Frontier Broadcasting Co. v. United States

265 F.2d 353
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 12, 1959
DocketNos. 14395, 14539
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 265 F.2d 353 (Frontier Broadcasting Co. v. United States) 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.

Bluebook
Frontier Broadcasting Co. v. United States, 265 F.2d 353 (D.C. Cir. 1959).

Opinion

WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge.

The Frontier Broadcasting Company, licensee of a television station at Scottsbluff, Nebraska, operating on Channel 10, applied to the Federal Communications Commission for a television construction permit for Channel 13 at Alliance, Nebraska, some 40 miles away. Western Nebraska Television, Inc., applied for a similar permit. The Commission designated the two mutually exclusive applications for a comparative hearing, finally fixed to begin October 1, 1957, which would include an issue as to Western Nebraska’s financial qualifications.1

Early in September, 1957, Frontier asked the Commission’s permission to enlarge its facilities at Scottsbluff so as to more nearly cover the Alliance area and stated that, if such permission were granted, it would not object to the dismissal of its Alliance application.

Frontier filed on September 20, 1957, what it called a “Petition to Intervene” in the Commission proceeding on Western Nebraska’s application for a construction permit at Alliance, should its own application therefor be dismissed on the condition it had suggested. Frontier made factual allegations showing its existing station at Scottsbluff would be subjected to competition from Western Nebraska’s proposed Alliance station,2 and said, “[I]t seeks here an order, if such be necessary, granting it leave to intervene in the above-captioned proceeding.”

The hearing examiner on October 4, 1957, denied Frontier’s petition to intervene, saying that Frontier already occupied the status of an applicant in which it could make the full evidentiary showing it sought to make as an inter-venor; that “there can be no legal or equitable grounds for permitting Frontier to occupy the dual status which it desires,” and that “double participation of the character proposed herein by a party in proceedings of this kind is not authorized by statute or by the Rules of the Commission.”

By an order entered October 10, 1957, the Commission granted Frontier’s application for increased coverage on Channel 10 at Scottsbluff, and at the same time dismissed Frontier’s application for a construction permit on Channel 13 at Alliance. Frontier then filed on October 15, 1957, a second petition to intervene in the Commission proceeding on Western Nebraska’s application for a construction permit at Alliance. It recited that its first petition for intervention had been denied by the hearing examiner; and it claimed that Frontier, as a party in interest based on prospective economic injury, was entitled as of right to intervene in the proceeding on the Western Nebraska application for a construction permit at Alliance, following dismissal of its own application therefor.

On October 24, 1957, the hearing examiner denied Frontier’s second petition to intervene, stating:

“Petitioner herein cannot be found entitled, as a matter of right, to intervene in the proceeding in view of the fact that its request [356]*356was admittedly filed subsequent to the period specified for that purpose in Section 309(b) of the Act, supra,. Although petitioner undoubtedly has alleged sufficient facts to show that it is a party in interest in the proceeding, within the meaning of this section, as interpreted by The Elm City case, it has not established sufficient good cause for delay in filing its request, as required by Section 1.388(d) of the rules. * * * [Petitioner had the option to remain in the hearing in the capacity of a comparative applicant or to dismiss its application and become a party-intervenor. Nothing prevented it from dismissing the Alliance application except its own decision to remain in the hearing until its Scottsbluff application was granted. Thus, the delay in filing an appropriate petition to intervene is here held to have been caused by petitioner’s own decision, which it made at its peril, and was not due to causes beyond its control. * * * ”

The hearing of Western Nebraska’s application for a construction permit at Alliance was resumed October 28, 1957, and proceeded to a conclusion without the presence of Frontier, which offered to participate but was excluded by the hearing examiner’s ruling that it was no longer a party to the proceeding.

By an order of February 3, 1958, the Commission affirmed the hearing examiner’s denial of Frontier’s petitions to intervene, and held that Frontier was not a party to the proceeding after the dismissal of its application on October 10, 1957. Thereupon Frontier petitioned us under § 402(a) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S. C.A. § 402(a), to review that order. The case bears our No. 14,395.

A few days after the foregoing petition for review had been filed, the hearing examiner handed down an initial decision granting Western Nebraska’s application for a construction permit at Alliance. By an order of June 19, 1958, the Commission slightly modified and made immediately effective the hearing examiner’s initial decision, and denied various motions and petitions in which Frontier had sought relief from it. Thereafter Frontier appealed to us from the Commission’s order of June 19, 1958, and the preliminary orders which preceded it. This appeal was taken under § 402(b) of the Act, 47 U.S.C.A. § 402 (b). It is our case No. 14,539, and has been consolidated with No. 14,395.

We need not decide whether the Commission’s order of February 3, 1958, which denied intervention and held Frontier was no longer a party, was appeal-able when the petition to review it — No. 14,395 — was filed. For in case No. 14,-539 the appeal from the final order granting a construction permit to Western Nebraska brings before us for review all interlocutory orders which preceded it, including of course the order attacked by the fii'st petition for review. Decision of the so-called intervention issue in the later case will control the decision of case No. 14,395.3

Under § 309(b), a petition for intervention is the method by which a [357]*357stranger to the record who deems himself a party in interest may present to the Commission his claim to be a party to the proceeding. In the petition he must seasonably show the basis for his interest, thus enabling the Commission to determine whether his allegations show him to be a “party in interest.” If so, he is entitled of right to become a party to the proceeding.4 So, it is a work of supererogation for one who is a party to a proceeding because of his interest as an applicant to seek to intervene merely to acquire the status of a party. Accordingly, the Commission was correct in denying the first petition for intervention insofar as Frontier sought to become a party to the proceeding.

But the first petition to intervene showed Frontier had a basis for interest as a competitor, quite apart from its interest as an applicant. The whole tenor of the pleading indicates that Frontier was setting forth reasons for continuing to be a party, even though it should cease to be an applicant.5 Unfortunately it denominated its pleading merely “Petition to Intervene,” i. e., to become a party, when in fact the pleading was a petition that another basis for interest in being a party be recognized. The confusion thus generated by Frontier doubtless caused the Commission to treat the pleading only as a petition to become

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