Where, pursuant to the provisions of § 402(b) of the
Communications Act of 1934, an appeal has been taken to the United
States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia from an order
of the Federal Communications Commission, that court, in order to
preserve the
status quo pending appeal, has power to stay
the execution of the Commission's order from which the appeal was
taken pending the determination of the appeal. P.
316 U. S. 11.
In response to a question certified by the Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia in respect of an appeal from an order of
the Federal Communications Commission granting permission to change
the frequency and increase the power of a radio station.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is here on certificate from the Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia. Judicial Code § 239, 28 U.S.C. § 346. The
question certified relates to the power of the Court of Appeals to
stay the enforcement of an order of the Federal Communications
Commission pending determination of an appeal taken under § 402(b)
of the Communications Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 1064, 1093.
Page 316 U. S. 5
The circumstances which induced the Court to certify the
question are these: on October 10, 1939, the Commission granted
without hearing the application of WCOL, Inc., licensee of Station
WCOL, Columbus, Ohio, for a construction permit to change its
frequency from 1210 to 1200 kilocycles and to increase its power
from 100 to 250 watts. The appellant, Scripps-Howard Radio, Inc.,
which is the licensee of Station WCPO, Cincinnati, Ohio, operating
on a frequency of 1200 kilocycles with power of 250 watts, filed a
petition for "hearing or rehearing" requesting the Commission to
vacate its previous order and set the WCOL application for hearing.
The Commission denied this petition on March 29, 1940, and an
appeal followed. In its statement of "reasons for appeal," the
appellant claimed that the Commission could not lawfully grant the
WCOL application without hearing; that, in granting the
application, the Commission departed from its rules and standards
of good engineering practice; that the appellant was entitled to a
hearing in order to show that the Commission's action did not serve
the public interest, since it would result in materially reducing
the coverage of Station WCPO, and thereby deprive a substantial
number of listeners of "the only local regional non-network
service" available to them, and that, in granting the WCOL
application without hearing, the Commission violated the Due
Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
The appellant asked the Court of Appeals to stay the
Commission's order pending the disposition of its appeal. Even
though the Court "had consistently, over a long period of years and
without objection on the part of the Commission, issued stay
orders" in cases where such orders were found to be necessary, the
Commission opposed the issuance of a stay order in this case on the
ground that the Court was without power to grant a stay. The
application was heard before the Court sitting with
Page 316 U. S. 6
three judges, which, with one judge dissenting, upheld the
Commission's contention. A motion for rehearing before all six
members of the Court was granted. The judges being equally divided
on the question of the Court's power to grant a stay, the following
question was certified to us:
"Where, pursuant to the provisions of Section 402(b) of the
Communications Act of 1934, an appeal has been taken to the United
States Court of Appeals from an order of the Federal Communications
Commission, does the court, in order to preserve the
status
quo pending appeal, have power to stay the execution of the
Commission's order from which the appeal was taken pending the
determination of the appeal?"
The Commission suggests that the certificate should be dismissed
because of the generality of the question.
Lowden v.
Northwestern Nat. Bank, 298 U. S. 160.
Read in the light of the preliminary statement certifying the facts
which presented the question,
Hill v. Wampler,
298 U. S. 460,
298 U. S. 464,
the question is limited to the type of order made by the Commission
in this case. It is therefore sufficiently specific.
The Communications Act of 1934 is a hybrid. By that Act,
Congress established a comprehensive system for the regulation of
communication by wire and radio. To secure effective execution of
its policy of making available "a rapid, efficient, nationwide, and
worldwide wire and radio communication service with adequate
facilities at reasonable charges," Congress created a new agency,
the Federal Communications Commission, to which it entrusted
authority previously exercised by several other agencies. Under the
Radio Act of 1927, 44 Stat. 1162, the Federal Radio Commission had
broad powers over the licensing and regulation of radio facilities.
