Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge D.H. GINSBURG.
This is a petition for review of a letter ruling of the Federal Communications Commission refusing to take action against National Public Radio for allegedly broadcasting “obscene, indecent, or profane” language in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1464. We hold that the petitioner lacks standing under Article III of the Constitution to challenge the FCC’s deсision.
I. BACKGROUND
In the early evening of February 28, 1989, NPR’s news show “All Things Considered” ran a report on the trial of John Gotti, the alleged leader of an organized crime syndicate in New York. The report featured a tape recording of a wiretapped phone conversation between Gotti and an associate. In the 110-word passаge that NPR excerpted from the tape recording for broadcast, Gotti used variations of “the f_ word” ten times. He used it to modify virtually every noun and in one instance even a verb (“I’ll f_ing kill you”). NPR made no effort, such as substituting bleeps for any or all of these references, to render the passage less offensive to persons of оrdinary sensibility.
Peter Branton, who heard the broadcast and was offended, filed a complaint with the Mass Media Bureau of the FCC. The Bureau concluded that the broadcast material in question was “not actionably indecent” and did not provide “the necessary legal basis for further Commission action” pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1464. Mr. Branton then wrote to the Commission asking how he could appeal the Bureau’s decision. The Commission treated his letter as an Application for Review and, in a brief letter ruling (over one dissent), affirmed the Bureau’s decision. The Commission explained that the Gotti tape was part of a “bona fide” news story; indeed, it had been introduced as evidеnce in the criminal trial that was the subject of that story. The Commission also noted its longstanding reluctance “to intervene in the editorial judgments of broadcast licensees on how best to present serious public affairs programming to their listeners.” Letter Ruling, 6 FCC Red. 610 (1991).
Mr. Branton now petitions for judicial review of the agency’s decision nоt to proceed against NPR.
II. Analysis
Article III of the Constitution of the United States limits the scope of the federal judicial power to the resolution of “cases” or “controversies.” In order to implement that limitation, the Supreme Court has developed a doctrine of standing that, along with the other requirements for justiciability, assurеs that the federal judicial power is exercised only in “those disputes which confine federal courts to a role consistent with a system of separate powers and which are traditionally thought to be capable of resolution through the judicial process.”
Flast v. Cohen,
In order to establish standing under Article III, a complainant must allege (1) a personal injury-in-fact that is (2) “fairly traceable” to the defendant’s conduct and (3) redressable by the relief requestеd.
Allen v. Wright,
A. Injury-in-fact
In order to challenge official conduct one must show that one “has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining some direct injury” in fact as a result of that conduct.
Golden v. Zwickler,
The petitioner in this case alleges that he was injured because he was subjected to indecent language over the airwaves. While an offense to one’s sensibilities may indeed constitute an injury,
see FCC v. Pacifica,
If the petitioner suffers any continuing injury, we suppose it is in the nature of the increased probability that, should the NPR broadcast go unsanctioned, he will be exposed in the future to similar indecencies over the airwaves. Under established Supreme Court precedent, however, this marginal increase in the possibility of a future harm does not meet the “immediacy” requirement for Article III standing.
For example, in
Los Angeles v. Lyons,
In the present case, the possibility that the petitioner will again “some day” be exposed to a broadcast indecency lacks the imminence required under Lyons, Rizzo, and Defenders of Wildlife. It is mere conjecture that a radio station will again broadcast, at a time when the petitioner is listening, indecencies that would be proscribed under 18 U.S.C. § 1464 (as he would have us interpret that statute). While there is, of course, some chance that somewhere, at some timе, the petitioner may again be exposed to a broadcast indecency as a result of the Commission’s decision, that possibility seems to us far too remote and attenuated to establish a case or controversy under Article III.
Nothing in
Office of Communications of United Church of Christ v. FCC,
UCC
is not controlling in the present case for two reasons. First, the appellants in
UCC
alleged that the licensee in question was engaged in a continuing pattern of inаppropriate and discriminatory broadcasting, which the FCC by renewing its license had in effect extended. In contrast, the appellant in the present case challenges an FCC determination regarding an isolated indecency broadcast at a single moment in the past. He does not allege a continuing course of misconduct, and there is simply too little reason to believe that the harm to him will ever recur. A listener who alleges that a broadcaster has repeatedly violated the indecency standard might be in a better position to argue that he is subject to a continuing harm or at least an increased likelihood of the harm recurring.
