1. The regulatory powers of the Federal Communications
Commission are not limited to the engineering and technical aspects
of radio communication. P.
319 U. S. 215.
2. Regulations adopted by the Federal Communications Commission,
as "in the public interest," touching the relations between
licensed broadcasting stations on the one hand, and network
organizations furnishing programs to such stations on the other
hand, are sustained as within the powers conferred upon the
Commission by the Federal Communications Act,
viz.:
(1) A regulation providing that no license shall be granted to a
standard broadcast station having any contract, arrangement, or
understanding with a network organization under which the station
is prevented or hindered from, or penalized for, broadcasting the
programs of any other network organization. P.
319 U. S.
198.
(2) A regulation providing that no license shall be granted to a
standard broadcast station having any contract, etc., with a
network organization which prevents or hinders another station
serving substantially the same area from broadcasting the network's
programs not taken by the former station, or which prevents or
hinders another station serving a substantially different area from
broadcasting any program of the network organization; but not
prohibiting any contract between a station and a network
organization pursuant to which the station is granted the first
call in its primary service area upon the programs of the network
organization. P.
319 U. S.
200.
(3) A regulation declaring that no license shall be granted to a
standard broadcast station having any contract, etc., with a
network organization which provides for the affiliation of the
station with the network organization for a period longer than two
years. P.
319 U. S.
201.
Page 319 U. S. 191
(4) A regulation providing that no license shall be granted to a
standard broadcast station which options for network program any
time subject to call on less than 56 days' notice, or more time
than a total of three hours within each of four segments of the
broadcast day, as described in the regulation, and that such
options may not be exclusive as against other network organizations
and may not prevent or hinder the station from optioning or selling
any or all of the time covered by the option, or other time, to
other network organizations. P.
319 U. S.
202.
(5) A regulation providing that no license shall be granted to a
standard broadcast station having any contract, etc., with a
network organization which (a), with respect to programs offered
pursuant to an affiliation contract, prevents or hinders the
station from rejecting or refusing network programs which the
station reasonably believes to be unsatisfactory or unsuitable; or
which (b), with respect to network programs so offered or already
contracted for, prevents the station from rejecting or refusing any
program which, in its opinion, is contrary to the public interest,
or from substituting a program of outstanding local or national
importance. P.
319 U. S.
204.
(6) A regulation providing that no license shall be granted to a
network organization, or to any person directly or indirectly
controlled by or under common control with a network organization,
for more than one standard broadcast station where one of the
stations covers substantially the service area of the other
station, or for any standard broadcast station in any locality
where the existing standard broadcast stations are so few or of
such unequal desirability (in terms of coverage, power, frequency,
or other related matters) that competition would be substantially
restrained by such licensing. P.
319 U. S.
206.
(7) A regulation providing that no license shall be granted to a
standard broadcast station having any contract, etc., with a
network organization under which the station is prevented or
hindered from, or penalized for, fixing or altering its rates for
the sale of broadcast time for other than the network's programs.
P.
319 U. S.
208.
3. Section 311 of the Federal Communications Act, by authorizing
the Commission to withhold broadcasting station licenses from
persons who have been convicted of violating the Antitrust Laws,
does not imply that, in the absence of such conviction, conduct of
the applicant amounting to such violation may not be considered by
the Commission in determining whether the granting of his
application would be contrary to the "public interest." P.
319 U. S.
222.
Page 319 U. S. 192
4. The standard of "public interest" governing the exercise of
the powers delegated to the Commission by the Act is not so vague
and indefinite as to create an unconstitutional delegation of
legislative authority. P.
319 U. S.
225.
5. The Commission, by announcing that it will refuse station
licenses to persons who engage in specified network practices
contrary to the public interest, convenience, or necessity, does
not thereby deny to such person the constitutional right of free
speech. P.
319 U. S.
226.
6. In a suit to enjoin the enforcement of regulation promulgated
by the Federal Communications Commission, the District Court
properly disposed of the case upon the pleadings and the record
made before the Commission, without trial
de novo. P.
319 U. S.
227.
47 F.
Supp. 940 affirmed.
Appeals from judgments of the District Court dismissing suits to
enjoin enforcement of chain broadcasting regulations promulgated by
the Federal Communications Commission.
Page 319 U. S. 193
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
In view of our dependence upon regulated private enterprise in
discharging the far-reaching role which radio plays in our society,
a somewhat detailed exposition of the history of the present
controversy and the issues which it raises is appropriate.
These suits were brought on October 30, 1941, to enjoin the
enforcement of the Chain Broadcasting Regulations promulgated by
the Federal Communications Commission on May 2, 1941, and amended
on October 11, 1941. We held last Term in
Columbia Broadcasting
System v. United States, 316 U. S. 407, and
National Broadcasting Co. v. United States, 316 U.
S. 447, that the suits could be maintained under §
402(a) of the Communications Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 1093, 47 U.S.C.
§ 402(a) (incorporating by reference the Urgent Deficiencies Act of
October 22, 1913, 38 Stat. 219, 28 U.S.C. § 47), and that the
decrees of the District Court dismissing the suits for want of
jurisdiction should therefore be reversed. On remand, the District
Court granted the Government's motions for summary judgment and
dismissed the suits on the merits.
47 F.
Supp. 940. The cases are now here on appeal. 28 U.S.C. § 47.
Since they raise substantially the same issues and were argued
together, we shall deal with both cases in a single opinion.
On March 18, 1938, the Commission undertook a comprehensive
investigation to determine whether special regulations applicable
to radio stations engaged in chain
Page 319 U. S. 194
broadcasting [
Footnote 1]
were required in the "public interest, convenience, or necessity."
