CITY OF GLENDALE, Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and Appellant, v. MARCUS CABLE ASSOCIATES, LLC, Defendant, Cross-complainant and Appellant.
No. B246697
Second Dist., Div. Five
Dec. 1, 2014
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COUNSEL
Rutan & Tucker, William M. Marticorena, Jeffrey T. Melching and Michelle D. Molko for Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and Appellant.
Coblentz Patch Duffy & Bass, Richard R. Patch, Ann E. Johnston and Allison L. Ehlert for Defendant, Cross-complainant and Appellant.
OPINION
MOSK, Acting P. J.—
INTRODUCTION
Defendant, appellant, and cross-respondent Marcus Cable Associates, LLC, doing business as Charter Communications, Inc. (Charter), appeals from orders granting summary adjudication in favor of plaintiff, respondent, and cross-appellant City of Glendale (Glendale), and Glendale appeals from an order granting summary adjudication in favor of Charter and from certain portions of a judgment in favor of Charter entered after trial. The disputes arise out of a cable television services system operated by Charter within Glendale and the free public, educational, and government-affairs (PEG) requirements in connection with such services.
We hold that federal law precluded Charter from obtaining a declaration of a right of offset against future franchise payments to Glendale for past overpayments of PEG fees to Glendale; Glendale did not breach any obligation in connection with its refusal to approve Charter‘s request to realign channel numbers for PEG programming that was broadcast on Charter‘s cable television system in Glendale; Charter had no further obligation to provide free video programming and cable modem services to Glendale; the trial court did not err in concluding that Charter had not conveyed to Glendale a permanent right to possess or use the fiber capacity for government intranet communications—an institutional network (I-Net)1—and Charter established that Glendale improperly and contrary to law used PEG fees. Thus, we affirm the judgment.
BACKGROUND
Glendale filed a complaint and request for a temporary restraining order to prevent Charter from realigning Glendale‘s PEG channel numbers. Charter answered and filed a cross-complaint. In the operative third amended cross-complaint, Charter sought declarations that it had no obligation to provide Glendale with free video programming services and free cable modem services or with free I-Net services; recovery of possession and control of the I-Net and damages for wrongful possession and detention of the I-Net; a declaration that Charter had the right to realign Glendale‘s PEG channels; a declaration that Glendale was unlawfully using PEG fees; and a declaration that Charter had a right to offset past PEG fee overpayments against future franchise fee payments.
A. Summary Adjudication Issues
Glendale filed a motion for summary judgment or summary adjudication on its complaint, and the parties filed cross-motions for summary adjudication on Charter‘s operative cross-complaint. Following briefing and a hearing, the trial court issued a minute order adopting its written tentative ruling on the parties’ respective motions as the final ruling of the court, as amended by the text of the minute order. The facts relevant to the trial court‘s summary adjudication rulings are set forth below.2
1. Declaration of Right to Offset
In December 2007, Charter was granted a state franchise that became effective in January 2008. Glendale established a franchise fee for Charter of 5 percent of Charter‘s annual gross revenues and a PEG fee of 2 percent of Charter‘s annual gross revenues, for a total annual fee obligation of 7 percent of Charter‘s annual gross revenues. Charter collected the franchise and PEG fees from its subscribers and included those fees as separate line items on its subscribers’ bills.
Charter sought a declaration in its fourth cause of action that Glendale improperly used the fees it collected for PEG operating costs resulting in an overpayment and a declaration in its fifth cause of action that Charter was entitled to deduct its PEG fee overpayments from future franchise fee payments. The trial court denied Charter‘s motion for summary adjudication as to whether Glendale improperly used the PEG fees, determining that there were triable issues of fact. The trial court also ruled on the cross-motions for summary adjudication that as a result of federal law, Charter was not entitled to a declaration that it could offset past overpayments of PEG fees against future franchise payments to Glendale.
2. Reassignment of PEG Channels
In 2009, Charter notified Glendale of a planned alteration of the location of Glendale‘s PEG channels as follows: (a) primary government access channel 6 moving to channel 3; (b) educational channel 15 moving to channel 95; (c) secondary government access channel 16 moving to channel 97; and (d) additional government access channel 21 moving to channel 32. Glendale refused to agree to the proposed channel realignment.
3. Free Video Programming and Free Cable Modem Services
In January 1995, the predecessor of Charter entered into a local franchise agreement with Glendale (Glendale franchise) under which Charter‘s predecessor was granted authority to construct and operate a cable television system within Glendale. In October 1995, Glendale approved the transfer of the Glendale franchise to Charter. The Glendale franchise was for a 10-year term that expired in 2005.
Paragraph 12 of the Glendale franchise required Charter to provide Glendale with free cable services to public buildings, including cable drops for residential cable to specified buildings and facilities and upstream capacity from the specified buildings and facilities “to allow live broadcasting and rebroadcasting from said sites and facilities.” Paragraph 14(c) of the Glendale franchise also required Charter to provide Glendale with an I-Net that would connect certain specified public buildings to “the activated return path of the cable television system” so as to “allow simultaneous insertion of five (5) audio/video/data programming sources into the return path from each designated location, the transmission of said programming to [any of the specified] building facilit[ies] . . . , the transmission of said programming to the headend and the simultaneous retransmission of said programming over the Residential Network upon completion of construction.”
In or about 1999, a dispute arose between Charter and Glendale concerning a change in the corporate control of Charter‘s parent entity and certain franchise compliance issues. In September 1999, Charter and Glendale entered into a settlement and transfer agreement (settlement agreement) that resolved the corporate control and franchise compliance disputes and authorized Charter to continue to provide cable services in Glendale following the change in corporate control.
