http://www.pamshouseblend.com/diary/16976/did-the-legal-team-in-perry-just-win-for-goodWhen the Perry v. Schwarzenegger decision was announced earlier this week there was - to quote Monty Python - much rejoicing. But immediately following the excitement and celebration there came a dark echo of caution: "This isn't over," it said. "There are still appeals to the Ninth Circuit, and eventually, to the Supreme Court. Anything could happen."
Except, what if that's only half right? What if part of the "anything" that could happen is that Judge Vaughn Walker's decision isn't appealed, never goes to the Ninth Circuit (much less SCOTUS) and Prop 8 is permanently, fabulously, dead?
In a motion filed late yesterday, lawyers for the plaintiff couples and the City of San Francisco argued that marriages should be allowed to begin immediately, rather than be stayed pending appeal. One of their arguments was that an appeal might never happen. They argued this because the governmental defendants - the Governator and the once (and future!) Governor Moonbeam - are not appealing and the Yes on 8 proponents - who were let in at the trial court as intervenors - don't have standing to appeal.
In a nutshell, from a non-lawyer, it seems that Justice Ginsburg, in the opinion to Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona (which was decided on other grounds), expressed "grave doubts" as to whether the proponents of a ballot measure had standing to appeal a federal court ruling in the absence of governmental actors making an appeal. In other words, the Yes on 8 folks might not have the right to appeal Walker's decision.