Philco Corporation (Philco), a Pennsylvania Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, National Broadcasting Company, Inc., Intervenor

293 F.2d 864, 110 U.S. App. D.C. 387, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4059, 1961 Trade Cas. (CCH) 70,063
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1961
Docket15891_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 293 F.2d 864 (Philco Corporation (Philco), a Pennsylvania Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, National Broadcasting Company, 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
Philco Corporation (Philco), a Pennsylvania Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, National Broadcasting Company, Inc., Intervenor, 293 F.2d 864, 110 U.S. App. D.C. 387, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4059, 1961 Trade Cas. (CCH) 70,063 (D.C. Cir. 1961).

Opinion

*866 EDGERTON, Circuit Judge.

Without a hearing, the Federal Communications Commission granted National Broadcasting Company’s (NBC) application for renewal of its broadcasting license for station WRCV-TV in Philadelphia. Philco Corporation, which manufactures various kinds of equipment in competition with NBC’s parent, Radio Corporation of America (RCA), protested the grant. Philco charged that renewal of NBC’s license was contrary to the public interest and asked for an evidentiary hearing. The Commission dismissed the protest, after oral argument but without an evidentiary hearing, and Philco appeals. 1 We think the Commission should have held the hearing.

Philco’s protest attacks NBC’s character qualifications. It traces what it calls the “consistent course towards monopoly” of NBC’s parent, RCA. It charges that NBC affords RCA “a vast amount of preferential publicity” not available to Philco or other competitors of RCA and so is “directly instrumental in expanding the adverse effects of RCA’s [monopoly] practices”. It includes a digest of Congressional committee reports which it says “raise the gravest questions as to the propriety of a number of NBC’s practices.” It describes a number of pending antitrust suits against NBC and RCA.

Section 309(c) of the Federal Communications Act made “any instrument of authorization” granted without a hearing subject to protest for thirty days. It did not require an evidentiary hearing on the protest unless it “specifies] with particularity the facts relied upon by the protestant as showing that the grant was improperly made or would otherwise not be in the public interest.” Even if the protest meets that test, no evidentiary hearing is required if “the Commission, after affording protestant an opportunity for oral argument, finds, for reasons set forth in the decision, that, even if the facts alleged were to be proven, no grounds for setting aside the grant are presented.” 47 U.S.C. § 309(c).

The Commission found that Philco’s review of RCA’s past practices, “cannot be deemed to show a course toward monopoly. * * * These matters are not new to the Commission. Philco merely is reiterating matters long known to us, some of which have been disposed of by official Commission action and others which we have concluded do not warrant Commission action. The great bulk of such matters occurred from one to three decades ago and protestant has demonstrated nothing to warrant their consideration again at this late date.” 2 We think it was error to divorce the alleged background from Philco’s allegations of current monopolistic and other improper conduct. Whether or not the background alone required a hearing, the charges of new misconduct gave it new significance. The Commission is not foreclosed by its former action or inaction. Wallace Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board, 323 U.S. 248, 65 S.Ct. 238, 89 L.Ed. 216, illustrates the principle. The Court said: “the Board * * ordinarily will respect the terms of a settlement agreement approved by it. It has consistently gone behind such agreements, however, where subsequent events have demonstrated that efforts at adjustment have failed to accomplish their purpose, or where there has been a subsequent unfair labor practice.” 323 U.S. at page 254, 65 S.Ct. at page 241.

*867 In the belief that it concerned only Philco’s standing to protest, the Commission failed to consider Philco’s charge that NBC gave preferential publicity to RCA: We think this also was error. In connection with Philco’s other allegations, unfair or harmful competition might be found to show that NBC lacks the character qualifications for a license. 3 The statement in the protest that the preferential publicity is “instrumental in expanding the adverse effects of RCA’s [monopoly] practices” links the publicity charge to character.

The Commission found other charges of current improper conduct insufficient because Philco “failed to adopt as its own and offer to prove” either the charges in the antitrust suits or the practices described by the Congressional committees. But § 309(c) of the Act does not require formal offers of proof. We think it assumes that one who protests thereby offers to prove his charges. It provides that “with respect to issues resulting from facts set forth in the protest and not adopted or specified by the Commission, on its own motion, both the burden of proceeding with the introduction of evidence and the burden of proof shall be upon the protestant.” 4

We think the protest alleges present misconduct with the particularity the statute requires. It says NBC gives RCA “preferential publicity” in that NBC broadcast stations (1) repeatedly remind the public that it is receiving “a service of RCA” and that RCA is “the pioneer and developer of compatible color”, (2) carry “news” stories publicizing RCA “which other news agencies do not find justified by their news value”, and (3) incorporate RC and RCA into their call letters; also because “such programs as ‘Today’ emphasize, when that is the fact, that their place or origin is in the ‘RCA Exhibition Hall’ where RCA products are always on display.” The protest says the Congressional committee reports disclose “features of NBC’s operations” which include the following: “Requiring advertisers to order all of the NBC-owned television stations plus certain favored affiliated stations * * * ”; “Retaining under its contracts the power to control affiliated stations’ time and substitute its decision as to programming for that of the licensee in the latter’s own community * * “giving affiliated stations first call on network programs in their communities * * ”; discriminating “among affiliates in the compensation paid for carrying its programs and among advertisers in the rates it charges them”; and maintaining “exclusive arrangements with sources of foreign news film.” Philco’s summary of the antitrust complaints is phrased more generally but includes charges that RCA and/or NBC conspired to monopolize radio and television research, patents and patent licensing; production, distribution and use of musical compositions through Broadcast Music, Inc.; and exhibition of a television program “Fashion Show”. 5

A protestant need not plead his evidence. We are not “to measure the requirement of Section 309(c) by the technicalities of pleading formerly applicable in civil litigation. What is required is merely an articulated statement *868 of some fact or situation which would tend to show, if established at a hearing, that the grant of the license contravened public interest, convenience and necessity, * * 6 Federal Broadcasting System v. Federal Communications Commission, 96 U.S.App.D.C. 260, 263, 225 F.2d 560, 563.

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293 F.2d 864, 110 U.S. App. D.C. 387, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 4059, 1961 Trade Cas. (CCH) 70,063, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philco-corporation-philco-a-pennsylvania-corporation-v-federal-cadc-1961.