In the supreme court, case United States, versus Windsor, the court, decided that the defensive marriage act violated, which of the following was it, the comity cause the depress clause of the fifth amendment, states rights or reasonable discrimination

In the case United States v. Windsor, the Supreme Court decided that the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) violated the Fifth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause, not the Comity Clause, Dormant Commerce Clause, or states' rights. The Court found that DOMA's definition of marriage as being between one man and one woman constituted unconstitutional discrimination against same-sex couples.