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Law Buzz

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Written by  |  Friday, 07 June 2013 14:23  |  Published in National Law
High Court Decides Gay-Rights Case (in Germany) - Wall Street Journal (blog)
AP

After much waiting, the big ruling on gay rights from the nation’s high court is in. Those wishing to know what the U.S. Supreme Court thinks about gay marriage will have to wait a bit more, however, because this ruling comes from Germany.

That nation’s Federal Constitutional Court decided in a 6-2 opinion released this week that legally registered gay couples are entitled to certain tax benefits already enjoyed by married heterosexual couples in Germany. It’s the second ruling this year favoring gay rights after an  earlier decision  involving gay adoption rights.

For U.S. audiences, what’s noteworthy about the German court’s ruling is the majority’s inability to locate a legally valid reason for treating the two types of couples differently, a challenge U.S. courts have also faced. Article 3 of Germany’s constitution says that “all persons shall be equal before the law,” echoing the U.S. Constitution’s

...

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