Adoption by Same-Sex Parents Recognized by Appeals Court
An Alabama appeals court ruled on Friday that the state must recognize the out-of-state adoption of three children by the estranged wife of their birth mother, lawyers for the plaintiff said.
The decision comes as a handful of Alabama judges have refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples in defiance of a federal ruling, and as another same-sex couple in Mobile has sued seeking similar adoption rights.
Alabama this month became the 37th state where gay marriage is legal after the U.S. Supreme Court refused to stay a federal ruling that struck down ‘s ban on same-sex marriage. Despite that, Roy Moore, the conservative chief justice of the state’s Supreme Court, has directed judges not to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.
The will by the end of June decide whether states can ban gay marriage.
Friday’s ruling applies to a case involving an Alabama couple who married in Georgia. One of the women, both of whom are referred to in court documents by their initials, gave birth to three children via insemination, and the other legally adopted them in Georgia.
When their relationship ended, the biological mother kept her former spouse from seeing the children, and the latter sued for visitation rights in Alabama, where they both lived, lawyers for the plaintiff said.
Separately, a plaintiff in the case in which a federal judge last month overturned Alabama’s gay marria
A hearing in that case has been scheduled for March 2.
The same local judge began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples only when he was ordered to do so by U.S. District Judge Callie Granade, after he had defied her initial ruling.
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