The Mann-Elkins Act of 1910, 36 Stat. 539, gave the Interstate
Commerce Commission general regulatory authority over telephone and
telegraph carriers. In addition, the Postmaster
Page 316 U. S. 7
General was empowered, under the Post Roads Act of 1866, 14
Stat. 221, to fix rates on government telegrams. [
Footnote 1] The Communications Act of 1934
was designed to centralize this scattered regulatory authority in
one agency.
See Message from the President to Congress,
February 26, 1934, Sen.Doc. No. 144, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.; Sen.Rep.
No. 781, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 1; H.Rep. No. 1850, 73d Cong., 2d
Sess., pp. 3-4.
The provisions for judicial review in the Act of 1934 reflect
its mixed origins. Section 402(a) makes the provisions of the
Urgent Deficiencies Act of October 22, 1913, 38 Stat. 208, 219,
pertaining to judicial review of orders of the Interstate Commerce
Commission, applicable to
"suits to enforce, enjoin, set aside, annul, or suspend any
order of the Commission under this Act (except any order of the
Commission granting or refusing an application for a construction
permit for a radio station, or for a radio station license, or for
renewal of an existing radio station license, or for modification
of an existing radio station license)."
48 Stat. 1064, 1093. The Urgent Deficiencies Act, which is thus
incorporated in § 402(a) of the Communications Act of 1934,
provides for review in a specially constituted district court, with
direct appeal to this Court. That Act authorizes the district
court, in cases "where irreparable damage would otherwise ensue to
the petitioner," to allow a temporary stay of the order under
review, subject to specified safeguards. 38 Stat. 208, 220
Page 316 U. S. 8
.
Section 402(b) of the Communications Act of 1934 provides for
review of the orders excepted from § 402(a). It gives an appeal
"from decisions of the Commission to the Court of Appeals of the
District of Columbia in any of the following cases: (1) By any
applicant for a construction permit for a radio station, or for a
radio station license, or for renewal of an existing radio station
license, or for modification of an existing radio station license,
whose application is refused by the Commission. (2) By any other
person aggrieved or whose interests are adversely affected by any
decision of the Commission granting or refusing any such
application."
48 Stat. 1064, 1093. This section follows § 16 of the Radio Act
of 1927, 44 Stat. 1162, as amended in 1930, 46 Stat. 844, the
relevant portions of which are set forth in the margin. [
Footnote 2]
See Sen.Rep. No.
781, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 9; H. Report No.1918, 73d Cong., 2d
Sess., pp. 49-50; remarks of Senator Dill, in charge of the measure
in the Senate, 78 Cong.Rec. 8825, and of Representative Rayburn,
who occupied the same role in the House, 78 Cong.Rec. 10314.
Thus, in both the Radio Act of 1927 and the Communications Act
of 1934, orders granting or denying applications for construction
permits or station licenses and for renewal or modification of
licenses were made reviewable by the Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia. [
Footnote
3]
Page 316 U. S. 9
And, with respect to such appeals, both § 16 of the Radio Act
and § 402(b) of the Communications Act were silent with respect to
the power of the Court of Appeals to stay orders pending appeal. It
is upon this silence in the Communications Act that the Commission
bases its contention, made for the first time when this litigation
arose in 1940, that the Court is without such power.
No court can make time stand still. The circumstances
surrounding a controversy may change irrevocably during the
pendency of an appeal despite anything a court can do. But, within
these limits, it is reasonable that an appellate court should be
able to prevent irreparable injury to the parties or to the public
resulting from the premature enforcement of a determination which
may later be found to have been wrong. It has always been held,
therefore, that, as part of its traditional equipment for the
administration
Page 316 U. S. 10
of justice, [
Footnote 4] a
federal court can stay the enforcement of a judgment pending the
outcome of an appeal.
In re Claasen, 140 U.
S. 200;
In re McKenzie, 180 U.
S. 536.
Generally speaking, judicial review of administrative orders is
limited to determining whether errors of law have been committed.
Rochester Telephone Corp. v. United States, 307 U.
S. 125,
307 U. S.
139-140. Because of historical differences in the
relationship between administrative bodies and reviewing courts and
that between lower and upper courts, a court of review exhausts its
power when it lays bare a misconception of law and compels
correction.
