State Authority to Protect Wildlife Preserved as Supreme Court Finally Overturns Geer v. Connecticut
The doctrine of state ownership of wildlife, as enunciated in the late 19th century United States Supreme Court decision in Geer v. Connecticut,1 has long been used to justify state restrictions on the taking of wildlife, particularly measures which discriminate against nonresidents. In the last half century, however, the Court's decisions have chipped away at the Geer rationale while preserving its result, thus creating an anomaly in the law. When the Court finally abandoned Geer altogether on April 24, it came almost as an anticlimax.