City of Lafayette v. American Television & Communication Corp.

98 Cal. App. 3d 27, 159 Cal. Rptr. 271, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2251
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 24, 1979
DocketCiv. 42245
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 98 Cal. App. 3d 27 (City of Lafayette v. American Television & Communication Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Lafayette v. American Television & Communication Corp., 98 Cal. App. 3d 27, 159 Cal. Rptr. 271, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2251 (Cal. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Opinion

MARTIN, J. *

By complaints separately filed but subsequently consolidated for trial, appellants City of Lafayette and Town of Moraga sought injunctive and declaratory relief against respondent American Television and Communication Corporation, a community antenna television (CATV) company, to enforce appellants’ asserted rights to regulate the rates charged by respondent for CATV service within appellants’ municipal limits. The trial court denied the relief appellants requested. We reverse with directions.

As we view it the appeal presents a single narrow question of law: Did the trial court correctly construe a contract between respondent’s predecessor in interest (Cable-Vision) and Contra Costa County? We conclude that it did not.

In 1966, before either Lafayette or Moraga was incorporated, Cable-Vision applied to the county for a license to provide CATV service within certain unincorporated areas of the county, including areas subsequently incorporated as Moraga and as part of Lafayette. The county granted the license for a 20-year term upon the authority of Government Code section 53066 1 and of the county’s own preexisting CATV *30 ordinance (then designated and herein referred to as Ordinance No. 1980 2 ), and Cable-Vision accepted the license. The license expressly incorporated “all terms and conditions of Ordinance 1980.”

In 1968 respondent acquired Cable-Vision, accepted an assignment of the license, and assumed all of Cable-Vision’s obligations thereunder.

Parts of the unincorporated area to which the license extended were incorporated into the new municipalities of Lafayette (in 1968) and Moraga (in 1974). Each municipality undertook, promptly upon incorporation, to adopt Ordinance No. 1980 as its own. Thereafter the two municipalities appear to have followed widely divergent courses with respect to CATV services within their municipal limits: Lafayette apparently elected to permit the county to continue to supervise the license for the time being, while Moraga apparently elected to assert its own control over CATV. In 1974 respondent proposed to raise its rates, submitting formal requests for approval first to the county and subsequently to each of appellants. The county approved a rate increase for unincorporated parts of the service area; Lafayette first indicated that it would approve but then withdrew its approval; Moraga did not take action. When, in 1976, respondent nevertheless announced its intention to impose the new county-approved rates in Lafayette and in Moraga, and to cut off service for nonpayment, appellants brought the underlying lawsuits.

*31 The parties and the trial court correctly agreed that the license, as granted by the county and accepted by Cable-Vision, was a contract (cf. Orange County Cable Communications Co. v. San Clemente (1976) 59 Cal.App.3d 165, 170-171 [130 Cal.Rptr. 429]), and not subject to any regulatory authority by the Public Utilities Commission as the system is not considered a public utility. Respondent properly further concedes that each municipality “may regulate it in all legitimate respects not inconsistent with its license agreement” and not in derogation of its vested rights thereunder. The threshold issue was whether appellants’ attempts to regulate respondent’s rates were consistent with the license.

The trial court never passed the threshold. Holding that neither appellant could regulate respondent’s rates and that each must abide by rate decisions arrived at between respondent and the county, it concluded that municipal regulation of respondent’s rates (1) would constitute an unconstitutional impairment of the obligation of the contract represented by the license (cf. U.S. Const., art. I, § 10; Cal. Const., art. I, § 9, formerly § 16), and (2) would conflict with a perceived public interest in unified regulation for the single integrated CATV system operated by respondent in Contra Costa County.

In our view the trial court’s conclusions are founded on a fundamental misreading of the contract. The key to our analysis is section 6503 of Ordinance No. 1980, the terms of which are incorporated into the license. Section 6503 reads as follows: “Whenever any portion of the territory covered by this license shall be annexed to, or otherwise become a part of any municipal corporation or of any other County, or any other agency or political subdivision of the State of California, the County’s rights hereunder shall inure to the benefit of such other public body and its appropriate officers.”

We focus on the phrase “the County’s rights hereunder.” The phrase has been in the ordinance, and thus (by incorporation) in the license, from the outset. If “the County’s rights hereunder” included the function of regulating rates, then clearly that function inured to the benefit of appellants; in such circumstances the passage of control over rates, being contemplated by the contract, could not be said to impair the contract (cf. Southern Pacific Co. v. Portland (1913) 227 U.S. 559, *32 572 [57 L.Ed. 642, 651, 33 S.Ct. 308]; 5 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (3d ed. 1969) Constitutionality of Ordinances, § 19.51, pp. 517-521), and the contract itself would evidence acquiescence by the contracting parties themselves in a determination that unified regulation of rates was not necessary.

We conclude that “the County’s rights hereunder” included the “right” to regulate rates. Section 6403 of Ordinance No. 1980 provides that “No increase in the rates and charges to subscribers, as set forth in the schedule filed and approved with licensee’s application, may be made without the prior approval of the Board expressed by resolution.” This provision represents but one of several aspects of control of CATV entrusted to cities and counties of this state by the Legislature in Government Code section 53066. Absent such a provision, regulatory control of CATV would, under general principles, have remained in the state (cf. 45 Cal.Jur.3d, Municipalities, § 85, pp. 151-152). Hence as between the state and its counties and cities, the counties and cities have, by statutory delegation, acquired the right to regulate CATV within their respective geographic confines (cf. also Orange County Cable Communications Co. v. San Clemente, supra, 59 Cal.App.3d 165, 171-174). We cannot in this respect distinguish the function of regulating CATV rates from the function (which respondent concedes to be a “right”) of receiving a license fee calculated as a percentage of the same rates: Each function is statutorily vested in the county or in the city; the active-passive distinction between regulating rates and receiving fees appears to us to be immaterial to the semantic classification at issue.

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Bluebook (online)
98 Cal. App. 3d 27, 159 Cal. Rptr. 271, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lafayette-v-american-television-communication-corp-calctapp-1979.