A Los
Angeles-area judge has ordered a man to continue paying
alimony to his ex-wife--even though she's in a
registered domestic partnership with another woman and
even uses the other woman's last name.
California
marriage laws say alimony ends when a former spouse
remarries, and Ron Garber thought that meant he was
off the hook when he learned his ex-wife had
registered her new relationship under the state's domestic
partnership law.
An Orange County
judge didn't see it that way.
The judge ruled
that a registered partnership is cohabitation, not
marriage, and that Garber must keep writing the checks,
$1,250 a month, to his ex-wife, Melinda Kirkwood.
Gerber plans to appeal.
The case
highlights questions about the legal status of domestic
partnerships, an issue the California supreme court is
weighing as it considers whether same-sex marriage is
legal. An appeals court upheld the state's ban on
same-sex marriage last year, citing the state's
domestic-partnership law and ruling that it was up to the
legislature to decide whether gays could wed.
Lawyers arguing
favor of same-sex marriage say they will cite the June
ruling in the Orange County case as a reason to unite gay
and heterosexual couples under one system: marriage.
In legal briefs
due in August to the state supreme court, Therese
Stewart, chief deputy city attorney for San Francisco,
intends to argue that same sex couples should have
access to marriage and that domestic partnership
doesn't provide the same reverence and respect as marriage.
The alimony
ruling shows ''the irrationality of having a separate,
unequal scheme'' for same-sex partners, Stewart said.
Garber knew his
former wife was living with another woman when he agreed
to the alimony, but he said he didn't know the two women had
registered with the state as domestic partners under a
law that was intended to mirror marriage.
''This is not
about gay or lesbian,'' Garber said. ''This is about the
law being fair.''
Kirkwood's
attorney, Edwin Fahlen, said the agreement was binding
regardless of whether his client was registered as a
domestic partner or even married. He said both sides
agreed the pact could not be modified and Garber
waived his right to investigate the nature of Kirkwood's
relationship.
Garber's
attorney, William M. Hulsy, disagreed.
''If he had
signed that agreement under the same factual scenario except
marriage, not domestic partnership, his agreement to pay
spousal support would be null and void,'' Hulsy said.
(AP)