Flytenow, Inc. v. Federal Aviation Administration
Petition for certiorari denied on January 9, 1917.
Issue
(1) What, if any, deference is due an agency's interpretation when it predominately interprets terms of common law in which courts, not administrative agencies, have special competence; (2) whether the circuit court erred when it held, in contravention of this Court's long-standing definition of "common carrier," that pilots who use the Internet to communicate are "common carriers" when those pilots do not earn a commercial profit or indiscriminately offer to share their travel plans with the general public, thus warranting remand; and (3) whether the circuit court erred in holding that the Federal Aviation Administration could, consistent with the First Amendment, lawfully discriminate against content-based Internet communications because of the message conveyed and the means chosen by pilots to convey it.
Recommended Citation: Flytenow, Inc. v. Federal Aviation Administration, SCOTUSblog, https://www.scotusblog.com/cases/flytenow-inc-v-federal-aviation-administration/