- Source: Sham Tsz Kit v Secretary for Justice
- Sham Tsz Kit v Secretary for Justice
- Recognition of same-sex unions in Hong Kong
- LGBTQ rights in China
- 2023 in LGBTQ rights
- Same-sex union court cases
- Index of articles related to Hong Kong
- 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests
- League of Social Democrats
- Hong Kong 47
- Timeline of reactions to the 2020 Hong Kong national security law (November 2020)
Sham Tsz Kit v Secretary for Justice [2023] HKCFA 28 is a landmark Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal case which ruled that the right to form registered partnerships is guaranteed to same-sex couples by the right to privacy under Article 14 of the Bill of Rights.
By a 3–2 decision, the court directed the government to establish an alternative framework for the legal recognition of same-sex relationships, with equivalent rights and obligations to marriage, within two years of the ruling. However, the court also ruled that same-sex couples do not have a constitutionally guaranteed right to marry.
The Court of Final Appeal delivered its judgment on 5 September 2023, following an appeal hearing held on 28 to 29 June 2023. Prior to this decision, the Court of First Instance and Court of Appeal each dismissed the judicial review.
The government has not yet implemented the decision in legislation.
Background
Jimmy Sham Tsz-kit is a Hong Kong permanent resident and a political activist presently jailed for alleged subversion under the National Security Law. He is gay, and has had a stable same-sex partner since 2011, who is also a Hong Kong permanent resident. Because Hong Kong law does not permit same-sex marriages or civil partnerships, Sham married his partner in New York.
Court of Appeal
The Court of Appeal held:
= Right to marry
=BL37 provides that the freedom of marriage of Hong Kong residents and their right to raise a family freely shall be protected by law. On a purposive interpretation, the historical context supports the interpretation that BL37 only extends to heterosexual marriages. Although the Court accepted that fundamental rights should be generously interpreted, a proper interpretation requires these fundamental rights to be read together with other provisions of BL as a coherent whole. Lex specialis prevails over lex generalis.
BL37 is the lex specialis on the right to marry and prefers heterosexual marriage, whereas BL25, BOR22, and BOR14 are general provisions which do not specify a right to marry. Therefore, BL25, BOR22, and BOR14 are not engaged and the question of justification did not arise.
= Civil partnerships
=On a proper interpretation, BOR14 does not impose a duty to recognise civil partnerships, locally or overseas.
Court of Final Appeal
On 10 November 2022, the Court of Appeal granted permission to appeal to the Court of Final Appeal on the following certified questions of law:
Does the exclusion of same-sex couples from the institution of marriage constitute a violation of the right to equality enshrined in Article 22 of the Bill of Rights ("BOR22") and Article 25 of the Basic Law ("BL25")?
Do the laws of Hong Kong, insofar as they do not allow same-sex marriage or provide any alternative means of legal recognition of same-sex partnerships, constitute a violation of the right to privacy under BOR14 and/or the right to equality enshrined in BOR22 and BL25?
Do the laws of Hong Kong, insofar as they do not recognise foreign same-sex marriage, constitute a violation of the right to equality enshrined in BOR22 and BL25?
On 5 September 2023, the Court of Final appeal ruled in that while the exclusion of same-sex couples in the city's marriage laws did not violate the right to equality under the Basic Law (BL25 / BOR22), the government's lack of recognition of same-sex partnerships violated the right to privacy (i.e. Right to privacy under BOR14, being provisions equivalent to Article 17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. BOR14 is part of the Basic Law as a result of BL39, which applied the said International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights). The ruling is suspended for two years in order to give the government time to comply with the decision.
See also
LGBT rights in Hong Kong
Recognition of same-sex unions in Hong Kong