Federal Communications Commission v. Pottsville
Broadcasting Co., 309 U. S. 134,
309 U. S.
144-145. If the administrative agency has committed
errors of law for the correction of which the legislature has
provided appropriate resort to the courts, such judicial review
would be an idle ceremony if the situation were irreparably changed
before the correction could be made. The existence of power in a
reviewing court to stay the enforcement of an administrative order
does not mean, of course, that its exercise should be without
regard to the division of function which the legislature has made
between the administrative body and the court of review.
"A stay is not a matter of right, even if irreparable injury
might otherwise result to the appellant.
In re Haberman
Manufacturing Co., 147 U. S. 525. It is an exercise
of judicial discretion. The propriety of its issue is dependent
upon the circumstances of
Page 316 U. S. 11
the particular case."
Virginian Ry. Co. v. United States, 272 U.
S. 658,
272 U. S.
672-673;
see Merchants' Warehouse Co. v. United
States, 283 U. S. 501,
283 U. S.
513-514.
These controlling considerations compel the assumption that
Congress would not, without clearly expressing such a purpose,
deprive the Court of Appeals of its customary power to stay orders
under review. It is urged that such a manifestation appears in the
provisions for judicial review contained in the Communications Act
of 1934. Specifically, the Commission contends that, since § 402(a)
incorporates the provisions of the Urgent Deficiencies Act of 1913
which explicitly authorize and regulate the issuance of stay
orders, the omission of any reference in § 402(b) to a power to
stay orders under review reflects a deliberate Congressional choice
to deprive the Court of Appeals of this power.
The search for significance in the silence of Congress is too
often the pursuit of a mirage. We must be wary against
interpolating our notions of policy in the interstices of
legislative provisions. Here, Congress said nothing about the power
of the Court of Appeals to issue stay orders under § 402(b). But
denial of such power is not to be inferred merely because Congress
failed specifically to repeat the general grant of auxiliary powers
to the federal courts. The Commission argues that the silence of
Congress, in view of the legislative history of the Act and the
nature of the orders reviewable under the Act, qualifies this
general authority, and is as commanding as if Congress had
expressly withheld from the Court of Appeals the power to stay
orders appealed under § 402(b).
The legislative history can furnish no support for this
contention. Neither the committee reports nor the hearings nor the
debates contain any reference to the power to stay Commission
orders on appeal. Significance is found in H.R. 7716, 72d Congress,
a bill which was passed by both houses in 1933 but which failed of
enactment because
Page 316 U. S. 12
of a pocket veto. That bill proposed to amend § 16 of the Radio
Act of 1927 so as to vest concurrent jurisdiction (with the Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia) of revocation cases in the
circuit courts of appeals, rather than in the district courts. The
bill also provided that the reviewing court, whether a circuit
court of appeals or the Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia, could enter a stay order "upon the giving of a bond by
the party applying for the stay in such amount and with such terms
and conditions" as the court deemed proper.
It is suggested that, if Congress had intended in the Act of
1934 to authorize the Court of Appeals to issue stay orders in
appeals under § 402(b), it would not have remained silent when,
only the year before, it had attempted to enact into law a specific
provision conferring that power. But H.R. 7716 and the
Communications Act of 1934 were not parallel legislative proposals.
The former was not a comprehensive legislative scheme for the
unification of federal regulatory authority over communications. It
proposed merely to amend the Radio Act of 1927 in several minor
particulars.
See H.Rep. No. 221, 72d Cong. 1st Sess., p.
7; Sen.Rep. No. 564, 72d Cong., 1st Sess., p. 7; Sen.Rep. No. 1004,
72d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 9. The enactment of the Communications Act
of 1934, however, came after a message to Congress from the
President on February 26, 1934, recommending the creation of a
single authority over communication by wire and radio. Sen.Doc. No.
144, 73d Cong., 2d Sess. Earlier in 1934, an interdepartmental
committee had made a study of the entire communications situation.