Paragraph 10 of the settlement agreement stated that Charter must provide or cause to be provided “free High-Speed Internet Access Service installation, modem and monthly service . . . on a stand-alone or network basis . . . to [specified public] buildings . . . .” Paragraph 12 of the settlement agreement provided that Charter was required, inter alia, to “complete and activate Government and Institutional [video] drops” at specified public buildings, and
Charter and Glendale had discussions about the terms and conditions under which the Glendale franchise would be renewed at the end of its term, but no agreement was reached by the parties for the renewal of the Glendale franchise. Charter applied for and was granted a state franchise pursuant to the Digital Infrastructure and Video Competition Act of 2006 (the State Cable Act)3 on December 13, 2007, effective January 2, 2008. Charter‘s service area under the state franchise included Glendale. As of January 2, 2008, the Glendale franchise was replaced by the state franchise. The stated term of the Glendale franchise had expired at the time the state franchise was issued.
In connection with the present dispute, Glendale and Charter disagreed as to whether (i) Charter was obligated to provide Glendale with free use of the I-Net in perpetuity; (ii) Glendale possessed an ownership interest in the I-Net or should return possession and control of the I-Net to Charter; (iii) Glendale was obligated to compensate Charter for past use of the I-Net; and (iv) Charter was obligated under the settlement agreement to provide certain public buildings with cable modem service at no charge for as long as Charter provided video services within Glendale.
As to Glendale‘s first cause of action and the cross-motions for summary adjudication, the trial court granted summary adjudication to Charter that it had no duty to provide free video programming or free cable modem services to Glendale. The trial court, however, denied summary adjudication on whether Charter had conveyed to Glendale a permanent right to possess or use the fiber capacity that made up the I-Net on the ground that there were triable issues of fact on this issue.
B. Trial
Following the trial court‘s rulings on the parties’ summary judgment and summary adjudication motions, the following issues remained for trial on the merits: Charter‘s request for a declaration concerning its continuing duty to provide free I-Net services; Charter‘s claim for recovery of the I-Net and damages for past use of the I-Net; Glendale‘s claim that Charter had given it a permanent right of possession or use of the I-Net—part of the first and second causes of action in Charter‘s cross-complaint; and Charter‘s request for a declaration that Glendale had used PEG fees for operating costs and therefore had collected from Charter an unlawful franchise fee—the fourth cause of action in Charter‘s cross-complaint. A trial ensued, after which the trial court rendered a statement of decision.4 Set forth below are the pertinent portions of the trial court‘s findings of fact after trial.
1. I-Net Obligations
On or about September 7, 1999, Charter and Glendale entered into a settlement agreement that resolved disputes over the change of control and franchise compliance issues that had arisen between the parties, including the dispute over the unfinished I-Net. The trial court found that Charter had not conveyed to Glendale a permanent right to possess or use the I-Net. In that connection, the trial court considered the following evidence and made the following findings.
a. The Parties’ Understanding of the Meaning of the I-Net Provision in the Settlement Agreement
Glendale argued that notwithstanding the absence of any conveyance or dedication language in the settlement agreement itself, the parties to that agreement had a “mutual understanding” that Charter was giving to Glendale an indefeasible right of use for certain portions of the fiber contained in Charter‘s cable system. The trial court found, however, that Glendale had introduced no evidence of such an understanding or agreement. The trial court also ruled that Charter could not obtain an order entitling it to recover property related to the I-Net or compensation for Glendale‘s use of fiber capacity.5
Two of Charter‘s witnesses who were involved in the negotiations testified that prior to the parties’ execution of the settlement agreement, Glendale did not ask that Charter provide it with ownership of, or an indefeasible right of
According to the trial court, Glendale did not contradict this testimony with any credible evidence. Glendale‘s witness, Ms. Christine Sansone, a Glendale employee, testified that she understood that under the settlement agreement, Glendale would have some sort of indefeasible right to use the I-Net fiber optic cable. Yet, when the trial court asked her directly whether there “was any discussion regarding what we have called ownership or ownership of the fibers” or whether Charter represented that it would “dedicate the fibers to the City,” Ms. Sansone responded that she did not recall those words ever being used in the negotiations.
Moreover, two staff reports prepared by Ms. Sansone and submitted to the Glendale City Council were inconsistent with her trial testimony that an agreement was reached by the parties for Charter to give to Glendale some form of ownership interest or perpetual right to occupy and use portions of Charter‘s cable system. Both reports were prepared long before the commencement of this litigation. The first report was dated September 7, 1999, after the terms of the settlement agreement had been finalized. In that report, Ms. Sansone described the primary terms of the agreement and recommended that the Glendale City Council approve it. In describing the results of the settlement agreement negotiations, the report mentioned the I-Net only in passing. That report stated that Charter “agreed to comply with the following Franchise requirements: . . . provide full return capacity from sites specified in Exhibit B.”
The first report referred to the I-Net as a “franchise requirement” but said nothing about Glendale obtaining a permanent possessory interest to strands of optical fiber. Yet Ms. Sansone submitted a declaration in this lawsuit calling the “complete restructuring of the original institutional network requirement from a dedication of band width to the actual provision of physical fiber” one of the four “most critical provisions” of the settlement agreement. At trial, according to the trial court, Ms. Sansone was unable to reconcile credibly her declaration testimony with the absence in the staff report of any reference to Glendale‘s acquisition of I-Net fiber, and therefore the report undermined the credibility of Ms. Sansone‘s testimony about the parties’ “mutual” understanding of the I-Net provisions.
