Comcast Cablevision of Sterling Heights, Inc v. City of Sterling Heights

443 N.W.2d 440, 178 Mich. App. 117
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 1989
DocketDocket 106847
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 443 N.W.2d 440 (Comcast Cablevision of Sterling Heights, Inc v. City of Sterling Heights) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comcast Cablevision of Sterling Heights, Inc v. City of Sterling Heights, 443 N.W.2d 440, 178 Mich. App. 117 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Hood, J.

Plaintiff, Comcast Cablevision of Ster *120 ling Heights, Inc., appeals as of right from a February 8, 1988, order for declaratory judgment issued pursuant to an October 29, 1987, opinion of the Macomb Circuit Court deciding issues of federal preemption under the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984, 47 USC 521 et seq., and the authority of defendant, City of Sterling Heights, to regulate certain aspects of Comcast’s cable tv service.

Specifically at issue are a five percent basic rate increase and a disconnect fee for premium services that Comcast sought to impose on its subscribers. We affirm the opinion of the trial court but vacate the portion of the resulting order disallowing the disconnect fee.

The franchise agreement between Comcast and Sterling Heights was part of a December, 1981, consent judgment resulting from litigation over the award of the franchise. In December, 1984, the federal Cable Act became effective. Relevant to this case is § 543 of the act, which provided for the deregulation of rates for the provision of cable service but retained limited municipal jurisdiction for an interim two-year period subject to a cable operator’s right to automatically increase basic rates by up to five percent per year during this interim period.

Under the terms of the Comcast franchise agreement, the rate for basic cable service was initially fixed at $7.50 a month through April 30, 1985. In May, 1985, pursuant to § 543 of the Cable Act, Comcast increased its basic rate by five percent from $7.50 to $7.87 per month. On December 5, 1985, it announced a further five percent increase from $7.87 to $8.26 per month, which went into effect January 15, 1986.

Additionally, on June 1, 1985, Comcast began charging its subscribers a $5 fee to disconnect a *121 premium service. This fee was later increased to $10, effective January 15, 1986. Premium services are separate from the basic service which includes all local vhf and uhf broadcast channels plus an additional twenty-four channels of programming. Premium services are optional and are sold on a per channel basis for additional varying rates.

This action began with the city’s filing on February 11, 1986, an ex parte petition to enjoin both the January, 1986, five percent rate increase and the $5 increase in the disconnect fee. While we need not set forth all the lower court proceedings for purpose of this appeal, we note they included removal to the federal district court and remand back to the Macomb Circuit Court. During this period, the city amended its cable ordinance to specifically prohibit a disconnect fee for basic, tier, or pay cable service, effective May 21, 1986.

In an opinion of October 29, 1987, the circuit court basically found that the federal Cable Act did not preempt the city’s notice requirement or regulation of the disconnect fee. Following apparently unsuccessful efforts by the parties to shape an order consistent with the opinion, the court signed the order presented by the city.

Comcast now appeals contending that local regulation of a disconnect fee and imposition of a ninety-day advance notice requirement are preempted by the Cable Act. Comcast also challenges that part of the order which disallows the disconnect charge as of May 21, 1986, on the basis that the record does not reflect the basis for this relief. The city has cross appealed, challenging the court’s statutory construction of the term "year” which resulted in the court upholding the January, 1986, increase.

We begin with consideration of whether the city *122 can regulate the disconnect fee for premium services.

The parties agree on the applicable law. They agree that the city can establish and enforce "customer service requirements” under 47 USC 552(a)(1). They also agree that under the act the city as a franchising authority may not regulate rates relating to the "provision” of premium services.

Comcast describes the fee as a rate "associated” with the provision of premium services and therefore preempted from local regulation. The city maintains that a disconnect fee does not relate to the provision of services but to their discontinuance and, therefore, cannot be a rate for the provision of services and its regulation is not preempted. The city argues that, since its regulation of the disconnect fee is not specifically preempted by the act, it has the authority to regulate the fee as a customer service requirement. The lower court found the fee was not a charge for the provision of cable service, but "a penalty imposed upon the customer for exercising the choice to disconnect a premium cable service.”

Under 47 USC 543, the city may "regulate the rates for the provision of cable service,” but only if those rates concern the provision of "basic cable service.” Basic cable services are those provided to all subscribers. ACLU v FCC, 262 US App DC 244, 248 n 3; 823 F2d 1554, 1558 n 3 (DC Cir, 1987). This limited authority is consistent with longstanding fcc policy which preempts state and local regulation of special pay cable programming, including rate regulation. Brookhaven Cable TV, Inc v Kelly, 573 F2d 765, 768 (CA 2, 1978). Thus, there is limited authority regarding rates for the provision of basic cable services and no authority regarding rates for the provision of premium ser *123 vices. Everyone agrees that the fee here concerns a premium service. The question is whether it is a "rate for the provision of’ the service.

Comcast has referred us to two United States Supreme Court opinions for guidance on the preemption issue, City of New York v FCC, 486 US —; 108 S Ct 1637; 100 L Ed 2d 48 (1988), and Capital Cities Cable, Inc v Crisp, 467 US 691; 104 S Ct 2694; 81 L Ed 2d 580 (1984). However, these cases concern direct conflicts between federal and local control, a situation we do not have here. Furthermore, they deal with regulations and provisions regarding technical quality and content control and provide us with no particular assistance on the question before us.

We begin with a statutory analysis of the phrase "rates for the provision,” on the assumption that its meaning will apply equally to matters involving both basic and premium services.

The first step in statutory analysis is the plain meaning of the language in question. See ACLU, supra, p 1568. The act does not define rate nor provision. However, there is no indication that either term has some specialized technical meaning applicable only in the cable services context. Rate appears to mean, as one would commonly expect, the amount charged the subscriber to receive the cable service. We do not believe that merely because a charge is involved for something associated with cable service the charge becomes a "rate for the provision” of cable service. Nor do we believe that "provision of cable services” encompasses anything or everything associated with those services.

In Housatonic Cable Vision Co v Dep’t of Public Utility Control,

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Bluebook (online)
443 N.W.2d 440, 178 Mich. App. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comcast-cablevision-of-sterling-heights-inc-v-city-of-sterling-heights-michctapp-1989.