Martinsville Cable, Inc. v. Time Warner N.Y. Cable, LLC

445 F. Supp. 2d 668, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59905, 2006 WL 2460452
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedAugust 24, 2006
DocketCivil Action 4:06cv033
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 445 F. Supp. 2d 668 (Martinsville Cable, Inc. v. Time Warner N.Y. Cable, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martinsville Cable, Inc. v. Time Warner N.Y. Cable, LLC, 445 F. Supp. 2d 668, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59905, 2006 WL 2460452 (W.D. Va. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

URBANSKI, United States Magistrate Judge.

This case concerns the ability of Mar-tinsville Cable, Inc. (“Martinsville Cable”) to exercise a right to match an offer to purchase the assets of Multi-Channel T.V. Cable Company, d/b/a Adelphia Cable Communications (“Adelphia”), which has provided cable television service in the City of Martinsville and Henry County pursuant to certain franchise agreements and ordinances since 1998.

This matter is before the court on Mar-tinsville Cable’s motion for partial summary judgment. Martinsville Cable seeks a declaration that the sale and transfer of the Adelphia cable television assets to Time Warner Cable, Inc. (“Time Warner”), and then to Comcast Corporation (“Com-cast”), pursuant to the Asset Purchase and Exchange Agreements entered into by the parties, is subject to Martinsville Cable’s right to match the offer to purchase made by Comcast. This right to match is set forth in ordinances adopted by Henry County and the City of Martinsville at the time of the execution of the franchise agreements with Adelphia. There are no disputed issues of material fact relevant to this motion. Rather, defendants Time Warner and Comcast challenge the legal import of Martinsville Cable’s claimed right to match the offer to purchase. The issues raised in this motion have been fully briefed and were argued on July 17, 2006. Following argument, the parties submitted additional briefing and evidence, and Time Warner and Comcast filed their own joint motion for summary judgment on the same legal issues.

*670 For the reasons summarized on the following pages and explained more fully in the opinion below, the undersigned denies plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment and enters summary judgment in favor of defendants.

I.

Plaintiff Martinsville Cable is a Virginia corporation incorporated in early 2006. At the time of its incorporation, its directors were the Mayor, Vice Mayor and City Manager of the City of Martinsville. Plaintiffs only asset is an assignment by the City of its right to match the offer to purchase the Adelphia cable television assets. Despite its separate corporate existence, it is clear that Martinsville Cable is nothing more than a conduit for the City to own and operate these assets.

Under Virginia law, Henry County may neither own nor operate the Adelphia cable television assets. Va.Code Ann. § 15.2-2108.3. 1 The City of Martinsville, however, may own or operate the assets provided it complies with certain requirements, including holding a preliminary public hearing, commissioning a feasibility study, and providing for public notice and a referendum. Va.Code Ann. §§ 15.2-2108.4-2108.8. In this case, the City of Martinsville made the decision to match the offer to purchase the Adelphia cable television assets without first holding the requisite preliminary public hearing. See Va.Code Ann. § 15.2-2108.5. Likewise, the City has failed to take any of the other steps required for it to own or operate a cable television facility. Without complying with these legal requirements, the City of Martinsville may not lawfully own or operate the Adelphia cable television assets. Under the express language of the statute, these strictures apply to both direct and indirect involvement in cable television. Thus, the City may not own or operate the Adelphia television cable assets indirectly through its thinly veiled alter ego, Martinsville Cable.

The City of Martinsville contends that it is exempt from the requirements of the recently enacted Municipal Cable Law under a grandfather clause applicable to municipalities which had installed a cable television headend 2 prior to the law’s enactment. See Va.Code Ann. § 56-265.4:4(E). While it is undisputed that the City of Martinsville itself had not installed such a headend, the City contends that all it needed to do to avail itself of this exception was to contract with Adelphia for headend installation. The City’s position that it is exempt from the public notice and referendum requirements of the Municipal Cable Law is inconsistent with the plain language of the statute. The exception to the Municipal Cable Law’s requirements for ownership and operation of a cable system applies only to cities that had installed a cable headend prior to the law’s enactment; the City of Martinsville did not install a headend. Adopting a broad exception as urged by the City of Martins-ville would, in effect, allow this exception to swallow the rule.

Further, even if the City’s claimed right to match the offer to purchase 3 had legal *671 validity, the City did not timely or properly exercise its right to match. Rather, the City, while providing notice by counsel that it intended to exercise its right to match in a conceded effort to exercise “leverage” over the transaction between Adelphia, Time Warner and Comcast, never actually matched Comcast’s offer. Nor is there any indication that it was either capable of matching the offer or willing to do so, as Martinsville Cable could not have matched the like-kind exchange offered by Comcast, did not meet the transaction’s closing deadline, and disagreed that the assets had the value assigned to them in the Time Warner/Comcast deal.

Time Warner and Comcast argue that by operation of federal law, the City and the County consented to the transfer of the assets to Time Warner and Comcast because they did not timely object to an application to the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC Form 394”) for transfer of those assets. While Henry County Board of Supervisors’ action on August 5, 2005 operated as a timely objection to the transfer, there are no Martinsville City Council minutes from the Council’s meeting of the same date that reflect action taken to timely deny the FCC Form 394s. Despite the absence of any minutes reflecting such formal action, several members of City Council have averred that denial was a “consequence of the City Council’s decision to exercise the Purchase Rights.” Declarations of James W. Clark, Joseph R. Cobbe and J. Ronald Ferrill at ¶ 4 (Docket Nos. 70, 72 and 73). Counsel for the City later wrote Adelphia on October 7, 2005 regarding its intent to deny the application.

Even if the City Council’s actions at the August 5, 2005 meeting and in the October 7, 2005 letter from counsel are considered sufficient to constitute denial of the FCC Form 394 application, it is clear that neither the City nor County complied with the letter or spirit of their own cable television ordinances in denying the application. The ordinances require the governing bodies to consider the legal, financial, technical or other qualifications of the proposed transferee, the compliance of the transferring cable operator with the Franchise Agreement and ordinance, and whether operation by the transferee would adversely affect cable services to subscribers, or otherwise be contrary to the public interest. Rather than meet the requirements of these ordinances, Martinsville Cable, and thus the City, had its own agenda, and at the July 17, 2006 hearing on its motion, Martinsville Cable made its position perfectly clear. Martinsville Cable has injected itself into this asset transfer to obtain “leverage” over the parties to the transaction.

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Related

In Re Adelphia Communications Corp.
368 B.R. 348 (S.D. New York, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
445 F. Supp. 2d 668, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59905, 2006 WL 2460452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinsville-cable-inc-v-time-warner-ny-cable-llc-vawd-2006.