The Commission's order directed that inquiry be made,
inter
alia, in the following specific matters: the number of
stations licensed to or affiliated with networks, and the amount of
station time used or controlled by networks; the contractual rights
and obligations of stations under their agreements with networks;
the scope of network agreements containing exclusive affiliation
provisions and restricting the network from affiliating with other
stations in the same area; the rights and obligations of stations
with respect to network advertisers; the nature of the program
service rendered by stations licensed to networks; the policies of
networks with respect to character of programs, diversification,
and accommodation to the particular requirements of the areas
served by the affiliated stations; the extent to which affiliated
stations exercise control over programs, advertising contracts, and
related matters; the nature and extent of network program
duplication by stations serving the same area; the extent to which
particular networks have exclusive coverage in some areas; the
competitive practices of stations engaged in chain broadcasting;
the effect of chain broadcasting upon stations not licensed to or
affiliated with networks; practices or agreements in restraint of
trade, or in furtherance of monopoly, in connection with chain
broadcasting; and the scope of concentration of control over
stations, locally, regionally, or nationally, through contracts,
common ownership, or other means.
On April 6, 1938, a committee of three Commissioners was
designated to hold hearings and make recommendations
Page 319 U. S. 195
to the full Commission. This committee held public hearings for
73 days over a period of six months, from November 14, 1938, to May
19, 1939. Order No. 37, announcing the investigation and specifying
the particular matters which would be explored at the hearings, was
published in the Federal Register, 3 Fed.Reg. 637, and copies were
sent to every station licensee and network organization. Notices of
the hearings were also sent to these parties. Station licensees,
national and regional networks, and transcription and recording
companies were invited to appear and give evidence. Other persons
who sought to appear were afforded an opportunity to testify. 96
witnesses were heard by the committee, 45 of whom were called by
the national networks. The evidence covers 27 volumes, including
over 8,000 pages of transcript and more than 700 exhibits. The
testimony of the witnesses called by the national networks fills
more than 6,000 pages, the equivalent of 46 hearing days.
The committee submitted a report to the Commission on June 12,
1940, stating its findings and recommendations. Thereafter, briefs
on behalf of the networks and other interested parties were filed
before the full Commission, and on November 28, 1940, the
Commission issued proposed regulations which the parties were
requested to consider in the oral arguments held on December 2 and
3, 1940. These proposed regulations dealt with the same matters as
those covered by the regulations eventually adopted by the
Commission. On January 2, 1941, each of the national networks filed
a supplementary brief discussing at length the questions raised by
the committee report and the proposed regulations.
On May 2, 1941, the Commission issued its Report on Chain
Broadcasting, setting forth its findings and conclusions upon the
matters explored in the investigation, together with an order
adopting the Regulations here assailed. Two of the seven members of
the Commission dissented
Page 319 U. S. 196
from this action. The effective date of the Regulations was
deferred for 90 days with respect to existing contracts and
arrangements of network-operated stations, and subsequently the
effective date was thrice again postponed. On August 14, 1941, the
Mutual Broadcasting Company petitioned the Commission to amend two
of the Regulations. In considering this petition, the Commission
invited interested parties to submit their views. Briefs were filed
on behalf of all of the national networks, and oral argument was
had before the Commission on September 12, 1941. And on October 11,
1941, the Commission (again with two members dissenting) issued a
Supplemental Report, together with an order amending three
Regulations. Simultaneously, the effective date of the Regulations
was postponed until November 15, 1941, and provision was made for
further postponements from time to time if necessary to permit the
orderly adjustment of existing arrangements. Since October 30,
1941, when the present suits were filed, the enforcement of the
Regulations has been stayed either voluntarily by the Commission or
by order of court.
Such is the history of the Chain Broadcasting Regulations. We
turn now to the Regulations themselves, illumined by the practices
in the radio industry disclosed by the Commission's investigation.
The Regulations, which the Commission characterized in its Report
as "the expression of the general policy we will follow in
exercising our licensing power," are addressed in terms to station
licensees and applicants for station licenses. They provide, in
general, that no licenses shall be granted to stations or
applicants having specified relationships with networks. Each
Regulation is directed at a particular practice found by the
Commission to be detrimental to the "public interest," and we shall
consider them
seriatim. In doing so, however, we do not
overlook the admonition of the Commission that the Regulations as
well as the network practices
Page 319 U. S. 197
at which they are aimed are interrelated:
"In considering above the network practices which necessitate
the regulations we are adopting, we have taken each practice
singly, and have shown that, even in isolation, each warrants the
regulation addressed to it. But the various practices we have
considered do not operate in isolation; they form a compact bundle
or pattern, and the effect of their joint impact upon licensees
necessitates the regulations even more urgently than the effect of
each taken singly."
(Report, p. 75.)
The Commission found that, at the end of 1938, there were 660
commercial stations in the United States, and that 341 of these
were affiliated with national networks. 135 stations were
affiliated exclusively with the National Broadcasting Company,
Inc., known in the industry as NBC, which operated two national
networks, the "Red" and the "Blue." NBC was also the licensee of 10
stations, including 7 which operated on so-called clear channels
with the maximum power available, 50 kilowatts; in addition, NBC
operated 5 other stations, 4 of which had power of 50 kilowatts,
under management contracts with their licensees. 102 stations were
affiliated exclusively with the Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
which was also the licensee of 8 stations, 7 of which were
clear-channel stations operating with power of 50 kilowatts. 74
stations were under exclusive affiliation with the Mutual
Broadcasting System, Inc. In addition, 25 stations were affiliated
with both NBC and Mutual, and 5 with both CBS and Mutual. These
figures, the Commission noted, did not accurately reflect the
relative prominence of the three companies, since the stations
affiliated with Mutual were, generally speaking, less desirable in
frequency, power, and coverage. It pointed out that the stations
affiliated with the national networks utilized more than 97% of the
total night-time broadcasting power of all the
Page 319 U. S. 198
stations in the country. NBC and CBS together controlled more
than 85% of the total night-time wattage, and the broadcast
business of the three national network companies amounted to almost
half of the total business of all stations in the United
States.