Extensive public hearings on the question of regulating the whole
field of communications were held by both the Senate and House
Committees on Interstate Commerce. It is obvious, therefore, that
what Congress undertook to do by the Communications Act of 1934 was
entirely different from what it tried to do the previous year in
H.R. 7716.
Page 316 U. S. 13
We are told that, in drafting § 402, Congress had before it and
relied extensively upon H.R. 7716, and reference is made to the
citations to that bill in the statement of the House managers.
H.Rep. No.1918, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 47-49. But whatever
reliance was placed upon H.R. 7716 by the framers of the 1934
legislation was without relation to its provisions for judicial
review. For, in that same statement (p. 47), it is said that
"provisions of the Radio Act of 1927 relating to judicial review
have been included" in the bill. And, as has previously been noted,
even though the Radio Act of 1927 contained no provisions dealing
with the authority of the Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia to stay orders of the Commission on appeal, the Court had
been issuing stays as a matter of course wherever they were found
to be appropriate, without objection by the Commission.
Boston
Broadcasting Co. v. Federal Radio Commission, 62 App.D.C. 299,
67 F.2d 505, decided June 19, 1933.
It is indisputable that, at least since 1930, the Court of
Appeals has been staying orders both of the Federal Radio
Commission, under § 16 of the Radio Act of 1927, and of the Federal
Communications Commission, under § 402(b) of the Communications Act
of 1934, whenever stays were regarded as necessary. To be sure, in
only one case, the
Boston Broadcasting decision,
supra, did the Court of Appeals even refer to the granting
of a stay order. The explanation is not hard to find. The power to
stay was so firmly imbedded in our judicial system, so consonant
with the historic procedures of federal appellate courts, that
there was no necessity for the Court of Appeals to justify its
settled practice. [
Footnote
5]
Page 316 U. S. 14
The considerations of policy which are invoked are as fragile as
the legislative materials are inapposite. It is said that the
nature of the orders reviewable under § 402(b) makes the grant of a
stay order manifestly inappropriate, since a stay would, in effect,
involve the judicial exercise of an administrative function. An
example is adduced of an appeal from an order denying an
application for a construction permit or a station license, or for
modification or renewal of a license. Of course, no court can grant
an applicant an authorization which the Commission has refused. No
order that the Court of Appeals could make would enable an
applicant to go on the air when the Commission has denied him a
license to do so. A stay of an order denying an application would,
in the nature of things, stay nothing. It could not operate as an
affirmative authorization of that which the Commission has refused
to authorize. But this is no reason for denying the Court the power
to issue a stay in a situation where the function of the stay is to
avoid irreparable injury to the public interest sought to be
vindicated by the appeal.
The Communications Act of 1934 did not create new private
rights. The purpose of the Act was to protect the public interest
in communications. By § 402(b)(2), Congress gave the right of
appeal to persons "aggrieved or whose interests are adversely
affected" by Commission action. 48 Stat. 1064, 1093. But these
private litigants have standing only as representatives of the
public interest.
Federal Communications Commission v. Sanders
Bros. Radio Station, 309 U. S. 470,
309 U. S. 477.
Compare National Licorice Co. v. Labor Board, 309 U.
S. 350,
309 U. S.
362-363. That
Page 316 U. S. 15
a court is called upon to enforce public rights, and not the
interests of private property, does not diminish its power to
protect such rights.
"Courts of equity may, and frequently do, go much farther both
to give and withhold relief in furtherance of the public interest
than they are accustomed to go when only private interests are
involved."
Virginian Ry. Co. v. System Federation, 300 U.
S. 515,
300 U. S. 552.
An historic procedure for preserving rights during the pendency of
an appeal is no less appropriate -- unless Congress has chosen to
withdraw it -- because the rights to be vindicated are those of the
public, and not of the private, litigants. Unless Congress
explicitly discloses such an intention, we should not lightly
attribute to it a desire to withhold from a reviewing court the
power to save the public interest from injury or destruction while
an appeal is being heard. To do so would stultify the purpose of
Congress to utilize the courts as a means for vindicating the
public interest. Courts and administrative agencies are not to be
regarded as competitors in the task of safeguarding the public
interest.
