On July 7, Maryland’s high court took a major step in recognizing and protecting the families formed by same-sex couples, a step Lambda Legal fervently hopes New York’s high court will soon take as well.
In Conover v. Conover the Maryland Court of Appeals issued a life-changing ruling for the little boy in that case and his non-biological parent, who with a same-sex partner had planned for his birth and raised him until the child’s biological mother cut off contact following the couple’s break-up.
Conover reversed a devastating 2008 Maryland ruling that had been a barrier for non-genetic, non-adoptive parents seeking custody and visitation with the children they had reared with their same-sex partners—the children’s legally recognized adoptive or genetic parents.
Lambda Legal’s amicus brief in the case argued that the court’s earlier ruling was outmoded, disrespecting the families formed by same-sex couples by treating functional second parents as legal strangers to their children.
Most critically, the children of these families suffer devastating harm when their parent-child relationships are denied legal recognition and protection. Especially after Obergefell v. Hodges, the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2015 marriage ruling, courts should no longer deny same-sex couples and their children the legal recognition and protections that come from respecting the parent-child bonds and families they form.
Indeed, as our brief argued, Maryland had fallen out of step with the majority of states around the nation, most recently Kansas and Oklahoma, whose high courts had recognized the vital parent-child bonds formed between children of same-sex couples and their intended second parents.