Tennessee Television, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, Wbir, Inc., Intervenor
This text of 262 F.2d 28 (Tennessee Television, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, Wbir, 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.
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Three mutually exclusive applications were filed with the Commission for a construction permit for a new television broadcast station on channel 10 in-Knoxville, Tennessee. The applicants were intervenor radio station WBIR, Inc., Scripps-Howard Radio, Inc., and appellant Tennessee Television, Inc. After a comparative hearing in a consolidated proceeding the Commission granted the application of intervenor and denied the others. The merits of this decision are involved in the appeals of Tennessee Television, Inc., in Nos. 13168 and 13905,1 which we treat first. Scripps-Howard, Inc., does not pursue an appeal so the contest as to the validity of the grant of intervenor’s application now lies between appellant on the one hand and intervenor and the Commission on the other.
Both appellant and intervenor were found by the Commission to be legally, technically, and financially qualified. The ■Commission accordingly entered upon a ■detailed consideration of their comparative qualifications, in the course of which it gave preferences to appellant in certain areas and to intervenor in other areas. With respect to still other comparative ■criteria in issue the Commission found neither applicant to be superior to the other.
The principal contention of appellant is that three of the four preferences accorded intervenor — prior performance as broadcast licensee, prior radio and television experience, and program implementation- — ■2 stem from the fact that intervenor and its stockholders are already multiple licensees of the Commission, owning various stations in other locations, and that in permitting these preferences to outweigh those accorded appellant — local ownership, civic participation, diversification of mass media, and diversification of television interests — the Commission virtually disregarded the diversification and anti-monopoly policy of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq.
The contention has a certain theoretical soundness. The public interest in diversification of the media of mass communication cannot be nullified by according to an experienced applicant, around whom there is a concentration of such media, preferences attributable to the experience it possesses because of such concentration. On the other hand, a newcomer, such as appellant, holding the advantage of affording a new and independent medium for the dissemination of programs, cannot rest unduly upon this one advantage; it must still compete in other areas which are of importance to the process of final selection by the Commission. Cf. Massachusetts Bay Telecasters, Inc. v. F. C. C., - U.S.App.D.C. -, 261 F.2d 55. It is in these other areas, considered with the preferences of appellant, that we find reasonableness in the Commission’s decision to award the permit to intervenor. In addition to preferring intervenor on integration of own[31]*31ership with management, n. 2, supra, the Commission, with adequate support in the evidence, also gave a preference to intervenor for more positive correlation between program planning and securing effective cooperation from local groups. There is a basis for considering this a significant weakness in appellant’s case since it is a purely local group and has been accorded a preference on that ground.
The diversification of media of communication that would result were the permit granted to appellant does not on the record so clearly warrant selection of appellant in the public interest as to outweigh other public benefits of the award to intervenor, at least to a degree that requires substitution of our judgment for that of the Commission. The Commission weighed all competing considerations, stating that it was apparent appellant was superior not only with regard to diversification but also in local ownership and civic participation; however, the Commission added,
“[W]e cannot conceive that the ownership by WBIR in Knoxville of a television station can be of such grave concern as to outweigh WBIR’s marked superiority in most other respects.”
This was a conclusion we must recognize as one the Commission could reasonably reach on the record. We find no such neglect of competing and relevant factors as would permit us to disturb the decision under the principles governing our review. The choice of intervenor does not rest simply upon its strength in matters that might be attributable to concentration of media of communication, but in good part upon the relative weakness of appellant in other respects.
The appeal in No. 13507 is from an order of the Commission denying without a hearing appellant’s protest and petition for reconsideration of ex parte action by the Broadcast Bureau of the Commission in granting intervenor’s application for modification of the permit awarded to it in the comparative proceedings. The Commission ruled that appellant had no standing to protest or request reconsideration; that is, that appellant was not a “party in interest” or a “person aggrieved or whose interests are adversely affected” within the meaning of the Communications Act. We think this ruling is correct. To have standing to protest the grant of an application for modification of a permit, or to obtain reconsideration of such a grant, one must be adversely affected or aggrieved by the proposed modification itself.3 The proposed modifications were (1) to change the location of the antenna supporting tower at the transmitter site 173 feet; (2) to increase the antenna height approximately 65 feet; (3) to change the main studio location within the Knoxville city limits; and (4) to change the type of transmitter, antenna, and other minor pieces of technical equipment. It does not appear how appellant is adversely affected or aggrieved by any of these proposals, since they affect no question involved in the decision favorable to in-tervenor in the comparative proceedings.
The case is different from McClatchy Broadcasting Co. v. F. C. C., 99 U.S.App.D.C. 199, 239 F.2d 19, certiorari denied Sacramento Telecasters, Inc. v. McClatchy Broadcasting Co., 353 U.S. 918, 77 S.Ct. 662, 1 L.Ed.2d 665,4 because here, in contrast with the situation there, the proposed modifications do not contemplate any such changes as would make the modified permit a new “grant,” or significantly affect the comparative qualifications of the applicants. The protest proceedings are not concerned with matters that have any impact adverse to [32]*32appellant in respects pertinent to the interest which gave it standing, namely, the interest of an applicant for the permit. That interest does not attach to the protest proceedings so long as the comparative qualifications of the applicants are not affected by the modifications which are the subject of the protest.5
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
262 F.2d 28, 104 U.S. App. D.C. 316, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 3389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-television-inc-v-federal-communications-commission-wbir-cadc-1958.