A second staff report was submitted to the Glendale City Council in May 2006, when the California Legislature was considering enacting the State
b. The Structure and Maintenance of the I-Net Is Consistent with Charter‘s Ownership
At the time of trial, Charter provided Glendale with the use of the I-Net by connecting 24 public buildings to Charter‘s cable system through fiber optic “cable drops.” Four strands of optical fiber connected each building (other than the Perkins Building) to the system backbone. When those four fibers reached the backbone, they were spliced with fibers already in the backbone in a way that provided a continuous route to the Perkins Building; those fibers served as a hub for the I-Net. As they ran from one public building to another through Charter‘s distribution system, the I-Net fibers were contained in larger cables that also contained many other fiber strands that were used to serve other Charter customers. In other words, the I-Net was completely integrated into Charter‘s cable system. Charter was not required to use any particular fiber strands to provide I-Net connectivity. Charter could reengineer its system and provide I-Net connectivity through different strands from the ones that were currently being used for that purpose. The trial court considered these facts as suggesting Charter‘s ownership of the I-Net.
c. The I-Net Is Not a “Fixture”
Charter‘s senior director of engineering testified that the sheaths that contain the fibers used exclusively by Glendale as part of the I-Net were contained within conduit in the ground or hung from utility poles. He testified that Charter could easily remove and replace the fiber sheaths in its system at will, without destroying or damaging them or the rest of Charter‘s fiber network. In fact, according to the testimony, Charter periodically removed portions of fiber optic cable from where they were placed as part of cable relocation efforts or for a variety of other reasons. The testimony at trial persuaded the trial court that Charter could easily disconnect Glendale‘s I-Net
2. PEG Fees
The trial court, in considering the following evidence and making the following findings, concluded that Glendale improperly used PEG fees.
a. Glendale‘s New Cable Ordinance
After the enactment of the State Cable Act, Glendale adopted a new cable ordinance. It provided, in pertinent part, that “A. Every state video franchise holder operating within the jurisdictional boundaries of the city shall calculate and remit to the city the following fees: [][] 1. A franchise fee equal to five (5) percent of that state franchise holder‘s gross revenues; [[] 2. A PEG access fee equal to two (2) percent of the gross revenues of that state video franchise holder which fee shall be used by the city for PEG purposes. [[] B. . . . A late payment charge . . . will be applied to any payment due by a state video franchise holder when said fees are not received or underpaid.” (Glendale Mun. Code, § 5.36.040.)
The regional vice president of Charter‘s western region testified that Charter paid franchise fees to Glendale in an amount equal to 5 percent of its “gross revenues” for the years 2008 through 2011. For that same period, Charter paid PEG fees equal to 2 percent of its “gross revenues.”
b. Glendale Creates a Lease to Avoid the Legal Restrictions on the Use of PEG Fees
Glendale‘s primary governmental access channel was known as GTV-6. Glendale employees produced and broadcasted meetings of the Glendale City Council and other city agencies on GTV-6, as well as other city-produced programming. Since 1995, Glendale had used the PEG fees it received from Charter to pay operational costs associated with the operation of the PEG facilities based on waiver language it had required be included in the settlement agreement. The documents admitted at trial containing interdepartmental communications and minutes of the Glendale City Council established that Glendale was aware that with the passage of the State Cable Act and Charter‘s receipt of a state-issued franchise, Glendale could no longer use PEG fees to pay operating—as opposed to capital—expenses, unless it treated those fees as franchise fees subject to the maximum allowable amount under federal and state law of 5 percent.
On or about June 15, 2010, the GFA board of directors—the Glendale City Council—adopted Resolution No. GFA10-03, which authorized the execution of a lease agreement with Glendale for Glendale‘s GTV-6 facilities and equipment (the GFA lease). The GFA lease was dated July 1, 2010. Pursuant to that lease, Glendale assigned to the GFA all future PEG fees that would be received by Glendale and the GFA then paid Glendale the same fees back as lease payments for the GTV-6 facilities and equipment used to produce programming for GTV-6. When Glendale received the PEG fees from Charter, they were placed into a capital account. The PEG access fees were then assigned to the GFA, which used those fees to pay Glendale the rental payments due under the lease. The lease payments were transferred to Glendale‘s general fund and could be used for any purpose. The acknowledged purpose of the lease agreement was to allow Glendale to use PEG fees for operating expenses without having those fees being treated as franchise fees subject to the 5 percent limit.
It is undisputed that the GFA, which had no employees, did not actually make use of the facilities and did not participate in the production of GTV-6 programming. Instead, Glendale continued to occupy and use the facilities exactly as it had before the lease went into effect. In fact, there was no purpose for the GFA and the lease agreement other than to allow Glendale to assess a 2 percent PEG fee and relieve itself of the obligation to consider it as part of the allowable 5 percent franchise fee.
c. Inappropriate Reimbursement of Past Capital Costs
Glendale claimed that through the use of this leasing mechanism, it was reimbursing itself for capital expenditures previously made from the general fund on PEG facilities. In or about 2004, Glendale dedicated portions of previously acquired real estate and buildings to construct and expand the GTV-6 facilities to include a studio and an auxiliary control room. The studio expansion was financed through unrestricted city funds. In or about 2010, Glendale commissioned a real estate appraisal by an independent member of the Appraisal Institute, who calculated the current fair market value of the real estate associated with the GTV-6 studio and the auxiliary control room to be $2,700,000. The same appraisal calculated an allocable portion of the fair
Around the same time in the beginning of 2010, Glendale conducted an internal asset valuation of (i) Glendale-owned specialized fixtures and equipment used in connection with PEG programming (e.g., cameras, lights, editing equipment) and (ii) the GTV-6 library, which consisted of a collection of over 3,000 governmental meetings and over 800 Glendale-produced programs. The fair market value of the specialized fixtures and equipment was calculated to be $1,217,540, and the fair market value of the film library was calculated to be $1,723,900. The specialized fixtures and equipment and the development of the film library previously had been financed by unrestricted city funds. Glendale‘s objective in performing the internal asset valuation and obtaining the independent appraisal was to obtain a total current value of its PEG facilities and equipment—the construction and purchase of which were financed by unrestricted city funds—in the event that Glendale decided to recoup the fair market value attributable to its prior expenditures.