The Commission recognized that network broadcasting had played
and was continuing to play an important part in the development of
radio. "The growth and development of chain broadcasting," it
stated,
"found its impetus in the desire to give widespread coverage to
programs which otherwise would not be heard beyond the reception
area of a single station. Chain broadcasting makes possible a wider
reception for expensive entertainment and cultural programs, and
also for programs of national or regional significance which would
otherwise have coverage only in the locality of origin.
Furthermore, the access to greatly enlarged audiences made possible
by chain broadcasting has been a strong incentive to advertisers to
finance the production of expensive programs. . . . But the fact
that the chain broadcasting method brings benefits and advantages
to both the listening public and to broadcast station licensees
does not mean that the prevailing practices and policies of the
networks and their outlets are sound in all respects, or that they
should not be altered. The Commission's duty under the
Communications Act of 1934 is not only to see that the public
receives the advantages and benefits of chain broadcasting, but
also, so far as its powers enable it, to see that practices which
adversely affect the ability of licensees to operate in the public
interest are eliminated."
(Report, p. 4.)
The Commission found that eight network abuses were amenable to
correction within the powers granted it by Congress:
Regulation 3.101 -- Exclusive affiliation of station.
The Commission found that the network affiliation agreements of NBC
and CBS customarily contained a provision which
Page 319 U. S. 199
prevented the station from broadcasting the programs of any
other network. The effect of this provision was to hinder the
growth of new networks, to deprive the listening public in many
areas of service to which they were entitled, and to prevent
station licensees from exercising their statutory duty of
determining which programs would best serve the needs of their
community. The Commission observed that, in areas where all the
stations were under exclusive contract to either NBC or CBS, the
public was deprived of the opportunity to hear programs presented
by Mutual. To take a case cited in the Report: in the fall of 1939,
Mutual obtained the exclusive right to broadcast the World Series
baseball games. It offered this program of outstanding national
interest to stations throughout the country, including NBC and CBS
affiliates in communities having no other stations. CBS and NBC
immediately invoked the "exclusive affiliation" clauses of their
agreements with these stations, and, as a result, thousands of
persons in many sections of the country were unable to hear the
broadcasts of the games.
"Restraints having this effect," the Commission observed,
"are to be condemned as contrary to the public interest
irrespective of whether it be assumed that Mutual programs are of
equal, superior, or inferior quality. The important consideration
is that station licensees are denied freedom to choose the programs
which they believe best suited to their needs; in this manner, the
duty of a station licensee to operate in the public interest is
defeated. . . . Our conclusion is that the disadvantages resulting
from these exclusive arrangements far outweigh any advantages. A
licensee station does not operate in the public interest when it
enters into exclusive arrangements which prevent it from giving the
public the best service of which it is capable, and which, by
closing the door of opportunity in the network field, adversely
affect the program structure of the entire industry."
(Report, pp. 52, 57.) Accordingly,
Page 319 U. S. 200
the Commission adopted Regulation 3.101, providing as
follows:
"No license shall be granted to a standard broadcast station
having any contract, arrangement, or understanding, express or
implied, with a network organization under which the station is
prevented or hindered from, or penalized for, broadcasting the
programs of any other network organization."
Regulation 3.102 -- Territorial exclusivity. The
Commission found another type of "exclusivity" provision in network
affiliation agreements whereby the network bound itself not to sell
programs to any other station in the same area. The effect of this
provision, designed to protect the affiliate from the competition
of other stations serving the same territory, was to deprive the
listening public of many programs that might otherwise be
available. If an affiliated station rejected a network program, the
"territorial exclusivity" clause of its affiliation agreement
prevented the network from offering the program to other stations
in the area. For example, Mutual presented a popular program, known
as "The American Forum of the Air," in which prominent persons
discussed topics of general interest. None of the Mutual stations
in the Buffalo area decided to carry the program, and a Buffalo
station not affiliated with Mutual attempted to obtain the program
for its listeners. These efforts failed, however, on account of the
"territorial exclusivity" provision in Mutual's agreements with its
outlets. The result was that this program was not available to the
people of Buffalo.
The Commission concluded that
"It is not in the public interest for the listening audience in
an area to be deprived of network programs not carried by one
station where other stations in that area are ready and willing to
broadcast the programs. It is as much against the public interest
for a network affiliate to enter into a contractual arrangement
which prevents another station from carrying
Page 319 U. S. 201
a network program as it would be for it to drown out that
program by electrical interference."
(Report, p. 59.)
Recognizing that the "territorial exclusivity" clause was
unobjectionable insofar as it sought to prevent duplication of
programs in the same area, the Commission limited itself to the
situations in which the clause impaired the ability of the licensee
to broadcast available programs. Regulation 3.102, promulgated to
remedy this particular evil, provides as follows:
"No license shall be granted to a standard broadcast station
having any contract, arrangement, or understanding, express or
implied, with a network organization which prevents or hinders
another station serving substantially the same area from
broadcasting the network's programs not taken by the former
station, or which prevents or hinders another station serving a
substantially different area from broadcasting any program of the
network organization. This regulation shall not be construed to
prohibit any contract, arrangement, or understanding between a
station and a network organization pursuant to which the station is
granted the first call in its primary service area upon the
programs of the network organization."
