NewsNational

Actions

Virginia law that requires couples to disclose their race is unconstitutional, judge says

Posted
and last updated

A federal judge ruled that a Virginia law requiring couples to reveal their race in applying for a marriage license is unconstitutional.

The lawsuit against the Virginia State Registrar and others was filed after three couples said they were denied marriage licenses in the state after they refused to check a box disclosing their race on their applications.

Finding that the statute violates the 14th Amendment, Judge Rossie D. Alston wrote in his ruling Friday that requiring the couples "to disclose their race in order to receive marriage licenses burdens their fundamental right to marry," Alston wrote.

"(T)he statutory scheme is a vestige of the nation's and of Virginia's history of codified racialization," the judge wrote.

"The Commonwealth of Virginia is naturally rich in its greatest traditions," Alston wrote. "But like other institutions, that stain of past mistakes, misgivings and discredited legislative mandates must always survive the scrutiny of our nation's most import institution ... the Constitution of the United States of America."

Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring last month directed that applicants would now be able to check a box that says "declined to answer" instead of checking a box that defined their race, and clerks of court across the state received the new form and a memo.

But the couples pushed ahead with the lawsuit, arguing that because the statute was still in place, Herring's directive could be changed after he is no longer in office.

"The provision in the statute is still intact, so the announcement does not necessarily solve the problem," Ashley Ramkishun, one of the plaintiffs, told CNN last month. "It's merely a Band-Aid."

The judge agreed.

The attorney general "provided a construction of the statute that is expressly at odds with its plain meaning," Alston wrote.

And although the clerks of court "swore to uphold General Herring's interpretation," they are still required to "uphold the statute, and General Herring's interpretation lacks the force of law," the judge said.