Osservatorio delle libertà ed istituzioni religiose

Olir

Osservatorio delle Libertà ed Istituzioni Religiose

Decreto 05 luglio 2018

Il Tribunale di Pistoia ha dichiarato l’illegittimità del
diniego opposto dal Sindaco alla dichiarazione di riconoscimento del
figlio minore da parte della madre non biologica parte di una coppia
omosessuale e ha ordinato allo stesso, nella sua qualità di
Ufficiale di Stato Civile, di formare un nuovo atto di nascita con
l’indicazione delle due madri, attribuendo al bambino il
cognome di entrambe. Un’interpretazione costituzionalmente
orientata dell’art. 8 L. 40/2004 porta, infatti, ad affermare
che i bimbi nati in Italia a seguito di tecniche di PMA eseguite
all’estero sono figli della coppia di donne che hanno prestato
il consenso manifestando inequivocabilmente di voler assumere la
responsabilità genitoriale sul nascituro quale frutto di un
progetto di vita comune con il partner e di realizzazione di una
famiglia. Dunque, nell’attuale sistema normativo si deve
ritenere che il consenso sia alla base della costituzione del rapporto
di filiazione in caso di ricorso alla PMA così come, nella
gestazione “ordinaria”, lo è il dato biologico
genetico.

Ordinanza 02 luglio 2018

Il Tribunale di Pordenone ha sollevato questione di legittimità
costituzionale avente ad oggetto gli articoli 5 e 12 commi 2°,
9° e 10° della legge n. 40/2004. In particolare,
l'esclusione dall'accesso alle tecniche di procreazione
medicalmente assistita delle coppie composte da soggetti dello stesso
sesso, nonché la correlata applicazione di sanzioni a chi non
rispetti tale divieto, si porrebbero in contrasto con gli articoli 2,
3, 31 comma 2°, 32 comma 1° e 117 comma 1° della
Costituzione.

Sentenza 26 giugno 2015

"This analysis compels the conclusion that same-sexcouples
may exercise the right to marry. The four principles and traditions to
be discussed demonstrate that the reasons marriage is fundamental
under the Constitutionapply with equal force to same-sex
couples."

Fonte del documento:
supreme.justia.com

Pronuncia 05 febbraio 2018, n.BCV-17-102855

Secondo un giudice della Superior
Court of California, costringere un pasticciere, in contrasto con le
sue convinzioni religiose, a preparare una torta nuziale per un
matrimonio tra una coppia omosessuale costituisce una violazione del
primo emendamento, che tutela la libertà di espressione.

Come si legge nel documento:

"A wedding cake
is not just cake in Free Speech analysis. It is an artistic expression
by the person making it that is to be used traditionally as
centerpiece in the celebration of marriage."

Sentenza 26 ottobre 2017

CORTE EDU, CASO RATZENBÖCK AND
SEYDL V AUSTRIA, 26 OTTOBRE 2017 (RICORSO N. 29475/12)

2. The Court’s assessment

(…)

(b) Compliance with Article 14 of the
Convention read in conjunction with Article 8

(…)

(iii) Application of the general
principles to the present case

38. The applicants
claimed that they had been discriminated against as a different-sex
couple, as they had no possibility of entering into a registered
partnership, an institution they preferred to marriage. The Court
therefore has to examine first whether, for the purpose of Article 14
of the Convention, the applicants were in a comparable situation to
same-sex couples who have access to registered partnerships and, if
so, whether any difference in treatment was justified.
39. The
Court accepts that different-sex couples are in principle in a
relevantly similar or comparable position to same-sex couples as
regards their general need for legal recognition and protection of
their relationship (see paragraph 35 above).
40. The Court
observes that the exclusion of different-sex couples from the
registered partnership has to be examined in the light of the overall
legal framework governing the legal recognition of relationships. The
registered partnership was introduced as an alternative to marriage in
order to make available to same-sex couples, who remain excluded from
marriage, a substantially similar institution for legal recognition
(see paragraph 13 above). Thus, the Registered Partnership Act (see
paragraphs 13-16 above) in fact counterbalances the exclusion of
same-sex couples in terms of access to legal recognition of their
relationships which existed before the Act entered into force in 2010.
In the case of Schalk and Kopf the Court found that the Registered
Partnership Act gave the applicants, a same-sex couple, the
possibility of obtaining a legal status equal or similar to marriage
in many respects. The Court concluded that there was no indication
that the respondent State had exceeded its margin of appreciation in
its choice of rights and obligations conferred by the registered
partnership (see Schalk and Kopf, cited above, § 109). Thus, the
institutions of marriage and the registered partnership are
essentially complementary in Austrian law. In this connection, the
Court observes further that, as has already been pointed out in Schalk
and Kopf, the legal status initially provided for by the Registered
Partnership Act was equal or similar to marriage in many respects, and
there were only slight differences in terms of material consequences
(ibid., § 109). Moreover, the Court observes that the legal
frameworks governing marriage and the registered partnership were
further harmonised after the Court had adopted its judgment in the
case of Schalk and Kopf and also after the applicants had lodged the
present application, and that to date no substantial differences
remain (see paragraph 16 above).
41. The applicants, as a
different-sex couple, have access to marriage. This satisfies –
contrary to same-sex couples before the enactment of the Registered
Partnership Act – their principal need for legal recognition.
They have not argued for a more specific need. Their opposition to
marriage is based on their view that a registered partnership is a
more modern and lighter institution. However, they have not claimed to
have been specifically affected by any difference in law between those
institutions.
42. This being so, the Court considers that the
applicants, being a different-sex couple to which the institution of
marriage is open while being excluded from concluding a registered
partnership, are not in a relevantly similar or comparable situation
to same-sex couples who, under the current legislation, have no right
to marry and need the registered partnership as an alternative means
of providing legal recognition to their relationship. There has
therefore been no violation of Article 14 taken in conjunction with
Article 8 of the Convention.”

Ordinanza 23 febbraio 2017

La redazione di
OLIR.it ringrazia il Prof. Manlio Miele – Università degli
Studi di Padova per la segnalazione del
documento.

Sentenza 21 luglio 2015, n.18766-36030/11

In the case of Oliari and Others v. Italy (application no. 18766/11
and 36030/11) the European Court of Human Rights held,
unanimously, that there had been: a violation of Article 8 (right
to respect for private and family life) of the European Convention
on Human Rights. The case concerned the complaint by three
homosexual couples that under Italian legislation they do not
have the possibility to get married or enter into any other type of
civil union. The Court considered that the legal protection
currently available to same-sex couples in Italy – as was
shown by the applicants’ situation – did not only fail to
provide for the core needs relevant to a couple in a stable
committed relationship, but it was also not sufficiently reliable. A
civil union or registered partnership would be the most
appropriate way for same-sex couples like the applicants to have
their relationship legally recognised. The Court pointed out, in
particular, that there was a trend among Council of Europe member
States towards legal recognition of same-sex couples –
24 out of the 47 member States having legislated in favour of
such recognition – and that the Italian Constitutional
Court had repeatedly called for such protection and recognition.
Furthermore, according to recent surveys, a majority of the Italian
population supported legal recognition of homosexual couples.
[Press Release – European Court of Human Rights]

Sentenza 11 dicembre 2014, n.G 119-120/2014

In its decision, the Constitutional Court finds that there is no
objective justification for differing provisions based on sexual
orientation which would generally exclude registered partners from
jointly adopting a child. Moreover, this would create unequal
treatment between registered partners when jointly adopting a child
and (same-sex or heterosexual) partners adopting a step child [fonte:
https://www.vfgh.gv.at – Press Release].