This is an appeal from a judgment entered pursuant to an order sustaining demurrer without leave to amend. Plaintiff is a corporation licensed by the Federal Communications Commission to render television broadcasting service to the San Jose area and it is the only licensed television station in that locality. There are two sets of defendants, one is composed of television broadcasters, hereinafter referred to as defendant broadcasters, the other of motion picture film producers and distributors, referred to as defendant distributors. The defendant broadcasters con *295 sist of a corporation licensed to operate television station KRON in San Francisco, its officers and directors, and a corporation licensed to operate television station KPIX in San Francisco, its officers and directors. Television station KRON is a member of the National Broadcasting Company chain and station KPIX is affiliated with the Columbia Broadcasting System.
The gist of plaintiff’s complaint is that defendant broadcasters have insisted that their contracts with defendant distributors contain an “exclusivity clause” binding distributors not to sell film to any television station with a transmitter within a 60-mile radius of the transmitter sites of defendant broadcasters. Since plaintiff’s transmitter is located within said 60-mile radius defendant distributors have refused to sell desirable film to plaintiff even though “plaintiff is able, ready and willing to pay full and fair price therefor.” This plaintiff alleges has caused injury to its business. It is also alleged that this discrimination deprives the viewing public of desirable pictures on plaintiff’s local channel or forces viewers, as an alternative, to endure an inferior “signal” from defendants’ stations. Plaintiff prays that defendants be enjoined from enforcing the exclusivity clause in contracts between defendant broadcasters and defendant distributors and that the exclusivity clause be declared void as contrary to public policy. Plaintiff also prays for damages, actual and punitive. The action was brought pursuant to Business and Professions Code, sections 16700 et seq. (Cal. Anti-Trust Statute, Codification of the Cartwright Act).
Defendants’ principal ground of demurrer is that the complaint presents a federal question and the state courts have no jurisdiction of the subject matter. Defendants also urge that plaintiff has failed to exhaust its administrative remedies. The trial court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend on the ground that a federal question is presented, thus depriving the state court of jurisdiction of the subject matter and for the additional reason that plaintiff has not exhausted available administrative remedies before the Federal Communications Commission. A judgment was entered pursuant to the order sustaining demurrer without leave to amend and this appeal followed.
Federal control of television broadcasting is embodied in the Communications Act of 1934, 48 Statutes 1082, title 47, U.S.C., as amended, and we must look to that act and the
*296
decisions construing its provisions to determine the scope and extent of such control
(Federal Communications Com.
v.
Pottsville Broadcasting Co.,
“(b) ‘Radio communication’ or ‘communication by radio’ means the transmission by radio of writing, signs, signals, pictures, and sounds of all kinds, including all instrumentalities, facilities, apparatus, and services (among other things, the receipt, forwarding, and delivery of communications) incidental to such transmission. ”
The federal courts have held television to be a form of radio within the meaning of title 47. In
Allen B. Dumont Laboratories
v.
Carroll,
“The Act itself establishes that the Commission’s powers are not limited to the engineering and technical aspects of regulation of radio communication. Yet we are asked to regard the Commission as a kind of traffic officer, policing the wave lengths to prevent stations from interfering with each other. But the Act does not restrict the Commission merely to supervision of the traffic. It puts upon the Commission the burden of determining the composition of that traffic ...”
*297
Defendants contend that the federal government has completely occupied the field and cite the following excerpt from the Dumont case,
supra,
page 155: “. . . The language employed is so all inclusive as to leave no doubt but that it was the intention of Congress to occupy the television broadcasting field in its entirety ...” Yet, a reading of the case does not justify the broad interpretation which defendants have given it since the specific holding is that states cannot censor films broadcast by television stations. Federal regulation of television is not unlimited. For example, the Federal Communications Act does not confer federal control over the purely private internal business affairs of a station even though no station can do business unless it is licensed pursuant to the F.C.A. The United States Supreme Court so held in
Federal Communications Com.
v.
Sanders Bros. Radio Station,
“. . . The touchstone provided by Congress was the ‘public interest, convenience, or necessity,’ a criterion which ‘is as concrete as the complicated factors for judgment in such a field of delegated authority permit. ’ Federal Communications Com. v. Pottsville Broadcasting Co.,309 U.S. 134 , 138 [60 S.Ct. 437 ,84 L.Ed. 656 ]. ‘This criterion is not to be interpreted as setting up a standard so indefinite as to confer an unlimited power. Compare New York Central Securities Corp. v. United States,287 U.S. 12 , 24 [53 S.Ct. 45 ,77 L.Ed. 138 ], The requirement is to be interpreted by its context, by the nature of radio transmission and reception, by the scope, character and quality of services . . .’ Federal Radio Comm’n v. *298 Nelson Bros. Co.,289 U.S. 266 , 285 [53 S.Ct. 627 ,77 L.Ed. 1166 ,89 A.L.R. 406 ].
