Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
Petitioner BellSouth Corporation challenges the constitutionality of Section 274 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (the “Act”), 47 U.S.C. § 274, and of the Federal Communications Commission’s order implementing that provision.
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The story behind the Telecommunications Act of 1996 has often been told, although electronic publishing restrictions have usually amounted to little more than a subplot. In 1982 a consent decree was entered in settlement of the government’s 1974 antitrust suit against AT&T. That decree, as modified by the district court, became known as the “Modification of Final Judgment,” or “MFJ.” See United States v. American Tel. & Tel. Co.,
The MFJ initially prohibited the BOCs from providing “information services,” defined to include electronic publishing. The prohibition rested on two concerns commonly voiced about regulated monopolists operating in fields adjacent to their monopolies. First, to the extent that the monopolist’s good or service is an input for the adjacent industry, the monopolist may offer its own enterprise discriminatory advantages, in this case “favorable access to the local network.”
The 1996 Act rescinded the MFJ, see Pub.L. No. 104-104, § 601, 110 Stat. 143 (1996), and changed the entire telecommunications landscape. Several key provisions of the Act apply to incumbent local exchange carriers generally, such as 47 U.S.C. § 251, requiring them to offer nondiscriminatory access and interconnection to local competitors. Sections 271 through 276 of the Act, however, entitled “Special Provisions Concerning Bell Operating Companies,” are applicable to the BOCs and their affiliates alone.
Section 274 provides:
No Bell operating company or any affiliate may engage in the provision of electronic publishing that is disseminated by means of such Bell operating company’s or any of its affiliates’ basic telephone service, except that nothing in this section shall prohibit a separated affiliate or electronic publishing joint venture operated in accordance with this section from engaging in the provision of electronic publishing.
47 U.S.C. § 274(a). Section 274’s restrictions expire on February 8, 2000, four years from the date of the Act’s passage. § 274(g)(2).
As is evident from its text, § 274 provides two pathways for BOCs wishing to enter electronic publishing: the “separated affiliate” route and the “joint venture” route. The statute defines a separated affiliate as “a corporation under common ownership or control with a Bell operating company that does not own or control a Bell operating company and is not owned or controlled by a Bell operating company.” 47 U.S.C. § 274(i)(9). An “electronic publishing joint venture” is a “joint venture owned by a Bell operating company or affiliate that engages in the provision of electronic publishing which is disseminated by means of such Bell operating company’s or any of its affiliates’ basic telephone service.” 47 U.S.C. § 274(i)(5). Section 274 imposes several structural requirements on both separated affiliates and electronic publishing joint ven
The Act defines “electronic publishing” broadly as
the dissemination, provision, publication, or sale to an unaffiliated entity or person, of any one or. more of the following: news (including sports); entertainment (other than interactive games); business, financial, legal, consumer, or credit materials; editorials, columns, or features; advertising; photos or images; archival or research material; legal notices or public records; scientific, educational, instructional, technical, professional, trade, or other literary materials; or other like or similar information.
47 U.S.C. § 274(h)(1). It then exempts several types of services, including data processing, voice messaging, and video programming. 47 U.S.C. § 274(h)(2).
BellSouth, of course, is not a BOC but an RBOC. Yet the government rightly refrains from raising a standing defense on that ground. The injury BellSouth suffered as the sole shareholder of two affected corporations (South Central Bell Telephone Company and Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company) is clearly enough to give it Article III standing. See Franchise Tax Board of California v. Alcan Aluminium Ltd.,
Bill of Attainder Challenge
We turn first to BellSouth’s challenge under Article I, section 9, clause 3 of the Constitution, which says that “[n]o Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed” by Congress, For the framers of the Constitution the term “bills of attainder” carried a specific meaning: it referred to parliamentary acts sentencing named persons to death without the benefit of a judicial trial. As early as 1810, however, in Fletcher v. Peck,
Even classic attainders seem not only to have specified individuals but also classes-defined as the confederates of a named traitor, as in the case of the attainder against the Earl of Kildare and his associates during the reign of Henry VIII. See Cummings,
We assume; as do the parties, that the Bill of Attainder Clause protects corporations as well as individuals. Although the Supreme Court has yet to address the question directly, it has suggested as much in dictum, see Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc.,
At times BellSouth comes close to arguing that the specification requirement ought to be the end of the matter. On this view, the Bill of Attainder Clause bars Congress from singling out a specified class of persons for burdens of any kind, regardless of whether those burdens can be viewed as punishments in any ordinary sense of the term. This was the theme of a famous student essay, Note, The Bounds of Legislative Specification: A Suggested Approach to the Bill of Attainder Clause, 72 Yale L.J. 330 (1962), and traces of the same approach can be found in the Supreme Court’s most extensive discussion (and most expansive application) of the clause, United States v. Brown,
In any event, whatever Brown’s potential for diluting the punishment requirement, the Supreme Court .has since taken that requirement seriously. It made this emphatically clear in Nixon v. Administrator of General Services,
(1) whether the challenged statute falls within the historical meaning of legislative punishment; (2) whether the statute, viewed in terms of the type and severity of burdens imposed, reasonably can be said to further nonpunitive legislative purposes; and (3) whether the legislative record evinces a congressional intent to punish.
