Plains Radio Broadcasting Co. v. Federal Communications Commission

175 F.2d 359, 85 U.S. App. D.C. 48, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2371
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 1949
Docket9973
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 175 F.2d 359 (Plains Radio 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
Plains Radio Broadcasting Co. v. Federal Communications Commission, 175 F.2d 359, 85 U.S. App. D.C. 48, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2371 (D.C. Cir. 1949).

Opinion

PRETTYMAN, Circuit Judge.

Appellant and intervenor filed mutually exclusive applications for construction permits for a radio station at Lubbock, Texas. The applications were consolidated for a comparative hearing and decision. The Commission granted intervenor a permit, upon a condition.

In Johnston Broadcasting Co. v. Federal Communications Comm’n, 175 F.2d 351 and Easton Publishing Co. v. Federal Communications Comm’n, 175 F.2d 344 decided today, we have stated the essentials to valid conclusions in radio cases which involve comparative determinations. We need not repeat those requirements here.

Principally, appellant Plains Radio Broadcasting Company (which we shall hereinafter call “Plains”) says that the decision of the Commission is invalid as arbitrary, without sufficient findings, and without substantial evidence in support, in these respects: (1) The Commission gran *361 ted intervenor a permit for a station with 5 kw. power, whereas that application was for a 1 kw. station only and all intervenor’s evidence related to the less powerful operation and none to the greater. (2) The Commission evaluated intervenor’s program proposal as superior to that of appellant, although, in fact, 62yk per cent of intervenor’s proposal was impossible of accomplishment, as the Commission knew and recognized. (3) The Commission weighed against appellant the fact that it owned and operated a newspaper in Lubbock, an illegal discrimination and also one imposed without comparative consideration with intervenor. (4) The Commission gave weight against appellant to an alleged overlap, contrary to its established rules on that subject and without notice of its intention to consider that feature of appellant’s operation.

Intervenor Lubbock County Broadcasting Company (which we shall refer to hereinafter as “Lubbock”) applied for a permit for a station of 1 kw. power. The notice of hearing specifying the issues, referred to its “proposed station”. Its evidence related to construction and operation at 1 kw. The Commission, after considering the area and the engineering technicalities involved, determined that in the public interest a grant should be made for S kw. operation in daytime and 1 kw. at night. It awarded the permit to Lubbock, but upon condition that the per-mittee file an application for “modification of permit” specifying 5 kw. daytime power.

Appellant says that the Commission is confined by the statute 1 and its Regulations 2 to consideration of the application as made out, cither originally or upon amendment, by the applicant; that it could not find Lubbock qualified to construct and operate at 5 kw. upon evidence which related solely to a station of 1 kw. power; and that it could not decide issues not framed or heard. Generally speaking, we agree with those contentions. But the Commission contends that it is not so rigidly confined as appellant urges, that these are not “inflexible limitations”, and that the Commission can grant facilities which are “reasonably related” to those requested. With that contention we agree, if “reasonably related” be understood to mean within the ambit of the issues and the evidence. 3

Our difficulty is that we cannot tell from anything brought to our attention in this record whether operation at 1 kw. is reasonably related to operation at 5 kw. Neither evidence nor findings shed any light upon that problem, so far as we can ascertain. Lubbock directed its evidence to 1 kw. operation. Plains directed its to 5 kw. The Commission did not make the award to Lubbock on its original application but required it to file a post-decision amendment, apparently reflecting the thought that the grant did not fall within the scope of the terms of the application as filed and heard. We are struck by the difference between the estimated costs of construction of the two applicants. Lubbock estimated the cost of its entire new station, including land, to be $36,300. Appellant Plains estimated the cost of enlarging its present station to be $144,400. Whether this disparity has any relation to the fact that Lubbock’s proposed station was 1 kw. power whereas Plains’s improved station was to be 5 kw. power, we do not know.

We do not think that we can guess on this point. If the Commission’s authority is restricted, as it says, to facilities “reasonably related” to those applied for, it should make findings to bring its conclusion within its authority. And it must receive evidence upon which to base those findings.

We are not impressed by the Commission’s argument that Plains is thwarted by its own inconsistency, in that its application was _ for 5 kw. operation day and night whereas the grant is to be for only 1 kw. at night. It may well be that 1 kw. operation for part of the time on a 5 kw. station is a reasonable rclation *362 ship, whereas a 5 kw. operation on a 1 kw. station is an impossibility. We know no more on that proposition than we know on the one first above-discussed, as there are no evidence and no findings. It is, however, common knowledge that electrical devices operate reasonably enough at less than capacity but do not, and cannot, operate at more than capacity. Thus, evidence of costs and ability to .operate at 5 kw. might well cover part-time operation at 1 kw., whereas costs and capacity of a 1 kw. station might be immaterial to a 5 kw. operation.

The second point concerns the evaluation of the proposed programs. The Commission has contended in this court, and has been sustained in the contention, 4 that in a comparative determination the relative merits of program proposals are an important, if not vital, feature of measurement in the public interest. In the case at bar, the Commission found as a fact that Lubbock’s “program proposal is based upon a Mutual Broadcasting System affiliation.” Upon that basis, it found the percentages of time which would be devoted to the various sorts of broadcasts — commercial, network and local live talent; and the types of programs —entertainment, educational, religious, etc.

In the oral argument before it and again upon the petition for rehearing, the Commission’s attention was drawn to the fact that an affiliation between Lubbock and the Mutual System was most unlikely, because Mutual had signed a contract with another •station in' the town of Lubbock. In its Memorandum Opinion and Order upon the rehearing, the Commission said:

“At the time of the hearing, Lubbock proposed an affiliation with Mutual Broadcasting System, and based its program plans on such an affiliation. Despite the fact that this network now has an affiliation with Station KCBD 'in Lubbock, and that an affiliation with Lubbock would probably not be made, we believe that the information which the record contains with respect to the type of programming this applicant proposes, indicates that it will present a well rounded and balanced program service.

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Related

Harrell v. Federal Communications Commission
267 F.2d 629 (D.C. Circuit, 1959)

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175 F.2d 359, 85 U.S. App. D.C. 48, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plains-radio-broadcasting-co-v-federal-communications-commission-cadc-1949.