United States v. Morgan, 307 U.
S. 183,
307 U. S.
190-191;
Federal Communications Commission v.
Pottsville Broadcasting Co., 309 U. S. 134.
Courts no less than administrative bodies are agencies of
government. Both are instruments for realizing public purposes.
It is urged that the orders reviewable under § 402(a), as to
which the power to grant stays is undeniable, are intrinsically
different from those reviewable under § 402(b). But, while the two
sections route appeals to different courts, the differentiation
was, in large measure, the product of Congressional solicitude for
the convenience of litigants. It had no relation to the scope of
the judicial function which the courts were called upon to perform.
For example, if the Commission, on its own motion, modifies a
station license, review is had under § 402(a) in the appropriate
district court. However, if it grants an application for
modification of a license, an appeal lies under § 402(b)
Page 316 U. S. 16
to the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. Both cases
give rise to the same kind of issues on appeal. Both orders are
equally susceptible of being stayed on appeal. As the legislative
history of the Act plainly shows, Congress provided the two roads
to judicial review only to save a licensee the inconvenience of
litigating an appeal in Washington in situations where the
Commission's order arose out of a proceeding not instituted by the
licensee. [
Footnote 6]
Judged by its own terms, its history, and the practice under it,
the Communications Act of 1934 affords no warrant for depriving the
Court of Appeals of the conventional power of an appellate court to
stay the enforcement of an order pending the determination of an
appeals challenging its validity. Indirect light is sometimes cast
upon legislation by provisions dealing with the same problem in
related enactments. No such light is shed here. The numerous laws
in which Congress has established administrative agencies for the
exercise of its regulatory powers do not disclose any general
legislative policy regarding the power to stay administrative
orders pending review. Some statutes are wholly silent; [
Footnote 7] some turn a court review
into an automatic stay; [
Footnote
8] some provide that the commencement of a suit shall not
operate as a stay unless the court specifically so provides;
[
Footnote 9] some authorize the
reviewing
Page 316 U. S. 17
court to grant a stay where necessary. [
Footnote 10] Significantly, the recent Emergency
Price Control Act of 1942 explicitly denies the power of the
reviewing court to enjoin enforcement of the administrative
orders.
The various enactments in which the staying power is made
explicit, as well as the statutes that are silent about it, afford
debating points, but no reliable aids in construing the Act before
us. One thing is clear. Where Congress wished to deprive the courts
of this historic power, it knew how to use apt words -- only once
has it done so, and in a statute born of the exigencies of war.
We conclude that Congress, by § 402(b) of the Communications Act
of 1934, has not deprived the Court of Appeals of the power to stay
-- a power as old as the judicial system of the nation. We do not,
of course, go beyond the question put to us. We merely recognize
the existence of the power to grant a stay. We are not concerned
here with the criteria which should govern the Court in exercising
that power. Nor do we in any way imply that a stay would or would
not be warranted upon the showing made by the appellant in this
case.
The question certified to us is answered in the affirmative.
So ordered.
Page 316 U. S. 18
MR. JUSTICE BLACK took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
A summary of the authority vested in the Federal Radio
Commission, the Interstate Commerce Commission, and the Postmaster
General, and of the extent to which such authority was actually
exercised, is contained in Appendix A, Historical Background of the
Communications Act of 1934, of the Monograph of the Attorney
General's Committee on Administrative Procedure dealing with the
Federal Communications Commission, Sen.Doc. No. 186, 76th Cong., 3d
Sess., pt. 3;
see also Herring and Gross,
Telecommunications, pp. 210-45.
[
Footnote 2]
"Any applicant for a construction permit, for a station license,
or for the renewal or modification of an existing station license
whose application is refused by the licensing authority shall have
the right to appeal from said decision to the Court of Appeals of
the District of Columbia. . . ."