Selective Service System v. Minnesota Public Interest Research Group,
To begin with, § 274’s restrictions are nothing like the classic attainders known to the framers. As mentioned above, bills of attainder at common law generally entailed execution, although this was typically coupled with other punishments, such as “corruption of blood,” which prevented the attainted party’s heirs from inheriting his property. See Brown,
The case becomes closer when we move from historic antecedents to burdens later found by the Supreme Court to rank as punishments, which have included “legislative bars to participation by individuals or groups in specific employments or professions.” Id. at 852,
Although a statute imposing structural separations on corporations seeking to engage in specific types of commercial activity may be analogous to such traditional employ
Placing § 274-among the burdens historically forbidden as attainders seems especially dubious because it does not bar the BOCs from electronic publishing but simply ■ requires structural separation. As counsel for BellSouth acknowledged at oral argument, the separated affiliate mechanism permits his client to establish a wholly-owned subsidiary to pursue electronic publishing. This subsidiary could disseminate materials over the telephone lines of BellSouth’s BOC subsidiaries, as long as it was kept separate from them in the ways prescribed by. § 274(b). Indeed, BellSouth itself could enter the electronic publishing business provided it observed the norms of separation from its BOCs. In short, § 274 leaves all the investors with stakes in the BOCs (i.e., the shareholders of the RBOCs) free to . pursue their collective electronic publishing ends, and to aggregate their capital to achieve those ends, subject only to structural separation requirements. While structural separation is hardly costless, neither does it remotely approach the disabilities that have traditionally marked forbidden attainders.
The second criterion asks whether. the challenged legislation, considering the type and severity of the burdens it imposes, can reasonably be said to further nonpunitive legislative purposes. This factor appears to be the most important of the three. See Siegel v. Lyng,
In fact, apart .from its specific targeting aspect, we find that § 274 has the earmarks of a rather conventional response to commonly perceived, risks of anticompetitive behavior. We have long recognized that structural separation is “a permissible regulatory tool” for ensuring “that no cross-subsidization or
BellSouth advances two arguments in support of its claim that Congress cannot reasonably be said to have enacted § 274 for nonpunitive purposes. First, it says the court’s 1991 removal of the information services prohibition from the MFJ—based on a finding that its removal could reasonably be found to advance the public interest (balancing the risk of BOC discrimination against competing information services ventures with the competitive benefits of BOC entry)— shows that Congress in 1996 had no plausible economic basis for reimposing electronic publishing restrictions. Second, BellSouth points to other local exchange carriers who are not covered by § 274’s proscriptions. To the extent the BOCs pose any anticompetitive threat, says BellSouth, then so do the excluded firms, and their exclusion demonstrates that Congress’s real aim was to punish the BOCs.