Pursuant to the State Cable Act and the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 (the Federal Cable Act),6 Glendale may require the payment of a franchise fee. (
Although the capital costs—“costs incurred in or associated with the construction of PEG access facilities” (In re Matter of Implementation of Section 621(a)(1) of the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 as amended by the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Compensation Act of 1992 (2007) 22 F.C.C.R. 5101, 5150–5151 (FCC Report))—are not considered franchise fees, operating costs must be part of the franchise fee, which is subject to the 5 percent limit. Presumably, capital costs can be
The legislative history of the Federal Cable Act demonstrates that the term “facilities” was intended to refer to PEG channel capacity, as well as facilities and equipment for the use of such channel capacity. (H.R.Rep. No. 98-934, 2d Sess., p. 45 (1984); Alliance for Community Media v. F.C.C. (6th Cir. 2008) 529 F.3d 763, 783–785 (Alliance).) Congress specified that “[t]his may include vans, studios, cameras, or other equipment relating to the use of public, educational, or governmental channel capacity.” (H.R.Rep. No. 98-934, supra, at p. 45.)
The trial court interpreted the “capital costs” broadly. The trial court said the phrase “associated with,” used by the FCC to describe capital costs, is broad in nature (Natural Resources Defense Council v. United States EPA (9th Cir. 1992) 966 F.2d 1292, 1304) and that its use is coextensive with the phrase “related to.” (See Alliance, supra, 529 F.3d at pp. 783–785; California Rice Industry v. Federal Trade Commission (9th Cir. 1939) 102 F.2d 716, 721 [28 F.T.C. 1912].) The trial court similarly concluded that the term “related to” is broad and far reaching. (Chiron Corp. v. Ortho Diagnostic Systems, Inc. (9th Cir. 2000) 207 F.3d 1126, 1131.) Thus, according to the trial court, capital costs can be said to be those costs that are incurred in, or that pertain, concern, or bear a relation to, PEG channel capacity, facilities or equipment, or the construction thereof. (H.R.Rep. No. 98-934, supra, at p. 45; Alliance, supra, 529 F.3d at pp. 783–785.) The trial court assumed, without deciding, that Glendale could reimburse itself for past capital expenditures on PEG facilities by using current PEG fees, but found that Glendale had secured an appraisal of the current value of its PEG facilities and equipment without reference to their actual costs at the time they were incurred, i.e., what Glendale expended in 2004 to expand the GTV-6 facility.
The trial court concluded that Glendale could not, consistent with the proper definition of capital costs, charge as “capital” reimbursement amounts based on a current appraisal of all facilities, equipment, and library of broadcasts acquired over the years regardless of when, and if, any funds were expended for such facilities, equipment, and library. The trial court said that although Glendale may be entitled to reimbursement of capital “costs” it had expended in connection with the PEG access channels and broadcasts, the calculation of such reimbursements by Glendale was flawed. Glendale‘s valuation was an improper method to calculate the GFA lease payments. Over the term of the lease, Glendale was paid not just the amount of its past general fund investments on GTV-6, but rather the entire present value of the
Moreover, much of the $5.8 million Glendale was seeking in “reimbursements” from PEG fee revenue was not money Glendale spent from the general fund on capital investments in the GTV-6 facilities. For example, $1.7 million of Glendale‘s stated value of the facilities came from the GTV-6 film library alone. That value was determined by estimating the amount it cost to pay city employees to record and edit the GTV-6 programs in the library. But, as a Glendale witness testified, those employees’ salaries were paid primarily from PEG fees in the first instance, not from the general fund. Glendale‘s rationale was that it should be entitled to recover sums that were spent from the general fund on GTV-6 capital costs and were never recovered. The trial court found it would be inappropriate to include sums spent from PEG fee revenue, such as the $1.7 million used to pay employees to produce the film library, for the amount of reimbursement of the general fund.
d. Disregarding the Lease
Charter‘s expert witness, Mr. Daniel Ray, was an expert in forensic accounting. Mr. Ray testified that, applying generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP),7 PEG fees were not being used for capital costs. In support of this conclusion, Mr. Ray testified that (i) the lease agreement had no economic substance, (ii) the terms of the lease agreement did not represent economic reality and so would not have been agreed to by an unrelated party, (iii) the lease agreement was not a capital lease under GAAP, (iv) by its own admission, Glendale was using PEG fees to pay PEG operating expenses, and (v) the purported “reimbursement” was not a capital expenditure from an accounting perspective. The facts upon which Mr. Ray relied in reaching these conclusions were largely undisputed.
With respect to the issue of whether the lease agreement had any economic substance, Mr. Ray testified that in related party transactions it is important—from an accounting standpoint—to look beyond the form of a transaction in order to confirm that there was economic substance to it. If there was no such economic substance, the form must be disregarded and only the substance should be considered in determining the proper classification of PEG fee
Further underscoring the lack of economic substance behind the lease agreement, Mr. Ray identified a number of ways in which the terms of the lease, or the “form of the transaction,” were, in effect, divorced from reality. For example, under the terms of the lease agreement, the GFA was “to take possession” of the GTV-6 facilities as of July 1, 2010, and would have the “use” and “enjoyment” of them. As noted above, however, it was undisputed that the GFA did not actually occupy or otherwise make use of the GTV-6 facilities. Instead, the same city employees who worked for GTV-6 before the lease agreement remained employees of Glendale and reported to work at the same location and continued to perform the same tasks after the lease agreement went into effect.
