Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
In 1994 the Federal Communications Commission auctioned off a group of Interactive Video and Data Service (“IVDS”) licenses. In 1997 it changed the rules governing grace periods for winning bidders who made late installment payments. Celtronix, a winning bidder for such a license, alleges that the change was unlawfully retroactive. We affirm the Commission’s decision.
In a June 1994 auction Celtronix (then known as Community Teleplay, Inc.) won an IVDS license for the Norfolk-Virginia Beach Metropolitan Service Area. As a small business, Celtronix was allowed to
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pay its winning bid in installments over the term of the license. 47 C.F.R. § 1.2110(d) (1994). The regulation provided that any payment would be in default after 90 days delinquency, but allowed a licensee to request a three-to-six-month grace period.
Id.
§ 1.2110(d)(4)(i), (ii). In considering whether to grant the grace period, the Commission could consider the licensee’s payment history, the reasons for default, the licensee’s financial condition, and other circumstances.
Id.
Though its regulations were not exactly clear on the availability of additional grace periods, the Commission issued a public notice claiming discretion to “extend or grant additional grace periods where circumstances warrant.” Public Notice,
“Wireless Telecommunications Bureau Staff Clarifies ‘Grace Period’ Rule for TVDS ‘Auction’ Licensees Paying By Installment Payments,”
In 1997 the Commission changed its grace period rule in the
Third Report and Order and Second Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making,
Celtronix filed a petition for reconsideration of the
Grace Period Order
in January 1998 and, in July of that year, an emergency motion for stay pending review of the petition. But in September 1998, just before the final date on which Celtro-nix’s license would have been permanently defaulted, the Commission announced a notice of a proposed rulemaking aimed at introducing new flexibility for spectrum occupied by IVDS licensees; to reflect the change it immediately redesignated the service as the “218-219 Mhz Service.”
Amendment of Part 95 of the Commission’s Rules to Provide Regulatory Flexibility in the
218-219'
MHz Service, Order, Memorandum Opinion and Order and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
In its final order on the 218-219 Mhz Service,
Amendment of Pari 95 of the Commission’s Rules to Provide Regulatory Flexibility in the 218-219 MHz Service, Report and Order and Memorandum Opinion and Order,
Celtronix sought reconsideration of the
218-219 MHz Service Order
in December 1999. While that was pending, the Commission denied Celtronix’s petition for reconsideration of the
Grace Period Order. Amendment of Part 1 of the Commission’s Rules
— Competitive
Bidding Procedures, Order on Reconsideration of the Third Report and Order, Fifth Report and Order, and Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making,
Celtronix chose to return the license to the Commission for amnesty, subject to its claim for a disaggregation alternative. It filed a petition for reconsideration of this order, which is still pending before the Commission.
As to the
Grace Period Order,
Celtronix filed a petition for review under § 402(a) of the Communications Act (No. 00-1401) and an appeal under § 402(b) (No. 00-1400). Since these jurisdictional provisions are mutually exclusive, see
Freeman Engineering Associates, Inc. v. FCC,
There is another jurisdictional concern. Given Celtronix’s election of amnesty in the event that its disaggregation proposal does not prevail (either by Commission change of heart or by judicial reversal of the Commission), there is a distinct chance that Celtronix would not benefit from a victory here; absent disaggregation, it would simply take its amnesty and depart. But we do not see this possibility as impairing its standing. Compare a standard two-issue case: If a plaintiff presents two or more alternative grounds as routes to its hoped-for ultimate victory, a court does not lose jurisdiction over the second claim once it has ruled in the plaintiffs favor on the first claim; victory on the first claim doesn’t moot the second.
Air Line Pilots Ass’n Int’l v. UAL Corp.,
Just as the contingent character of the ruling on the second issue in the above cases does not spell mootness, so too the fact that here Celtronix’s ultimate success may depend on the outcome of pending administrative litigation should not be seen as rendering the harm inflicted on it by the Commission’s grace period decision too “conjectural” for purposes of standing.
