Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
Freeman Engineering Associates, Inc., a disappointed applicant for a pioneer’s preference in a Federal Communications Commission licensing proceeding, both appealed from and petitioned for review of an FCC order granting Mobile Telecommunications Technologies Corporation (Mtel) a pioneer’s preference for a variety of two-way services in a single 50 Khz channel. We consolidated those two cases with a petition filed by Bell-south Corporation, and as explained below, we now dismiss both Freeman’s appeal and its petition as incurably premature.
I. Background
Freeman Engineering Associates, Inc. sought a pioneer’s preference with the FCC for the provision of communications services to hearing impaired subscribers in the 930-931 MHz band in the New Orleans and Baton
Freeman simultaneously asked the FCC to reconsider the decision denying it a pioneer’s preference and asked this court to review the FCC’s decision granting a pioneer’s preference to Mtel. The FCC now moves for dismissal of Freeman’s appeal and petition in this court on the ground that they are premature because Freeman’s request for reconsideration is pending before the agency.
II. Analysis
The FCC’s motion to dismiss Freeman’s cases is based upon our decision in United Transportation Union v. ICC,
Freeman’s attempt to place its cases outside the rule against simultaneous judicial review and agency reconsideration is initially attractive but ultimately unavailing. Even a modicum of concern for judicial economy militates strongly against concurrent review in this recurring situation. See Outland v. CAB,
As the FCC explained in the order that Freeman seeks to challenge, a license applicant that is granted a pioneer’s preference “will be placed on a pioneer’s preference track, not subject to competing applications, and if otherwise qualified will receive a license. Other applicants will compete for remaining licenses in the normal licensing process.” 8 FCC Red. at 7172. As we understand that, if the FCC were upon reconsideration to grant Freeman a pioneer’s preference, and both Mtel and Freeman are otherwise qualified (and there are allocations enough to accommodate two pioneers), then both applications will be granted. Mtel’s application for a license would no longer have a competitive advantage over Freeman’s in the scramble for a scarce resource, and Freeman would have no interest in (and perhaps no standing to pursue) judicial review of the grant to Mtel.
It is widely accepted that “finality with respect to agency action is a party-based concept.” See United Transportation Union,
Freeman also argues that if it were to wait for the FCC to act upon its petition for rehearing before seeking review of the FCC’s grant of a pioneer’s preference to Mtel, then its petition for review would be dismissed as untimely as to the Mtel issue. Not so. For, as we have said, Freeman’s petition for reconsideration in part rendered the agency order nonfinal in its entirety (as to Freeman). When the agency acts upon the petition for reconsideration, Freeman may timely seek judicial review of any part of its final order.
III. Conclusion
Because Freeman’s petition for reconsideration of the FCC’s order denying Freeman a pioneer’s preference is currently pending before the agency, its appeal from and petition for review in this court of the same order insofar as it grants a pioneer’s preference to Mtel are incurably premature. Freeman’s appeal and petition, therefore, are
Dismissed.
