A federal appeals court in Denver struck down Utah's ban on gay marriage Wednesday, paving the way for a U.S. Supreme Court decision on the issue as soon as next year. The ruling by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals was the first by any federal appeals court on the issue to date.

While the ruling struck down the Utah ban, it applies to the other five states in the circuit: New Mexico, Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas and Oklahoma.

Utah officials said they would appeal and would seek a quick resolution of the issue. That would seem to suggest the state will appeal directly to the Supreme Court and will forego asking for a rehearing by the full the appeals court.

Wednesday's decision, as is typical, was rendered by a three judge panel. The vote was 2 to 1. Judge Carlos Lucero, a Clinton appointee, was joined by George W. Bush appointee Jerome Holmes in the majority. Dissenting was Judge Paul Kelly, a George H.W. Bush appointee.

In the meantime, same-sex marriage will remain illegal because the appeals court blocked its ruling from going into effect pending appeal.

In the coming weeks and months, other appeals courts will issue decisions in gay marriage cases in other parts of the country. The Supreme Court may well wait until it has more than one case on its doorstep before it decides to resolve the issue. Any high court decision is unlikely to occur until the latter part of the next Supreme Court term in 2015.

Last year the Supreme Court struck down the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which had barred federal recognition of same-sex marriages in states where they are legal. The federal law had precluded legally married same-sex couples from receiving tax, Social Security and other benefits. In the wake of that decision, 14 district courts have struck down gay marriage bans in various states, the most recent coming Wednesday in Indiana.

The majority decision in the 10th Circuit pointed to more than a dozen Supreme Court decisions declaring that marriage is a fundamental right. Judge Lucero, the opinion author, framed the ruling as analogous to the Supreme Court's 1967 decision Loving v. Virginia, which struck down state laws that banned interracial marriage.

Quoting a recent Supreme Court ruling, Lucero said that the drafters of the Constitution "knew times can blind us to certain truths and later generations can see that laws once thought necessary and proper in fact serve only to oppress."

He noted that a state must present compelling justifications for interfering with a fundamental right like the right to marry. Here, Lucero said, the state failed to advance any justification that holds water.

Utah claimed that the ban on same-sex marriage serves state interests in "fostering a child-centric marriage culture," ensuring that children are "raised by their biological mothers and fathers" or a married opposite-sex couple, promoting "adequate reproduction" and "accommodating religious freedom and reducing the potential for civic strife."

But all of these reasons, Lucero wrote, are based on a flawed underlying claim — that marriage and procreation are linked. This claim is evidently false, he noted, because other Utahans can marry anyone of the opposite sex, regardless of "reproductive capacity."

Advocates of the marriage ban also argued it should be upheld because it was voted on by Utahans, who have the right to decide matters of state law through democratic processes. Lucero observed that the difference between same-sex unions and relationships that can legitimately be banned in this way, like polygamy and incest, is that the Supreme Court has extended constitutional protections to same-sex relationships.

People who want to marry someone of the same gender, Lucero said, "are entitled to exercise the same fundamental right as is recognized for persons who wish to marry a person of the opposite sex." These fundamental rights "are not matters for opinion polls or the ballot box," he said.

Similarly, the majority dismissed claims that allowing same-sex couples to marry could negatively affect opposite-sex couples or children.

"We cannot imagine a scenario under which recognizing same-sex marriages would affect the decision of a member of an opposite-sex couple to have a child, to marry or stay married to a partner, or to make personal sacrifices for a child," wrote Lucero.

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Transcript

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

And Nina is staying with us for a few minutes to talk about another significant judicial ruling. Only this one didn't come from the Supreme Court but from 10th circuit court of appeals based in Denver. And Nina, I gather this decision was on gay marriage.

NINA TOTENBERG, BYLINE: The 10th circuit today became the first federal appeals court to strike down a state ban on gay marriage. It ruled unconstitutional gay marriage bans in Utah and Oklahoma. Last year, the Supreme Court ruled that the Defense of Marriage Act - the Federal Defense of Marriage Act - is unconstitutional. And since then, we've had more than a dozen decisions in the lower federal courts all over the country - all striking down bans on gay marriage. But as I said, this is the first appeals court decision and, Audie, we who cover the law have been waiting for this because we all know that the pipeline on gay marriage is headed to the Supreme Court. And until appeals courts, one or more rule, there will be no Supreme Court decision. And there are other appeals courts who have this issue before them and we'll be hearing those decisions in the coming weeks and months. In many of these cases, the losers may ask the appeals court to rehear the case with all the judges present, not just the panel of three that hears cases initially. But that doesn't have to happen.

CORNISH: So who were the judges who made this decision today?

TOTENBERG: This was a 2 to 1 decision. The two judges in the majority were Carlos Lucero, a Clinton appointee who wrote the 65 page ruling, and Jerome Holmes, appointed by President George W. Bush. The dissenter was Paul Kelly, appointed by the first President Bush.

CORNISH: What did the majority say?

TOTENBERG: The court pointed to more than a dozen Supreme Court decisions holding that marriage is a fundamental right. Judge Lucero, the opinion author, framed the ruling as analogous to the Supreme Court's 1967 decision striking down state laws that banned interracial marriage. Quoting a recent Supreme Court opinion, he said that the drafters of the Constitution knew that times can blind us to certain truths and later generations can see that laws - can see that laws once thought necessary, in fact, conserve only to oppress. He noted that a state must present compelling justifications for interfering with a fundamental right like the right to marry. And here, the court said the states failed to advance any justification that holds water.

CORNISH: Meanwhile Nina, when do you think this will get to the Supreme Court?

TOTENBERG: Well I think, in all likelihood, not before next year at the earliest.

CORNISH: That's NPR legal correspondent Nina Totenberg. Nina, thanks as always.

TOTENBERG: Thank you, Audie. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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