As another example, the lease agreement provided that the GFA was supposed to pay, in addition to the lease payments, certain expenses such as the fees and expenses of attorneys; consultants; accountants; and all utility services, including janitor service, security, power, gas, telephone, light, heating, and water. It was undisputed, however, that the GFA did not make any such payments.
Under the terms of the lease agreement, the GFA was to deposit promptly all PEG fees received into a “PEG Lease Payment Fund” established by the GFA. But it was undisputed that the GFA did not open any such account.
Mr. Ray also testified that the terms set forth in the lease agreement were not based upon economic reality and would not have been agreed to by an unrelated party because they were premised on a valuation of the GTV-6 facilities that was highly suspect. In support of this conclusion, Mr. Ray pointed to a number of components of the overall value used by Glendale ostensibly to determine an appropriate rental rate. Specifically, he expressed questions and concerns, from a forensic accounting perspective, about the fact that Glendale (i) valued all of the equipment at its original cost rather than its
In addition, Mr. Ray discussed the issue of whether the lease agreement was a capital lease or an operating lease. The evidence on this issue was not disputed. Both Mr. Ray and Mr. Robert Elliot, Glendale‘s director of finance, agreed that (i) all leases are either capital leases or operating leases, (ii) if there is an effective transfer of title at the end of the lease term, then the lease is a capital lease, (iii) if there is no transfer of title at the end of the lease term, then the lease is an operating lease, and (iv) payments made on a capital lease are capital expenses, while payments made on an operating lease are operating expenses. On its face, the lease agreement did not include a transfer of title at the end of the lease term. Thus, the payments by the GFA should not be considered “capital” reimbursements, even if the lease was determined to be more than a mere shell mechanism to continue requiring the PEG fee payments from Charter.
The only witness Glendale provided to respond to Mr. Ray‘s testimony was Mr. Elliot. When Mr. Elliot was asked specifically by the trial court whether Mr. Ray‘s opinions were wrong, he was unable or unwilling to say whether Mr. Ray was right or wrong. Moreover, Mr. Elliot admitted that if he were going to determine whether something was a capital cost or an operating cost, he “would apply the same criteria that Mr. Ray applied” in his testimony. Mr. Elliot was the only witness called by Glendale to testify on accounting issues related to the expenditure of PEG fees. Yet, he never testified that PEG fees were being spent on capital costs. Taking this testimony together with the other evidence described above, the trial court found that Glendale was not using the PEG fees it received from Charter for PEG capital costs.
e. Trial Court‘s Conclusions and the Appeal
Following a court trial, the trial court issued a statement of decision that included the factual findings detailed above, and ruled that Glendale had no ownership interest in the I-Net and Charter had no continuing duty to provide free I-Net services and facilities. The trial court also ruled in favor of Charter on the PEG issue, ruling that Charter was entitled to a declaration that (i) Glendale was using PEG fees for purposes other than capital costs associated
Charter filed an appeal as to the summary adjudications against it. Glendale cross-appealed as to the summary adjudication against it and as to that part of the judgment based on the trial court‘s decisions following trial.
DISCUSSION
A. Charter‘s Appeal
1. Standard of Review
Charter‘s appeal raises two challenges to the trial court‘s orders granting Glendale‘s cross-motions for summary adjudication of the third and fifth causes of action in Charter‘s amended cross-complaint. Because those challenges are based on undisputed facts and involve the interpretation of state and federal statutes, we review the summary adjudications de novo.
As stated in Araquistain v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (2014) 229 Cal.App.4th 227, 231 [176 Cal.Rptr.3d 620] (Araquistain), “The standard of review of a summary judgment motion in favor of a defendant is well settled. We ‘independently assess the correctness of the trial court‘s ruling by applying the same legal standard as the trial court in determining whether any triable issues of material fact exist, and whether the defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’ [Citation.] Here, the dispositive facts are undisputed, and the question is one of statutory interpretation. ‘It is well settled that the interpretation and application of a statutory scheme to an undisputed set of facts is a question of law [citation] which is subject to de novo review on appeal. [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (See Davis v. Kiewit Pacific Co. (2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 358, 363 [162 Cal.Rptr.3d 805] [“In reviewing an order granting summary adjudication of an issue, we apply the same de novo standard of review that applies to an appeal from an order granting summary judgment.“].)
2. Declaration of Right of Offset
Charter contends that the trial court erred when it granted Glendale‘s cross-motion for summary adjudication of Charter‘s fifth cause of action for a declaration that Charter had a right to offset the amount of its PEG fee
Whether under
As the court explained in Jones Intercable of San Diego v. City of Chula Vista (9th Cir. 1996) 80 F.3d 320, “Congress found that, prior to passage of section 555a(a), municipalities were facing unexpected and ‘potentially crippling’ civil damage liability claims in relation to their regulation of cable operators. [Fn. omitted.] See Daniels Cablevision, Inc. v. United States, 835 F.Supp. 1, 11–12 (D.D.C. 1993). In response, Congress exempted municipalities from civil damages liability arising out of the local regulation of cable services in order ‘to preserve the municipal franchising and regulation scheme envisioned by the [Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984].’ Id. at 12. [[] We conclude that section 555a(a) promotes Congress‘s substantial interest in having municipalities regulate cable operators without fear of
As Glendale points out, Charter originally sought damages and reimbursement based on its claim that Glendale had unlawfully expended PEG fees. When Glendale raised the damages prohibition in section 555a(a), part of the Federal Cable Act, in response to Charter‘s claim for damages and reimbursement, Charter amended its cross-complaint by deleting the express request for damages and reimbursement and replacing it with a request for a declaration that it had a future right of offset based on past overcharges of PEG fees. According to Glendale, the change in the relief that Charter sought from legal to equitable remedies was merely a pleading artifice designed to circumvent the damage prohibition in section 555a(a) of the Federal Cable Act. We agree.
