
Class seek to be married and to have their marriages recognized by the State. Should
any of these Plaintiffs (or similarly situated Plaintiff Class members) file an Alabama
income tax return truthfully reporting their marital status as married, they would
risk prosecution by the Attorney General or his subordinates because Alabama does
not recognize them as married and could consider that representation to be false.
Indeed, married Plaintiffs would risk prosecution even if they were to declare their
tax filing as single, as the Attorney General could also consider that representation
to be false. 2 Only this Courts previously issued injunction barring the Attorney
General from enforcing Alabamas marriage ban prevents Plaintiffs 3 from being
exposed to the threat of prosecution based on their declared marital status. 4
Plaintiffs thus have a present, ongoing case or controversy with the Attorney
General that is redressableindeed, is currently being redressedthrough this
Courts issuance of declaratory and injunctive relief against him.
The Attorney General similarly has responsibility for enforcement of
Alabamas marriage ban as it relates to the solemnization of a same-sex couples
marriage. In order to marry in Alabama, a couple must apply for and be issued a
license, which serves as the legal authority for a religious or non-religious official to
solemnize a marriage. See Ala. Code 30-1-9, 30-1-7. But state law provides that
The current injunction against the Attorney General also inures to the
benefit of same-sex couples married both in Alabama and elsewhere who now reside
in Alabama.
3
same-sex couples may not obtain marriage licenses and that any person who performs
a marriage for a couple without a valid license is subject to a $1,000 penalty. Id.,
30-1-19, 30-1-11. County probate judges are required to report violations of this
provision to district attorneys. See id., 30-1-18. And as noted by the Supreme Court
of Alabama, the Attorney Generals authority to direct, control, and attend to all
litigation concerning the interests of the state encompasses the ability to do so in the
manner he sees fit, even over district attorneys objections. Ex Parte King, 59 So. 3d
21, 2627 (Ala. 2010).
The Attorney Generals authority to enforce Alabamas penalty for a person
solemnizing a marriage without a license, including a marriage of a same-sex couple,
Ala. Code. 30-1-11, creates a direct conflict with, and direct barrier to, the relief
Plaintiffs seek and is sufficient to establish a case or controversy under Article III
between the Attorney General and the unmarried Plaintiffs and Plaintiff Class
members. Plaintiffs broadly challenge Ala. Code 30-1-19 and all other Alabama laws
prohibiting or denying recognition to the marriages of same-sex couples, and the relief
they seek includes a declaration that all such provisions are unconstitutional. This
relief would encompass such criminal statutes as Alabama Code 30-1-11. Baskin
v. Bogan, 12 F. Supp. 3d 1144, 115253 (S.D. Ind.), affd, 766 F.3d 648 (7th Cir. 2014),
cert. denied, 135 S. Ct. 316 (2014) (holding that state attorney general was proper
defendant in challenge to Indianas marriage ban); see also Citizens for Equal
Protection v. Bruning, 455 F.3d 859, 864 (8th Cir. 2006) (holding that because state
attorney general had some connection with the enforcement of marriage ban for
same-sex couples, [t]his satisfies the case or controversy requirement of Article III).
Not only does the Attorney General possess enforcement authority with respect
to Alabamas marriage ban, he has exercised that authority consistently to ensure
compliance with the ban. Indeed, pursuant to the duty to give opinions on questions
of law connected with the interests of the state and its departments, see Ala. Code
36-15-1(1)(a), 5 a former Attorney General issued a formal opinion in 2000 stating
that Alabama and its subdivisions should not recognize civil unions entered into in
Vermont. See Ala. Op. Atty Gen. 2000-129 (Ala. A.G. 2000). The opinion advised that
[r]efusing to recognize a same-sex marriage or civil union would not be arbitrary or
fundamentally unfair, and . . . would also further a legitimate public policy expressed
in the Alabama Marriage Protection Act. Id. at 10. As the Eighth Circuit has held,
issuance of such a formal opinion confirms that [an attorney generals] broad powers
include policing compliance with a states prohibition on same-sex couples ability to
marry and have their marriages recognized. Bruning, 455 F.3d at 864. These duties
are sufficient to establish a justiciable dispute between the state attorney general and
same-sex couples challenging the constitutionality of the marriage ban, even if other
state officers are also involved in enforcement of the ban. See id. 6
The Attorney General also has the express authority to issue opinions
to Alabamas probate court judges. See Ala. Code 36-15-1(1)(b).
5
In sum, given the Attorney Generals direct authority over suits seeking
criminal or civil penalties arising from enforcement of Alabamas marriage ban,
Plaintiffs Second Amended Complaint sufficiently alleges a justiciable case or
controversy under Article III. Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that they would
suffer injury in fact from the Attorney Generals continued enforcement of
Alabamas marriage ban, and the Court is capable of redressing that injury. Indeed,
the Court has already redressed that injury on an interim basis by preliminarily
enjoining the Attorney General from enforcing the ban. But for the Courts injunction,
Plaintiffs, Plaintiff Class members, and other married same-sex couples would face
an ongoing threat of criminal prosecution or other enforcement actions by the
Attorney General and his subordinates through their enforcement of Alabamas laws
barring same-sex couples from marriage and from recognition of their marriages.
