BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                       



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                                 THIRD READING


          Bill No:  SB 906
          Author:   Leno (D), et al
          Amended:  As introduced
          Vote:     21

           
           SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE  :  3-2, 3/23/10
          AYES:  Corbett, Hancock, Leno
          NOES:  Harman, Walters


           SUBJECT  :    Marriage

           SOURCE  :     Equality California
                      California Council of Churches IMPACT


           DIGEST :    This bill distinguishes between civil and  
          religious marriage by clarifying that a civil marriage is  
          established pursuant to a State of California marriage  
          license, to which the consent of the parties capable of  
          making that contract is necessary.  This bill specifies  
          that no priest, minister, rabbi, or authorized person of  
          any religious denomination would be required to solemnize a  
          marriage that is contrary to the tenets of his/her faith.   
          This bill additionally states that any refusal to solemnize  
          a marriage under that provision shall not affect the tax  
          exempt status of any entity.  

           ANALYSIS  :    Existing law provides that marriage is a  
          personal relation arising out of a civil contract between a  
          man and a woman, to which the consent of the parties  
          capable of making that contract is necessary.  (Section 300  
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          of the Family Code)
          
          Existing law enumerates persons who are authorized to  
          solemnize a marriage, including to, but not limited to, any  
          priest, minister, rabbi, or authorized person of any  
          religious denomination.  (Section 400 of the Family Code)

          Existing constitutional law provides that Congress shall  
          make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or  
          prohibiting the free exercise thereof.  (Amendment 1 of the  
          United States Constitution)

          Existing constitutional law provides that free exercise and  
          enjoyment of religion without discrimination or preference  
          are guaranteed.  (Article I, Section 4 of the California  
          Constitution)

          This bill instead provides that civil marriage is a  
          personal relation arising out of a civil contract between a  
          man and a woman established pursuant to a State of  
          California marriage license, to which the consent of the  
          parties capable of making that contract is necessary.  

          This bill specifies that no priest, minister, rabbi, or  
          authorized person of any religious denomination will be  
          required to solemnize a marriage that is contrary to the  
          tenets of his/her faith.  

          This bill additionally states that any refusal to solemnize  
          a marriage under that provision shall not affect the tax  
          exempt status of any entity.  

           Background
           
          On May 15, 2008, the California Supreme Court, in a 4-3  
          decision, struck down as unconstitutional the California  
          statutes limiting marriage to a man and a woman.  (  In re  
          Marriage Cases  (2008) 43 Cal.4th 757.)  Following the  
          Court's landmark decision, approximately 18,000 same-sex  
          couples wed in California.  However, opponents of same-sex  
          marriage began circulating petitions to amend the statutory  
          text of invalid Section 308.5 of the Family Code into the  
          Constitution even before the Supreme Court issued its  
          ruling, and enough signatures were gathered to qualify the  







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          petition as Proposition 8.  On November 4, 2008,  
          Proposition 8 passed by a narrow 52 percent margin.  Civil  
          rights organizations again filed suit with the California  
          Supreme Court, asking that it overturn the initiative as an  
          invalid revision.  

          On May 26, 2009, the Supreme Court in  Strauss v. Horton   
          (2009) 46 Cal. 4th 364, upheld Proposition 8 in a 6-1  
          decision, but held, unanimously, that the same-sex  
          marriages performed in California before the passage of  
          Proposition 8 remain valid.  In  Strauss  , the Supreme Court  
          first determined that Proposition 8 did not repeal the  
          constitutional rights of individuals to choose their life  
          partners and enter into "a committed, officially  
          recognized, and protected family relationship that enjoys  
          all the constitutionally based incidents of marriage"  
          recognized by the Court in  Marriage Cases  .  (  Strauss  , 46  
          Cal.4th at 388.)  Instead, the Court found, Proposition 8  
          "carves out a narrow and limited exception to these state  
          constitutional rights, reserving the official designation  
          of the term 'marriage' for the union of opposite-sex  
          couples as a matter of state constitutional law, but  
          leaving undisturbed all of the other extremely significant  
          substantive aspects of a same-sex couple's state  
          constitutional right to establish an officially recognized  
          and protected family relationship and the guarantee of  
          equal protection of the laws."  (Id.)
          On May 22, 2009, opponents of Proposition 8 filed an action  
          in federal court in the Northern District of California  
          challenging Proposition 8 as violating both the due process  
          clause and equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment to  
          the federal constitution and seeking injunctive relief  
          enjoining application of the proposition.  (  Perry v.  
          Schwarzenegger  , 09-CV-2292.)  A trial was held between  
          January 11-27, 2010 and the case is still pending.

          One of the much publicized arguments in support of  
          Proposition 8 has been that same-sex marriage poses a  
          danger to religious freedom because churches will lose  
          their tax exempt status if they refused to solemnize such  
          marriages.  (See Laurie Goodstein, "A Line in the Sand for  
          Same-Sex Marriage Foes," New York Times, October 27, 2008.)  
           This bill seeks to resolve this debate by clarifying the  
          distinction between civil and religious marriage and  







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          providing that members of the clergy are not required to  
          solemnize marriages contrary to the tenets of their faith.

           Prior Legislation

           AB 43 (Leno), 2007-08 Session, contained similar religious  
          exemption language.  The bill which passed the Senate with  
          a vote of 22-15 on September 27, 2007, was vetoed by the  
          Governor.

          AB 849 (Leno), 2005-06 Session, contained similar religious  
          exemption language.  The bill was vetoed by the Governor.

          AB 19 (Leno), 2005-06 Session, contained similar religious  
          exemption language.  The bill was vetoed by the Governor.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  No    
          Local:  No

           SUPPORT  :   (Verified  3/24/10)

          Equality California (co-source)
          California Council of Churches IMPACT (co-source)
          AIDS Project Los Angeles
          Anti-Defamation League
          Asian Americans for Civil Rights & Equality
          California Communities United Institute
          California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing  
          Committee
          Consumer Attorneys of California

           OPPOSITION  :    (Verified  3/24/10)

          California Family Council
          Concerned Women for America
           
           ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :    The author's office states that in  
          the national debate surrounding marriage equality, one  
          issue raised by opponents is fear that clergy will be  
          forced to solemnize marriages of same-sex couples or face  
          legal consequences, even if their faith does not permit or  
          support such marriages.  The author's office further states  
          that while proponents of marriage equality disagree that  
          this is a valid concern it is also true that each state  







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          (except Iowa) that recognizes same-sex marriage has also  
          enacted an explicit religious exemption.  The author's  
          office asserts that as long as there is confusion over this  
          issue, the Legislature should act in order to clarify  
          constitutional rights, particularly because marriage  
          equality and religious exemptions are parallel protections  
          for similar claims to individual liberty.


          RJG:mw  3/24/10   Senate Floor Analyses 

                         SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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