Everything about Martin V Ziherl totally explained
Martin v. Ziherl, 607
S.E.2d 367 (Va. 2005), was a case decided by the
Supreme Court of Virginia, which ruled that the
Virginia criminal law against
fornication was unconstitutional. The court's decision followed the 2003 ruling of the
U.S. Supreme Court in
Lawrence v. Texas that established the right of adults to engage in private, consensual sex.
Background of the case
Muguet Martin and Kristopher Ziherl were an unmarried couple who had been in a sexually active relationship for two years when Martin's doctor diagnosed her with
herpes. She then filed a
lawsuit against Ziherl in the
Richmond Circuit Court, alleging that he knew he was infected with herpes when they'd unprotected sex, knew it was contagious, and failed to inform her. Her
complaint claimed
negligence, intentional
battery and
intentional infliction of emotional distress, for which she sought compensatory and
punitive damages.
The Supreme Court of Virginia had ruled in
Zysk v. Zysk, 387 S.E.2d 466 (Va. 1990), that
plaintiffs couldn't recover damages for injuries suffered while participating in illegal conduct. As sex between unmarried persons was criminalized under Virginia's anti-fornication statute, Ziherl filed a
demurrer in response to Martin's suit. Judge Theodore J. Markow rejected Martin's argument that the statute was no longer valid after
Lawrence v. Texas, in which the U.S. Supreme Court struck a
Texas law criminalizing
homosexual sodomy as an infringement upon the liberty of adults to engage in private and consensual intimate conduct under the
due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Judge Markow instead believed the fornication prohibition satisfied the
rational basis review that
Lawrence ruled the Texas statute failed, because the fornication law was reasonably related to the legitimate government goals of protecting public health and encouraging marriage for procreation. Ziherl's demurrer was sustained, resulting in the dismissal of Martin's suit. She subsequently appealed to the Virginia Supreme Court.
On appeal, Ziherl argued that Martin lacked
standing to challenge the constitutionality of the statute because she was under no threat of prosecution, and so invalidation wouldn't impact her liberty but would only allow her to pursue her lawsuit against him. The court refused to consider this argument, however, because of the longstanding rule that it wouldn't consider a standing argument that wasn't first made at the trial court level.
The Court's decision
The Virginia Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the Virginia fornication law violated the
Fourteenth Amendment. Because the conduct by which Martin was allegedly injured couldn't be considered illegal,
Zysk didn't apply and she could proceed with her suit against Ziherl in the Richmond Circuit Court.
Lawrence v. Texas was the sole foundation for the court's ruling, and so the majority of its opinion was an interpretation of that decision. The U.S. Supreme Court in
Lawrence had stated that it was adopting the reasoning of
Justice John Paul Stevens in his dissent to
Bowers v. Hardwick, which
Lawrence overruled. The Stevens rationale, as the Virginia Supreme Court presented it, was that "decisions by married or unmarried persons regarding their intimate physical relationship are elements of their personal relationships that are entitled to due process protection." The Virginia Supreme Court stated that
sexual intercourse was clearly part of the personal relationship of an unmarried couple, and that criminalizing intercourse clearly infringed upon their constitutionally protected right to make intimate choices.
Regarding Ziherl's argument that the statute served valid public interests, the court stated that in
Lawrence, the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled that the Texas sodomy statute furthered "no legitimate state interest" that could justify infringing the right to intimate contact. The Virginia Supreme Court interpreted this to mean that
all state interests must be insufficient to justify a prohibition on private, consensual sexual conduct, rather than only those advanced by Texas to support its statute in
Lawrence. The court was careful to note that this didn't pertain to laws involving minors, non-consensual or public sexual activity, or
prostitution, all of which the
Lawrence Court also distinguished.
The Virginia Supreme Court made no reference to any earlier decisions finding anti-fornication statutes unconstitutional, such as
State v. Saunders, 381
A.2d 333 (
N.J. 1977).
Further Information
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