Daniels Cablevision, Inc. v. United States

835 F. Supp. 1, 21 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2225, 74 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 98, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12806, 1993 WL 393000
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedSeptember 16, 1993
DocketCiv.A. 92-2292, 92-2494 and 92-2558
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 835 F. Supp. 1 (Daniels Cablevision, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniels Cablevision, Inc. v. United States, 835 F. Supp. 1, 21 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2225, 74 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 98, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12806, 1993 WL 393000 (D.D.C. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

JACKSON, District Judge.

The plaintiffs in these three lawsuits present facial constitutional challenges to eleven provisions of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460, and to two provisions of the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-549, 98 Stat. 2780 (“the Cable Act” or “Acts”), contending that, for sundry reasons, these provisions infringe upon their First Amendment right to freedom of speech. 1 No other infirmities are alleged in these actions, however, and the Court is therefore not called upon to address other constitutional issues that may lurk elsewhere in this landmark legislation.

The Court holds that section 11(c) of the 1992 Cable Act (insofar as it amends the Communications Act of 1934 to include new section 613(f)(1)(A)), and sections 15 and 25 of the 1992 Cable Act are unconstitutional. It concludes that all of the remaining provisions of the 1992 and 1984 Cable Acts in dispute are facially compatible with the First Amendment.

I.

The 1992 Cable Act subjects the cable television industry to extensive and unprecedented federal regulation. Controversial from the moment the legislation was first proposed, it was immediately assailed once enacted from several quarters in these and other lawsuits. The plaintiffs here are cable television system owner/operators and programmers. The named defendants are the United States and the Federal Communications Commission (“the FCC” or “the Commission”), the administrative agency charged with its enforcement. 2 The plaintiffs contend that multiple provisions of the 1992 Cable Act (and, in retrospect, others of its ancestor, the 1984 Cable Act), unconstitutionally interfere with their First Amendment right to “speak” as they wish through the cable tele *4 vision systems they own, control or use, to the audiences of their choice.

Two other lawsuits, in which the plaintiffs challenged two particular provisions of the 1992 Act on similar grounds, were filed within days of the three lawsuits now before this Court. 3 All plaintiffs in all five lawsuits challenged sections 4 and 5 of the 1992 Cable Act (creating 47 U.S.C. §§ 534 & 535), the so-called “must-carry” provisions, which require cable operators to carry programming originating with certain over-the-air television broadcasters whose signals coincide with cable operators’ service areas, and all five cases were consolidated as related cases. Thereafter, the claims in all cases challenging the constitutionality of the must-carry provisions were severed for hearing, as the statute expressly requires, by a three-judge district court convened in accordance with section 23 of the 1992 Cable Act. See Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 810 F.Supp. 1308 (D.D.C.1992). 4 All of the plaintiffs’ claims other than those involving the must-carry provisions are presently before this single-judge district court on the summary judgment motions of each of the plaintiffs; on the cross-motions for summary judgment of the federal defendants; and on the briefs and dispositive motions of the several applicants for intervention and amici.

II.

Starting from the premise of the Must-Carry Opinion —that the 1992 Cable Act is essentially a regulatory measure of economic rather than ideologic import — much of its reasoning is apposite to a decision with respect to the remainder of the Act. Congress undertook to expand and tighten government’s control over that segment of the television market in which the plaintiffs traded, namely the business of delivering video signals to a major portion of the nation’s homes. Congress was largely unconcerned with what was being said with those signals. It was concerned, however, that the plexuses of wires linking video “speakers” and most of the television receivers across the country remain open to transmit a diverse mix of “voices,” not only the messages chosen for delivery by those who owned or controlled the cables.

Several of the provisions of the 1992 Cable Act avowedly inhibit the cable operators and programmers in making full use of the capabilities of their systems to deliver signals to their subscribers. The plaintiffs challenge these provisions largely on the same grounds on which they based their challenge to the must-carry provisions in sections 4 and 5 of the 1992 Act. See Must-Carry Opinion, supra note 4. The Act, in effect, confiscates a portion of those capabilities for use by others. In First Amendment terms — insofar as plaintiffs are deemed to be “speakers,” i.e., purveyors of messages rather than of message-bearing electronic impulses — Congress has deprived them of unlimited choice as to the messages they will deliver, to whom they may deliver them, and the “speakers” for whom they will do so. It is for these reasons, as some cases have held in other contexts, that the cable operators argue that the provisions must be strictly scrutinized.

As the Must-Carry court observed, however, in its opinion rejecting similar challenges to the must-carry provisions, the crucial inquiry for determining the appropriate level of First Amendment scrutiny is not merely whether governmental regulation results in compelling certain speech, fetters the speaker’s discretion in deciding what to say, or favors particular speakers at the expense of others, but is also whether the regulation is, overtly or covertly, content-based; that is, the government is telling the speaker what can or cannot be said. Constraints on speech, even if deriving from an exercise of governmental authority, need be strictly scrutinized only if the government has specified the speaker’s message. See Turner Broadcasting, 819 F.Supp. at 42. Although the provisions at issue here may impose some limit on the autonomy of cable *5 operators to speak only such speech as they would themselves pronounce, most do so only to serve regulatory goals unrelated to content. Accordingly, these other provisions, too, are constitutional, as was the case with Must-Carry, if those goals serve significant governmental interests and do not burden substantially more speech than necessary to serve these interests. Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781, 799, 109 S.Ct. 2746, 2758, 105 L.Ed.2d 661 (1989); United States v. O’Brien, 391 U.S. 367, 377, 88 S.Ct. 1673, 1679, 20 L.Ed.2d 672 (1968). 5

Mandatory Carriage of Public, Educational, and, Governmental (“PEG”) Programming and Leased Access Channels; Rate Regulation; Restrictions on Vertically Integrated Programmers.

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835 F. Supp. 1, 21 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2225, 74 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 98, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12806, 1993 WL 393000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-cablevision-inc-v-united-states-dcd-1993.