City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
Celtronix argues that the new grace period rule, 47 C.F.R. § 1.2110(g)(4), violates the Administrative Procedure Act, which limits “rules” to agency prescriptions of “future effect.” 5 U.S.C. § 551(4); see
Bowen v. Georgetown University Hospital,
According to Justice Scalia, a retroactive rule forbidden by the APA is one which “alter[s] the
past
legal consequences of past actions.”
Bowen,
It seems impossible to characterize the rule change here as “alter[ing] the past legal consequences” of a past action. It altered the future effect of the initial license issuance, to be sure, but that could not be viewed as “past legal consequences.” Nor could the change be said to impair rights possessed by Celtronix when it acted, as it could have had no grace period rights before it “acted” to acquire the license, and any payment delay covered by the new rule, i.e., any delay not already excused, necessarily occurred after the rule change. If the rule could be viewed as “impos[ing] new duties” at all (in the sense of making the duty to pay installments more stringent), it would run afoul of Landgraf s concept only if it imposed them with regard to a “transaction[ ] already completed.” That would be so if the “transaction” at issue were the issuance of the license itself, as Celtronix urges, rather than the delay in payments.
The examples used in the cases make clear that we should focus on the
payment delays
and not on initial
issuance
of the license. As Justice Scalia noted in
Land-graf,
a new ban on gambling would not involve retroactivity in its application to existing casinos (which presumably would have been
licensed
by a state), because the “relevant retroactivity event is the primary activity of gambling, not the primary activity of constructing casinos.”
Landgraf,
Celtronix claims to have had a “vested right” to keep requesting additional grace periods and to force the Commission to consider any unique circumstances. To this end, it cites
Landgraf
s statement that the judicial clear statement rule would apply where a statute would otherwise “impair rights a party possessed when he acted.”
The introduction of auctions made no change in this aspect of the licensing regime. In fact, Congress provided both that the Commission would retain its authority “to regulate or reclaim spectrum licenses,” 47 U.S.C. § 309(j)(6)(C), and that nothing in the use of auctions would “be construed to convey any rights ... that differ from the rights that apply to other licenses.... ” Id. § 309(j)(6)(D).
Of course the grace period change may have altered the value of the rights Celtro-nix acquired by its winning bid and commitment to make the required payments. This sort of retroactivity — characteristic of a rule having exclusively “future effect” but affecting the desirability of past transactions — has become known as “secondary retroactivity.” See
Bowen,
Here it’s easy to find the rule reasonable in both respects. The Commission merely replaced the possibility of two (or maybe more) three-month grace periods, available only on a successful appeal to the Commission’s discretion, with the assurance of two 90-day periods subject to 5% and 10% penalties on the delayed payments. Looking at licensees as a class, there is no reason to think the change disadvantageous. Indeed, the Commission described the change as a “liberalization.”
Grace Period Order,
¶ 108. Nor does Celtronix suggest that the rule change would inflict material injuries on any set of licencees (such as ones whose circumstances made receipt of Commission grace especially likely) that would offset its beneficial effects, or indeed that the Commission has
ever
exercised its discretion favorably. Moreover, it seems utterly improbable that the old grace provisions could have induced reliance, either in the form of higher
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bids by licensees at the bidding stage (as the change is so trivial and likely beneficial), or of any different conduct thereafter (as both old and new rule provide substantially equal motivations to avoid default). See
Bergerco,
Celtronix also urges a somewhat makeshift argument that the FCC’s rule change was a breach of contract, citing
United States v. Winstar Corp.,
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The order of the Commission is
Affirmed.
Notes
. The current version of the rule provides that the grace period shall be a quarter year, rather than 90 days, but is otherwise similar in substance. 47 C.F.R. § 1.2110(g)(4)(i) (2000).
. The passage cited by Celtronix in fact makes no reference to ‘Vested” rights, but other parts of the opinion do. See
