COALITION FOR THE PRESERVATION OF HISPANIC BROADCASTING, Appellant,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Appellee,
Spanish International Communications Corp., Station
Representatives Association, Inc., Fouce Amusement
Enterprises, Inc., Univision, Inc., Intervenors.
HISPANIC BROADCASTING SYSTEMS, INC., Appellant,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Appellee,
Spanish International Communications Corp., Bahia de San
Francisco Television Co., Seven Hills Television Co.,
Station Representatives Association, Inc., Fouce Amusement
Enterprises, Inc., Univision, Inc., Intervenors.
HISPANIC BROADCASTING LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, Appellant,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Appellee,
Spanish International Communications Corp., Bahia de San
Francisco Television Co., Seven Hills Television
Co., Station Representatives
Association, Inc., Univision,
Inc., Intervenors.
Susan M. JARAMILLO, Appellant,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Appellee,
Seven Hills Television Co., Univision Holdings, Inc., et
al., Intervenors.
TVL CORPORATION, Appellant,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Appellee,
Univision Holdings, Inc., et al., Intervenor.
The COALITION FOR the PRESERVATION OF HISPANIC BROADCASTING,
et al., Appellants,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, Appellee,
Univision Holdings, Inc., et al., Intervenor.
Nos. 87-1285, 87-1287, 87-1299, 88-1564, 88-1588 and 88-1596.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Dec. 12, 1990.
Decided April 23, 1991.
As Amended May 14, 1991.
Notices of Appeals from an Order of the Federal Communications Commission.
Morton L. Berfield, with whom Lewis I. Cohen and Roy W. Boyce were on the brief, for appellant Hispanic Broadcasting Ltd. Partnership in No. 87-1299.
Stephen A. Sharp for appellant Hispanic Broadcasting System in No. 87-1287. Martin E. Firestone also entered an appearance for appellant.
Katrina Renouf, with whom Margot Polivy was on the brief for appellant Susan Jaramillo in No. 88-1564.
Bruce A. Eisen was on the brief for appellant Coalition for the Preservation of Hispanic Broadcasting in Nos. 87-1285 and 88-1596.
James P. Riley and Robert A. DePont were on the brief for appellant TVL Corp. in No. 88-1588.
Daniel M. Armstrong, Associate Gen. Cоunsel, F.C.C., with whom Robert L. Pettit, Gen. Counsel and Sue Ann Preskill, Counsel, F.C.C. were on the brief for appellee in Nos. 87-1285, 87-1287, 87-1299, 88-1564, 88-1588 and 88-1596.
Linda K. Smith and David H. Solomon entered appearances for intervenor Station Representatives Ass'n, Inc. in Nos. 87-1285, 87-1287 and 87-1289.
L. Andrew Tollin and Leon T. Knauer entered appearances for intervenor Seven Hills Television Co. in Nos. 87-1285, 87-1287, 87-1289, 88-1564 and 88-1588.
N. Frank Wiggins entered an appearance for intervenor Fouce Amusement Enterprises, Inc. in Nos. 87-1285, 87-1287 and 87-1289.
Richard E. Wiley, John C. Quale, James R. Bayes and Diane Z. Goldman entered appearances for intervenors Spanish Intern. Communications and Univision Holdings, Inc., et al. in Nos. 87-1285, 87-1287, 87-1289, 88-1588 and 88-1596.
John L. Tierney, Richard F. Swift and Ann Bavender entered appearances for intervenor Bahia de San Franciscо Television Co. in No. 87-1287.
Before MIKVA, Chief Judge, WALD, EDWARDS, RUTH BADER GINSBURG, SILBERMAN, BUCKLEY, WILLIAMS, D.H. GINSBURG, SENTELLE, THOMAS, HENDERSON and RANDOLPH, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS.
Dissenting Opinion filed by Chief Judge MIKVA.
STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge:
This is an appeal from a Federal Communications Commission decision granting a conditional renewal of several television licenses. We deny the challenges of two petitioners for failure to exhaust administrative remedies and those of two others for want of standing.1
As the panel opinion presented the facts in detail, see Coalition for the Preservation of Hispanic Broadcasting v. FCC,
At about the time the Review Board acted, petitioners Hispanic Broadcasting Systems, Inc. ("HBS") and Hispanic Broadcasting Limited Partnership filed aрplications for the licenses and asked the Commission to reverse the Review Board. As the filings came years after the relevant FCC "windows" had closed, the Commission rejected the applications as untimely. Nonetheless, it permitted petitioners to appear before it as amici and considered their argument that the renewal and transfer of Spanish International's licenses violated the FCC's "Jefferson Radio " policy, which prohibits any licensee from transferring a broadcast station at full value while a proceeding that might lead to license forfeiture is pending. See Jefferson Radio Co. v. FCC,
Two of the challengers are prospective applicants, HBS and the Partnership, and three, the Partnership (in a second capacity), Susan Jaramillo and the Coalition for the Preservation of Hispanic Broadcasting, are purportedly dissatisfied viewers. We hold that (1) HBS and the Partnership may not obtain judicial review because they did not timely invoke the administrative procedures required of prospective applicants; and (2) the viewers do not have standing to sue because they do not fall within the zone of interests contemplated by Sec. 310(b).
The Would-Be Applicants
HBS and the Partnership seek two kinds of relief. First, they ask us to overturn the FCC's decision to reject their applications as untimely. We deny this relief for the reasons stated by the panel opinion.
Both panel opinions and, upon rehearing, the litigants themselves treated this issue as a matter of Article III standing: Are the prospects of these latecomers' winning the licenses (if they were vacant) serious enough that they were truly harmed by the Commission's rejection of claims that might have led to nonrenewal and vacancy? See generally Warth v. Seldin,
The judicial review provision of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. Sec. 402(b), authorizes disappointed "applicant[s]" and, more generally, "any ... person who is aggrieved or whose interests are adversely affected" by a Commission licensing order to sue for relief in this court. Yet even "aggrieved" persons must comply with prescribed administrative procedures. See Spanish International Broadcasting Co. v. FCC,
Spanish International illustrates the exhaustion principle at work in the licensing context. International Panorama TV sought a license to construct a new television station. A competitor, Spanish International (apparently the same company as the beneficiary of today's ruling), twice submitted petitions attacking International Panorama's application, invoking the grounds it afterwards raised on appeal.3 Because both petitions were untimely, the FCC refused to admit Spanish Internаtional as a party to the proceedings. After unsuccessfully petitioning for reconsideration under Sec. 405, Spanish International asked this court (1) to reverse the FCC's order denying it formal participation in the application proceedings and (2) to reverse the FCC's decision that International Panorama satisfied the Commission's character qualifications. See Appellant's Brief, Spanish Int'l Broadcasting Co. v. FCC,
The court affirmed the FCC's judgment that Spanish International's petitions were untimely and, accordingly, ruled that Spanish International had failed to exhaust the prescribed administrative remedies.
As there, so here. An applicant for a broadcast license must file a timely application with the FCC before he may challenge an adverse Commission order in this court. This requirement promotes the values that the exhaustion doctrine was designed to protect: administrative and judicial economy and comity between courts and agencies. See generally McKart v. United States,
Moreover, as Judge Mikva wrote for this court in New York State Ophthalmological Society v. Bowen,
First, if HBS or the Partnership had timely pursued the proper administrative course, one of them might have prevailed in a comparative hearing and obtained the licenses without prevailing on the alien ownership issue (or, if even relevant under this sсenario, the Jefferson Radio issue). Even if the FCC had ruled conclusively for Spanish International on the alien ownership issue, petitioners obviously could not have sued until after they had given their last administrative remedy--the comparative hearing--a shot, and we will not exempt them from that requirement now simply because they ignored the relevant application deadlines. And though it is difficult for a challenger to unseat an incumbent in a renewal proceeding, see generally Central Florida Enterprises, Inc. v. FCC,
Alternatively, if HBS and the Partnership had filed timely applications, the FCC might well have determined--quitе apart from the issue of Spanish International's qualifications--that they were unqualified to operate broadcast stations. Indeed, the Commission pointed out in denying the belated applications that admitting petitioners to consideration "would require evidentiary hearings on [their] qualifications and on the standard comparative issue." See Joint Appendix 435; see also In re Belo Broadcasting Corp.,
This is unlike the frequent case where compliance with an agency's procedures would not have cаused the agency to venture down a path that could have mooted the issue brought to court. In such cases this court has often relaxed exhaustion requirements to permit consideration of issues that an agency has had a "fair opportunity" to address. See, e.g., United Church of Christ v. FCC,
Jacksonville Broadcasting Corp. v. FCC,
Obviously nothing in our decision prevents any person who feels aggrieved from appealing an order denying him party status in the administrative proceedings; the panel decision (incorporated here) disposing of the untimely applications exemplifies the point. And if the agency's denial were in error, its denial of status would necessarily excuse later non-participation.6
One final note: HBS and the Partnership cannot excuse their tardiness on the grounds that they did not exist until after the prescribed filing period. Their principals existed and could have formed the firms earlier.
