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During her
nearly 20-year relationship, Jennifer Levinson considered herself married
in every sense to her partner, Kathy Levinson.
On many counts, the Levinsons Mimicked the Ozzie and Harriet model of
the American family: While Kathy moved up the corporate ladder to become
chief operating officer of E*TRADE the wildly successful online brokerage
firm, Jennifer stayed at home and took care of their two children and
the house. "If you go back to the 1950s model, Kathy was the husband,
and I was the wife," Jennifer says.
There was, of course, at least one crucial difference between Kathy and
Jennifer and Ozzie and Harriet: Kathy and Jennifer didn't have a marriage
license.
There are many indications, however, that they would have married if it
were legal. Though Kathy is the biological mother of their two young children,
Jennifer adopted them. Jennifer even legally changed her last name to
match Kathy's.
And last year their personal relationship turned highly public when Californians
were asked to vote for a ban on gay and lesbian marriage. The Levinsons
became national poster girls for same-sex marriage, speaking out against
the referendum and forking over $300,000well as helping to raise hundreds
of thousands more-to help finance the unsuccessful campaign to defeat
it.
Until the two broke up in April 2000, Jennifer says she thought the relationship
"was equal in every way including financially.." But ever since the bitter
split, the two have been locked in an acrimonious who-gets-what squabble.
When Kathy retired in May 2000 from E*TRADE, her net worth was estimated
at as much as $40 million. And as Kathy's de facto wife, Jennifer says
she deserves half of everything.
But married is a legal term, and "we [gays and lesbians] still don't have
it," says Cliff Staton, a spokesman for Kathy Levinson. (Levinson declined
to talk with The Advocate.) "We're not guaranteed the rights of married
people," he says including the same rules of divorce.
With the exception of Vermont, where a same-sex couple wanting to dissolve
its civil union can go through
'the same family court system as married couples wanting a divorce, there
is precious little legal framework for same-sex couples who call it quits.
"At best," says Suzanne Goldberg, an assistant professor of law at Rutgers
University in New Jersey and a family law expert, "the law treats a same-sex
breakup as a business deal between two people about property. It's highly
dependent on whatever separation agreement the couple may have. It's done
without the complex background rules of divorce, which take into account
the context of sacrifices and decisions two people make as a family unit.
Divorce rules have evolved to ensure the partner in the weaker financial
position is not left penniless. But when gay and lesbian couples separate,
it boils down to who holds the purse strings."
The irony, of course, is that "one of the best arguments for gay people's
freedom to marry is divorce," says Evan Wolfson, director of the Freedom
to Marry Project in New York City [see Wolfson's commentary on page 34]
"When straight people marry, it's understood that they acquire certain
property rights simply as part of the status of marriage," says Erica
Bell, an out lesbian partner at the New York law firm Weiss, Buell, and
Bell. "As long as gays and lesbians are denied the right to marry, we're
denied those property rights as well. It's all about status-plainly put,
we just don't have it." Just like in marriage law, she says, gay people
are virtually invisible in divorce, legally speaking.
In only one state besides Vermont has there been significant legal recognition
for gays and lesbians who end their relationships. Leaning on a series
of laws known as "equitable" or "fairness" doctrine, a Washington State
appellate court ruled in the late 1990s that unmarried partners are presumed
entitled to half of the couple's combined assets, even without a written
or oral contract.
Based on that ruling, some Washington municipalities are applying family
law principles to lesbian and gay couples, says Frederick Hertz, an Oakland,
Calif., lawyer and one of the nation's leading experts on gay and lesbian
divorce. However, he cautions, the Washington ruling involved an unmarried
heterosexual couple, "so there is still fierce debate if it applies to
gays or not."
Hertz is the author of Legal Affairs: Essential Advice for Same-Sex Couples
and also is representing Jennifer Levinson in her lawsuit against Kathy
Levinson. He says there are about five states in which gay people have
absolutely no legal recourse when seeking redress during a separation.
In at least three other states (Minnesota, Texas, and New York), any court
claim must be based on the violation of a written agreement
In most states unmarried couples--straight or gay--can theoretically make
claims on money or property, based on agreements that are written or verbal
or can be proved by patterns of conduct. These claims are duked out in
civil court rather than family court, and they must be based on the individual
state's contract laws. "And that means that, every step of the way, the
legal system favors the one with the power, the one with the assets,"
Hertz says.
Jerry Chasen, a principal with Miami law firm Chasen and Associates, agrees.
