The Connecticut Supreme Court handed down a ruling on the Margaret Mueller retroactive gay rights case this week, deciding that same-sex partners can receive backdated benefits afforded to heterosexual couples.
Although no states that allow gay marriage have made their laws retroactive, many same-sex partners believe they should have received Social Security survivor payments, tax breaks, inheritances, and other benefits that were afforded only to heterosexual married couples before gay marriage laws were passed.
The Connecticut high court ruled unanimously Wednesday that a woman whose wife died amid a medical malpractice case may sue a doctor over the loss of her wife's companionship and income, even though that right to sue was limited to heterosexual married couples at the time. Legal experts called the decision the first of its kind in the country, according to The Associated Press.
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John Thomas, a professor at the Quinnipiac University School of Law, believes the ruling opened a door to all kinds of new legal claims by same-sex couples seeking benefits and rights they weren't entitled to before gay marriage laws were passed. If the U.S. Supreme Court ever declares gay marriage constitutional, he said, the legal floodgates would open.
"I think what the court recognized is that constitutional rights don't spring into existence in one moment of time," Thomas said. "I would expect to see a number of similar lawsuits in other states."
Thomas and gay rights lawyers say the issue of retroactive gay marriage rights hasn't made it to the nation's courts yet for the most part, but they expect to see it spring up in the not-so-distant future in states across the country. While the Connecticut court did not make its 2008 approval of gay marriage retroactive, it expanded common law to give gays and lesbians the right to sue over the death of a partner.
"Because there was a time when many same-sex couples couldn't marry, they were subjected to a whole range of unfair treatment under the law and this decision is really a great step forward," said Ben Klein, a lawyer for Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders in Boston. "We have these remnants from the past that the court, at least in this one instance, has rectified."
Groups that oppose gay marriage, including the Family Research Council in Washington, D.C., are against making gay marriage rights retroactive.
"This decision could open the floodgates to claims for retroactive benefits in an almost unlimited number of areas," said Peter Sprigg, senior fellow for policy studies at the Family Research Council. "Connecticut has no obligation to pay reparations to homosexuals for having maintained the natural definition of marriage until 2008."
Same-sex marriage is now legal in 19 states and the District of Columbia, while gay marriage bans that have been overturned in some other states continue to make their way through the courts.
The Connecticut case involved Margaret Mueller and Charlotte Stacey, insurance industry workers who lived in Stamford and Norwalk. They had a civil union in Connecticut in 2005 and got married in Massachusetts in 2008 after 23 years together under that state's gay marriage law, shortly before Connecticut approved gay marriage.
Mueller was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2001. In 2005, however, Mueller and Stacey learned the diagnosis was wrong and she actually had appendix cancer. Mueller died in 2009 at age 62. Stacey said her death could have been prevented if the original diagnosis had been correct.
Mueller sued for malpractice. After her death, a jury issued a $2.4 million verdict in her favor against one of her doctors, while another doctor settled for an undisclosed amount. The trial court and the state Appellate Court, however, ruled against Stacey in her effort to sue a doctor for loss of spousal "consortium," saying Stacey and Mueller weren't married as required under the law at the time of the malpractice.
Massachusetts is the only other state where such a case was debated, legal experts say. That state's highest court ruled in 2008 against a lesbian widow seeking to sue for loss of consortium, saying Massachusetts' gay marriage law wasn't retroactive and that a ruling in her favor "could open numbers of cases in all areas of law to the same argument."
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