But cf. Lyons,
Second, in the years since
UCC,
the Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized the “immediacy” element of the injury-in-fact requirement.
See Defenders of Wildlife,
- U.S. at -,
In sum, the petitioner fails to demonstrate that the FCC’s decision not to take action against NPR causes him an injury that is sufficiently “immediate” to establish his standing to challenge that decision. The marginal increase in the probability that he will be exposed to indecent language in the future if NPR is not sanctioned is simply too slight to generate a case or controversy proper for resolution by an Article III court.
B. Causation/Redressability
Even if the harm to the petitioner here were sufficiently immediate to make out an Article III “injury,” he would not be able to show that his injury “fairly can be traced to the challenged action” and would be “redressed by a favоrable decision.”
Simon v. Eastern Kentucky Welfare Rights Org.,
As an initial matter, it should be remеmbered that the petitioner in the present case is not himself in any way subject to the FCC decision he seeks to challenge. His probabilistic injury (such as it is) “results from the independent action of some third party not before the court,”
i.e.,
NPR or some other broadcaster that may in the future offend him with an indecent broadcast.
Simon,
The Supreme Court is particularly disinclined to find that the causation and redressability requirements are satisfied where a complainant challenges only an Executive Branch decision not to impose costs
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or penalties upon some third party. For example, in
Linda R.S. v. Richard D.,
Finally, in
Allen v. Wright,
In the present case, it is at least equally conjectural whether the FCC’s proceeding against the alleged broadcast indecency of February 28, 1989 would cause any radio station(s) in the petitioner’s area to broadcast any fewer indecent programs in the future. As in the cases discussed above, any favorable impact of the official action that the complainant seeks to compel depends utterly upon the actions of “third parties] not before the court,”
Simon,
For example, radio stations might well decide that the benefits of broadcasting indecent language оf the sort petitioner here challenges outweigh the costs of making certain payments to the Government (here in the form of fines rather than of taxes). Predicting the reaction of “public” radio stations to a monetary fine is particularly difficult because such stations are non-profit entities. See Henry B. Hansmann, Reforming Nonprofit Corporation Law, 129 U.Pa.L.Rev. 497, 568-69 (1981) (“the patrons of a nonprofit are generally much less able to look out for themselves than are the shareholders in a business corporation”). In addition, as broadcast journalists, even for-profit broadcasters undoubtedly make programming decisions in part with an eye to non-monetary factors, such as their own conception of journalistic integrity. See Radio-Television News Directors Association Code of Ethics (stating members’ responsibility, inter alia, “to gather and report information of importance and interest to the public accurately, honestly and impartially” and to “evaluate information solely on its merits as news”).
As a result, the court can have no confidence that the FCC’s failure to impose a sanction upon NPR will lead it or any other broadcaster to injure the petitioner in the future. Or to put the matter conversely, it is speculative whether our reversal of the agency’s decision would serve at all to protect the petitioner from future exposure tо broadcast indecency.
This holding (and the Supreme Court precedent upon which it is based) may at first seem inconsistent with the fundamental prin
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ciple that increasing the price of an activity (i.e., broadcasting indecency) will decrease the quantity of that activity demanded in the market, or in the language of economics, that demand curves are downward sloping.
See
Paul A. Samuelson & William D. Nordhaus, Economics 60-61 (12th ed.
1985);
Richard A. Posner, Economic Analysis of Law 5 (4th Ed.1992). We would hardly undertake to doubt this basic principle, however.
See Smith v. NTSB,
Without some reason to believe that thе level of broadcast indecency is significantly affected by the possibility of incurring an FCC sanction, we lack a sufficient basis for the exercise of the federal judicial power. A court is rightly reluctant to enter a judgment which may have no real consequence, depending upon the putative cost-benefit analy-ses of third parties over whom it has no jurisdiction and about whom it has almost no information.
III. Conclusion
This dispute between the petitioner and the FCC falls outside the constitutional domain of the federal courts. The petitioner fails to establish a justiciable case or controversy because his asserted injury is too attenuated and improbable and because this injury neither resulted from the challenged Government decision nor would be remedied by a reversal of that decision. Accordingly, the petition for review is
Dismissed.
