NEW YORK (AP) – The city will appeal a judge’s ruling against the state ban on same-sex marriages, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Saturday.

The mayor said that while he believes such marriages should be permitted, “If we did not appeal this I think we would have chaos in this city. … There would be tens of thousands of people coming here.”

He said he wanted the issue to be settled in the state’s highest court or in the Legislature because “the public serves the finality.”

Referring to a short-lived wedding spree in San Francisco after the mayor there granted marriage licenses to same-sex couples, Bloomberg said, “What you do not want to have is a repetition of California, when many people for a month were misled into thinking they could get the union they so much wanted. … Their great joy was snatched away.”

State Supreme Court Justice Doris Ling-Cohan ruled Friday that the state law in unconstitutional, finding in favor of five same-sex couples who had been denied marriage licenses by the city. The judge said the city clerk may not deny a license to any couple solely because the two are of the same sex.

“Under both the federal and New York State constitutions, it is beyond question that the right to liberty, and the concomitant right to privacy, extend to protect marriage,” Ling-Cohan wrote.

She stayed her decision, which the mayor said indicated that she felt it “should go to a higher court.”

“I’m glad the judge ruled this way because it gets us the ability to get this to the appellate court,” Bloomberg said at the opening of the Lunar New Year Flower Market.


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