As we said earlier, the information services ban was lifted from the MFJ at the behest of the Department of Justice, which had insisted on the ban when the MFJ was being negotiated. Circumstances had changed, the government argued; the information services market had become more competitive, and the BOCs’ ability to discriminate and cross-subsidize had consequently decreased. The district court initially rejected the government’s proposal, United States v. Western Electric Co., 673 F.Supp. 525, 587-97 (D.D.C.1987), but we reversed, saying that the court had used too stringent a standard to evaluate the government’s motion, which no party to the consent decree had opposed. United States v. Western Electric Co.,
Obviously Congress’s reading of the evidence in 1996 was different from the one arrived at by the Department of Justice in 1987—or by this court in 1993 for that matter. It does .not follow from these conflicts between branches, however, that Congress cannot rationally be said to have pursued nonpunitive purposes in enacting § 274. Certainly our triennial review decisions never suggested that the risks of anticompetitive conduct were so feeble that no one could reasonably assert them except as a smokescreen for some invidious purpose (much less for the specific invidious purpose of “punishing” the BOCs). And we note that § 274 is less severe than the analogous pre-1991 MFJ provision along several dimensions: it applies only to electronic publishing rather than to information services as a whole, it expires after five years rather than continuing indefinitely, and it mandates structural separation, rather than complete exclusion.
BellSouth complains that this reading of the second factor reduces it to little more than a rational basis test, the most anemic form of constitutional scrutiny. If this were strictly true, of course, the Bill of Attainder Clause (as applied to non-suspect classes
BellSouth’s second argument focuses on the fact that § 271 does not cover several large non-BOC local exchange carriers, in particular GTE Corporation.
But the differential treatment of the BOCs and non-BOCs is neither suggestive of punitive purpose nor particularly suspicious. Because the BOCs’ facilities are generally less dispersed than GTE’s, they can exercise bottleneck control over both ends of a telephone call in a higher fraction of cases than can GTE. The BOCs thus enjoy a materially greater opportunity to shift costs from their electronic publishing pursuits to their rate-regulated local exchange ventures.
The third device for identifying a punishment focuses on legislative intent, and in practice appears to differ from the second only in inviting a journey through legislative history. On this point we can be brief. Bell-South simply has not come forward with the kind of “unmistakable evidence of punitive intent which ... is required before a Congressional enactment of this kind may be struck down” as an attainder. Selective Service System,
In sum, we hold that § 274 is not a bill of attainder.
First Amendment Challenge
BellSouth complains that § 274 abridges its constitutional right of free speech by restricting its ability to provide electronic publishing. Clearly the structural separation requirements regulate expressive activity within the scope of the First Amendment. So, as is often the ease in the First Amendment arena, the parties devote much
We begin with BellSouth’s claim that § 274 warrants strict First Amendment review because it targets named corporations. In support of this claim BellSouth cites our decision in News America Publishing, Inc. v. FCC,
Only marginally more promising for Bell-South are the Supreme Court’s decisions in Minneapolis Star & Tribune Co. v. Minnesota Commissioner of Revenue,
News America, Minneapolis Star, and Arkansas Writers’ Project all featured some suggestion that the legislature’s differ
Here, there is no indication that § 274’s coverage was limited to the BOCs because of any concern about the content of their speech—no indication, in other words, that “the legislature’s speaker preference reflects a content preference.” Id. “So long as they are not a subtle means of exercising a content preference, speaker distinctions of this nature are not presumed invalid under the First Amendment.” Id. at 645,
We turn next to BellSouth’s claim that § 274 is expressly formulated in terms of content, and thus requires strict scrutiny. To be sure, § 274 defines the field of expression to which it applies by reference to a set of categories that might in a formal sense be described as content-based. Thus it covers items such as “news,” “entertainment,” and “research material,” and exempts information such as “video programming,” “voice messaging,” and “data processing.” See § 274(h)(1).
