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Court validates transgender man’s marriage, allows divorce to continue

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ASSOCIATED PRESS / APRIL 2, 2013
Born a woman in Hawaii, Thomas Beatie was taking steps to become a man before his marriage. But having subsequently given birth to three children raised questions for an Arizona judge about his gender and the validity of his marriage.

PHOENIX » A transgender man in Arizona who gave birth to three children after beginning to change from female to male can continue to pursue a divorce, a state appeals court said last week in reversing a judge who refused to end the marriage.

A three-judge panel of the Arizona Court of Appeals ruled Wednesday that Thomas Beatie’s marriage to Nancy Beatie in Hawaii in 2003 is considered valid in Arizona and concluded it wasn’t a same-sex union.

Last year, a lower court judge denied the divorce request and ruled that Arizona’s ban on same-sex marriages prevented the marriage from being recognized as valid.

Thomas Beatie began to change sex before the marriage but retained female reproductive organs and became pregnant three times with donated sperm when Nancy Beatie was unable to have children. The couple eventually moved to Arizona and sought a divorce a few years later.

Thomas Beatie was born a woman in Hawaii and as an adult underwent a double mastectomy and chest reconstruction surgeries, and began testosterone hormone therapy and psychological treatment to become a man.

Sixteen months ago, Maricopa County Family Court Judge Douglas Gerlach concluded the marriage appeared to be a same-sex union because it was between a woman and a person who was capable of giving birth.

The family court judge also found he had no jurisdiction to handle the divorce request because there was insufficient evidence that Beatie was a man when he got married, even though he had his Hawaii driver’s license and birth certificate changed to say he was a man.

The Arizona appeals court ruled that Beatie’s marriage in Hawaii was valid and noted that he didn’t withhold his transgender status from officials in Hawaii.

The panel said it was obligated to let people who get their birth certificates changed to reflect a new gender status the rights connected to their amended status — and doing otherwise would run afoul of equal-rights protections.

"It’s a precedent-setting case that will protect a lot of families," said Shannon Minter, legal director for the National Center for Lesbian Rights.

Minter, an expert in family law involving gay, lesbian and transgender people, said the last time an appeals court made a ruling in a divorce case involving a transgender person was in the late 1970s in New Jersey — and the court in that case found the validity of the marriage in question.

Both sides in the Beatie case were pressing the courts to allow a divorce and made similar arguments.

"I am somewhat surprised that it did get reversed, because your chances are very minimal on getting things reversed," said David Higgins, an attorney for Nancy Beatie.

Attorney David Michael Cantor, who represents Thomas Beatie, said the ruling will help his client close this chapter of his life, and it brings legal recognition to his marriage.

"The state of Arizona has officially recognized him as a man and that his marriage was valid, and because his marriage was valid, his kids were born in wedlock, which is important to him," Cantor said.

Jacques Billeaud, Associated Press

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