NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Now that the U.S. Supreme Court has legalized
same-sex marriage, the Tennessee attorney general’s office is no longer
contesting the divorce of two men who wed in another state.
Tennessee attorney general drops same-sex divorce case
On Friday, the office sent a brief to the Tennessee Court of Appeals
making clear that it won’t stand in the way of Frederick Michael Borman and
Larry Kevin Pyles-Borman getting a divorce.
The couple married in Iowa in 2010. Rockwood attorney Mark Foster, who
represents Frederick Michael Borman, said they have been denied a divorce
since filing in Roane County in March 2014 because the state didn’t
recognize same-sex marriages before last month’s Supreme Court decision.
Harlow Sumerford, a spokesman for Attorney General Herbert Slatery, said
in a statement that the filing acknowledges the impact of the Supreme
Court’s decision on Tennessee law.
