Bendix Aviation Corp., Bendix Radio Division v. Federal Communications Commission

272 F.2d 533
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1959
DocketNos. 14650, 14693
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 272 F.2d 533 (Bendix Aviation Corp., Bendix Radio Division 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.

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Bendix Aviation Corp., Bendix Radio Division v. Federal Communications Commission, 272 F.2d 533 (D.C. Cir. 1959).

Opinion

DANAHER, Circuit Judge.

The Commission on April 16, 1958, adopted without prior notice, and on April 38, 1958, released, its Memorandum Opinion and Order 1 effecting immediate changes in its Rules. Many bands of frequencies were reassigned, some to be reserved exclusively for Government use, some exclusively for non-Govemment use and others on a shared basis. We are here concerned with two such bands, one involving frequencies in the 420-450 Me band, and the other touching frequencies in the 8500-9000 Me band. We will discuss only so much of the problem presented and the questions involved as we deem basic and essential to our conclusions.

Bendix Aviation Corporation (herein Bendix) on May 9, 1958, sought authorization for experimental use of the 430 Me frequency in two of its aircraft for the development of an airborne aircraft collision avoidance system. Its petition was dismissed and reconsideration was denied. Bendix appealed 2 and here challenges the Commission’s action in case No. 14650.

Air Transport Association of America and Aeronautical Radio, Inc. (herein ARINC/ATA) filed a pleading in support of the Bendix application. These parties, Bendix and others before the Commission had sought reconsideration of the Commission’s April 16, 1958 Order, but all reconsideration was denied by the Commission’s Order released July 31, 1958.3 In case No. 14693 ARINC and ATA insist that the Commission’s termination of the 8500-9000 Me band for use in radionavigation with its consequent availability to exclusive use by the Government for “radiopositioning”4 is invalid. By our order of October 16, 1958, these cases were consolidated.

The restrictions in the use of the spectrum were initiated by a request from the Office of Defense Mobilization (ODM) 5 acting, as the Commission said, in behalf of the Executive Branch of the Government. The representations submitted by ODM bore a security classification and the material has not been made public pursuant to Executive Order [536]*536105016 78 and Section 4(j) of the Communications Act7 which in pertinent part reads: “The Commission is authorized to withhold publication of records or proceedings containing secret information affecting the national defense.”

The Commission based its action on representations by ODM that the “reallocation of frequency bands for Government use are stated to be essential to fill radio-positioning requirements which have increased significantly in recent years due to the international political climate and the advent of the ‘space age’ ”; “that the requirements in question cannot be accommodated in frequency bands presently allocated for Government use”; and that redesignation of bands for exclusive use by Government services must be made “at this time.” Accordingly, because of the urgency and nature of the Government’s requirements and “because of the vital national defense considerations involved,” the Commission made its public interest determination that its Rules be amended immediately to permit the orderly satisfaction of national defense requirements. The Commission further found that in view of such necessities and the vital national defense factors which it concluded were here compellingly involved, it was impracticable and contrary to the public interest to comply with the public notice requirements of Section 4 of the Administrative Procedure Act.8

Appellant and petitioners alike have attacked the Commission’s failure to comply with the public notice provisions of the section.

No. 14650

Some three weeks after the Commission had ordered the denial of non-Government access to the 420-450 Me band, Bendix applied for experimental use of the 430 Me frequency to develop a device for the prevention of mid-air collisions between aircraft. That such airborne electronic equipment is highly necessary may be assumed, especially where so many competent authorities, Government representatives and industry spokesmen alike, seem to have united in their efforts to devise a system to reduce the collision hazards which are a matter of common knowledge. The Commission also was clearly cognizant of the public interest character of the Bendix objective. In issue is the determination by the Commission that the Government need is. paramount and vitally transcends non-Government use of the frequencies here involved, even assuming the very substantial public interest in and need for an airborne collision avoidance system. That determination is challenged on several grounds.

Bendix claims that under 47 U.S.C.A. § 309 it was entitled either to^ a grant or to a hearing. But when the Bendix application was filed, the frequency of 430 Me had already been withdrawn from the field of non-Government use except as the Commission authorized' temporary use of the frequency until' February 15, 1963, for radio altimeters 9 and for amateur service. Even amateur use was to be permitted on a limited [537]*537power basis and then only on condition that it not cause harmful interference to the radiopositioning service10 as defined in the amended Rules.11 Thus Government use for radiopositioning was already exclusive with the exceptions noted, when Bendix filed its May 9, 1958, application. Contrary to the argument of Bendix, we conclude the Commission’s action was not in derogation of the Act or of the Commission’s Rules touching experimental authorizations, for frequency 430 Me simply was no longer available for any such purpose as was disclosed by the Bendix application.

But, Bendix argues, to permit an allocation of the requested frequency for substantially exclusive Government use for radiopositioning is in conflict with treaty obligations of the United States. Prior to the April 16, 1958 Order, the 1947 Atlantic City Convention 12 had provided for international use of the band 420-450 Me for aeronautical radionavigation and amateur services, with two footnotes appended. Atlantic City Footnote 210, subject to the limitation in Footnote 211, accorded priority in this band to aeronautical radionavigation with the requirement that other services admitted to the band not cause harmful interference to the priority service. Atlantic City Footnote 211 provided for Region 2 (which includes the United States), that the allocation for aeronautical radio-navigation is temporary and exclusively for altimeters.

Conformably thereto, the Commission’s Rule, 47 C.F.R. § 2.104(a) (5) adopted and applied the treaty provisions, with added footnotes US 11, in effect, permitting aeronautical radio-navigation service, i. e., altimeters, to use the band 420-460 Me only until February 15, 1963, and US 18 limiting the power to be utilized by the amateur service. That same rule, as amended agreeably to the April 16, 1958 Order simply spelled out that “radio altimeters” were not to be permitted to use the band 420-460 after February 15, 1963, and that amateur service was not to cause harmful interference to the radiopositioning service. Such requirements and limitations not only conformed to the Radio Regulations annexed to the Atlantic City Convention but to the applicable provisions of the Buenos Aires Convention of 1952, (T.I.A.S. No. 3266).

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