The label attached to a complaint or a cause of action does not control. (Benach v. County of Los Angeles (2007) 149 Cal.App.4th 836, 845 [57 Cal.Rptr.3d 363] [when classifying an action as legal or equitable, courts look to the substance of the action—nature of rights in issue and remedy sought].) Although Charter labeled its first cause of action as one for declaratory relief, the underlying purpose of that claim was to obtain a declaration that Glendale was obligated to repay or reimburse Charter for alleged past overpayments of PEG fees. Leaving aside the issue of whether a declaration of rights based, in part, on past events, is appropriate, Charter‘s requested declaration would result in a judicially recognized right of offset, the practical effect of which would be the recoupment of money allegedly wrongfully obtained from Charter by Glendale, i.e., the recovery of damages. (3) “Whatever their semantic differences, the statutory and dictionary definitions of ‘damages’ share several basic concepts. Each requires there to be ‘compensation,’ [fn. omitted] in ‘money,’ ‘recovered’ by a party for ‘loss’ or ‘detriment’ it has suffered through the acts of another.” (AIU Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (1990) 51 Cal.3d 807, 826 [274 Cal.Rptr. 820, 799 P.2d 1253].) We therefore conclude that the trial court correctly determined that Charter‘s request for a declaration of a right of offset contravened the prohibition against damages in
3. Request to Realign PEG Channels
Charter contends that the trial court erred when it granted Glendale‘s motion for summary adjudication of the third cause of action in Glendale‘s cross-complaint for declaratory relief regarding Charter‘s right to realign Glendale‘s PEG channels. According to Charter, the trial court erred when it
Charter concedes that it did not argue specifically in the trial court that statutes, such as
The Supreme Court in Keener v. Jeld-Wen, Inc. (2009) 46 Cal.4th 247 explained the basis for the forfeiture rule as follows: “The forfeiture rule generally applies in all civil and criminal proceedings. [Citations.] The rule is designed to advance efficiency and deter gamesmanship. As we explained in People v. Simon (2001) 25 Cal.4th 1082, 1108 . . . : ’ “The purpose of the general doctrine of waiver [or forfeiture] is to encourage a defendant to bring errors to the attention of the trial court, so that they may be corrected or avoided and a fair trial had . . . .“’ [Citation.] ’ “No procedural principle is more familiar to this Court than that a constitutional right,” or a right of any other sort, “may be forfeited in criminal as well as civil cases by the failure to make timely assertion of the right before a tribunal having jurisdiction to
Because Charter argued in the trial court only that contract principles—as opposed to principles of statutory interpretation—required Charter to provide a reasonable basis for its refusal to approve the proposed channel realignment, both Glendale and the trial court were deprived of the opportunity to address that discrete issue. As noted, Charter has forfeited that argument by failing to raise it in the trial court.
Even if the issue was not forfeited, we conclude that the refusal of Glendale to consent was lawful. Despite the statutory requirement that Charter obtain the agreement of Glendale to the channel realignment, Charter indicated it was proceeding with that realignment without seeking any relief from the Glendale City Council or judicial relief—e.g., petitioning for a writ of mandamus. It was at that point that Glendale sought and obtained injunctive relief.
The Legislature provided for the fundamental policy that PEG channels not be realigned unless the local entity agreed. (
The Legislature may provide for the consent or agreement of interested parties to an application of the statute or regulation. (See Kugler v. Yocum (1968) 69 Cal.2d 371, 379-380; Brock v. Superior Court (1937) 9 Cal.2d 291, 299.) In “a proper case” (Wilkinson v. Madera Community Hospital (1983) 144 Cal.App.3d 436, 442), when the Legislature delegates its power, standards may be implied by the statutory purpose to avoid arbitrary action. (People v. Wright (1982) 30 Cal.3d 705, 712-713; Kugler v. Yocum, supra, 69 Cal.2d at p. 381 [” ‘[The] most perceptive courts are motivated much more by the degree of protection against arbitrariness than by the doctrine about standards . . . ’ “]; see id. at
Because the Legislature determined that there be no PEG channel realignment after the initial designation of PEG channels without the agreement of the local entity, it is questionable if there was a delegation of authority that required any type of protection for the cable operator. The California Supreme Court said, “The granting of discretionary power, not restricted by specific standards” can be appropriate if the objectionable activity is to “be regulated or restricted to certain localities.” (In re Petersen (1958) 51 Cal.2d 177, 184.) In licensing situations, the licensing agency may not “act arbitrarily or oppressively.” (Id. at p. 185.) “[I]t is presumed that the agency will duly perform its public duty, but an abuse may be shown and relief obtained in the courts.” (Ibid.) Here, however, a traditional licensing issue is not involved.
Even if Glendale‘s action in refusing realignment is subject to challenge as being arbitrary, we conclude, as a matter of law, that such refusal was not arbitrary. (See County of Los Angeles v. City of Los Angeles (2013) 214 Cal.App.4th 643, 654 [“In determining whether a public agency has abused its discretion, the court may not substitute its judgment for that of the agency, and if reasonable minds may disagree as to the wisdom of the agency‘s action, its determination must be upheld. [Citation.] A court must ask whether the public agency‘s action was arbitrary, capricious, or entirely lacking in evidentiary support . . . .“]; O.W.L. Foundation v. City of Rohnert Park (2008) 168 Cal.App.4th 568, 596; County of Del Norte v. City of Crescent City (1999) 71 Cal.App.4th 965, 976-978.) Glendale gave as reasons for not agreeing to a PEG channel realignment that it did not want to risk viewership loss—a possibility according to experts and market surveys—and a possible degradation of picture quality. In addition, both the Glendale Unified School District and Glendale Community College that managed and administered a PEG educational channel opposed the realignment of that channel.10
Although Charter disputes Glendale‘s reasons, Glendale‘s position was not arbitrary because Glendale had evidence supporting its concerns and the risk of negative consequences. Accordingly, for all of the above reasons, we
On the contract issue, we disagree with Charter‘s argument that contract principles impose an implied reasonableness requirement on Glendale‘s statutory right under
B. Glendale‘s Cross-appeal
Glendale cross-appeals from the trial court‘s summary adjudication of Charter‘s claim that Charter had no continuing duty to provide Glendale with free video programming and cable modem services, and the trial court‘s decisions after trial that Charter had no obligations to provide to Glendale use of the I-Net indefinitely without cost and that Glendale had charged Charter unlawful PEG fees.
