Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Educational Telecasting Corp. v. Federal Communications Commission

534 F.2d 11
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 1976
DocketNo. 75-1425
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 534 F.2d 11 (Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Educational Telecasting Corp. v. Federal Communications Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Educational Telecasting Corp. v. Federal Communications Commission, 534 F.2d 11 (1st Cir. 1976).

Opinion

ALDRICH, Senior Circuit Judge.

Subject to a procedural matter that the Commission claims, we believe incorrectly in this instance, raises a jurisdictional issue, the questions in this petition to review revolve upon the meaning and application of Rule 76.61(d) of the Federal Communications Commission (47 C.F.R. § 76.-61(d)) which prescribes what signals may be carried by a major cable television system, hereafter CATV. The section reads, in presently material part,

“(d) . . . Such system may also carry any other noncommercial educational signals, in the absence of objection filed pursuant to § 76.7 by any local noncommercial educational station or State or local educational television authority.”

Since the Commission favors the widest possible dissemination of all signals, and the legitimate complaint of a noncommercial educational broadcaster is to “possible erosion of local support among cable television subscribers,” Cable Television Report and Order, 36 F.C.C.2d 143, 180 (1972), the Corn-[13]*13mission limits objections to the importation of distant (i. e., incapable of local off-air reception) signals. Information Transfer, Inc., 38 F.C.C.2d 335 (1972). In Norristown Distribution Systems, Inc., 38 F.C.C.2d 350 (1972), in applying the rule to deny the applicant CATV a certificate to include carriage of a distant educational signal, it stated as follows:

“(b) Section 76.61(d) of the rules permits carriage of distant out-of-state educational stations proposed in certification applications in the absence of opposition of local educational stations or authorities. The objections submitted herein, in the absence of rebuttal by the cable system, persuades us to deny carriage of WNET. We emphasize, however, that Section 76.61(d) does not require automatic denial of distant educational signal carriage in the face of local educational signal objection. Such objection must be supported by probative evidence.” (Emphasis suppl.)

The Commission held the objector’s showing to be sufficient.

In the present case applicant Public Cable Company holds franchises to construct and operate a CATV at Portland and South Portland, Maine. In August, 1974 it gave public notice of its intention to carry the signals of ten TV stations, including four noncommercial educational signals, three being local, including petitioner’s WCBB, and one distant, WGBH-TV, of Boston, Massachusetts. Petitioner, Colby-BatesBowdoin Educational Telecasting Corporation, hereafter Colby, by appropriate pleadings supported by affidavits, objected to the inclusion of the WGBH-TV signal. It now seeks review of the Commission’s order denying the objection.

To Colby’s pleading and affidavits Public Cable filed a “Response.” Other than asserting that Colby’s allegations were “conclusional and wholly self-serving” and contained “no specific factual evidence whatsoever,” the response contributed nothing. In a way it contributed less than nothing, since Public Cable requested that its application be granted on the “precedent” established by Norristown. So far as being a precedent is concerned, in Norristown the Commission denied an application with less in the way of objections than Colby raised here.

In Norristown the objector’s affidavits consisted of general allegations that the CATV was within the noncommercial educational TV objector’s primary service area, and that the objector received financial support therefrom. No population figures, or contribution figures, were given. Colby has made the same allegations, and has given statistics for both. In addition, Colby is already faced with two other noncommercial educational competitors, a fraetionalization problem, while the objector in Norris-town had none. Yet, the Commission was satisfied that Norristown’s objector had furnished “probative evidence,” while Colby’s showing is denominated “speculative.”

Furthermore, if we were to notice an off-the-record fact, it would be that WGBH-TV is a persistent and skillful fundraiser, precisely the type of distant import, if the “special protection,” Second Report & Order, 2 F.C.C. 725, 760, 762 (1960); Reconsideration of Cable Television Report & Order, 36 F.C.C.2d 326, 330 (1972), we would suppose Rule 76.61(d) was directed to, is still intended. We can think of nothing more threatening to an already crowded local educational enterprise than the importation of a further, “big” competitor.

We divide Colby’s complaints into three. (1) The Commission, without notice, placed a substantially higher burden of pleading on it than it had announced in Norristown.

(2) The burden established by the Commission is almost impossible to fulfill substantively. (3) The Commission “noticed” facts that were not in the record, and did so without affording Colby an opportunity to meet them before it considered these facts to reach its decision.

1. There is no reason why an administrative body cannot change its procedures, even without notice, so long as there is no due process loss of substantive rights. We do not agree with the contention in the Commission’s brief that its decision in Amherst Cablevision, Inc., 51 F.C.C.2d 408 [14]*14(1975), provided adequate notice to enable Colby to make the newly required showing before the decision was made. Nevertheless, the path was open to Colby to point out that it had, in effect, been misled, and seek reconsideration on such further showing as might respond to the Commission’s requirements. Our primary concern is with Colby’s second point.

2. In its opinion herein, Public Cable Co., 55 F.C.C.2d 383, 384, (1975) the Commission said,

“Colby has failed to support substantially its claim of adverse impact or to show that the public will lose service. It has not proven that audience fractionalization necessarily will result in a loss of WCBB contributors, nor has it submitted probative evidence indicating that a specific percentage loss in contributors will equal the same percentage loss in contributions. . . . Colby’s citation of Norristown, supra, is inapposite. In that case we found the unrebutted allegations of financial loss by the local educational station to be persuasive in denying carriage of the distant educational signal. In this case the local educational station claims adverse financial impact while the system disputes that claim. We have examined Colby’s arguments and found them to be speculative. Therefore, we must deny the oppositions to these applications.”

Colby feels that this is not merely a reappraisal of standards, to use the characterization in the Commission’s brief, but a disquieting, as well as puzzling change. On its own statement in Norristown the Commission there required, and accordingly must have considered that it received, “probative evidence.” When Colby submitted the same and more, it did not suddenly cease to be evidence and become “speculative.” Nor, with due respect to the Commission, did it become less “persuasive” because it was “rebutted” by the applicant. To rebut is to refute, to respond by something contrary. All that Public Cable did here was to press its case and say Colby had not alleged enough. This did not “rebut” anything. See Presque Isle TV Co. v. United States,

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