Cox Cable Cleveland Area, Inc. v. King

582 F. Supp. 376, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12647
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 18, 1983
DocketC83-3604
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 582 F. Supp. 376 (Cox Cable Cleveland Area, Inc. v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox Cable Cleveland Area, Inc. v. King, 582 F. Supp. 376, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12647 (N.D. Ohio 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

WHITE, District Judge.

This matter having come on for hearing on plaintiff’s motion for preliminary injunction and the Court, having consolidated the hearing with a trial on the merits pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(a)(2) and have heard the testimony of witnesses and arguments of counsel, makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law in accordance with Rule 52 of the Fed.R.Civ.P.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The parties have stipulated to the first twelve numbered findings.

1. Plaintiff is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Ohio with its principal place of business at 12423 Plaza Drive, Parma, Ohio.

2. Defendant Donald S. King (“King”), whose real name is Donald L. Smith has used the other names of Don King, and William L. Rogers and is doing business as American Hy-Tech. Defendant resides and conducts business at 1821 Marloes Avenue, East Cleveland, Ohio. King has used and now uses other names, to wit, Donald L. Smith, William L. Rodgers, and William L. Rogers. Defendant is a citizen of the State of Ohio. The defendant’s acts complained of have occurred and are occurring in the State of Ohio.

3. Plaintiff is in the business, among other things, of operating a cable television system in the Cleveland, Ohio area.

4. In order to provide cable television service, plaintiff has constructed facilities, which include a network of coaxial cable which starts at each individual subscriber’s television set, feeds into a truck line and terminates ultimately at a local antenna of *378 plaintiff. Plaintiffs subscribers of premium programming view the premium channels by means of interstate through-the-air broadcasts received by plaintiffs centrally located antennas attached principally by cable to the subscriber’s home television set.

5. Plaintiff operates its cable television system pursuant to authority granted by the localities of Rocky River, Parma, Par-ma Heights, Lakewood, Seven Hills, Fair-view Park, Olmsted Falls, Olmsted Township, Broadview Heights, and Brooklyn Heights, all of which are localities in the Cleveland, Ohio area.

6. Plaintiff offers its paying subscribers two levels of service:

(a) “Basic Service consisting of:

(i) typical network television programs, local television programs and “super stations” (e.g. WOR in New York and Turner Broadcasting in Atlanta, Georgia), all of which can be received without the need of the usual rooftop antenna; and

(ii) local government, educational, informational (weather reports, stock market reports, and the like) and public access.

(b) “Premium Programming” consisting of special programming made available through Cox on four separate channels (19 through 22.)”

Premium Programming includes first run movies, special entertainment programs and other features not available to the general public by the television networks, super stations or other generally available television services. Plaintiff purchases Premium Programming from four suppliers, namely, Home Box Office, Cinemax, Playboy and Spotlight. Each of the four Premium Programming services are supplied to paying subscribers on a separate channel.

7. Plaintiff is authorized by each of the Premium Programming suppliers to provide the Premium Programming to those paying subscribers of plaintiff who pay an additional monthly fee for each Premium Programming channel selected.

8. Plaintiff is required to pay to each supplier of Premium Programming a portion of the applicable monthly subscription fee received by it.

9. Plaintiff supplies to each of its paying subscribers a device known as a “converter” or “converter/decoder,” which enables a subscriber to receive intelligible signals on an ordinary television set when the device is connected between the subscriber’s television set and the plaintiff’s cable outlet.

10. Plaintiff specially adjusts its devices so that a paying subscriber will receive only the specific programming to which it has subscribed and no other.

11. The transmission of the Premium Programming supplied by Home Box Office, Cinemax, Spotlight and Playboy constitutes a common carrier transmission, (all of which originate outside of Ohio) via the Satcom F3 satellite, the Satcom F4 satellite and the Westar 5 satellite.

12. Defendant has advertised, offered for sale, and sold to the public one or more types of devices consisting of converters, converter/descramblers, converter/decoders, decoders and descramblers, including Oak Industries model M35B, which are capable of, used for and intended to be used for the unauthorized interception and reception of plaintiff’s private signals, including the Premium Programming signals.

13. Defendant has sold Oak Industries M35B converter/decoders since at least March 1983, as follows: three in or about June 1983 and four or five additional in the period June 1983-August 1983 for a total of seven or eight or as many as ten from early 1983 to date. In addition defendant recommended to an undetermined number of potential purchasers, numbering between twenty and thirty, that they purchase M35B converter/decoder from another supplier, for which defendant was to receive a portion of the sales price as credit against equipment brought from the supplier.

14. Plaintiff arranges and pays for the reception of the interstate common carrier *379 transmission of the Premium Programming supplied by Home Box Office, Cinemax, Playboy and Spotlight, with the express intent that the transmissions are to be received only by persons who pay to subscribe to plaintiffs Premium Programming service. The plaintiff does not intend that the signals be received by the public at large.

15. Plaintiffs paying subscribers receive Premium Programming through interstate common carrier transmissions by means of the plaintiffs facilities, including the cable network installed by plaintiff.

16. In an attempt to avoid theft of its Premium Programming services, plaintiff scrambles its Premium Programming signals so that an ordinary television set will require a descrambler or decoder, among other things, to receive an intelligible signal.

17. An Oak M35B converting/decoder has a useful life of about seven to ten years.

18. When an unauthorized converter/decoder is connected to a purchaser’s television set and plaintiff’s cable facility, a purchaser can intercept all of the plaintiff’s cable television programming, including Premium Programming signals which are intended solely for the paying subscribers and not for the general public.

19. Once defendant has sold an unauthorized converter/decoder it is virtually impossible for plaintiff to detect the purchasers’ unauthorized use of the converter/decoder.

20. Plaintiff has made a substantial and continuing investment to bring Premium Programming to the Cleveland, Ohio area.

21.

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Bluebook (online)
582 F. Supp. 376, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-cable-cleveland-area-inc-v-king-ohnd-1983.