1. Summary Adjudication
a. Standard of Review and Summary Adjudication of Part of a Cause of Action
Glendale‘s cross-appeal raises, inter alia, a challenge to the trial court‘s order granting Charter‘s motion for summary adjudication of the first cause of action in Charter‘s cross-complaint. Because that challenge is based on undisputed facts and involves the interpretation of the State Cable Act and the parties’ franchise and settlement agreements, we review it de novo. (See Sacks v. City of Oakland (2010) 190 Cal.App.4th 1070, 1082; Araquistain, supra, 229 Cal.App.4th at p. 231.)
In its letter brief, Glendale contends that the trial court‘s order summarily adjudicated only part of the first cause of action in violation of
Although the trial court‘s order summarily adjudicating, in part, Charter‘s first cause of action may have violated
b. Analysis
Glendale challenges the trial court‘s ruling that although Charter and Glendale engaged in negotiations for an extension of the Glendale franchise agreement, no such agreement was reached and therefore Charter had no continuing duty to provide Glendale with free video programming and cable modem services. Because Charter had no such continuing duty to provide Glendale with free video programming and cable modem services, the trial court did not err in making that ruling. The settlement agreement‘s obligation to provide high-speed internet access and modem capability lasted only as “long as the Franchisee [(Charter)] provide[s] Cable Service within the City pursuant to the [Glendale franchise agreement] or any renewal or extension thereof.”
It was undisputed that the Glendale franchise agreement expired in 2005 and that although the parties negotiated about a renewal of that franchise, they did not reach a final agreement on a renewal. Charter thereafter provided cable services in Glendale under a state franchise agreement effective January 2008. As a result, any obligation under the Glendale franchise agreement as modified by the settlement agreement terminated as a matter of law in January 2008. The trial court therefore correctly granted Charter‘s motion for summary adjudication as to that part of the first cause of action related to the free cable programming and cable modem services issue.
2. Trial
a. Standard of Review
Glendale maintains that because its challenges to the trial court‘s rulings after trial on the I-Net and PEG fees issues involve only contract and statutory interpretation, the governing standard of review is de novo. Charter counters that because the trial court‘s rulings on those two issues were based on detailed factual findings made after trial, the substantial evidence standard governs Glendale‘s appeal from those rulings. As discussed below, we agree that the I-Net and PEG fees issues are based on facts and therefore the substantial evidence standard of review would govern any properly raised challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence in support of the trial court‘s findings.
b. Indefinite I-Net Obligations
Glendale contends that the trial court erred when it found that there was no agreement between the parties to allow Glendale to use indefinitely the dark fiber optic cables in the I-Net without cost. According to Glendale, the parties negotiated a “business deal” in connection with the settlement agreement that allowed it to use the dark fiber optic cables in the I-Net without cost and, notwithstanding the provisions of the State Cable Act and Charter‘s state franchise agreement, that “deal” remained valid and enforceable.
As noted above, Glendale contends that the I-Net issue should be reviewed de novo because it involves an interpretation of the settlement agreement, as well as an interpretation of the State Cable Act. The purported agreement upon which Glendale relies, however, admittedly was an oral one supposedly made during the parties’ negotiations of the franchise compliance issues that ultimately gave rise to the settlement agreement. The alleged existence of such an agreement raised a factual issue, not an issue of contract interpretation. Moreover, conflicting parol evidence was introduced concerning the intention of the parties, making the interpretation of the settlement agreement subject to the substantial evidence standard of review. (Winet v. Price (1992) 4 Cal.App.4th 1159, 1165–1166.)
Given that the trial court‘s finding of no agreement to indefinite use of the dark fiber optic cables in the I-Net, Glendale is foreclosed from contending, as it does on appeal, that the parties orally agreed to such indefinite use. Because all of Glendale‘s appellate arguments on this issue are predicated on the existence of such an oral agreement, Glendale has failed to carry its burden of affirmatively demonstrating error on appeal. (Mark Tanner Construction, Inc. v. HUB Internat. Ins. Services, Inc. (2014) 224 Cal.App.4th 574, 578 [appellants who failed adequately to challenge the legal bases or factual findings of the trial court “failed to carry their burden to demonstrate error“].)