44 Stat. 1162, 1169.
[
Footnote 3]
Where the Commission revokes a station license or modifies a
license on its own motion, judicial review is available only under
§ 402(a) of the Communications Act. The reason for this
differentiation appears in the following statement of Senator Dill,
who steered the bill in the Senate:
"I desire to call attention to what I think is an important fact
to consider in this appeal provision. Those owners of radio
broadcasting stations living long distances from the District of
Columbia should not be required to come to Washington to prosecute
an appeal from a decision for which they were not responsible. When
I say 'were not responsible,' I mean a decision which was granted
against them or affecting them when they did not bring the case
into court. . . . So we provide that, where the decisions of the
commission are made in cases wherein the stations took no part in
beginning the suits, appeal may be taken in the three-judge
district courts in the jurisdictions where the stations are
located. But in the case where the applicant for the license or the
permit, or whatever it may be, comes to the commission and asks for
a change in his license or asks for a new license, or asks for
something to be done by the commission, then, if the commission
makes a decision from which he desires to appeal, he must make his
appeal in the courts of the District of Columbia."
78 Cong.Rec. 8825-26.
Cf. Sen.Rep. No. 781, 73d Cong.,
2d Sess., pp. 9-10.
Section 16 of the Radio Act of 1927 provided for appeals from
revocation orders to either the Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia or the District Court of the district in which the
station was located. 44 Stat. 1162, 1169.
[
Footnote 4]
Section 262 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 377, empowers the
federal courts
"to issue all writs not specifically provided for by statute
which may be necessary for the exercise of their respective
jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and principles of
law."
This provision appeared in the very first Judiciary Act, 1 Stat.
73, 81-82.
Compare District of Columbia Code (1940 ed.) §
11-208, authorizing the Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia "to issue all necessary and proper remedial prerogative
writs in aid of its appellate jurisdiction." 31 Stat. 1189,
1227.
[
Footnote 5]
As late as February 23, 1939, the Commission stated its position
as follows:
"The Commission has not opposed in the past, and does not
propose in the future, to oppose the granting of a stay or such
interlocutory restraining order by this court as may be necessary
to protect the appellate jurisdiction of the court or preserve the
status quo pending determination of an appeal from an
order of the Commission in any case where such a stay or
restraining order appears reasonably to be necessary or
advisable."
Opposition to Petition for Stay Order filed by the Commission in
Crosley Corp. v. Federal Communications Commission, No.
7351, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, Feb. 23, 1939,
pp. 1-2 (70 App.D.C. 312, 106 F.2d 833).
[
Footnote 6]
See note 3
supra.
[
Footnote 7]
E.g., Commodity Exchange Act of 1922, 42 Stat. 998,
1001, 7 U.S.C. § 9; Radio Act of 1927, 44 Stat. 1162; Railroad
Retirement Act of 1937, 50 Stat. 307, 315, 45 U.S.C. § 228k.
[
Footnote 8]
E.g., Federal Alcohol Administration Act of 1935, 49
Stat. 977, 980, 27 U.S.C. § 204(h); Investment Company Act of 1940,
54 Stat. 789, 844, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-42(b).
[
Footnote 9]
E.g., Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938, 52 Stat. 31,
7 U.S.C. § 1367; Securities Act of 1933, 48 Stat. 74, 80, 15 U.S.C.
77i; Trust Indenture Act of 1939, 53 Stat. 1175, 15 U.S.C. § 77vvv;
Public Utility Act of 1935, 49 Stat. 803, 834, 15 U.S.C. § 79x;
Investment Company Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 789, 844, 15 U.S.C. §
80a-42(b); Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 847, 856, 15
U.S.C. § 80b-13; Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, 52 Stat. 1060,
1065, 29 U.S.C. § 210(b); Bituminous Coal Act of 1937, 50 Stat. 85,
15 U.S.C. § 836(b); Natural Gas Act of 1938, 52 Stat. 821, 831,
832, 15 U.S.C. § 717r(c).
[
Footnote 10]
E.g., Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938, 52 Stat. 973,
1024, 49 U.S.C. § 646(d); Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914, 38
Stat. 719, as amended, 52 Stat. 111, 113, 15 U.S.C. § 45(c)
(authorizing the court to issue such writs as "are necessary in its
judgment to prevent injury to the public or to competitors
pendente lite").