Nothing about the provision, however, suggests an underlying purpose to favor or disfavor particular viewpoints, nor does Bell-South advance such a suggestion. The Supreme Court has held that statutes lacking such a purpose are likely to be deemed content-neutral. “[L]aws that confer benefits or impose burdens on speech without reference to the ideas or views expressed are in most instances content-neutral.” Turner I,
In summary,; then—despite BellSouth’s twin contentions that § 274 favors certain speakers, and certain types of speech, over others—we hold that intermediate scrutiny is appropriate because here, perhaps even more than in Turner, there is simply no hint that “the government has adopted a regulation of speech because of [agreement or] disagreement with the message it conveys.” Turner I,
A regulation will be upheld under intermediate scrutiny “if it advances important governmental interests unrelated to the
Under intermediate scrutiny, while the government obviously need not meet the most rigorous standard of “narrow tailoring,” it must nonetheless “demonstrate that the recited harms are real, not merely conjectural, and that the regulation will in fact alleviate these harms. in a direct and material way.”. Id. at 664,
But it does' complain that Congress could have guarded against these risks through less speech-restrictive methods, for instance by imposing non-structural safeguards such as accounting requirements. Intermediate First Amendment scrutiny, however, does not entail a “least restrictive means” analysis. See Turner II, 520 U.S. at ---,
As in its bill of attainder attack, BellSouth points to the exclusion of GTE and other non-BOC local exchange carriers. But as we said in that connection, there are plausible reasons for the exclusion, and, just as BellSouth failed in that context to suggest a punitive purpose, here it equally fails to suggest any intent to favor non-BOCs’ viewpoints over BOCs’. Moreover, since intermediate scrutiny demands that the government “not burden substantially more speech than necessaiy to further [its] interests,” Turner II, 520 U.S. at -,
Finally, we note again that § 274 leaves each RBOC free to publish electronically, using the facilities of its BOC subsidiaries, either directly or through a subsidiary, so long as the acting corporation conforms to the statutory separation requirements. Bell-South argues that the separated affiliate mechanism is entirely irrelevant to the First Amendment question, since “[i]t hardly answers one person’s objection to a restriction on his speech that another person, outside his control, may speak for him.” Arkansas Writers’ Project,
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The petition for review is
Denied.
Notes
. The order under challenge is Implementation of the Telecommunications Act of 1996: Telemessaging, Electronic Publishing, and Alarm Monitoring Services, FCC No. 97-35 (Feb. 7, 1997). BellSouth's challenge to the order is entirely derivative of its constitutional challenge to the statute, with no claim that the FCC acted outside the scope of its statutory authority.
. AT&T also divested its minority holdings in the Cincinnati Bell Telephone Company and the Southern New England Telephone Company, which are not classified as BOCs in the Act.
. The Act defines "Bell operating company” as follows:
The term "Bell operating company"— •
(A)means any of the following companies: Bell Telephone Company of Nevada, Illinois Bell Telephone Company, Indiana Bell Telephone Company, Incorporated, Michigan Bell Telephone Company, New England Telephone and Telegraph Company, New Jersey Bell Telephone Company, New York Telephone Company, U.S. West Communications Company, South Central Bell Telephone Company, Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company, Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania; The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company, The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Maryland, The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Virginia, The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of West Virginia, The Diamond State Telephone Company, The Ohio Bell Telephone Company, The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company, or Wisconsin Telephone Company; and
(B) includes any successor or assign of any such company that provides wireline telephone exchange service; but
(C) does not include an affiliate of any such company, other than an affiliate described in subparagraph (A) or (B).
47 U.S.C. § 153(4).
. We note that another RBOC has launched a Bill of Attainder Clause and First Amendment challenge to the "Special Provisions” as a whole. See SBC Communications, Inc. v. FCC,
. At least it would do so if it took the form of a conventional penalty such as a fine. If it look the form of a restriction barring certain closely held corporations from specific lines of business, its effect on flesh-and-blood people would depend on the language of the restriction and on the ability of officers, directors and shareholders to carry on their pursuits outside the named corporations. See below at pp. 65-66.
. See also Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc.,
. See also Pierce v. Carskadon,
. Because we find no attainder, we need not wrestle with the issue of remedy. Severability is largely a matter of legislative intent, and it is doubtful that Congress would have intended the many provisions of the Act beneficial to the BOCs to survive deletion of this burdensome one.
. Like the BOCs, GTE was subject to a consent decree for more than a decade, until the- passage of the Act. The decree, however, permitted GTE to provide information services, subject to structural separation and non-discrimination requirements. See United States v. GTE Corp.,
. While in 1993 we somewhat disparaged the distinction then drawn between GTE and the BOCs on the basis of relative dispersion, United States v. Western Electric Co.,
. In a similar vein, we have described Minneapolis Star and Arkansas Writers' Project as “likely addressed only to the special complexities of taxation.” Walsh v. Brady,
. In fact, the tax exemption challenged in Arkansas Writers' Project facially excluded certain publications on the basis of their content, rendering it especially suspect.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
With respect to the First Amendment argument of the Bell operating companies (“BOCs”), I agree with the majority’s analysis and with its conclusion. With respect to the bill of attainder claim, however, I agree with most of the majority’s analysis;' I simply conclude that it does not support the majority’s conclusion.
