Stewart & Jasper Orchards v. Jewell
Petition for certiorari denied on January 12, 2015.
Issue
(1) Whether the United States Fish and Wildlife Service is obligated, under the Endangered Species Act, to demonstrate how a reasonable and prudent alternative to any federal agency action that is likely to jeopardize the continued existence of a protected species or adversely modify its critical habitat is economically feasible; if so, whether it can ignore the devastating impacts on the human community caused by the alternative's implementation, as the Ninth Circuit held below in conflict with the Fourth Circuit; (2) whether and to what extent (if any) the Service's interpretation of its own regulation defining "reasonable and prudent alternative" " an interpretation that dispenses with the obligation to explain or provide evidence of the alternative's economic feasibility " is entitled to deference; and (3) whether the decision of this Court in Tennessee Valley Authority v. Hill " which interpreted the Endangered Species Act prior to Congress"s addition of the "reasonable and prudent alternative" framework " still requires federal agencies to protect species and their habitat "whatever the cost."
Recommended Citation: Stewart & Jasper Orchards v. Jewell, SCOTUSblog, https://www.scotusblog.com/cases/stewart-jasper-orchards-v-jewell/