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
Congress has provided through § 402(a) of the Communications Act
of 1934, that, in appeals from certain classes of orders of the
Federal Communications Commission, the appellate court may issue a
stay. The order here involved is of a class which is expressly
excepted from § 402(a). Sec. 402(b). which provides for an appeal
from this class of order, contains no provision whatsoever for a
judicial stay. Where Congress, in one section of an Act, has
provided for a stay of certain orders, but not of others, it has
not remained silent on the subject. It has drawn a line. And that
line should not be obliterated by us in absence of plain and
compelling indications that the purpose of Congress was different
from what the fact of the statute reveals. There are no such
reasons here.
The legislative history gives no comfort to the view of the
majority. In drafting § 402, Congress had before it H.R. 7716, 72d
Congress. That bill, designed to amend the Radio Act of 1927, had
been passed by both houses in 1933, but had failed of enactment
because of a pocket veto. Under § 16(f) of that bill, orders of the
type here in question could be stayed by the appellate court.
Congress relied extensively on that earlier bill in drafting § 402.
H.Rep. No.1918, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 47-49. If Congress had
intended the appellate court to have the power to stay this type of
order, it hardly seems likely, as the Commission points out, that
Congress would have failed to include it when, only the year
before, it had attempted to write into the statute a specific
provision conferring that power. But, if we disregard that
circumstance and turn to other parts of the legislative history,
there are no indications that the line which Congress drew
Page 316 U. S. 19
between § 402(a) and § 402(b) was inadvertent or accidental.
Nor are we justified in rewriting the statute to iron out
possible logical inconsistencies in the classification of orders
which Congress has made in § 402(a) and § 402(b). If we were a
legislative committee, perhaps we would not retain in § 402(a)
orders which are made by the Commission on its own motion and which
modify a station license, since such orders, if made pursuant to an
application, are covered by § 402(b). But to seize on that lack of
symmetry here is to miss the forest for the trees. The nature of
the run of the orders excepted from the stay provisions of § 402(a)
demands respect for the words of the Act. The instant case is a
good illustration.
Federal Communications Commission v. Sanders
Bros., 309 U. S. 470,
642, holds that a competitor such as appellant has no private
property interest which may be protected on appeal. "The policy of
the Act is clear that no person is to have anything in the nature
of a property right as a result of the granting of a license."
Id., p.
309 U. S. 475.
Any injury to an existing station as is alleged here
"is not a separate and independent element to be taken into
consideration by the Commission in determining whether it shall
grant or withhold a license."
Id., p.
309 U. S. 476.
Thus, it is manifest that the failure of Congress to extend the
stay provisions of § 402(a) to the run of orders of this type makes
sense. The Urgent Deficiencies Act, which is incorporated into §
402(a), allows a temporary stay "where irreparable damage would
otherwise ensue to the petitioner." 38 Stat. 208, 220. But, where
appeals under § 402(b)(2), as in the instant case, are not shown to
involve private rights, analogies to situations where the power to
issue a stay is implied because irreparable damage may be done an
appellant whose individual interest has been unlawfully invaded are
inapposite. For the same reason, statistics as to the presence of
this power in statutes of other administrative agencies
Page 316 U. S. 20
are irrelevant in absence of a showing that, in the precise
situations there involved, no private rights were at stake.
And that leads to a related reason why it will not do to lean on
"the historic procedures of federal appellate courts" so that an
implied power to issue a stay in this type of case may be found.
"The office and jurisdiction of a court of equity, unless enlarged
by express statute, are limited to the protection of rights of
property."
In re Sawyer, 124 U. S. 200,
124 U. S. 210.
All constitutional questions aside (
Muskrat v. United
States, 219 U. S. 346), we
should require explicit, unequivocal authorization before we
permitted an appellant who has no individual substantive right at
stake in the litigation to obtain a stay to protect the public
interest. Repeated attempts of private litigants to obtain a
special stake in public rights have been consistently denied.