The majority opinion sets forth the provisions of 47 U.S.C. § 274, and I .will not rehash them here, beyond a brief summary to set the stage for my dissent. That section prohibits Bell operating companies, by name, and their affiliates, from engaging in the provision of a lucrative fine of business on the same terms as competitors, potential competitors, or anyone else in the world. BellSouth argues that this provision constitutes ^legislative punishment for their past course of business conduct, and as such, runs afoul of Article I, section 9, clause 3 of the Constitution, which provides that, “No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto law shall be passed.”
As the majority notes, while the term “Bill of Attainder” may have originally referred to parliamentary acts sentencing persons to death without a trial by the judiciary, Maj. Op. at 62, the Supreme Court early held that the prohibition extends to legislative punishment of specified persons beyond capital punishment. Fletcher v. Peck, 10 U.S. (6 Crunch) 87,
On its face, the legislation before us appears to fall squarely on the condemned side of this two-part test. Section 274 exhibits nearly unprecedented specificity, forbidding twenty named corporations, alone out of over 1,300 local exchange carriers, from entering a trade or business oh the same terms as others. Of all the bill of attainder cases decided by the Supreme Court, in only one did a statute single out individuals by name, and that was deemed an unconstitutional bill of attainder. See Lovett,
Mere specificity may not make an act a bill of attainder, but in most cases the Court has required little more. The Court has described the Bill of Attainder Clause as the embodiment of a fundamental principle of separation of powers: “a legislature can provide that persons possessing certain characteristics must abstain from certain activities, but must leave to other tribunals the task of deciding who possesses those characteristics.” United States v. Brown,
Nixon, of course, is a unique case. It involved a disgraced President of the United States who had, as Justice Stevens pointed out, “resigned his office under unique circumstances and accepted a pardon for any offenses committed while in office,” thereby “plac[ing] himself in a different class from all other Presidents.” Id. at 486,
In what appears to have been an attempt to cabin its reasoning in Nixon, the Court in Selective Service System announced a three-part test to determine whether a statute imposes “punishment” for purposes of the Bill of Attainder Clause:
(1) whether the challenged statute falls within the historical meaning of legislative punishment; (2) whether the statute, viewed in terms of the type and severity of burdens imposed, reasonably can be said to further nonpunitive legislative purposes; and (3) whether the legislative record evinces a congressional intent to punish.
Id. at 852,
Under Selective Service, we probably need go no further; nevertheless, analysis under the additional parts of that test support the conclusion that this statute is unconstitutional. The second prong asks “whether the statute, viewed in terms of the' type and severity of burdens imposed, reasonably can be said to further nonpunitive legislative purposes.”
I further conclude that the third factor, which I deem the least important, also supports classifying the statute as a bill of attainder. That factor requires us to examine “whether the legislative record evinces a congressional intent to punish.” Selective Service,
More instructive on congressional motivation than the scattered remarks is the timing and apparent triggering of the enactment. As the majority notes in its discussion of factor two, Congress passed section 274 after the judiciary removed the information services prohibition from the modified final judgment. Maj. Op. at 66-67. The reinstatement of that ban following its judicial removal to me bespeaks, indeed shouts, a motive on the part of the Article I branch to reimpose a burden on the parties before the court which the Article III branch found no longer appropriate. While I have no quarrel with the legitimacy of a congressional motive to correct what it sees as an improper application of legal protection against future, conduct, when Congress defined the burdened class by name rather than by characteristic or future action, I can discern no other motive than an intent to react to (read “punish”) the past conduct of those named persons. This, I suggest, violates the principle under
That is, the prohibition against bills of attainder and ex post facto laws is an essential part of the Constitution’s structural separation of powers among the three branches of government. As the majority’s analysis suggests, that clause was designed to prevent punishment “without the benefit of a judicial trial.” Maj. Op. at 62. By way of comparison, in Plant v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc.,
I would say in closing that the majority’s discussion of the lightness of the burden, typified by the ways in which a BOC might restructure in order to get around it, goes only to the weight of the punishment, not its character as punishment. Thus, that part of the majority’s reasoning does nothing to convince me that the statute can survive constitutional scrutiny.
