McClatchy Broadcasting Co. v. Federal Communications Commission

239 F.2d 19
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedOctober 18, 1956
DocketNo. 12470; No. 12637
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 239 F.2d 19 (McClatchy Broadcasting Co. 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
McClatchy Broadcasting Co. v. Federal Communications Commission, 239 F.2d 19 (D.C. Cir. 1956).

Opinion

WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge.

During a comparative hearing on mutually exclusive applications for a television construction permit filed by Mc-Clatchy Broadcasting Company and Sacramento Telecasters, Inc., the presiding examiner permitted Telecasters, over McClatchy’s objection, to amend its application. The amendment provided for a higher antenna of a different type, making Telecasters’ proposed coverage practically equal to that proposed by Mc-Clatchy. As a result of the amendment the applicants stipulated there would be no substantial difference in coverage between the two proposals from an engineering standpoint, thus removing the coverage issue from the case.1

After the hearing, the examiner’s initial decision found McClatchy would better serve the public interest, but the Commission disagreed. It recognized McClatchy’s outstanding record of public service in the newspaper and radio fields, but considered diversification of control of facilities for the dissemination of fact and opinion to be determinative. On the basis of that holding the Commission issued October 4, 1954, a television construction permit to Telecasters, a newcomer in the communications field without radio or newspaper connections.

McClatchy appealed to this court November 1, 1954. We affirmed. Mc-Clatchy v. Federal Communications Commission, No. 12,470, decided January 27, 1956. 99 U.S.App.D.C. 195, 199, 239 F. 2d 15, 19. The matter is again before us on rehearing. It was a close case, since the evidence showed and the Commission found McClatchy superior in important aspects of the comparison. But, as we said in the opinion, “Although the examiner’s choice of McClatchy as [22]*22superior in all respects except diversification of control is strongly supported by the proof, we cannot find that the Commission’s decision was arbitrary, capricious or unsupported by substantial evidence.” We adhere to that statement and accordingly on the record presented to us in case No. 12,470 again affirm the order on appeal therein.

As that record does not reflect developments in the proceeding before the Commission which took place after the grant to Telecasters was made, those subsequent events were not before us when we considered McClatchy’s appeal from the order of October 4, 1954, and upheld the grant. The developments were these: Telecasters filed with the Commission November 26, 1954, an application for modification of the construction permit which had been issued less than 60 days before. It sought to change its transmitter site from Pine Hill to Logtown, California, and to decrease the height of the antenna. These changes would reduce the coverage of Telecasters’ station 2 below that which it had proposed by amendment during the hearing, which was approximately equal to that proposed by McClatchy. Without a hearing on the application for modification, the Commission granted it December 9, 1954, and publicly announced its action December 14.

January 13,1955, McClatchy petitioned the Commission, under § 405 of the Communications Act as amended, 47 U.S.C.A. § 405, to stay the effectiveness of the modification, and to designate for hearing Telecasters’ application therefor. McClatchy’s petition summarized its points as follows:

“1. The modification of Telecasters’ construction permit was granted on the basis of false representations made to the Commission;
“2. The grant of the above-entitled modification, if allowed to go unchallenged, results in a fraud being practiced on the Commission and McClatchy Broadcasting Company in view of the representations made by Telecasters in the comparative hearing between it and Mc-Clatchy for the original construction permit;
“3. The grant of the above-entitled modification if allowed to go unchallenged will result in a fraud being practiced upon'the people in the area to be served by the station proposed by Telecasters because of the false representations made to these people with regard to the service that will be rendered; and
“4. The grant of the above-entitled modification if allowed to go unchallenged will adversely affect the interests of McClatchy as this modification is directly related to the grant of the original construction permit.”

The petition, which is quite lengthy and detailed, supported the four points with specific allegations and equally detailed opposition was filed by Teleeasters, to. which McClatchy replied.

In the petition, McClatchy referred to circumstances which were not revealed by the respective applications and which were not known to the parties during the hearing. The allegations, therefore, fall within the reservation in the mid-hearing stipulation (see the quotation therefrom in footnote 1, supra, and particularly the. italicized words) subject to which Mc-Clatchy had joined in waiving the right, of cross-examination on the coverage issue and the right to present other evidence thereon. It seems that MeClatchy's allegations were sufficient to destroy the-effect of the waiver, and thus to entitle-it to be heard on the engineering issue-which was allegedly revivified by Telecasters’ application for modification.

The Commission did not afford Mc-Clatchy a hearing. In an opinion adopted March 16,1955, and released two days-later, it held McClatchy had no standing-[23]*23under § 405 of the Act either as licensee of a standard broadcast station at Sacramento or as the unsuccessful applicant for a television broadcast station in Sacramento. With respect to the latter, the Commission said:

“ * * * The proceeding involving McClatchy’s application for a construction permit has been concluded. The time for seeking reconsideration has expired.* McClatchy is no longer an applicant for Channel 10. Standing cannot be based upon a former status. It should be noted that even if the instant modification of Telecasters’ permit were not to be granted, this would not serve to reinstate McClatchy as an applicant for Channel 10 because Telecasters’ original construction permit would still be outstanding. * * * ”
* “An appeal from the Commission’s decision granting the construction permit to Telecasters and denying McClatchy’s application is pending in the U. S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit * * *. This fact does not alter McClatchy’s status. The Commission’s decision has not been stayed. In the event the Commission’s decision is reversed, the basic construction permit will be vacated, and both the McClatchy and Telecasters applications reconsidered. * * *

Thus the Commission attributed such finality to the grant to Telecasters made October 4, 1954, that it considered Mc-Clatchy was thereafter not a party to the proceeding in which the grant was made, and so had no legitimate interest in and could not complain of the modification of the grant or any subsequent event.

The agency decision awarding a construction permit to Telecasters was not stayed, as the Commission points out, and consequently it was effective pending appeal and Telecasters could have commenced construction thereunder by taking a calculated risk as to the result of the appeal. During the pendency of the appeal, McClatchy had no standing to protest against anything done under the unstayed order of October 4, 1954, or to object to any further order which merely implemented or explained the appealed order without changing its essential nature.

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239 F.2d 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclatchy-broadcasting-co-v-federal-communications-commission-cadc-1956.