Regulation 3.103 -- Term of affiliation. The standard
NBC and CBS affiliation contracts bound the station for a period of
five years, with the network having the exclusive right to
terminate the contracts upon one year's notice. The Commission,
relying upon § 307(d) of the Communications Act of 1934, under
which no license to operate a broadcast station can be granted for
a longer term than three years, found the five-year affiliation
term to be contrary to the policy of the Act:
"Regardless of any changes that may occur in the economic,
political, or social life of the Nation or of the community in
which the station is located, CBS and NBC affiliates are bound by
contract to continue broadcasting the network programs of only one
network for 5 years. The licensee is so bound even
Page 319 U. S. 202
though the policy and caliber of programs of the network may
deteriorate greatly. The future necessities of the station and of
the community are not considered. The station licensee is unable to
follow his conception of the public interest until the end of the
5-year contract."
(Report, p. 61.) The Commission concluded that, under contracts
binding the affiliates for five years, "stations become parties to
arrangements which deprive the public of the improved service it
might otherwise derive from competition in the network field; and
that a station is not operating in the public interest when it so
limits its freedom of action." (Report, p. 62.) Accordingly, the
Commission adopted Regulation 3.103:
"No license shall be granted to a standard broadcast station
having any contract, arrangement, or understanding, express or
implied, with a network organization which provides, by original
term, provisions for renewal, or otherwise for the affiliation of
the station with the network organization for a period longer than
two years: [
Footnote 2]
Provided, That a contract, arrangement, or understanding
for a period up to two years, may be entered into within 120 days
prior to the commencement of such period."
Regulation 3.104 -- Option time. The Commission found
that network affiliation contracts usually contained so-called
network optional time clauses. Under these provisions, the network
could, upon 28 days' notice, call upon its affiliates to carry a
commercial program during any of the hours specified in the
agreement as "network optional time." For CBS affiliates, "network
optional time" meant the entire broadcast day. For 29 outlets of
NBC on the Pacific Coast, it also covered the entire broadcast day;
for substantially all of the other NBC affiliates,
Page 319 U. S. 203
it included 8 1/2 hours on weekdays and 8 hours on Sundays.
Mutual's contracts with about half of its affiliates contained such
a provision, giving the network optional time for 3 or 4 hours on
weekdays and 6 hours on Sundays.
In the Commission's judgment, these optional time provisions, in
addition to imposing serious obstacles in the path of new networks,
hindered stations in developing a local program service. The
exercise by the networks of their options over the station's time
tended to prevent regular scheduling of local programs at desirable
hours. The Commission found that
"shifting a local commercial program may seriously interfere
with the efforts of a [local] sponsor to build up a regular
listening audience at a definite hour, and the long-term
advertising contract becomes a highly dubious project. This hampers
the efforts of the station to develop local commercial programs,
and affects adversely its ability to give the public good program
service. . . . A station licensee must retain sufficient freedom of
action to supply the program and advertising needs of the local
community. Local program service is a vital part of community life.
A station should be ready, able, and willing to serve the needs of
the local community by broadcasting such outstanding local events
as community concerts, civic meetings, local sports events, and
other programs of local consumer and social interest. We conclude
that national network time options have restricted the freedom of
station licensees and hampered their efforts to broadcast local
commercial programs, the programs of other national networks, and
national spot transcriptions. We believe that these considerations
far outweigh any supposed advantages from 'stability' of network
operations under time options. We find that the optioning of time
by licensee stations has operated against the public interest."
(Report, pp. 63, 65.)
The Commission undertook to preserve the advantages of option
time, as a device for "stabilizing" the industry
Page 319 U. S. 204
without unduly impairing the ability of local stations to
develop local program service. Regulation 3.104 called for the
modification of the option-time provision in three respects: the
minimum notice period for exercise of the option could not be less
than 56 days; the number of hours which could be optioned was
limited; and specific restrictions were placed upon exercise of the
option to the disadvantage of other networks. The text of the
Regulation follows:
"No license shall be granted to a standard broadcast station
which options for network programs any time subject to call on less
than 56 days' notice, or more time than a total of three hours
within each of four segments of the broadcast day, as herein
described. The broadcast day is divided into 4 segments, as
follows: 8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.; 1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.; 6:00 p.m.
to 11:00 p.m.; 11:00 p.m. to 8:00 a.m. Such options may not be
exclusive as against other network organizations, and may not
prevent or hinder the station from optioning or selling any or all
of the time covered by the option, or other time, to other network
organizations."
Regulation 3.105 -- Right to reject programs. The
Commission found that most network affiliation contracts contained
a clause defining the right of the station to reject network
commercial programs. The NBC contracts provided simply that the
station "may reject a network program the broadcasting of which
would not be in the public interest, convenience, and necessity."
NBC required a licensee who rejected a program to "be able to
support his contention that what he has done has been more in the
public interest than had he carried on the network program."
Similarly, the CBS contracts provided that if the station had
"reasonable objection to any sponsored program or the product
advertised thereon as not being in the public interest, the station
may, on 3 weeks' prior notice thereof to Columbia, refuse to
broadcast such program,
Page 319 U. S. 205
unless, during such notice period, such reasonable objection of
the station shall be satisfied."
While seeming in the abstract to be fair, these provisions,
according to the Commission's finding, did not sufficiently protect
the "public interest." As a practical matter, the licensee could
not determine in advance whether the broadcasting of any particular
network program would or would not be in the public interest.
