A clear obligation under EU law
“A Member State is obliged to recognise a marriage between two EU citizens of the same sex when it was legally concluded in another Member State in which those citizens exercised their freedom of movement and residence,” the Court stated in its ruling.
The case involved two Polish nationals living in Germany, one of whom also holds German citizenship. After marrying in Berlin, they planned to return to Poland as a married couple. To ensure their marriage would be recognised, they applied to have their German marriage certificate transcribed into the Polish civil registry.
Polish authorities rejected the request, arguing that Polish law does not allow marriages between people of the same sex and that recognising such a marriage would violate fundamental principles of the Polish legal order.
The couple challenged the decision. When examining the case, Poland’s Supreme Administrative Court referred it to the CJEU, asking whether EU law allows a Member State to refuse recognition or transcription of a same-sex marriage legally concluded elsewhere in the EU.
