Beaumont Broadcasting Corp. v. Federal Communications Commission

202 F.2d 306
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedOctober 10, 1952
Docket10888
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 202 F.2d 306 (Beaumont Broadcasting Corp. 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
Beaumont Broadcasting Corp. v. Federal Communications Commission, 202 F.2d 306 (D.C. Cir. 1952).

Opinion

BAZELON, Circuit Judge.

Beaumont Broadcasting Company, appellant, and Ozarks Broadcasting Company, in-tervenor, enjoy simultaneous use of the 560 kilocycle band for standard broadcasting. Because of their geographical separation and limited broadcasting power, each station has long operated without causing electrical interference to the other. In 1945, however, a chain of events was set in motion which ended this state of affairs and ultimately resulted in the present litigation. To understand the issues before us, we must relate the administrative developments as they unfolded.

Tn November of 1945, Beaumont filed an application for an increase in power from 1000 to 5000 watts. Because the Commission thought the grant of this proposal would not cause electrical interference within the normally protected service area of any other station, it concluded that there was no need for a hearing and approved the proposal on February 22, 1947. Some five months earlier, however, Ozarks had also sought permission to increase its signal strength to 5000 watts. This proposed signal would produce electrical interference in the new area reached by the expanded Beaumont signal. Ozarks regarded Beaumont’s expanded area as a potential obstacle to its own planned extension 1 and concluded, apparently correctly, 2 that the Commission had overlooked the pending Ozarks’ application when it granted Beaumont’s application without a hearing. Accordingly, Ozarks petitioned the Commission to modify Beaumont’s grant, making it subject to subsequent interference from the proposed Ozarks extension or, in the alternative, to set aside Beaumont’s grant and schedule both the Beaumont and Ozarks applications for a consolidated hearing. 3

Acting upon that petition, the Commission concluded in 1947 4 that the amount of electrical interference which Beaumont’s “expanded” area would suffer- from a grant of *308 the Ozarks’ application was "not substantial,” 5 and that the Ozarks and Beaumont proposals were not mutually exclusive. 6 It also pointed out that “the public interest would be better served by an immediate grant of the [Beaumont] application subject to any interference that might result [to Beaumont] if the [Ozarks application] were subsequently granted” 7 than by the delays inherent in the comparative evaluation of the Ozarks and Beaumont proposals. The Commission carefully pointed out, however, that the applicants were entitled to a comparative hearing, and that if "for any reason” Beaumont did not wish to accept the grant so conditioned, it could reject it and make timely application for a comparative hearing with Ozarks. 8 Beaumont did not reject the grant and it did not ask for a comparative hearing.

In due course, Ozarks’ own application came on forbearing with Beaumont participating fully in opposition. 9 The proceeding culminated in an order granting Ozarks’ application and Beaumont brought this appeal.

The Commission’s order is attacked here on three grounds. First, Beaumont says that it was illegally denied a comparative hearing in the Ozarks proceedings. It bases its view on the theory that the conditional grant to it in 1948 was not notice that there would be no comparative hearing in the subsequent Ozarks proceedings. We think this position untenable. The Commission’s statement already quoted and its announcement that Beaumont could “refuse the grant * * * and demand a comparative hearing” within twenty days 10 were clear notice that the grant to Beaumont was conditioned on a waiver of its right to a comparative hearing. By accepting the grant, Beaumont accepted the condition which was part of it.

A more serious objection, however, goes to the Commission’s power under the Federal Communications Act 11 and the Fifth Amendment to condition a -grant on the acceptance by the grantee of subsequent electrical interference. Stripped to its essentials, the question is this: where two applications pending before the Commission are not mutually exclusive but nevertheless are of such a nature that a grant of both would cause some interference in the sought-after area of one of the applicants, may the Commission require the applicant whose service will suffer interference either to accept the interference or demand a full hearing on the merits of the competing applications within twenty days ?

In making the conditional grant to Beaumont, the Commission was acting pursuant to its Rule 1.383 which provides that if an application is granted “subject to any interference that may result to the station if designated application or applications are subsequently granted,” the conditional grant shall be considered a grant of the original application unless rejected within twenty days. If rejected, “the Commission will vacate its original action upon the application and set the application for hearing in the same manner as other applications are set for hearing.” 12 This rule is designed to assist in the expeditious dispatch of competing applications, “a matter not unrelated to achieving the ends of justice”. 13 By *309 making a conditional grant instead of holding Beaumont’s application until it could receive simultaneous processing with Ozarks’, the Commission enabled one area to receive a service more quickly than it would if it had had to await the outcome of a comparative hearing. This also necessarily meant that Beaumont was enabled to proceed with its plans for expansion sooner than it would have been able to do had it awaited the outcome of a comparative hearing. But to ensure full protection of the public and private interests involved, the rule does provide and the Commission stated that a comparative hearing would be granted if asked for within twenty days. We cannot regard the Commission’s action as other than “a satisfactory practical solution of a difficult administrative problem.” 14 It violates neither the Federal Communications Act nor the Fifth Amendment.

Beaumont’s second attack on the validity of the Commission’s order concerns a deviation from one of the provisions of the Commission’s Standards of Good Engineering Practice Concerning Standard Broadcasting Stations. To understand this provision, it is necessary to describe a related provision not directly involved here. Under this related provision, each standard radio broadcasting station normally enjoys freedom from objectionable electrical interference up to a point where its broadcast signal is of a designated strength. 15 The imaginary line connecting all of these points in every direction around a station is called the station’s “normally protected contour.”

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202 F.2d 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaumont-broadcasting-corp-v-federal-communications-commission-cadc-1952.