Two gay couples in Texas who were married in Massachusetts, where same-sex marriage is legal, are trying to get divorces, but the State of Texas is saying no. Getting a divorce in Massachusetts is not an option since they are now Texas residents.
In the first case, the men – who are identified in court records as JB and HB – were married in Massachusetts in 2006 and separated two years later. They had been together 11 years before ending their relationship. In the second case, partners Angelique Naylor and Sabina Daly married in Massachusetts in 2004 and adopted a child. Both couples are represented by attorney James J. “Jody” Scheske.
Judge Tena Callahan granted a divorce to JB and HB last October and also ruled that Texas’ ban on gay marriage is unconstitutional. Texas Attorney General Greg Abbot is fighting that ruling in the appellate court, arguing that in order to recognize the divorce, Texas would have to recognize the marriage, and therefore, the couple is trying to overturn Texas’ gay marriage ban.
Texas voters approved a state constitutional amendment, and state law prohibits same-sex marriages or civil unions. Attorney General Abbot is arguing that Texas courts can’t dissolve a marriage that the state does not recognize.
As of this writing, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, New Hampshire, Vermont and the District of Columbia allow same-sex marriage. When trying to divorce, these couples are getting mixed results in the United States. Judges in Pennsyvlvania, Indiana and Rhode Island have refused to divorce same-sex couples married elsewhere. New York grants such divorces even though the state doesn’t allow same-sex marriage.
Civil unions, which give certain rights and responsibilities to same-sex couples, are legal in New Jersey. Domestic partnerships, which give some spousal rights to same-sex couples, are valid in California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Nevada, Oregon, Washington and Wisconsin.