98 F.2d 303 | D.C. Cir. | 1938
These three cases are here on one record and were heard by us as one case. The appeal is from an order authorizing WATR, licensee of a radio station at Waterbury, Connecticut, to change its frequency from 1190 kc. to 1290 kc., to increase its power from 100 watts to 25.0 watts and its hours of operation from limited to unlimited time. Appellants are Pittsburgh Radio Supply House, licensee of station WJAS in Pittsburgh, Intermountain Broadcasting Corporation, licensee of KDYL in Salt Lake City, and Head of the Lakes Broadcasting Company, licensee of station WEBC in Duluth. Each operates on the 1290 kc. frequency, and each has nighttime power of 1,000 watts. In January 1935 Head of the Lakes applied to the Commission for an increase of nighttime power from 1,000 watts to 5,000 watts. Pittsburgh applied for the same increase in May, 1936. Inter-mountain, at the time material here, had no pending application for change of power. At the time the applications just mentioned; were filed with the Commission its Rule 120 designated the frequency 1290 kc. as one of many “regional frequencies”, and the rule provided that the operating power of stations assigned to that frequency should not exceed 1,000 watts nighttime. The Commission, in view of this rule, advised Head of the Lakes and Pittsburgh that their applications requested more power than was permitted under the rule, but the applicants replied that they nevertheless desired to prosecute the applications. The Commission accordingly designated, the applications for hearing along with other 5,000-watt applications, but no date for this hearing was set by the Commission. It was after these applications had been filed that Waterbury filed its application.. On September 22, 1936, the Commission granted Waterbury’s application without hearing, and on October 27th Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh charges, first, that the order is unlawful because the Commission granted Waterbury’s application before considering Pittsburgh’s prior and pending application, whereby Pittsburgh will be deprived of its lawful right to a full and fair hearing since the grant to Waterbury places obstacles in the way of a grant to Pittsburgh which did not exist when its application was originally filed; second, that the Commission’s initial action in denying Waterbury’s application was final and the Commission was without power thereafter to reverse its position and grant the relief sought; and, third, that in making the grant to Waterbury the Commission ignored material evidence adduced at the hearing “regarding, inter alia, questions of interference”.
Intermountain’s position is that the grant to Waterbury “may” cause interference with its service “and" will interfere with the logical development of the 1290 kc. frequency in the allocation plan of the Federal Communications Commission”. It also insists that the Commission exhausted its fact-finding power when it first denied Waterbury’s application and was without authority to grant it thereafter.
Head of the Lakes charges that the Commission should have considered its application for increase of power before considering and acting on Waterbury’s application; that the Commission had no authority to reverse its first July 6th- order; and that the Commission erred as a matter of law in determining that public interest would be served by granting Waterbury’s-application.
Condensed, the grounds of appeal may be said to be that the Commission erred in acting on the Waterbury application while the other applications requesting increased power on the 1290 kc. frequency were pending; that the action first taken on July 6th was conclusive and final and exhausted the Commission’s power, so that the later grant was a nullity; and that the Commission erred in failing to consider or to give proper weight to evidence relating to questions-of interference.
Section 402(b), Communications Act of 1934, (47 U.S.C.A. 402(b), permits an-appeal to this court by (1) any applicant for a license or renewal or modification of an existing license whose application is refused and (2) by any other person aggrieved or whose interests are adversely affected by a decision of the Commission granting or refusing an application. Unless one or the other of these grounds is shown, the appeal will have to be dismissed. Universal S. W., Inc., v. Commission, 59 App.D.C. 319, 41 F.2d 113.
The Commission defends on the principal ground that none of the appellants has an appealable interest, saying that it has not denied the application of any of them and that the granting of intervener’s application does not aggrieve or adversely affect the interests of any of them.
Enough has been said to indicate that appellants are not entitled to appeal under 402(b) (1), for Intermountain has no application pending, and the applications of Pittsburgh and Head of the Lakes have not been acted on. Nor is there any claim by any of appellants under 402(b) (2) that they will suffer financial or economic injury, loss of patronage, or loss of listening audience. Head of the Lakes does not assert that it will suffer any electrical interference from Waterbury’s operations. Intermountain’s claims in this respect are general, and as to, both it may be said that, in view of the distances between Duluth and Salt Lake City on the one hand and Waterbury on the other, it is obvious that any claim of interference so far as either is concerned is wholly unsubstantial. Only Pittsburgh makes any serious charge that the grant to Waterbury will result in elec
As to it, the record shows that it requested that Waterbury’s application and its application for increased power be considered together. This request was in line with the Commission’s Rule 106.4. If Pittsburgh’s application had been for a lawful grant, and if it were shown that the Commission’s prior consideration of Waterbury’s application seriously prejudiced Pittsburgh, we would have a case in which we might say Pittsburgh had appealable interest as a “person aggrieved,” notwithstanding the latitude which we have said should be permitted to the Commission in such matters. Pulitzer Publishing Co. v. Federal Communications Comm., 68 App. D.C. 124, 94 F.2d 249, 252. But that is not this case. Here Pittsburgh has applied for a grant which would be in direct violation of Rule 120, and it can succeed in its objective only by inducing the Commission to change the rule. This is a matter so wholly of policy under the provisions of the Act and so peculiarly within the special and expert knowledge of the Commission that to undertake to control it judicially would be clearly an impingement upon the jurisdiction of the Commission. The Commission has in the past considered whether Rule 120 ought to be changed in the manner Pittsburgh . requests, but no change has been made and, while the question may be said to be still open, we have no reason to assume it will be changed and certainly no right to say that the Commission shpuld suspend its functions pending its determination of that question. Hence, we think Pittsburgh has no appealable interest which we may consider here.
In the view we have just expressed, it is clear we have no right to consider the claimed irregularity on the part of the Commission in first denying and then granting Waterbury’s application. However irregular the action in that respect may be, it is not subject to review save at the instance of a person aggrieved or whose interests are adversely affected. None of the appellants, for the reasons we have pointed out, can meet the test of appealable interest laid down in the statute, and therefore the three appeals are dismissed.
Appeals dismissed.