A man who claims to have married his computer in New Mexico has sued the state of Alabama for refusing to recognize the marriage, according to court records.

This is only the latest in a long string of such lawsuits filed by Chris Sevier, who describes his sexual orientation as "machinist." Sevier has filed similar lawsuits in Texas and Utah and filed a suit in Colorado seeking to force a baker to make a wedding cake for him and his computer "bride," according to multiple news reports.

Sevier filed a federal lawsuit in Alabama's Northern District on Aug. 31 alleging his rights, along with the rights of individuals his complaint identifies as "an ex-gay" and "an ex-transgender," were violated by Gov. Kay Ivey, Attorney General Steve Marshall and Blount County Probate Judge Chris Green.

In the filing, Sevier claimed he "married an object in New Mexico with female like features" and asked Green to either recognize the union or issue him a new marriage license. "Defendant Green issues marriage licenses to individuals who self-identify as homosexual, but he refuses to issue marriage licenses to zoophiles, machinists, and polygamists license on a basis that can only be described as procedurally arbitrary," the complaint states.

The other plaintiffs, John Gunter Jr., Whitney Kohl and Joan Grace Harley, described as polygamists, were denied a license, the suit states, as the three attempted to marry each other.

Green told AL.com the plaintiffs did not make the request in person but called inquiring about getting the licenses. "I just said I wouldn't do that in Blount County. No way, no how."

While Green's office began issuing same-sex marriage licenses after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling, state law does not grant him the authority to issue polygamist licenses or marriage licenses for people seeking to wed an "inanimate object," he said.

Ivey and Marshall, the complaint states, violated the plaintiff's constitutional rights by giving "special treatment" to gays and lesbians but not polygamists or "machinists."

The complaint argues the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage nationwide was the work of "moral relativist (sic) who have infiltrated the bench like a cancer (and) cannot be permitted to monkey with the Fourteenth Amendment just because they believe that 'the ends justify the means.'"

Sevier, a former Tennessee lawyer, was previously charged with stalking and harassing both country star John Rich and a 17-year-old girl and also pushed for pornography taxes in 13 states, The Daily Beast reported earlier this year.

"In Alabama, the probate Judges are issuing marriage licenses to self-identified homosexuals based on their sexual orientation or self-asserted sex-based identity narrative. The governor and state officials are providing full marriage benefits and privileges to leally self-identified homosexuals but not to self-identified polygamists and machinists for procedural and moral reason."