"It's almost always the person without the money who seeks legal help"
in a gay or lesbian breakup, and that person "is trying to assert his
or her rights as if they were in a legally recognized union," he says.
Unfortunately, he adds, "they often don't have a legal leg to stand on.
The law just doesn't provide any kind of recognition for this kind of
relationship-and thus no recognition when the relationships fall apart.
An intimate [same-sex] relationship doesn't mean squat to the law."
Though the rules vary widely from state to state, Hertz says that, in
general, "divorce law is the most enlightened law in America." Women,
typically at an economic disadvantage in heterosexual marriages, are no
longer at the mercy of their husbands, he says. But when gays and lesbians
sever their relationships, "the weakest one gets screwed. The absence
of marriage leaves us vulnerable."
Vulnerable is exactly how "Ben" (who asked that his real name not be used)
says he felt when he found himself in the midst of an acrid breakup with
his partner of 10 years. The couple's $350,000 home in a wealthy Philadelphia
suburb was in both their names, and the pair had a verbal agreement that
they would divide the sale of the house down the middle should they ever
go their separate ways. But Ben says that during the breakup, his partner
said several times that he thought he deserved the lion's share from the
house's sale.
When Ben and his partner first moved in together, both men earned roughly
equal incomes. Within their first year as a couple they purchased their
first house. Ben footed the entire $80,000 down payment, and the two split
the mortgage payments 50-50.
A year and a half later, Ben's partner inherited $750,000 and a paid-off
family home. Using the proceeds from the sale of the family home plus
the profit from the sale of the house they lived in, the couple upgraded
to a larger place. Again, they split the mortgage payments equally. Ben's
partner did pay a higher percentage of the utilities and upkeep, but Ben
says he himself was the handyman who kept the place in shape.
Ben was troubled when he says his ex began making noises about getting
more than half the value of their shared property. "We never had a written
agreement. I was worried he was going to show up at the settlement table
and demand 75% of the profits, and I knew a judge wasn't going to look
at two men the same way he would a married couple."
To protect himself, Ben hired a lawyer who basically threatened to out
Ben's partner at work if he tried to claim more than his fair share. "It
was essentially blackmail," Ben says. "But I couldn't depend on the laws,
and this was fair If I didn't do something to protect myself, I might
have been ripped off."
Today, Ben and his current partner share a home in Delaware. Because Ben's
partner has a spotty credit history, the couple decided to put the house
solely in Ben's name. However, Ben insisted they draw up legal documents
spelling out that they each own a 50% share. "I wanted my partner to feel
a sense of ownership even though his name isn't on the mortgage," Ben
says. "And I didn't ever want him to feel the way I had."
But Ben and his partner are the exception rather than the rule, most legal
experts agree. "It's easy to understand why so few gay and lesbian couples
avoid the topic," Goldberg says. "No one wants to think about the possibility
of breaking up when they are in love." Furthermore, as Chasen points out,
even if a couple manages to broach the subject, there's no guarantee that
the person in the weaker financial position will get a fair deal.
The Levinson case demonstrates that drawing up legal documents doesn't
guarantee that confrontation will be avoided. Jennifer Levinson says that
in 1989 she and Kathy drew up a partnership agreement outlining their
finances: "But it was prepared when we were both working and there wasn't
much disparity between our incomes, before we had children, before I quit
my job to take care of our home affairs, and before we had wealth." Since
that time, she adds, "our lives changed dramatically. I quit work, raised
the kids, and kept house, while she got a gazillion stock options." Although
she did not give specifics about the agreement, she says it "is outdated"
and would leave her practically penniless.
Staton, Kathy Levinson's spokesman, disputes Jennifer's version. "Kathy's
view is that because they were unable to get married, they created a series
of contracts to guide and define their relationship," he says. Staton
describes the couple's written financial agreement as being "worth millions
of dollars to Jennifer" but says that she is now trying to alter the terms
of the agreement in hopes of winning more money.
Under California law, married couples split the family assets 50-50 when
divorcing, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary. Jennifer Levinson
says she should not deserve less simply because her relationship was to
a woman rather than a man. (The couple share custody of their 5- and 8-year-old
children.)
"If we were married and she was the man, there's no question this would
absolutely be easier," Jennifer says. "But because the courts didn't recognize
me and Kathy and the kids as a family, it's applying business and contract
law to my marriage. That's devastating and demeaning."
With evident sadness she adds, "Mine is the perfect example of why we
need all the rights of marriage-including divorce."
Dahir also writes for Self, Business Traveler, and Good Housekeeping.
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