Wilton E. Hall and Greenville, Television Company v. Federal Communications Commission, Spartan Radiocasting Company, Intervenor

237 F.2d 567
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedOctober 22, 1956
Docket13231_1
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 237 F.2d 567 (Wilton E. Hall and Greenville, Television Company v. Federal Communications Commission, Spartan Radiocasting Company, 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
Wilton E. Hall and Greenville, Television Company v. Federal Communications Commission, Spartan Radiocasting Company, Intervenor, 237 F.2d 567 (D.C. Cir. 1956).

Opinion

BAZELON, Circuit Judge.

Appellants protested a Federal Communications Commission order of April 30, 1954, granting intervenor a modification of its permit to construct and operate a television station on Channel 7, assigned to Spartanburg, South Carolina. 1 ' Those protests were denied by the Commission without a hearing, upon the ground that appellants did not appear to be “parties in interest,” but we reversed that action and remanded the cause to-the Commission for hearing under § 309 (e) of the Communications Act. 2 Greenville Television Co. v. Federal Communi *571 cations Comm., 1955, 95 U.S.App.D.C. 314, 221 F.2d 870. On March 9,1956, after hearing, the Commission affirmed its grant of the modification permit. This appeal followed.

For introductory purposes the facts are sufficiently stated in our earlier opinion. Such additional facts as may be relevant will be detailed at appropriate parts ■of this opinion.

I. The Propagation Curves

We first consider the last of the issues stipulated by the parties: “Whether the Commission made proper findings, based upon evidence of record, to support a determination that public interest, convenience and necessity would be served by a modification of the original construction permit granted to Intervenor.”

The Commission and intervenor, in stipulating this issue, reserved the right to “raise jurisdictional questions” with respect to it. The Commission does not appear to have exercised its reserved right. But the intervenor has, by contending that the issue was not asserted as a ground of protest and that, moreover, there was no need for the Commission to make a public interest determination in this proceeding. We dispose of this jurisdictional matter before discussing the merits of the issue.

The modification permit was granted without a hearing under § 309(a) of the Communications Act, which provides: “If upon examination of [an] application * * * the Commission shall find that public interest, convenience, and necessity would be served by the granting thereof, it shall grant such application.” Absent protest under § 309(c), the ex parte determination of public interest thus made by the Commission would support the grant. Nor does it follow that, by entertaining a protest and holding a hearing under § 309(c), the Commission necessarily vitiates its earlier ex parte determination that the grant of an application would serve the public interest. An application is not subjected to all the tests of a comparative proceeding merely because its grant has been protested. But, neither is the earlier public interest determination conclusive. If it appears, upon the hearing held under § 309(c), that the earlier ex parte grant was improvident, because it would not serve the public interest, the permit should be cancelled. That the particular respect in which the grant offends may not have been alleged as one of the specific grounds of the protest does not preclude this result. The purpose of the statute is to search out the public interest. We said in Clarksburg Publishing Co. v. Federal Communications Comm., 1955, 96 U.S.App.D.C. 211, 215, 225 F.2d 511, 515:

“The statute contemplates that, in appropriate eases, the Commission’s inquiry will extend beyond matters alleged in the protest in order to reach any issue which may be relevant in determining the legality of the challenged grant. Clearly, then, the inquiry cannot be limited to the facts alleged in the protest where the Commission has reason to believe, either from the protest or its own files, that a full evidentiary hearing may develop other relevant information not in the possession of the protestant.”

A fortiori, where the information relevant to the public interest has already been disclosed by the evidentiary hearing, the Commission’s “inquiry cannot be limited to the facts alleged in the protest.” So, if it appears upon the record of the § 309(c) proceeding that the public loses rather than gains from the modification of intervenor’s construction permit, the Commission must reckon with that circumstance even if it was not alleged in the protests.

We are thus brought to the merits of the issue and a consideration of the engineering evidence which looms so large in this case. Appellants sought to prove to the Commission that the modification violated § 307(b) of the Act providing for “fair, efficient and equitable” distribution of service among communi *572 ties and § 3.607 3 of the Commission’s Rules governing availability of channels from the Table of Assignments promulgated in the Commission’s Sixth Report and Order. 4 In short they sought to establish that the modification made intervenor’s station a Greenville station rather than a Spartanburg station. In this they failed, 5 but they did prove, if their evidence is acceptable, that the modification would result in a diminution of the signal to the Spartanburg area, thus eliminating service to some areas and some people and down-grading service to those who will continue to receive the signal. That such a curtailment of service is not in the public interest is axiomatic. Whether or not it may be off-set by concomitant factors is something the Commission should consider. 6 For example, the Commission concluded that interven- or’s move to Paris Mountain was made in order to obtain a network affiliation with the Columbia Broadcasting System. Had the Commission concluded from the engineering evidence that the move would down-grade service to the Spartanburg community, it could then have considered whether the value to the community of a network affiliation outweighed the curtailment of coverage, whether a network other than CBS might be available without a change, and whether a CBS affiliation necessitated lowering both power and antenna height, as well as relocating the transmitter. Since, however, the Commission repudiated the conclusion of service curtailment which would follow from an acceptance of the engineering evidence and, therefore, gave no consideration to possible compensating factors, we confine ourselves to the engineering evidence and what follows therefrom.

The modification permit authorized intervenor to construct its transmitter slightly farther from Spartanburg and much closer to Greenville and Anderson than originally authorized by the construction permit. It also provided for a considerably lower tower and considerably less power. 7

The Commission found “the pertinent effects of the change” were (1) to reduce the station’s minimum signal over Spartanburg from 95 dbu to 85 dbu; (2) to reduce the percentage of the population of the Spartanburg trading area which would receive Grade A

Related

WITN-TV, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission
849 F.2d 1521 (D.C. Circuit, 1988)
WBEN, Inc. v. United States
396 F.2d 601 (Second Circuit, 1968)
Hall v. Federal Communications Commission
257 F.2d 626 (D.C. Circuit, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
237 F.2d 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilton-e-hall-and-greenville-television-company-v-federal-communications-cadc-1956.