Harbenito Broadcasting Co., Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission. L. B. Wilson, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission

218 F.2d 28
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedSeptember 27, 1954
Docket11985_1
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 218 F.2d 28 (Harbenito Broadcasting Co., Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission. L. B. Wilson, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission) 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
Harbenito Broadcasting Co., Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission. L. B. Wilson, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, 218 F.2d 28 (D.C. Cir. 1954).

Opinion

PRETTYMAN, Circuit Judge.

These are two appeals 1 from an order of the Federal Communications Commission.

Harbenito Broadcasting Company, Inc., is assignee of a construction permit granted one Hofheinz. Its station (KS OX) is at Harlingen, Texas. Hofheinz was granted a construction permit for a standard broadcast station. The dispute centers about daytime operation. Hofheinz’s original permit authorized him to construct for daytime operation at 50 kilowatts power with directional antenna. Upon application the permit was modified to permit non-directional daytime operation. The station was constructed, and Hofheinz began program tests. He later applied for his license for regular operation.

L. B. Wilson, Inc., is the licensee of a station (WCKY) at Cincinnati, Ohio. It operates on the same frequency as does Hofheinz and at 50 kilowatts power non-directional. It claims that Hof-heinz’s operation under the modified grant (non-directional daytime) created objectionable interference within its (Wilson’s) normally protected contour. Therefore, it says that the modification of Hofheinz’s grant was a modification of Wilson’s license. 2 It asserted its right to a hearing upon such modification.

Procedurally Wilson asserted its rights by filing a petition for reconsideration of the modification of Hofheinz’s grant, requesting revocation of Hofheinz’s program test authority, and a petition requesting that Hofheinz’s application for license be set down for hearing. Hof-heinz duly opposed all these moves. The Commission set all the pleadings down for oral argument, and oral argument before the full Commission was held.

Wilson’s claim of objectionable interference within its normally protected contour was on account of alleged daytime skywave. At this frequency propagation of radio signals consists of groundwave and skywave. The ground-wave is conducted over the earth’s surface, depending upon the electrical conductivity characteristics of the particular soil. The skywave travels through the sky and is refracted back to earth *30 by an imperfectly reflecting medium called the ionosphere. As is generally known, groundwave transmission is more restricted in its 'coverage but is of a steadier nature than skywave transmission. During daytime hours useful and reliable broadcast service is rendered solely by the groundwave signal. During the daytime skywave is spasmodic and generally of low intensity and is not relied on to render a broadcast service. Although a small portion of the signal may be refracted to earth, it dissipates almost entirely into the atmosphere. During nighttime, however, because of more extensive and reliable refraction, the skywave assumes relatively more reliable characteristics and greater intensity. Its existence during those hours has long been recognized by the industry and the Commission’s rules and standards. These rules have for years afforded protection against nighttime skywave interference.

Wilson’s problem arises out of the fact that there is not an abrupt change between the low daytime and high nighttime intensity of the skywave. There is a period of transition, which starts sometime before sunset and continues until sometime thereafter (approximately one hour and forty minutes), during which period skywave intensity gradually increases. A similar transition period of decrease occurs before and after sunrise. Wilson’s complaint concerns skywave interference during these transition periods.

The Commission tells us that under the system of allocation now in effect it deliberately determined not to provide protection against daytime skywave; that is the precise point of conflict between the Commission and Wilson. But certainly it did not devise any special rules of protection for the periods of transition. And, however all that may be, recognizing the need for a re-evaluation of the problem, the Commission in 1947 adopted a Notice of Proposed Rule Making known as the Daytime Sky-wave case. 3 That proceeding is still pending before the Commission.

In the case at bar, after the oral argument, the Commission took several steps. It dismissed Wilson’s protests and petitions, but it modified Hofheinz’s program test authority so as to allow operation of the station with directional antenna daytime in conformity with the prior construction permit. This action eliminated the operation of the station upon non-directional antenna daytime. The Commission separated the Daytime Sky-wave case from the Clear Channel case and set it for immediate disposition. It deferred consideration of Harbenito’s application for license pending the outcome of the Daytime Skywave case.

In respect to Wilson the Commission took the position that the terms of the license were set by existing rules and regulations, that those rules and regulations did not purport to provide protection against daytime skywave interference, and that therefore Wilson’s protests and petitions rested upon a premise which was erroneous upon its face as a matter of law. These appeals followed. The Commission says that under the applicable cases 4 Wilson’s protests and petitions could be rejected after oral argument upon the legal point and without an evidentiary hearing, by analogy as though upon demurrer or motion to dismiss. Wilson says that the case of L. B. Wilson, Inc. v. Federal Communications Comm. 5 is still the law and requires that it be afforded a full evidentiary hearing.

Hofheinz (i. e., Harbenito) says that the notice given by the Commission of the proposed oral argument contained *31 no intimation that his (Hofheinz’s) construction permit might be modified or that that question was involved, and that the statute 6 requires that he be given notice in writing, showing the grounds, of such proposed action. He also says the Commission violated Section 319(c) of the Communications Act. 7

First, considering Wilson’s appeal, we agree that the decision and opinion in L. B. Wilson, Inc. v. Federal Communications Comm., supra, are still good law in so far as pertinent here; they were not modified, in respects here pertinent, by the subsequent WJR cases 8 either in the Supreme Court or in this court. This court was unanimous in the view that, if a petition for reconsideration of a construction permit states facts which raise a substantial question as to objectionable interference with an existing license, the petitioner is entitled to a hearing. The difficulty concerns the type of hearing to which such a petitioner is entitled. This court held that the Commission could, as a first step, test the validity of the petition as if upon demurrer and, after oral argument, rule upon its sufficiency as a matter of law assuming its allegations to be correct. That view was adhered to in the subsequent WJR cases. So we must conclude that in the case at bar the Commission could in an initial procedural step subject Wilson’s claims to a test as a matter of law upon an oral argument.

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Bluebook (online)
218 F.2d 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harbenito-broadcasting-co-inc-v-federal-communications-commission-l-cadc-1954.