"It is obvious that from such skeletal information [as the
networks submitted to the stations prior to the broadcast], the
station cannot determine in advance whether the program is in the
public interest, nor can it ascertain whether or not parts of the
program are in one way or another offensive. In practice, if not in
theory, stations affiliated with networks have delegated to the
networks a large part of their programming functions. In many
instances, moreover, the network further delegates the actual
production of programs to advertising agencies. These agencies are
far more than mere brokers or intermediaries between the network
and the advertiser. To an ever-increasing extent, these agencies
actually exercise the function of program production. Thus, it is
frequently neither the station nor the network, but rather the
advertising agency, which determines what broadcast programs shall
contain. Under such circumstances, it is especially important that
individual stations, if they are to operate in the public interest,
should have the practical opportunity, as well as the contractual
right, to reject network programs. . . ."
"It is the station, not the network, which is licensed to serve
the public interest. The licensee has the duty of determining what
programs shall be broadcast over his station's facilities, and
cannot lawfully delegate this duty or transfer the control of his
station directly to the network or indirectly to an advertising
agency. He cannot lawfully bind himself to accept programs in every
case
Page 319 U. S. 206
where he cannot sustain the burden of proof that he has a better
program. The licensee is obliged to reserve to himself the final
decision as to what programs will best serve the public interest.
We conclude that a licensee is not fulfilling his obligations to
operate in the public interest, and is not operating in accordance
with the express requirements of the Communications Act, if he
agrees to accept programs on any basis other than his own
reasonable decision that the programs are satisfactory."
(Report, pp. 39, 66.)
The Commission undertook in Regulation 3.105 to formulate the
obligations of licensees with respect to supervision over
programs:
"No license shall be granted to a standard broadcast station
having any contract, arrangement, or understanding, express or
implied, with a network organization which (a), with respect to
programs offered pursuant to an affiliation contract, prevents or
hinders the station from rejecting or refusing network programs
which the station reasonably believes to be unsatisfactory or
unsuitable; or which (b), with respect to network programs so
offered or already contracted for, prevents the station from
rejecting or refusing any program which, in its opinion, is
contrary to the public interest, or from substituting a program of
outstanding local or national importance."
Regulation 3.106 -- Network ownership of stations. The
Commission found that NBC, in addition to its network operations,
was the licensee of 10 stations, 2 each in New York, Chicago,
Washington, and San Francisco, 1 in Denver, and 1 in Cleveland. CBS
was the licensee of 8 stations, 1 in each of these cities: New
York, Chicago, Washington, Boston, Minneapolis, St. Louis,
Charlotte, and Los Angeles. These 18 stations owned by NBC and CBS,
the Commission observed, were among the most powerful and desirable
in the country, and were permanently inaccessible to competing
networks.
"Competition
Page 319 U. S. 207
among networks for these facilities is nonexistent, as they are
completely removed from the network-station market. It gives the
network complete control over its policies. This 'bottling-up' of
the best facilities has undoubtedly had a discouraging effect upon
the creation and growth of new networks. Furthermore, common
ownership of network and station places the network in a position
where its interest as the owner of certain stations may conflict
with its interest as a network organization serving affiliated
stations. In dealings with advertisers, the network represents its
own stations in a proprietary capacity and the affiliated stations
in something akin to an agency capacity. The danger is present that
the network organization will give preference to its own stations
at the expense of its affiliates."
(Report, p. 67.)
The Commission stated that, if the question had arisen as an
original matter, it might well have concluded that the public
interest required severance of the business of station ownership
from that of network operation. But since substantial business
interests have been formed on the basis of the Commission's
continued tolerance of the situation, it was found inadvisable to
take such a drastic step. The Commission concluded, however, that
"the licensing of two stations in the same area to a single network
organization is basically unsound and contrary to the public
interest," and that it was also against the "public interest" for
network organizations to own stations in areas where the available
facilities were so few or of such unequal coverage that competition
would thereby be substantially restricted. Recognizing that these
considerations called for flexibility in their application to
particular situations, the Commission provided that
"networks will be given full opportunity, on proper application
for new facilities or renewal of existing licenses, to call to our
attention any reasons why the principle should be modified or held
inapplicable."
(Report, p. 68.)
Page 319 U. S. 208
Regulation 3.106 reads as follows:
"No license shall be granted to a network organization, or to
any person directly or indirectly controlled by or under common
control with a network organization, for more than one standard
broadcast station where one of the stations covers substantially
the service area of the other station, or for any standard
broadcast station in any locality where the existing standard
broadcast stations are so few or of such unequal desirability (in
terms of coverage, power, frequency, or other related matters) that
competition would be substantially restrained by such
licensing."
Regulation 3.107 -- Dual network operation. This
regulation provides that:
"No license shall be issued to a standard broadcast station
affiliated with a network organization which maintains more than
one network:
Provided, That this regulation shall not be
applicable if such networks are not operated simultaneously, or if
there is no substantial overlap in the territory served by the
group of stations comprising each such network."
In its Supplemental Report of October 11, 1941, the Commission
announced the indefinite suspension of this regulation. There is no
occasion here to consider the validity of Regulation 3.107, since
there is no immediate threat of its enforcement by the
Commission.
