Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
Entravision Holdings, LLC, petitions for review of an order of the Federal Communications Commission denying reconsideration of a prior order. Because the Commission order denying reconsideration is unreviewable under
ICC v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers,
I. Background
In 1997 the Federal Communications Commission proposed to reallocate channels 60-69 from broadcast television service to other commercial and public safety uses. Latin Communications Group (LCG), Entravision’s predecessor in interest in the licenses for two low power television (LPTV) stations operating on channels 61 and 63, submitted comments to the Commission suggesting certain protections be granted to LPTV stations that would be displaced by the proposed reallocation. The Commission adopted the reallocation proposal but declined to adopt the protections suggested by LCG.
In re Reallocation of Television Channels 60-69, Report & Order,
12 F.C.C.R. 22953,
Entravision and LCG then timely filed a joint petition for review. Subsequently, LCG completed assignment of the two LPTV broadcast licenses to Entravision and withdrew from this action, leaving En-travision as the sole petitioner.
II. Analysis
Under Fed. R.App. P. 15(a), a petition for review of an agency order must “specify the order or part thereof to be reviewed.”
*
Failure to specify the correct order can result in dismissal of the petition.
See City of Benton v. NRC,
136 F.3d
*313
824, 826 (D.C.Cir.1998);
John D. Copanos & Sons, Inc. v. FDA,
Here Entravision specified for review the
Memorandum Opinion & Order.
Under
ICC v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers,
Entravision’s claim that we may infer it intended to seek review of the
Report & Order
appears to be foreclosed by
Southwestern Bell,
Entravision points to one difference between its filings and those in Southwestern Bell and City of Benton: Entravision expressly mentioned not just the order denying reconsideration but the underlying Report & Order — the one it wants the court to review — in the petition for review. In context, however, the mere mention of the Report & Order does not make fairly infer-able Entravision’s intent to seek review of that order. On the contrary, Entravision mentions the Report & Order in its petition for review only in the course of stating the history of the proceeding prior to the order of which review is being sought. Consider:
[Entravision and LCG] petition this Court for review of the [FCC’s] Memorandum Opinion & Order (“MO&O"), FCC 98-261 (released October 9, 1998; published in Federal Register November 17, 1998), in which the FCC denied LCG’s Petition for Partial Reconsideration of the FCC’s earlier Report and Order (“RO&O”) [sic] in which it decided not to protect low power television (“LPTV”) stations operating on Channels 60-69.... A copy of the MO&O is attached hereto as Exhibit A.... The MO&O constitutes final FCC action rejecting LCG’s request for protection....
The clear import is that only the Memorandum Opinion & Order is under review; this is reinforced by Entravision having attached only the Memorandum Opinion & Order to the petition. See 28 U.S.C. § 2344 (“The petitioner shall attach to the petition as exhibits copies of the order, report, or decision [for review]”).
Entravision’s contemporaneous filings even more clearly demonstrate that it intended to put before the court only the order denying reconsideration. Entravision’s docketing statement, filed within a month of its petition, specifies only the Memorandum Opinion & Order for review: In the space for denoting the “date(s) of order(s) [under review],” Entra-vision entered the date of the Memorandum Opinion & Order and only that date. Entravision’s preliminary statement of issues, filed the same day, likewise points only to the Memorandum Opinion & Order, there Entravision identifies two issues, both of which relate exclusively to the Commission’s denial of reconsideration in the Memorandum Opinion & Order:
1. Whether the FCC’s denial of the Petition for Partial Reconsideration was contrary to law ...;
2. Whether the FCC’s denial of the Petition for Partial Reconsideration adequately addresses how the FCC may weigh the public interest benefits of continued LPTV services....
Based upon Entravision’s petition for review and these nearly contemporaneous filings, we cannot fairly infer that it intended to seek review of the
Report & Order.
Because Entravision fails to satisfy this first requirement for review of an unspecified order, we need not consider the second requirement — that the Commission not have been prejudiced by En-travision’s mistake.
See Southwestern Bell,
In a last ditch effort to avoid this conclusion, Entravision claims that, because the Commission’s argument based upon Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Southwestern Bell would dispose entirely of the case, the Commission was required by Interim D.C. Circuit Rule 27(g)(1) to raise it in a timely-filed motion, and the Commission cannot now raise it on brief. Rule 27(g)(1) provides:
Any motion which, if granted, would dispose of the appeal or petition for review in its entirety, or transfer the case to another court, must be filed within 45 days of the docketing of the case in this court, unless, for good cause shown, the court grants leave for a later filing.
If Entravision’s interpretation of our Rule were correct, then we suppose briefs *315 would contain only non-dispositive arguments and there would be no point in counsel writing them or in our reading them. But of course, Entravision is not correct: the Rule governs motions, not arguments, and is therefore no bar to the disposition of this case on the basis of the arguments in the briefs.
III. Conclusion
Entravision petitioned for review only of the
Memorandum Opinion & Order.
Under
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers,
Dismissed.
Notes
Effective December 1, 1998, Fed. R.App. P. 15(a) was amended (in style but not in substance) to require that a petitioner "specify” rather than "designate” the order or part thereof to be reviewed. Because Entravision and LCG filed their petition after the amendment, we refer to the amended version of the Rule in this opinion.
To the extent that
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. FCC,
