Cable TV of Santa Barbara, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission

428 F.2d 672
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1970
DocketNo. 24827
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 428 F.2d 672 (Cable TV of Santa Barbara, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cable TV of Santa Barbara, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, 428 F.2d 672 (9th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

HAMLEY, Circuit Judge:

This matter is before us on the petition of Cable TV of Santa Barbara, Inc, and Cable TV of Santa Barbara County, Inc. (collectively Cable TV) to review a Federal Communications Commission (Commission) memorandum order and opinion adopted August 13, 1969. The Commission order and opinion is reported in Central Coast Broadcasters, Inc., 18 F.C.C.2d 886 (1969).1 Central Coast Broadcasters, Inc. (KCOY), which instituted the Commission proceeding, has intervened in the court in support of the FCC order and opinion. Key Television, Inc. (KEYT), which intervened on the side of Cable TV in the Commission proceedings, has intervened in this court in support of the petition to review.

Cable TV operates a cable television system serving the city of Santa Barbara and some contiguous portions of Santa Barbara County. This system provides the signals of fourteen California television stations to approximately twenty thousand subscribers, estimated at sixty thousand viewers. The stations carried include KNXT-TV (CBS) and KNBC-TV (NBC), both of Los Angeles, and KEYT.

[674]*674KEYT (ABC) is the licensee of the only television station in Santa Barbara, California. KCOY, primarily a CBS outlet but with limited NBC affiliation, is the only licensed television station in Santa Maria, California, located in northern Santa Barbara County. Santa Barbara and Santa Maria are fifty-seven miles apart and are separated by the Santa Ynez mountains. KCOY’s transmission tower is located near Santa Maria, and, because of the intervening mountains, that station’s only access to Santa Barbara is by means of Cable TV’s system. KEYT, however, can be received in Santa Maria off-the-air, because that station’s transmission tower is located on one of the Santa Ynez mountains.

The Los Angeles stations carried on Cable TV are also viewable off-the-air in the city of Santa Barbara, although the distance between the two cities in some ninety miles. Off-the-air, however, the Los Angeles stations give Santa Barbara only a grade B signal, which is inferior to the signal received in Santa Barbara over Cable TV facilities.

When KCOY commenced operations in 1964, it requested and obtained carriage on Cable TV’s system. Then, in February, 1968, after a change in the station’s management, KCOY asked Cable TV to afford it nonduplication protection.2 In response, Cable TV commenced a “tone-switching” operation on September 15, 1968. Under this procedure, Cable TV continued to broadcast KNXT and KNBC signals from Los Angeles simultaneously with KCOY’s signal. However, whenever there were duplicating network programs, the non-network commercials and announcements of KCOY were inserted in place of those transmitted by the Los Angeles stations. As a result, KCOY’s signals not only avoided duplication by the Los Angeles stations but received double coverage, since they appeared on two of Cable TV’s channels during periods of network program duplication.

Within two months Cable TV notified KCOY of its intent to terminate the “temporary” tone-switching agreement, as Cable TV subsequently described it. Cable TV gave two reasons for this cessation: because the operation was undertaken on the mistaken assumption that KCOY would be allowed by the Commission to move its transmitter to provide a better signal; and because of the volume of subscriber complaints about the deterioration in service caused by tone-switching. KCOY responded immediately by filing suit in the Superior Court for the County of Santa Barbara to prohibit Cable TV from breaching its “contract” to provide KCOY with exclusivity protection. However, on May 19, 1969, the state court entered a judgment holding that Cable TV had made “no contract or agreement” to provide KCOY with nonduplication protection.

KCOY then petitioned the Commission for relief, asserting that, despite the holding of the state court, there was a private agreement between KCOY and Cable TV enforceable under Paragraphs 49 and 56 of the Second Report and Order, 2 F.C.C.2d 725 (1966). Alternatively, KCOY contended that it was entitled to non-duplication under the requirements of 47 C.F.R. § 74.1103 (1969). In its order of August 13, 1969, here under review, the Commission declined to grant relief on either of these grounds. The Commission nevertheless granted KCOY non-duplication protection under 47 C.F.R. § 74.1109 (1969).

The Commission gave the following reasons for granting such relief:

“We * * * believe that Cable TV should be required to afford program exclusivity to KCOY-TV, since that [675]*675station’s predicted grade A contour include Santa Barbara, its signal is being carried by Cable TV, and non-duplication protection would, we find, affirmatively serve the public interest.
“We find that in face of KCOY-TV’s substantial losses over the past years, affording non-duplication protection would serve the public interest by enhancing the ability of this station to obtain revenues and thus to continue its needed local service to the Santa Maria area.
“In short, we find that requiring Cable TV to afford KCOY-TV program exclusivity vis-a-vis the KNBC and KNXT signals will further the allocations policies (discussed in Shen-Heights [11 F.C.C.2d 814]), as well as the policies underlying the Second Report and Order (2 F.C.C.2d 725), and that the public interest calls for this requirement. *s * * ” 18 F.C.C.2d at 887, 888 (footnote omitted).3

Commission reliance upon material outside the record

Cable TV and KEYT urge several reasons why the order of August 13th should be overturned. Among them is that one of the grounds cited by the Commission in support of its decision is based upon material outside the record.

In the portion of the Commission’s opinion quoted above reference is made to KCOY’s “substantial losses over the past years * * To buttress this statement, the Commission added a footnote stating that “* * * [s]ince its inception, KCOY-TV has reported substantial losses to the Commission * * The footnote then sets out the figures for KCOY’s operating losses for the years 1964-1968. 18 F.C.C.2d at 888, note 2. These loss figures were taken from the annual confidential financial reports (form 324) that all broadcast stations must file with the Commission. Cable TV and KEYT claim that they have not been given an adequate opportunity to rebut this information.

While KCOY’s losses may well be “adjudicative,” they must also be “disputed” and “critical” facts in order to entitle Cable TV and KEYT to an evidentiary hearing. 2 K. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise, § 15.10 at 403 (1958).4 In our view, the losses in question did not, on this record, constitute either “disputed” or “critical” facts.

Cable TV and KEYT have had repeated opportunities to dispute the existence of KCOY’s losses, but they have never done so in any effective fashion. For example, KCOY put Cable TV and KEYT on notice of this issue in its original petition for nonduplication protection filed with the Commission. Yet neither Cable TV nor KEYT in their oppositions to this petition disputed the losses. Furthermore, in their petitions for stay of the non-duplication order, [676]

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