H & B Communications Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, Prescott Tv Booster Club, Inc., Intervenor

420 F.2d 638, 17 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 2069, 137 U.S. App. D.C. 70, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 10061
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1969
Docket22685
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 420 F.2d 638 (H & B Communications Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, Prescott Tv Booster Club, Inc., Intervenor) 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
H & B Communications Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, Prescott Tv Booster Club, Inc., Intervenor, 420 F.2d 638, 17 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 2069, 137 U.S. App. D.C. 70, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 10061 (D.C. Cir. 1969).

Opinions

FAHY, Senior Circuit Judge:

H & B Communications Corporation, appellant, is the owner and operator of a CATV system serving Prescott, Arizona. Prescott T.V. Booster Club, Inc., intervenor, applied to the Commission for a construction permit for a new VHF translator station, on output channel 2 in Prescott. H & B petitioned the Commission to deny Booster’s application or designate it for a hearing, but the Commission denied the petition and granted the application in an Opinion and Order of December 26, 1968. H & B appeals pursuant to Section 402(b) (6), urging that a hearing should have been conducted to determine the extent to which interference from the proposed translator could be eliminated. We remand the case to the Commission for such a hearing and a re-evaluation of the ultimate issue of the public interest to be considered in light of the hearing.

Translators and CATVs are both designed to supplement regular television broadcasting in small communities where direct reception is either weak or nonexistent. The translator receives television signals from a distant location on its original broadcast channel, converts to another television channel, and then amplifies and transmits to the general public.1 On the other hand, the CATV system, after receiving distant signals by means of an antenna, transmits programs through a wire or cable connected to the sets of individual subscribing members who pay for the service, and to no others.2

H & B’s CATV system presently cables the signals of five Phoenix, Arizona television stations to its subscribers. Booster is licensed to operate four translator stations and rebroadcasts four of the five stations carried by the CATV system. Booster now proposes to transmit the signals of the fifth Phoenix station, causing H & B to object on the grounds that the existing translators have caused interference with CATV reception and that the approval of the proposed fifth translator station would aggravate this situation, inconsistently with the public interest.

In granting the application without a hearing, the Commission acknowledged H & B’s allegations of interference, but concluded that under the Commission’s rules CATV is not entitled to protection. The Commission explained that this CATV system serves only 2,000 homes in comparison with approximately 5,000 homes which receive translator broadcasts and that the applicant is a non[640]*640profit organization seeking to rebroad-east an educational television station on a noncommercial basis. The Commission’s opinion also observed that H & B’s CATV system has been operating successfully despite present interference and, if necessary, is capable of taking corrective measures.

H & B concedes that the Commission’s rules do not entitle a CATV system to absolute protection against translator interference but contends that a finding by the Commission that the operation of a fifth VHF translator will be in the public interest can only be made after a proper consideration of the impairment of the television services made available to its CATV subscribers. It is claimed that such a determination requires a hearing to resolve the issue of H & B’s ability to eliminate the anticipated interference.

We find in the record before the Commission a conflict on the question whether the interference with the CATV system, which would be caused by the additional Booster translator, could be prevented or significantly reduced. If the interference issue is material to the ultimate issue of the public interest, convenience, and necessity, a hearing accordingly would be required. Assuming materiality for the moment, we first describe the claimed interference and the conflict about it.

According to H & B the operation of the existing translators causes two types of interferences to CATV reception. One type results from the use of channels 4 and 6 by both Booster and H & B, causing translator signals to radiate directly into the tuners of the receiving sets of individual CATV subscribers. H & B noted its limited success in eliminating this home interference through the installation of transformers in the sets of individual subscribers. The second type of interference is claimed to be the product of Booster’s transmission of signals on channels 4, 6 and 7 adjacent to the Phoenix channels 3, 5, and 8 carried by the CATV. Attempts to eliminate this interference through the use of adjacent channel traps on off-the-air antennas and the processing of signals through a Conrac demodulator have also been ineffective according to H & B. Even with such devices, H & B claims that the traps create a degradation of CATV signals and the interference continues to exist at least two days a month. The effect of authorizing Booster to translate signals on channel 2, argues H & B, will be to create interference to the CATV subscriber’s reception on cable channel 2, previously the only channel free from any interference, and an aggravation of the interference to the off-the-air reception of the adjacent channel 3, which is already subject to interference from the translator’s output channel 4.

In response to H & B’s petition before the Commission Booster suggested that the home reception interference could be solved by using grounded, shielded wires connected to each receiving set. It further contended that adjacent channel interference could be solved by more effective adjustment of the trapping devices of the kind which Booster has installed. To meet these contentions H & B filed a reply brief explaining that it has in fact attempted to use the shielded cable to reduce home interference but that such a device has been ineffective and a safety hazard. It also contested Booster’s claim that different trap equipment could be more effectively utilized by pointing out that H & B transmits color signals which would be distorted by the trap equipment suggested by Booster. H & B concluded that,

the measures Booster asserts will resolve the interference questions are insufficient for that purpose, or at a minimum * * * the differences between the factual allegations of H & B and Booster cannot be resolved without a hearing.

At this point in the proceedings, the Commission suggested to both parties the possibility of resolving the interference [641]*641problem through the use of another VHF channel by Booster, but both H & B and Booster agreed that this proposal was not satisfactory. In replying to the Commission, Booster made additional suggestions to H & B for eliminating the interference, which H & B in its response to the Commission refuted.

The Commission, with the record as thus set forth, rendered its decision without any reference to the conflict on possible solutions to the interference problem. Instead the Commission concluded that the interference could be eliminated either by relocating the head end of the CATV system or through the use of microwave relay stations. In its Motion to Stay the Commission order, H & B argued that the Commission’s decision suggested no remedies to the interference in home reception and that its resolution of the adjacent channel interference issue was unsupported by facts presented to the Commission, was inadequate and too costly.

From the foregoing it seems clear that the record before the Commission did not furnish the basis for a disposi-tive decision as to the extent to which interference could be mitigated or eliminated.

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420 F.2d 638, 17 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 2069, 137 U.S. App. D.C. 70, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 10061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-b-communications-corporation-v-federal-communications-commission-cadc-1969.