The Viewers
Susan Jaramillo and the Coalition claim standing as viewers to challenge the FCC's approval of the renewal and transfer agreement. The Partnership also asserts viewer standing on the basis of the residence and viewing habits of its general partner. We dismiss these claims on prudential standing grounds. See generally Air Courier Conference of America v. American Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO, --- U.S. ----,
That section was designed to protect the entire nation--to "prevent[ ] alien activities against the Government during the time of war." Noe v. FCC,
Nor can viewers assert standing as intended beneficiaries of the Jefferson Radio doctrine, for it is entirely instrumental, aimed (in this context) only at enhancing the deterrent effect of whatever substantive provision supports the attack on the incumbent licensee, here Sec. 310(b)(3). See Stereo Broadcasters, Inc. v. FCC,
* * *
We affirm the FCC order of June 5, 1987. We adhere to the panel opinion as it relates to petitioner TVL's claim and to the FCC's decision to reject petitioners' applications as untimely. We vacate the panel opinion as it relates to the standing of petitioners HBS and the Partnership and to the merits of their Jefferson Radio claim, and dismiss for want of exhaustion the claims that each rests on its status as a frustrated applicant. Finally, we dismiss for want of standing the claims of petitioners Coalition for Hispanic Broadcasting and Susan Jaramillo and the independent claim of the Partnership in its role of viewer.
So ordered.
MIKVA, Chief Judge, dissenting:
Running headlong from the questions briefed and argued before us, my colleagues seek refuge in a theory as novel as it is questionable. Unsupported by precedent, undeveloped by the court, and unresponsive to the facts of this case, the stepchild of exhaustion theory announced today has an inauspicious birth. I doubt that this poor relation will thrive; therefore, I take issue with the majority primarily because particular parties have wrongly been denied their day in court. But recognizing the possibility that today's holding may be vivified by other judges on another day, I also write to express my view that it finds no precedent in the wholly sensible doctrine of administrative exhaustion and is, in fact, at odds with the goals underlying that requirement. Accordingly, I dissent.
I.
We granted en banc review in this case to consider a single question: Whether petitioners have standing to challenge decisions by the Federal Communications Commission (the "FCC" or "Commission") allowing assignment of certain television station licenses to Hallmark Cards, Inc. ("Hallmark"). A technical and fact-specific issue to be sure, but one that this court deemed at the time to be of "exceptional importance." FED.R.APP.P. 35(a). See Appellee's Petition for Rehearing or Suggestion for Rehearing En Banc at 2 (filed Feb. 23, 1990) (seeking review of standing issue on grounds of importance).
Having heard the Commission's position on the standing issues of this case, I sympathize with the court's impulse to rest its holding on other grounds. Standing to appeal administrative decisions depends on a complex mix of statutory and constitutional conundrums, and is not simple to explicate. If, therefore, petitioners' claims had been totally meritless, this court might well have dismissed them without reaching the relatively difficult standing questions. See Coker v. Sullivan,
If it is dissatisfied with the parties' presentations to this court, the majority could--and should--hаve ordered supplemental briefing so that its judgment would be an informed one. If it is merely intent on avoiding the standing question upon which rehearing en banc was granted, the majority would have been well advised to dismiss this en banc petition as improvidently granted. But the majority chooses a different course, to which I now turn.
