(CROSS-POSTED FROM THE ECHR SEXUAL ORIENTATION BLOG)
In advance of the
Grand Chamber judgment in Hämäläinen
v Finland next Wednesday, Constantin Cojocariu has written a guest
post on the case. Constantin is the applicant's lawyer, and represented her in
the Grand Chamber
hearing last October. Many thanks to Constantin for this
insightful and interesting post.
The Court has recently announced it will deliver its
judgment in the Hamalainen v Finland case on 16 July. The facts of this
case are relatively straightforward. Heli Hamalainen, the applicant, is a trans
woman who has been married for many years and who has a 12-year old child with
her wife. She came out as transgender during marriage, and applied for legal
gender recognition. The authorities in Finland rejected her request, as she and
her wife were not willing to forgo their marriage, a precondition to legal
gender recognition under national law. The applicant exhausted domestic
remedies and lodged an application with the European Court of Human Rights,
complaining about breaches of her rights under Article 8 (right to private and
family life), Article 12 (right to marry) and Article 14 (prohibition of
discrimination). On 13 November 2012, the Chamber
rejected the complaint on all counts, based on reasoning that was reminiscent
of that employed in the same-sex marriage case Schalk and Kopf
v Austria. In that case, the Court made it clear that the
Convention did not require states to open marriage to same-sex couples, and
that that option remained within their margin of appreciation, at least for the
time being. The Hamalainen judgment was even out of step with previous
judgments in forced divorce cases (namely Parry v the
United Kingdom), where the Court at least acknowledged the
predicament of spouses in a transgender marriage faced with the choice between
marriage and legal gender recognition. This article discusses some of the
choices I have made, as the applicant’s main counsel, during proceedings before
the Court, the different factors that may influence the eventual decision, as
well as, briefly, the possible outcomes before the Grand Chamber.
I got involved in the case after the Chamber delivered
its judgment, and asked that it be referred to the Grand Chamber, based on
reasons discussed in a guest post
published previously on this blog. In my request and subsequently during
proceedings before the Grand Chamber, I tried very hard to distinguish the case
from the broader question of same-sex marriage. Some commentators, including Paul Johnson,
criticised my choice, stating that it would have been preferable to argue the
case for same sex marriage more broadly. Indeed, equal marriage legislation
also benefits transgender spouses, as it removes the underlying objection to
legal gender recognition of the trans spouse. However, in my view, attempting
to distance ourselves as much as possible from the contentious issue of
same-sex marriage was the only reasonable chance we had to succeed.
The Court is obviously not ready to move forward on
the issue, at least not until a more solid consensus builds among Council of
Europe member states towards opening marriage to same-sex couples. And there
are sufficient grounds for making this distinction – forced divorce legislation
severs an existing marriage that is valid and intact, whereas discriminatory
marriage legislation does not allow same-sex marriage to form in the first
place. We emphasized that there were countries that had made this distinction
(such as Germany and Switzerland), demonstrating that allowing transgender
marriages to subsist did not necessarily require equalising marriage rights.
Experience shows that the Court will only find a breach of the Convention on
the narrowest of grounds, and that it usually refrains from deciding incidental
issues that it was not called to decide in the first place. My choice was
strategic, and is not dissimilar for example to that made by the applicants in X and Others
v Austria, on second-parent adoption in a same-sex couple, who
stressed that they were not seeking to compare their situation to that of
married different sex couples (at §108). On the other hand, if I tried to draw
attention from the elephant in the room - same-sex marriage - I did so in the
knowledge that a positive outcome would benefit indirectly homosexual
couples as well, by substantially undermining the rationale for preserving
marriage as an institution reserved for different sex couples.
The particular setup in Finland makes this case a
slightly more difficult proposal. Transgender marriages are not ended by
divorce upon the legal gender recognition of one of the spouses (in that sense,
the system may be more accurately described as triggering the “forced
dissolution of marriage” rather than “forced divorce”). Instead, marriages are
automatically and comparatively painlessly converted into registered
partnerships, upon the consent of the cisgender spouse. In addition, registered
partnerships in Finland are more or less identical to marriage in terms of the
rights and benefits conferred on the spouses as well as in relation to their
children. The legal regime in place in Finland is therefore relatively benign,
at least compared to other countries where alternatives to marriage are not
available and/or divorce proceedings are particularly arduous and lengthy.
It therefore follows that I had to fall back on the
personal and religious significance of marriage in general, and to the spouses
in this case in particular. Although the applicant had not made a claim under
Article 9, I tried to introduce religious considerations through the back door
of Article 8 - married life comes with the scope of “family rights” and
marriage is recognised to also have a religious dimension. This is a very
strong argument, particularly pertinent to the applicant and her spouse, which
the Court cannot easily discount as it mines the rich vein of its jurisprudence
emphasizing the privileged status of marriage, justifying preferential legal
treatment. Particularly in our day and age, the state has no business
whatsoever interfering with valid marriages under any pretext, including the
gender identity of the parties. In that sense, forced marriage legislation, as
well as the reasoning of the Chamber in this case, very well reveal (as argued
by Andrew Sharpe in Transgender
Jurisprudence: Dysphoric Bodiesof Law) the “intrinsic homophobia
of the law.”
Three additional brief observations. Perhaps it would
have been preferable to include the applicant’s spouse, as well as their child,
as victims in their own right from the very beginning of the proceedings before
the Court, as their family rights are more obviously interfered with. That
said, the Court is obligated in principle to also consider the consequences of
the forced divorce scheme on third parties, including family members, during
its proportionality examination under Article 8. Second, two processes are
ongoing in Finland in parallel with proceedings in this case, which may result
eventually in the repealing of forced marriage legislation. A legislative
initiative is currently before the Finnish Parliament to equalise marriage
rights, which however appears to have run into some trouble; and a committee
was formed to look into the possibility of revising legal gender recognition
legislation, including by abandoning the divorce requirement. To the extent
that either of these processes had been concluded successfully before the Court
delivered its judgment, that would have constituted a substantial consideration
in the process of adjudicating the case in Strasbourg as well, potentially
undermining the government’s insistence that there had been religiously and
morally inspired objections in Finland. Finally, I spent a fair amount of time
and space trying to unpack the normative contents of Article 12 on the right to
marry. Without going into details, it seems to me that forced divorce
legislation empties Article 12 of any significance, to the extent that Article
12 is interpreted as allowing the state to interfere with valid marriages to
the point of triggering their dissolution. It will be interesting to see how
the Court decides this issue.
To conclude, there are three possible outcomes in this
case. The first is a win, which may vary in scope, to include various
combinations of the claims made. This would be an amazing outcome, with
substantial consequences for standards in the area of legal gender recognition
more generally as well as marriage rights. The second is a qualified loss, but
based on a more principled and sympathetic approach to the applicant’s
situation and transgender rights in general. In this scenario, the Court may
reject the application based on the lack of any material differences between
marriage and registered partnerships in Finland. While this would open
the way for challenges against forced divorce legislation in countries without
alternatives to marriage, it may spill over by encouraging states to maintain
similar but segregated legal regimes for same-sex and different sex couples
respectively. The third, and the least likely, outcome is the worst, with the
Grand Chamber endorsing the Chamber decision, thus in effect denying the
specificity of the issues raised in transgender cases.
Constantin
Cojocariu is an independent human rights expert and lawyer specialised in
advising transgender and disabled applicants in proceedings before the European
Court of Human Rights.
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