c. PEG Fees
Glendale challenges the trial court‘s ruling that Glendale had charged an unlawful franchise fee by spending PEG fees on PEG operating costs, contending that Charter lacked standing to contest the PEG fees and that Glendale‘s lease arrangement with the GFA satisfied the Federal Cable Act‘s requirement that PEG fees must be expended on “capital costs.” (
As the trial court determined during the summary adjudication proceedings, Charter had standing to challenge the PEG fees issue. The cases on which Glendale‘s standing argument is based, such as Scol Corp. v. City of Los Angeles (1970) 12 Cal.App.3d 805 (Scol),13 involved
As stated in Sipple v. City of Hayward (2014) 225 Cal.App.4th 349, 359 (Sipple), ”Scol has since been criticized for its sharp distinction between a ‘taxpayer’ and a ‘tax collector,’ and its strict rule denying standing in all circumstances to ‘tax collectors.’ ’ “To the extent Scol stands for the proposition that a party lacks standing to challenge a tax unless it is the denominated “taxpayer” under the statutory or regulatory scheme imposing the tax, it is outdated.” ’ (TracFone Wireless, Inc. v. County of Los Angeles (2008) 163 Cal.App.4th 1359, 1364 (TracFone).) This is because ‘[t]here have been some refinements of the rule barring suits for refund to persons not technically regarded as “taxpayers” . . . resulting from unusual circumstances which have been subject to judicial review.’ (Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. State Bd. of Equalization (1989) 214 Cal.App.3d 518, 526 (Delta).” The court in Sipple analyzed the cases involving “unusual circumstances” as those that conferred standing on a “tax collector” in the interests of fairness and so that the taxing authority not be unjustly enriched. (Sipple, supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at pp. 359-361.)
We do not have to undertake the analysis applied in Sipple, supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at pages 359 through 361. In this case, the Glendale ordinance that imposed the PEG fee required the video franchise holder, i.e., Charter, to calculate and remit to Glendale a PEG fee of 2 percent of gross annual revenues. Although Charter passed the PEG fees through to its customers, it was nevertheless primarily liable under the ordinance for the calculation and payment of the fees. Because Charter was required to calculate and pay the PEG fees to Glendale in the first instance, Charter had standing to challenge the propriety of those fees.
Glendale‘s challenge to the merits of the trial court‘s ruling on the PEG fees issue suffers from the same defect as its challenge to the ruling on the I-Net issue. Glendale characterizes its challenge as a definitional one under
According to the trial court‘s findings, “[t]here was no relationship between what Glendale spent in the past on capital and what it would receive in lease payments” because Glendale included in its calculation of past capital expenditures the “entire present value” of the GTV-6 studio and equipment, not the amount actually spent on those items. The trial court also found Glendale‘s calculation of the amount it was entitled to recoup on capital expenditures was inappropriate because Glendale included in that calculation the present value of the film library, including the cost of the salaries of the city employees who recorded and edited the programs in the library, salaries that the trial court found had been paid from PEG fees in the first instance, and not from the general fund as contended by Glendale.
Given the trial court‘s factual findings on the flawed calculation of past general fund expenditures on capital investments in the GTV-6 facilities and equipment—findings that Glendale does not challenge on appeal—Glendale has failed to demonstrate that the trial court erred in ruling that Glendale improperly calculated PEG fees.
The trial court also made unchallenged factual findings concerning the legitimacy of the GFA lease arrangement and concluded, as a factual matter, that the arrangement was a sham. The trial court based its findings, in part, on expert testimony concerning the economic substance of the lease arrangement. Relying in part on that testimony, the trial court found that the GFA lease was a related-party transaction and that “neither Glendale nor the GFA was getting anything it did not already have before the transaction, or was giving up anything as a result of the transaction.” According to the trial court, Glendale was not giving up the occupancy or use of the lease facilities and the GFA was not actually using or occupying them. Moreover, the trial court found that the same Glendale employees who worked for GTV-6 before the lease agreement remained employees of Glendale, reported to work at the same location, and performed the same tasks after the lease went into effect. In addition, the trial court found that although the GFA was required under the lease to pay certain expenses in addition to lease payments, the GFA never paid any such expenses.
Glendale argues that Charter‘s forensic accounting expert mistakenly relied on GAAP concerning the meaning of “capital costs” to arrive at his conclusion, instead of the FCC definition discussed in cases such as Alliance, supra, 529 F.3d at pages 783 through 785. Glendale asserts that because the trial court erroneously used GAAP, Glendale can attack the trial court‘s finding concerning the GFA lease. According to Glendale, the expert‘s reliance on the GAAP definition of the term “capital costs” rendered his entire opinion on the PEG fees issue irrelevant.14 Glendale asserts that the FCC definition of “capital costs“—those that are “incurred in or associated with the construction of PEG access facilities” (FCC report, supra, 22 F.C.C.R., at pp. 5150-5151)—is broader than GAAP and that the lease payments fall within that definition.15
Although the trial court relied on Charter‘s accounting expert when making its factual findings about the GFA lease, its statement of decision makes clear that it applied the FCC definition in concluding that the GFA lease was a sham arrangement intended to allow Glendale to circumvent the Federal Cable Act‘s 5 percent limitation on PEG fees and to continue to collect and use PEG fees for operating costs. The trial court gave the term “capital costs” a broad reading in concluding that such costs include “those costs that are incurred in, or that pertain, concern, or bear a relation to, PEG channel capacity, facilities or equipment, or the construction thereof.” The trial court determined that Glendale did not reimburse itself for prior capital expenditures because the amount it claimed it was owed was not what it spent on the GTV-6 studio improvements, and the GFA lease was not a real transaction and could not convert operating expenses into PEG fees capital expenditures. In addition, the only Glendale witness to testify about the capital costs issue, Glendale‘s chief financial officer, Mr. Elliot, conceded that he would apply
The other problem with Glendale‘s contention concerning the forensic accounting expert‘s testimony is that it is actually an argument that the trial court‘s findings concerning the GFA lease are not supported by substantial evidence because they were exclusively based on irrelevant expert opinion. As discussed above, Glendale‘s failure to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence precludes it from making this argument. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in determining that Glendale had not applied PEG fees exclusively to PEG capital costs or treated them as franchise fees, reducing its franchise fee entitlement accordingly. Thus, we conclude that the trial court did not err in its conclusion that PEG fees that Glendale charged were not proper.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. No costs are awarded on either the appeal or cross-appeal.
Kriegler, J., and Goodman, J.,* concurred.
*Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