“The ‘public interest’ to be served under the Communications Act is thus the interest of the listening public in ‘the larger and more effective use of radio, ’ § 303 (g). The facilities of radio are limited and therefore precious; they cannot be left to wasteful use without detriment to the public interest. ‘An important element of public interest and convenience affecting the issue of a license is the ability of the licensee to render the best practicable service to the community reached by his broadcasts.’ Federal Communications Comm’n v. Sanders Bros. Radio Station,309 U.S. 470 , 475 [60 S.Ct. 693 ,84 L.Ed. 869 ] ...”
Plaintiff contends that the questions presented by this case involve private business controversies within the rationale of the Sanders ease. Its complaint belies its contention since plaintiff alleges as follows:
“That neither Station KRON or KPIX send City Grade Service pictures throughout the principal part of the territory covered within the City Grade Service signal of Station KNTV as hereinabove described; that there are living and residing within the said area in the County of Santa Clara, more than 300,000 people and that the majority of homes within said area have television receiving sets; that Station KNTV is the only television station whose signal gives City Grade Service within the greatest part of the area described in Paragraph IV hereof, and that by virtue of the said acts and the said course of conduct of defendants, as aforesaid, the people of San Jose and the surrounding area are given no option if they wish to watch programs containing films distributed and licensed by the defendants hereinabove alleged to be in that business, except to endure an inferior grade of signal reception from Stations KRON and KPIX. ’ ’
In substance, this allegation accuses defendant broadcasters of evading the principles of the P.C.A. and specifically of violating the provision which Mr. Justice Frankfurter has characterized as the touchstone provided by Congress, namely, “public convenience, interest or necessity”
(Federal Communications Com.
v.
Pottsville Broadcasting Co.,
The practice about which plaintiff complains has been implemented in the television industry by a contract clause denominated the “exclusivity clause.” The use of this type clause in contracts for the purchase of film by television stations has been practiced to some extent throughout the industry. The nationwide aspect of the problem is evidenced by the fact that plaintiff intervened or filed a petition in support of an application for a regulation prohibiting the use of exclusivity clauses. The application to the Federal Communications Commission was initiated by New Hampshire station, WMUR-TV. This action by the New Hampshire station sought a regulation forbidding the use of the “exclusivity clause” by any television station in the United States. The facts related in plaintiff’s petition and affidavit in intervention before the F.C.C. are repeated in substance in the complaint in this action. Thus, by recognizing the industrywide and nationwide scope of the crucial question involved here, plaintiff has negated its argument to this court that the question is purely private or local in nature. It is true as plaintiff argues that it has a private interest in the outcome of this litigation which is vital. Yet, the public too has an interest in the subject matter of the litigation and that public interest is one of the fundamental reasons for federal control of television broadcasting. In this situation where there is a conflict between private and public interests or rights, the language of the United States Supreme Court in
Garner
v.
Teamsters Union,
The industrywide aspect of the exclusivity clause points up a major reason why this is a proper case for federal juris
*300
diction. Were the California court to assume jurisdiction and decide the legality of the exclusivity clause in television contracts, a conflict between forums could well develop. The court of another state, or a federal court, or the Federal Communications Commission might well come to a different conclusion than that reached by a court of this state. Defendant broadcasters are network stations and engaged in interstate commerce
(Allen B. Dumont Laboratories
v.
Carroll, supra).
Yet, if a California court were to determine the legality of the exclusivity clause, the decision would be applicable to all television stations within the state including network stations. We doubt that plaintiff would contend as a general proposition that the State of California could regulate the television industry in the face of the F.C.A. In
Allen B. Dumont Laboratories
v.
Carroll, supra,
the court concluded: “. . . We think it is clear that Congress has occupied fully the field of television regulation and that that field is no longer open to the States. Congress possessed the constitutional authority to effect this result.
Hines
v.
Davidowitz,
The defendants also argue that plaintiff must exhaust its administrative remedies before applying to any court for redress. Specifically, they contend that plaintiff must first apply to the Federal Communications Commission for a ruling on the exclusivity clause in contracts between television broadcasters and film producers and distributors. The trial court agreed with defendants and stated in its opinion that plaintiff had not applied to the F.C.C. for relief nor exhausted its administrative remedies. In
United States
v.
R.C.A.,
The judgment is affirmed.
Kaufman, P. J., and Draper, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 24, 1960.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