Regulation 3.108 -- Control by networks of station
rates. The Commission found that NBC's affiliation contracts
contained a provision empowering the network to reduce the
station's network rate, and thereby to reduce the compensation
received by the station, if the station set a lower rate for
non-network national advertising than the rate established by the
contract for the network programs. Under this provision, the
station could not sell time to a national advertiser for less than
it would cost the advertiser if he bought the time from NBC. In the
words of NBC's vice-president,
"This means simply that a national advertiser should pay the
same price for the station
Page 319 U. S. 209
whether the buys it through one source or another source. It
means that we do not believe that our stations should go into
competition with ourselves."
(Report, p. 73.)
The Commission concluded that
"it is against the public interest for a station licensee to
enter into a contract with a network which has the effect of
decreasing its ability to compete for national business. We believe
that the public interest will best be served and listeners supplied
with the best programs if stations bargain freely with national
advertisers."
(Report, p. 75.) Accordingly, the Commission adopted Regulation
3.108, which provides as follows:
"No license shall be granted to a standard broadcast station
having any contract, arrangement, or understanding, express or
implied, with a network organization under which the station is
prevented or hindered from, or penalized for, fixing or altering
its rates for the sale of broadcast time for other than the
network's programs."
The appellants attack the validity of these Regulations along
many fronts. They contend that the Commission went beyond the
regulatory powers conferred upon it by the Communications Act of
1934; that, even if the Commission were authorized by the Act to
deal with the matters comprehended by the Regulations, its action
is nevertheless invalid because the Commission misconceived the
scope of the Act, particularly § 313 which deals with the
application of the antitrust laws to the radio industry; that the
Regulations are arbitrary and capricious; that, if the
Communications Act of 1934 were construed to authorize the
promulgation of the Regulations, it would be an unconstitutional
delegation of legislative power; and that, in any event, the
Regulations abridge the appellants' right of free speech in
violation of the First Amendment. We are thus called upon to
determine whether Congress has authorized the Commission to
exercise the
Page 319 U. S. 210
power asserted by the Chain Broadcasting Regulations, and if it
has, whether the Constitution forbids the exercise of such
authority.
Federal regulation of radio [
Footnote 3] begins with the Wireless Ship Act of June 24,
1910, 36 Stat. 629, which forbade any steamer carrying or licensed
to carry fifty or more persons to leave any American port unless
equipped with efficient apparatus for radio communication, in
charge of a skilled operator. The enforcement of this legislation
was entrusted to the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, who was in
charge of the administration of the marine navigation laws. But it
was not until 1912, when the United States ratified the first
international radio treaty, 37 Stat. 1565, that the need for
general regulation of radio communication became urgent. In order
to fulfill our obligations under the treaty, Congress enacted the
Radio-Communications Act of August 13, 1912, 37 Stat. 302. This
statute forbade the operation of radio apparatus without a license
from the Secretary of Commerce and Labor; it also allocated certain
frequencies for the use of the Government, and imposed restrictions
upon the character of wave emissions, the transmission of distress
signals, and the like.
The enforcement of the Radio Act of 1912 presented no serious
problems prior to the World War. Questions of interference arose
only rarely because there were more than enough frequencies for all
the stations then in existence. The war accelerated the development
of the art, however, and, in 1921, the first standard broadcast
stations
Page 319 U. S. 211
were established. They grew rapidly in number, and, by 1923,
there were several hundred such stations throughout the country.
The Act of 1912 had not set aside any particular frequencies for
the use of private broadcast stations; consequently, the Secretary
of Commerce selected two frequencies, 750 and 833 kilocycles, and
licensed all stations to operate upon one or the other of these
channels. The number of stations increased so rapidly, however, and
the situation became so chaotic, that the Secretary, upon the
recommendation of the National Radio Conferences which met in
Washington in 1923 and 1924, established a policy of assigning
specified frequencies to particular stations. The entire radio
spectrum was divided into numerous bands, each allocated to a
particular kind of service. The frequencies ranging from 550 to
1500 kilocycles (96 channels in all, since the channels were
separated from each other by 10 kilocycles) were assigned to the
standard broadcast stations. But the problems created by the
enormously rapid development of radio were far from solved. The
increase in the number of channels was not enough to take care of
the constantly growing number of stations. Since there were more
stations than available frequencies, the Secretary of Commerce
attempted to find room for everybody by limiting the power and
hours of operation of stations in order that several stations might
use the same channel. The number of stations multiplied so rapidly,
however, that by November, 1925, there were almost 600 stations in
the country, and there were 175 applications for new stations.
Every channel in the standard broadcast band was, by that time,
already occupied by at least one station, and many by several. The
new stations could be accommodated only by extending the standard
broadcast band, at the expense of the other types of services, or
by imposing still greater limitations upon time and power. The
National Radio Conference which met in November, 1925,
Page 319 U. S. 212
opposed both of these methods, and called upon Congress to
remedy the situation through legislation.
The Secretary of Commerce was powerless to deal with the
situation. It had been held that he could not deny a license to an
otherwise legally qualified applicant on the ground that the
proposed station would interfere with existing private or
Government stations.
Hoover v. Intercity Radio Co., 52
App.D.C. 339, 286 F. 1003. And, on April 16, 1926, an Illinois
district court held that the Secretary had no power to impose
restrictions as to frequency, power, and hours of operation, and
that a station's use of a frequency not assigned to it was not a
violation of the Radio Act of 1912.
United States v. Zenith
Radio Corp., 12 F.2d
614. This was followed on July 8, 1926, by an opinion of Acting
Attorney General Donovan that the Secretary of Commerce had no
power, under the Radio Act of 1912, to regulate the power,
frequency or hours of operation of stations. 35 Op.Atty.Gen. 126.
The next day, the Secretary of Commerce issued a statement
abandoning all his efforts to regulate radio and urging that the
stations undertake self-regulation.