II.
In this case, too, Attorney General Strange has admitted that he is the proper
defendant to the proceedingsand the Court has agreed. When the Attorney General
moved to dismiss the State of Alabama, which had been named as the defendant by
the then-pro se Plaintiffs (Doc. 8), Magistrate Judge Cassady stated:
The Court notifies the pro se plaintiffs that rather than filing a
substantive response in opposition to the defendants motion to dismiss,
they may well desire to respond by filing a motion to amend their
complaint to dismiss the State of Alabama and substitute as the proper
defendant in this case the actual movant with respect to the pending
motion, that is, Luther Strange, in his official capacity as Attorney
General of the State of Alabama.
Order, Doc. 11 at 12 (footnotes omitted). Judge Cassady explained that as Luther
Strange has admitted in Searcy v. Strange, . . . he may be sued in his official capacity
as Attorney General of the State of Alabama. Id. at 2 n.2. Plaintiffs took Judge
Cassadys suggestion and moved to amend the complaint to name the Attorney
General as the sole defendant. See Motion to Amend Complaint and Change
Defendant, Doc. 12. The Attorney General did not object to the substitution. See
Response, Doc. 13 at 4. The Magistrate Judge recommended that the motion to
amend be granted, see Doc. 14, and this Court adopted that recommendation as its
own opinion, see Doc. 22.
And the Attorney General has kept his word: he has actively defended
Alabamas marriage ban as a defendant in this and other cases, including by filing a
cross-motion for summary judgment in Hard v. Bentley and by seeking appellate
relief from this Courts rulings in this case and in Searcy. See Searcy v. Attorney Gen.,
State of Ala., No. 15-10295-C, consolidated with Strawser v. Attorney Gen., State of
Ala., No. 15-10313-A (11th Cir. Feb. 3, 2015) (order denying stay pending appeal),
and Strange v. Searcy, 135 S. Ct. 940 (2015) (order denying stay pending disposition
of Sixth Circuit cases).
For the reasons stated in Section I above, the Attorney Generals initial view
that he is a proper defendant in a challenge to Alabamas marriage ban was correct.
His eleventh-hour claim to the contrary has no merit. 7
III.
Conclusion.
For the reasons set forth above, the Attorney Generals motion to dismiss
should be denied.
Respectfully Submitted,
NATIONAL CENTER FOR LESBIAN RIGHTS
By: /s/ Shannon P. Minter
Shannon P. Minter*
Christopher F. Stoll*
National Center for Lesbian Rights
1100 H Street, NW, Suite 540
Washington, DC 20005
Tel: (202) 734-3545
Fax: (415) 392-8442
Email: [email protected]
Email: [email protected]
Heather Fann
Boyd, Fernambucq, Dunn & Fann, P.C.
3500 Blue Lake Drive, Suite 220
Birmingham, AL 35243
Tel: (205) 930-9000
Fax: (205) 930-9010
Email: [email protected]
Randall C. Marshall (MARSR3023)
ACLU Foundation of Alabama
P.O. Box 6179
Montgomery, Alabama 36106-0179
Tel: (334) 420-1741
Fax: (334) 269-5666
Email: [email protected]
David Dinielli**
Cal. Bar No. 177904
Scott D. McCoy*
N.Y. Bar No. 3970803
Southern Poverty Law Center
400 Washington Avenue
Montgomery, AL 36104
Tel: 334-956-8200
Email: [email protected]
Email: [email protected]
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Ayesha N. Khan*
D.C. Bar No. 426836
Zachary A. Dietert*
D.C. Bar No. 1003784
Americans United for Separation of Church and
State
1901 L Street, N.W., Suite 400
Washington, D.C. 20036
Tel: (202) 466-3234
Email: [email protected]
Email: [email protected]
Attorneys for Plaintiffs
* Appearing pro hac vice
** Motion for admission pro hac vice forthcoming
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that I electronically filed the foregoing with the Clerk of the
Court by using the CM/ECF system on April 10, 2015. I certify that service will be
accomplished by the CM/ECF system to the following parties:
Luther Strange
Attorney General
Andrew L. Brasher
Solicitor General
James W. Davis
Laura Howell
Assistant Attorneys General
State of Alabama
Office of Attorney General
501 Washington Avenue
Montgomery, Alabama 36130
Tel: (334) 353-2609
Lee L. Hale (HAL026)
501 Church Street
Mobile, AL 36602
Phone: (251) 433-3671
J. Michael Druhan, Jr. (Druh2816)
Harry V. Satterwhite (Satth4909)
SATTERWHITE, DRUHAN, GAILLARD & TYLER, LLC
1325 Dauphin Street
Mobile, Alabama 36604
(251) 432-8120 (phone)
(251) 405-0147 (fax)
[email protected]
[email protected]
Mark S. Boardman (ASB-8572-B65M)
Clay R. Carr (ASB-5650-C42C)
Teresa B. Petelos (ASB-8716-L66T)
BOARDMAN, CARR, BENNETT, WATKINS, HILL & GAMBLE, P.C.
400 Boardman Drive
Chelsea, Alabama 35043-8211
Telephone: (205) 678-8000
Attorneys for the Honorable Don Davis,
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