Colorado Radio Corp. v. Federal Communications Commission
This text of 118 F.2d 24 (Colorado Radio 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.
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Appellant, Colorado Radio Corporation, is licensed to operate the regional station, KVOD, at Denver. It and another regional station, KFEL, with which it had been sharing time, applied for permission to increase power and to operate unlimited time. F. W. Meyer filed an application for permission to construct and operate a local station in the same city. A hearing on this application, in which appellant and KFEL were intervenors, was held in May, 1938. On March 20, 1939, the Commission granted construction permits to KVOD and KFEL which authorized increased power and unlimited operation. The Commission denied the Meyer application in May, 1939, whereupon he filed a petition for rehearing. On October 10th, licenses to cover the construction permits to KVOD and KFEL were granted. On October 24th, the Commission set aside its decision in the Meyer case. Reargument, in which appellant participated, was held on November 9th. On November 15th, the Commission granted the application. On December 6th, the appellant filed a motion for rehearing which was denied, and it appeals.
The Commission moved to dismiss appellant’s appeal on two grounds. First, the appellant has failed to show that it has standing here within the meaning of section 402(b) (2).1 Second, the Reasons for Appeal do not allege any error of law in the Commission’s action.
We believe that the appellant is a person aggrieved within the meaning of section 402(b) (2) as construed by the Supreme Court in the Sanders case.2 The Court held that a person who stands to be hurt financially is entitled to appeal.3 Appellant’s tenth reason for appeal reads:
“That the Commission’s action in granting the application of F. W. Meyer and [26]*26denying the petition of KVOD for a rehearing to show the changed condition in the City of Denver, more particularly the injurious economic effect the operation of the proposed station will have on KVOD, was arbitrary, capricious and was a denial to KVOD of a fair and impartial hearing.” A liberal construction of this statement, plus the recognition of the competitive relation that will exist between KVOD and the Meyer station, places appellant within the rule of the Sanders case.
This brings us to the Commission’s second contention that the appeal should be dismissed because appellant has not alleged any errors of law. We believe that the appeal should be dismissed, but upon the ground that the appellant is foreclosed from raising the questions it endeavors to present here.
The only statements in the Reasons for Appeal that can be considered as stating errors of law are that the appellant was not allowed to reopen the record to show a changed condition, and that the Commission did not consider the effect of the changed condition.
The changed condition is that two former half-time stations became full time stations. The appellant, in its brief, sets out the possible effects of the new full time station grants on Meyer’s application, states that the Commission was apprised of this fact in its motion for rehearing, asks what value was its participation in the proceedings if it cannot show how ability to serve and economic conditions have changed between the time of the hearing on and the Commission’s grant of the Meyer application, and concludes that it should have been determined whether the public would have been adversely affected by granting still another station.
Granting the Meyer application, after another station had been allowed might, for example, impair the revenue to one of all,4 might make the securing of adequate talent difficult, and in the end the public might suffer. Refusal by the Commission to allow appellant, who had been a full-fledged intervenor from the start of the proceedings to present evidence on the implications and consequences of adding, in net effect, one full time station, might well be error. However, we feel that we should not pass upon this question in the present case since the appellant is foreclosed from asserting such error, if error it is.
The changed condition already existed at the time of the reargument on the Meyer application. As has been pointed out, the Commission’s authorization of two full time stations instead of the two half-time ones came on March 20, 1939. Meyer’s application was denied in May. Licenses to cover the construction grants to the new full time stations were issued on October 10th. On October 24th the Commission set aside its decision denying the Meyer application and there was reargument on November 9th. Thus, appellant could have moved to submit additional evidence concerning the changed condition at any time between October 24th and November 9th. This it did not do, nor did it suggest its desire to offer further evidence until December 6th, twenty days after the Commission approved the Meyer application.
Appellant took its chance that the Commission, on the existing record, would revert to its previous decision although it had been set aside.5 Now that the decision has gone against it, the appellant wants a chance to persuade the Commission with a supplemental record. We cannot allow the appellant to sit back and hope that a decision will be in its favor, and then, when it isn’t, to parry with an offer of more evidence. No judging process in any branch of government could operate efficiently or accurately if such a procedure were allowed.
The Reasons for Appeal are bottomed on nothing that happened between November 9th and December 6th, the date on which the appellant asked for a rehearing. There [27]*27must be an end to determinations and re-determinations. The issue was crystallized and the record could have been made before the Commission’s action. Appellant has not properly exhausted its administrative remedy. 6
It might .be countered that the appellant is not entirely foreclosed by its delay because having a status by which it is allowed to correct all errors of law it can contend that the error of law alleged is not only that it was denied an opportunity to adduce additional evidence, but also that the Commission failed to consider the effect of the changed condition. Such an error, however, is not sufficiently alleged. The fact that a new station was operating did not have to be put in the record for the Commission could, and, as is shown by its opinion, did, take official notice of it. The appellant makes no definite and specific showing that the result is not supported by the evidence. Thus, appellant’s contention must necessarily simmer down to the position that further facts, showing in more detail and in light of experience the effect of the new station, were in existence and could have been made part of the record.
Under these circumstances to allow the appellant to allege as an error of law a situation that it took no timely steps to correct by presenting its evidence in full would change its position from that of an interested party under the statute to that of a mere vigilante. As we said in the Red River case, “The. burden, therefore, is, and properly should be, upon an interested person to act affirmatively to protect himself. It is more reasonable to assume in this case a legislative intent that an interested person should be alert to protect his own interests than to assume that Congress intended the Commission to consider on its own motion the possible effect of its action in each case, upon every person who might possibly be affected thereby.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
118 F.2d 24, 73 App. D.C. 225, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-radio-corp-v-federal-communications-commission-cadc-1941.