But the plea of the Secretary went unheeded. From, July, 1926,
to February 23, 1927, when Congress enacted the Radio Act of 1927,
44 Stat. 1162, almost 200 new stations went on the air. These new
stations used any frequencies they desired, regardless of the
interference thereby caused to others. Existing stations changed to
other frequencies and increased their power and hours of operation
at will. The result was confusion and chaos. With everybody on the
air, nobody could be heard. The situation became so intolerable
that the President in his message of December 7, 1926, appealed to
Congress to enact a comprehensive radio law:
"Due to the decisions of the courts, the authority of the
Department [of Commerce] under the law of 1912 has broken down;
many more stations have been operating
Page 319 U. S. 213
than can be accommodated within the limited number of wave
lengths available; further stations are in course of construction;
many stations have departed from the scheme of allocations set down
by the Department, and the whole service of this most important
public function has drifted into such chaos as seems likely, if not
remedied, to destroy its great value. I most urgently recommend
that this legislation should be speedily enacted."
(H.Doc.483, 69th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 10.)
The plight into which radio fell prior to 1927 was attributable
to certain basic facts about radio as a means of communication --
its facilities are limited; they are not available to all who may
wish to use them; the radio spectrum simply is not large enough to
accommodate everybody. There is a fixed natural limitation upon the
number of stations that can operate without interfering with one
another. [
Footnote 4]
Regulation of radio was therefore as vital to its development as
traffic control was to the development of the automobile. In
enacting the Radio Act of 1927, the first comprehensive scheme of
control over radio communication, Congress acted upon the knowledge
that if the potentialities of radio were not to be wasted,
regulation was essential.
The Radio Act of 1927 created the Federal Radio Commission,
composed of five members, and endowed the Commission with wide
licensing and regulatory powers. We do not pause here to enumerate
the scope of the Radio Act of 1927 and of the authority entrusted
to the Radio Commission, for the basic provisions of that Act are
incorporated in the Communications Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 1064, 47
U.S.C. § 151
et seq., the legislation immediately before
us. As we noted in
Federal Communications Comm'n v. Pottsville
Broadcasting Co., 309 U. S. 134,
Page 319 U. S. 214
"In its essentials, the Communications Act of 1934 (so far as
its provisions relating to radio are concerned) derives from the
Federal Radio Act of 1927. . . . By this Act, Congress, in order to
protect the national interest involved in the new and far-reaching
science of broadcasting, formulated a unified and comprehensive
regulatory system for the industry. The common factors in the
administration of the various statutes by which Congress had
supervised the different modes of communication led to the
creation, in the Act of 1934, of the Communications Commission. But
the objectives of the legislation have remained substantially
unaltered since 1927."
Section 1 of the Communications Act states its
"purpose of regulating interstate and foreign commerce in
communication by wire and radio so as to make available, so far as
possible, to all the people of the United States a rapid,
efficient, Nationwide, and world-wide wire and radio communication
service with adequate facilities at reasonable charges."
Section 301 particularizes this general purpose with respect to
radio:
"It is the purpose of this Act, among other things, to maintain
the control of the United States over all the channels of
interstate and foreign radio transmission; and to provide for the
use of such channels, but not the ownership thereof, by persons for
limited periods of time, under licenses granted by Federal
authority, and no such license shall be construed to create any
right, beyond the terms, conditions, and periods of the
license."
To that end, a Commission composed of seven members was created,
with broad licensing and regulatory powers.
Section 303 provides:
"Except as otherwise provided in this Act, the Commission from
time to time, as public convenience, interest, or necessity
requires, shall --"
"(a) Classify radio stations; "
Page 319 U. S. 215
"(b) Prescribe the nature of the service to be rendered by each
class of licensed stations and each station within any class;"
"
* * * *"
"(f) Make such regulations not inconsistent with law as it may
deem necessary to prevent interference between stations and to
carry out the provisions of this Act . . . ;"
"(g) Study new uses for radio, provide for experimental uses of
frequencies, and generally encourage the larger and more effective
use of radio in the public interest;"
"
* * * *"
"(i) Have authority to make special regulations applicable to
radio stations engaged in chain broadcasting;"
"
* * * *"
"(r) Make such rules and regulations and prescribe such
restrictions and conditions, not inconsistent with law, as may be
necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act. . . ."
The criterion governing the exercise of the Commission's
licensing power is the "public interest, convenience, or
necessity." §§ 307(a)(d), 309(a), 310, 312. In addition, § 307(b)
directs the Commission that,
"In considering applications for licenses, and modifications and
renewals thereof, when and insofar as there is demand for the same,
the Commission shall make such distribution of licenses,
frequencies, hours of operation, and of power among the several
States and communities as to provide a fair, efficient, and
equitable distribution of radio service to each of the same."
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
Page 319 U. S. 216
merely to supervision of the traffic. It puts upon the
Commission the burden of determining the composition of that
traffic. The facilities of radio are not large enough to
accommodate all who wish to use them. Methods must be devised for
choosing from among the many who apply. And since Congress itself
could not do this, it committed the task to the Commission.
The Commission was, however, not left at large in performing
this duty. 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 Comm'n v.
Pottsville Broadcasting Co., 309 U. S. 134,
309 U. S.
138.
"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,
287 U. S. 24. 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. Nelson Bros. Bond & Mortgage
Co., 289 U. S. 266,
289 U. S.
285.
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,
309 U. S. 475.
The Commission's licensing function cannot be discharged,
therefore, merely by finding that there are no technological
objections to the granting of a license. If the criterion of
"public interest" were limited to such matters, how could the
Commission
Page 319 U. S. 217
choose between two applicants for the same facilities, each of
whom is financially and technically qualified to operate a station?
