Salt Lake Tribune | - 1 hour ago |
That
depends. Hours after U.S. District Court Judge Robert J. Shelby ruled
Utah's ban on gay marriage was unconstitutional, the Utah attorney
general's office filed a notice of appeal with the 10th Circuit Court in
Denver and asked Shelby to stay his decision.
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Same-sex marriage in Utah Q&A: Now what?
By Brooke Adams
| The Salt Lake Tribune
Is same-sex marriage now legal in Utah forever? »
That depends. Hours after U.S. District Court
Judge Robert J. Shelby ruled Utah’s ban on gay marriage was
unconstitutional, the Utah attorney general’s office filed a notice of
appeal with the 10th Circuit Court in Denver and asked Shelby to stay
his decision.
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Federal judge strikes down Utah ban on same-sex marriage
Published December 20, 2013
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What happens if the ruling is stayed? »
At present, same-sex marriage is legal in
Utah. If the ruling is stayed, the ban will be reinstituted while the
legal fight continues and no more marriage licenses will be issued. A
plaintiff’s attorney said marriage licenses issued to that point will be
valid, but the state said marriages would be declared invalid if its
appeal succeeds.
So will churches be forced to perform gay weddings? »
No. In his ruling, Shelby noted that while the
state did not make a religious freedom argument, nothing in his
decision mandates any change for religious institutions, which "may
continue to express their own moral viewpoints and define their own
traditions about marriage." If anything, Shelby said, the ruling
"expands religious freedom" since churches that want to perform same-sex
marriages can now do so.
Was the speed of the ruling a surprise? »
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Not according to one attorney in the case.
Peggy Tomsic, who represented the plaintiffs, said both sides filed a
"massive" number of briefs in October and November, which the judge had
read before he heard oral arguments on Dec. 5.
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