All America Cables & Radio, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission

736 F.2d 752, 237 U.S. App. D.C. 143
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1984
DocketNos. 83-1252 to 83-1255
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 736 F.2d 752 (All America Cables & Radio, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
All America Cables & Radio, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, 736 F.2d 752, 237 U.S. App. D.C. 143 (D.C. Cir. 1984).

Opinions

Opinion for the Court filed by District Judge HAROLD H. GREENE.

Opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part filed by Circuit Judge STARR.

HAROLD H. GREENE, District Judge:

Petitioner All America Cables and Radio, Inc. (All America), which provides long distance telephone services to and from Puerto Rico, is seeking review of two companion orders issued by the Federal Communications Commission on January 20, 1983.1 These orders resulted from applications filed by the Puerto Rico Telephone Company (PRTC), a local telephone company owned and operated by the government of Puerto Rico, which sought authorization from the Commission to displace All America as the long distance carrier between Puerto Rico and the United States mainland (Mainland), and between Puerto Rico and Canada.

In its first order, the Commission found that the relief requested by PRTC was not in the public interest, and it denied that carrier's application for control over All America’s facilities which were providing service between Puerto Rico and the Mainland. At the same time, however, the Commission certified PRTC to compete with All America as an interstate and foreign carrier on the Puerto Rico Mainland route. Puerto Rico Telephone Company, — F.C. C.2d —, FCC 83-27, released February 8, 1983 (Mainland Order).2 In the second order, the Commission denied a PRTC request that it be substituted for All America with respect to service between Puerto Rico and Canada but, in an action similar to that in the Mainland Order, it authorized PRTC to acquire from All America twelve communications circuits and to use them to provide long distance service between Puerto Rico and Canada in competition with PRTC. Puerto Rico Telephone Company, F.C.C.2d —, FCC 83-29, released February 8, 1983 (the Canada Order).3

The basic issue here is whether the Commission had the authority to certify PRTC so as to allow it to compete with All America in proceedings instituted and conducted to determine whether PRTC should displace All America in the Puerto Rico-Mainland and Puerto Rico-Canada markets. We find that the Commission lacked such authority and that its orders must be set aside as arbitrary, capricious, and not in accordance with law. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).4

I

PRTC provides local telephone service to approximately 90 percent of the telephone subscribers in Puerto Rico.5 Prior to the entry of the orders under review, the company was not authorized to render long distance service which was provided exclusively by All America and its affiliate, ITT Communications, Inc.-Virgin Islands (ITT). All America and ITT owned, maintained, and operated all the facilities dedicated to overseas service to and from Puerto Rico, including a satellite earth station, microwave transmission facilities, and submarine cables.

[145]*145On December 21, 1978, PRTC filed an application with the FCC seeking authorization under section 214 of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. § 214, to displace All America as Puerto Rico’s long distance carrier.6 The application set forth a detailed proposal for a revision of the methods by which communications services were provided among Puerto Rico, the Mainland, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. PRTC requested that, as'part of that revision, it be allowed to combine under its control both interstate and intrastate transmission and service, and to become substituted for All America with respect to the interstate operations.

It was the theory of PRTC’s application that All America and ITT functioned as mere middlemen between PRTC and its off-island counterparts. PRTC described the division between its local service and All America’s long distance service between Puerto Rico and the off-shore points as “arbitrary” and “[a] fragmentation of responsibility for operating these facilities [which] is anachronistic and inefficient.”7 PRTC claimed that its plan would improve the quality of the overall communications network serving Puerto Rico.

Consistent with these purposes, the PRTC plan did not contemplate the construction of new, competitive transmission facilities. PRTC explained that the construction of such facilities would not be in the public interest because the existing equipment of All America and ITT was adequate to serve Puerto Rico’s long distance needs8 and because such construction would not be economically efficient.9 Rather, PRTC sought an order from the FCC' requiring All America and ITT to transfer to it the ownership of their existing facilities.10

On April 2, 1979, All America moved for a denial of PRTC’s Mainland application, arguing, inter alia, that the applicant was in effect requesting All America’s decertification as a long distance carrier,11 and that PRTC’s proposal would violate the Commission’s policy favoring private over government ownership of the facilities used to provide commercial communications services.12

Two years later, on May 12, 1981, while the Mainland Application was still pending, PRTC filed an application for direct service between Puerto Rico and Canada. This objective was to be achieved, again, by the displacement of All America.13 PRTC proposed to lease from All America and AT & T first eight, and later twelve, circuits between San Juan and New York as well as connecting facilities between New York and the Canadian border. PRTC stated that it expected to handle directly over ninety percent of the Puerto Rico-Canada [146]*146traffic and to take care of any remaining traffic through PRTC-controlled overflow routings to AT & T and All America.

All America again opposed PRTC. It reasserted the decertification objection, and it identified a number of alleged technical and economic deficiencies, particularly with regard to PRTC’s plan to use All America for its overflow traffic.14

On January 20, 1983, the FCC issued both the Mainland and the Canada orders. With respect to the former, the agency accepted All America’s argument that PRTC’s application was a proposal to decertify All America as a long distance carrier, and it found such decertification not to be in the public interest. Said the Commission:

PRTC is requesting the Commission to give it the major portion of the off-island market and, in effect, decertify [All America] and authorizing PRTC to merely step into [All America’s] shoes____ [W]e find that no public interest benefits will result from forcing [All America and ITT] to sell IRUs in the circuitry requested by PRTC.15

The Commission did not limit itself to that determination, however. Instead, it decided to treat the application as a request for new entry into a monopolized market, and on that basis it certified PRTC as an interstate and foreign carrier allowed to compete with All America.16 Primarily on the basis of the policy determination it had made earlier with respect to competition generally in MTS and WATS Market Structure,

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736 F.2d 752, 237 U.S. App. D.C. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/all-america-cables-radio-inc-v-federal-communications-commission-cadc-1984.