II.
The court suggests that its approach will protect the finality of FCC proceedings and "promot[e] judicial efficiency," thereby furthering purposes traditionally associated with the exhaustion doctrine. Maj.Op. at 232-233. But these reasons can be invoked to justify any refusal to review agency action; whenever courts find challenges to administrative decisions nonjusticiable, they enhance the finality of agency determinations and lighten the judiciary's load. Accordingly, the court should adhere to its practice of asking whether dismissal of a case on exhaustion grounds would further "the primary purpose of the exhaustion doctrine": preventing premature interruption of the administrative process. Randolph-Sheppard Vendors of Am. v. Weinberger,
The majority's decision to deny judicial review will not prevent "premature" interference with FCC proceedings for the simple reason that the petitioners raised each argument presented to this court before the Commission, and the Commission conclusively rejected every one. See Spanish Int'l Communications Corp.,
My conviction that no prudential exhaustion doctrine bars assertion of jurisdiction over this petition for review finds unequivocal support in our cases interpreting the only exhaustion requirement that Congress saw fit to impose in the Communications Act. See 47 U.S.C. Sec. 405 (1988). Section 405 bars judicial review of Commission actions where:
the party seeking such review (1) was not a party to the proceedings resulting in such order, decision, report, or action, or (2) relies on questions of fact or law upon which the Commission, or designated authority within the Commission, has been afforded no opportunity to pass.
Id. The majority concedes that section 405, as construed in our cases, does not bar review of petitioners' claims. See Maj.Op. at 231 n. 2. Yet it fails to mention that this court has repeatedly held that section 405 "codif[ies] the judicially-created doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies." Washington Ass'n for Television & Children v. FCC,
Spanish Int'l Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, the 1967 decision so heavily relied upon by the majority, is not to the contrary. In that case, the Commission had summarily rejected petitions for administrative review and rehearing without addressing the merits of appellant's objections. See
It is of course true that this case might never have come to court if the petitioners had acted differently years ago, long before the legal questions presented by this appeal arose. See Maj.Op. at 233. But I cannot agree with the majority that wishful speculation about what might have been justifies denying access to this court. Nor does the exhaustion requirement's futility exception, invoked by the majority, have any relevance to this case, see Maj.Op. at 233 & n. 4; because the exhaustion doctrine cannot reasonably be applied to the facts before us, reliance on cases interpreting one of its еxceptions is insufficient to justify the majority's holding.
I find the court's approach particularly disquieting because Hispanic Broadcasting Limited Partnership ("HBLP") and Hispanic Broadcasting Systems, Inc. ("HBS") acted just as wise investors would--they spent time and money actively pursuing the licenses only at the point when a realistic chance of obtaining them arose. That a court sensitive to economic theory in other contexts should confuse rational economic behavior with a lack of genuine interest in obtaining the licenses only points up the majority's fervor to be done with this case. Cf. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. v. FERC,
It is critical to remember that the television licenses which HBLP and HBS seek were not vacant during the years when, in the majority's view, HBLP and HBS should have pursued them. Rather, they were held by Spanish International Communications Corporation and Bahia de San Francisco (collectively, "Spanish International"), which were entitled under FCC rules to an all-but-insurmountable "renewal expectancy." See Central Florida Enterprises, Inc. v. FCC,
The prospects for those seeking Spanish International's licenses improved dramatically when the Commission, finding a "substantial question" whether Spanish International was under alien control, ordered that a hearing be held on the incumbent's qualifications as a license-holder. See Hearing Designation Order, 48 Fed.Reg. 28549 (1983). But the majority fails to mention that a long-standing Commission practice known as the "Jefferson Radio policy," as then in force, precluded transfer of Spanish International's licenses pending resolution of the qualifications issue. See Stereo Broadcasters, Inc. v. FCC,
These reasonable expectations were upset, however, by an unforeseeable change in the well-established Jefferson Radio policy. The Commission decided to ratify the settlement agreement under which Spanish International would transfer its licenses to Hallmark, notwithstanding Jefferson Radio. See Spanish Int'l Communications Corp.,
Petitioners have no way of curing the shortcomings that the majority sees in their past efforts; that is just another aspect of the unfairness visited specifically upon them. More generally, though, the majority does not indicate what those who would challenge FCC licensing decisions must do to satisfy its retroactive "exhaustion" requirement. Must they seek every license up for renewal on the off chance that the incumbent licensee will be found unqualified, and that the license will be economically attractive at that hypothetical time? What are the implications of such a result for the Commission's established renewal procеdures? Must prospective license-holders have applied for the license in question during the most recent filing window, or is any past filing sufficient? Must the FCC have recognized them as qualified to hold a broadcast license? How can they show their qualifications absent a comparative licensing proceeding? One can only speculate. It is clear, though, that the majority effectively requires parties with an interest in competing for vacant licenses to safeguard that interest by filing frivolous applications challenging incumbent license-holders.