See Massachusetts v. Mellon, 262 U.
S. 447;
Sprunt & Son v. United States,
281 U. S. 249;
Alabama Power Co. v. Ickes, 302 U.
S. 464;
Tennessee Electric Power Co. v. Tennessee
Valley Authority, 306 U. S. 118;
Atlanta v. Ickes, 308 U.S. 517;
Singer & Sons v.
Union Pacific R. Co., 311 U. S. 295. The
attempt to obtain a stay is but another manifestation, albeit
oblique, of that same endeavor. Hence, instead of starting from the
premise that an "historic power" to issue a stay in this type of
case will be readily implied, we should assume just the contrary.
Not even long acquiescence or approval on the part of the
Commission should lead us to make such a departure from those
historic accepted principles. For that reason alone, § 402(b)
should be read narrowly and restrictively.
But it is said that Congress entrusted the vindication of the
public interest to private litigants. The
Sanders case,
properly construed, merely means that the Court of Appeals has
jurisdiction of appeals by a "person aggrieved" or by one "whose
interests are adversely affected" by the Commission's decision. §
402(b). But
Page 316 U. S. 21
that does not mean that an appellant has a cause of action
merely because he has a competing station. Unless he can show that
his individual interest has been unlawfully invaded, there is
merely
damnum absque injuria, and no cause of action on
the merits.
Alabama Power Co. v. Ickes, supra; Greenwood County
v. Duke Power Co., 81 F.2d 986, 999.
And see Duke Power
Co. v. Greenwood County, 302 U. S. 485.
Congress could have said that the holder of a radio license has an
individual substantive right to be free of competition resulting
from the issuance of another license and causing injury. In that
event, unlike the situation in
Muskrat v. United States,
supra, there would be a cause of action for invasion of a
substantive right. But, as we said in the
Sanders case,
Congress did not create such a substantive right. And no facts are
shown here which would bring this appeal outside the rule of that
case. On that assumption I fail to see how an appeal statute
constitutionally could authorize a person who shows no case or
controversy to call on the courts to review an order of the
Commission.
A fortiori, he would have no standing to
obtain a stay.
Furthermore, the power to issue a stay in this type of case
cannot be found in the "all writs" statutes. Judicial Code, § 262;
District of Columbia Code (1940 ed.) § 11-208. As we stated in
Federal Communications Commission v. Pottsville Broadcasting
Co., 309 U. S. 134, the
relationship between the Court of Appeals and the Commission is not
that of federal courts
inter se.
". . . to assimilate the relation of these administrative bodies
and the courts to the relationship between lower and upper courts
is to disregard the origin and purposes of the movement for
administrative regulation and, at the same time, to disregard the
traditional scope, however far-reaching, of the judicial process.
Unless these vital differentiations between the functions of
judicial and administrative tribunals
Page 316 U. S. 22
are observed, courts will stray outside their province and read
the laws of Congress through the distorting lenses of inapplicable
legal doctrine."
P.
309 U. S. 144.
The Commission, not the courts, is the ultimate guardian of the
public interest under this Act. The appellate court is limited to a
correction of "errors of law."
Id., p.
309 U. S. 145.
The judgment of the Commission, not the court, determines whether
the public interest will be served by an application.
Id.,
pp.
309 U. S.
144-145. Hence, the power of the courts in this
situation to issue writs under the "all writs" statutes should be
limited to the protection of its jurisdiction. If, as here,
construction of a new station is completed pending appeal by
another licensee, the court's jurisdiction is not impaired, though
we assume that it has jurisdiction of the appeal and that appellant
has a cause of action on the merits. If the Commission has
committed an error of law, it must bow to the decree of the court
and revise its order. But to allow the court to go beyond that and
find an implied power to issue a stay in this type of case is to
distort the statutory scheme. 12 Air L.Rev. 224. Jealous regard for
the administrative role and function in this field will leave to
Congress any enlargement within constitutional limits of the
judicial power.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY joins in this dissent.