If the majority thinks such waste of applicants' resources a trade-off for heightened administrative efficiency, it is misguided; today's decision may well increase the numbеr of applications filed for licenses held by qualified incumbents, even though such applications are disfavored by the Commission and will have no real chance of success. Thus, invocation of exhaustion principles here will hinder the very administrative efficiency those principles were designed to advance. I doubt that this result is intended by the majority, but I am not surprised that nonsensical results will flow from a decision driven more by evasion than logic.
If, on the other hand, the court is motivated by a naked instinct to keep those who would challenge agency decisions out of court, my objection is more elemental. The record is clear that these petitioners acted reasonably in light of administrative precedents and the decisions of this court. Punishing sensible economic and legal decisions by withholding judicial review from firms that make them is, in my view, an unacceptable exercise of judicial discretion.
III.
I do not overlook the majority's effort to narrow its opinion to the context of this case. See Maj.Op. at 234. But I cannot join with my colleagues on that basis alone. Rather, I believe today's decision unwise, unsound, and unfair. I dissent.
Notes
We also reject the claim of TVL Corporation for the reasons stated in the panel opinion, Coalition for the Preservation of Hispanic Broadcasting v. FCC,
Although the applicant petitioners were not parties to the proceedings after denial of their untimely applications, their presentation to the Commission of the theories that they raise here, and the Commission's consideration of those theories, satisfies Sec. 405 under the cases summarized at pp. 233-234 below
Thus Spanish International met the condition that our cases sensibly impose for satisfying the exhaustion requirement of Sec. 405: the Commission had a fair opportunity to address the issues raised on appeal. See United Church of Christ v. FCC,
The dissent's suggestion that the Commission did not address Spanish International's сlaims on the merits, see Dissent at 237, is therefore irrelevant. It is also false. The court observed that "because of their public importance, [the Commission] treated extensively the questions raised by [Spanish International]. It found that all of the points lacked merit save its claim respecting [International Panorama's] character qualifications, and this issue it designated for hearing."
The dissent proposes that parties be permitted to sit out agency proceedings until the prospects of administrative relief pass a certain threshold (never identified) of financial promise. Dissent at 237-239. The dissent understandably does not identify a single case that supports such an extension of the exhaustion doctrine's futility exception. Apparently no court has yet felt it necessary to dilute the doctrine to that extent, presumably because no court shares the dissent's fear that the doctrine's application will generate "frivolous" administrative claims. See id. at 239
Contrary to the dissent's suggestion, see Dissent at 236-237, nothing we say undermines those of the above cases dеcided under 47 U.S.C. Sec. 405. In such cases, requiring exhaustion is often pointless; in ours, it is not. An agency's prior opportunity to consider the issues on appeal may be a necessary condition for judicial review, but it is not therefore a sufficient condition. Dicta that Sec. 405 "codif[ies]" the exhaustion doctrine, see Dissent at 236, can hardly wipe out Spanish International 's controlling treatment of the issue, which, to our knowledge, no case has ever criticized, much less purported to overrule. This leaves the dissent's criticism that Spanish International is "over a generation old", Dissent at 235, a curious ground for overruling a case
Cf. Shurberg Broadcasting of Hartford, Inc. v. FCC,