Since the very inception of federal regulation by radio,
comparative considerations as to the services to be rendered have
governed the application of the standard of "public interest,
convenience, or necessity."
See Federal Communications Comm'n
v. Pottsville Broadcasting Co., 309 U.
S. 134,
309 U. S. 138
n. 2.
The avowed aim of the Communications Act of 1934 was to secure
the maximum benefits of radio to all the people of the United
States. To that end, Congress endowed the Communications Commission
with comprehensive powers to promote and realize the vast
potentialities of radio. Section 303(g) provides that the
Commission shall "generally encourage the larger and more effective
use of radio in the public interest"; subsection (i) gives the
Commission specific "authority to make special regulations
applicable to radio stations engaged in chain broadcasting"; and
subsection (r) empowers it to adopt
"such rules and regulations and prescribe such restrictions and
conditions, not inconsistent with law, as may be necessary to carry
out the provisions of this Act."
These provisions, individually and in the aggregate, preclude
the notion that the Commission is empowered to deal only with
technical and engineering impediments to the "larger and more
effective use of radio in the public interest." We cannot find in
the Act any such restriction of the Commission's authority.
Suppose, for example, that a community can, because of physical
limitations, be assigned only two stations. That community might be
deprived of effective service in any one of several ways. More
powerful stations in nearby cities might blanket out the signals of
the local stations so that they could not be heard at all. The
stations might interfere with each other, so that neither could be
clearly heard. One station might dominate the other with the power
of its signal. But
Page 319 U. S. 218
the community could be deprived of good radio service in ways
less crude. One man, financially and technically qualified, might
apply for and obtain the licenses of both stations and present a
single service over the two stations, thus wasting a frequency
otherwise available to the area. The language of the Act does not
withdraw such a situation from the licensing and regulatory powers
of the Commission, and there is no evidence that Congress did not
mean its broad language to carry the authority it expresses.
In essence, the Chain Broadcasting Regulations represent a
particularization of the Commission's conception of the "public
interest" sought to be safeguarded by Congress in enacting the
Communications Act of 1934. The basic consideration of policy
underlying the Regulations is succinctly stated in its Report:
"With the number of radio channels limited by natural factors,
the public interest demands that those who are entrusted with the
available channels shall make the fullest and most effective use of
them. If a licensee enters into a contract with a network
organization which limits his ability to make the best use of the
radio facility assigned him, he is not serving the public interest.
. . . The net effect [of the practices disclosed by the
investigation] has been that broadcasting service has been
maintained at a level below that possible under a system of free
competition. Having so found, we would be remiss in our statutory
duty of encouraging 'the larger and more effective use of radio in
the public interest' if we were to grant licenses to persons who
persist in these practices."
(Report, pp. 81, 82.)
We would be asserting our personal views regarding the effective
utilization of radio were we to deny that the Commission was
entitled to find that the large public aims of the Communications
Act of 1934 comprehend the considerations which moved the
Commission in promulgating the Chain Broadcasting Regulations. True
enough, the
Page 319 U. S. 219
Act does not explicitly say that the Commission shall have power
to deal with network practices found inimical to the public
interest. But Congress was acting in a field of regulation which
was both new and dynamic.
"Congress moved under the spur of a widespread fear that, in the
absence of governmental control, the public interest might be
subordinated to monopolistic domination in the broadcasting
field."
Federal Communications Comm'n v. Pottsville Broadcasting
Co., 309 U. S. 134,
309 U. S. 137.
In the context of the developing problems to which it was directed,
the Act gave the Commission not niggardly, but expansive, powers.
It was given a comprehensive mandate to "encourage the larger and
more effective use of radio in the public interest," if need be, by
making "special regulations applicable to radio stations engaged in
chain broadcasting." § 303(g)(i).
Generalities unrelated to the living problems of radio
communication of course cannot justify exercises of power by the
Commission. Equally so, generalities empty of all concrete
considerations of the actual bearing of regulations promulgated by
the Commission to the subject matter entrusted to it, cannot strike
down exercises of power by the Commission. While Congress did not
give the Commission unfettered discretion to regulate all phases of
the radio industry, it did not frustrate the purposes for which the
Communications Act of 1934 was brought into being by attempting an
itemized catalogue of the specific manifestations of the general
problems for the solution of which it was establishing a regulatory
agency. That would have stereotyped the powers of the Commission to
specific details in regulating a field of enterprise the dominant
characteristic of which was the rapid pace of its unfolding. And so
Congress did what experience had taught it in similar attempts at
regulation, even in fields where the subject matter of regulation
was far less fluid and dynamic than radio. The essence of that
Page 319 U. S. 220
experience was to define broad areas for regulation and to
establish standards for judgment adequately related in their
application to the problems to be solved.
For the cramping construction of the Act pressed upon us,
support cannot be found in its legislative history. The principal
argument is that § 303(i), empowering the Commission "to make
special regulations applicable to radio stations engaged in chain
broadcasting," intended to restrict the scope of the Commission's
powers to the technical and engineering aspects of chain
broadcasting. This provision comes from § 4(h) of the Radio Act of
1927. It was introduced into the legislation as a Senate committee
amendment to the House bill (H.R. 9971, 69th Cong., 1st Sess.).
This amendment originally read as follows:
"(C) The commission, from time to time, as public convenience,
interest, or necessity requires, shall --"
"
* * * *"
"(j) When stations are connected by wire for chain broadcasting,
determine the power each station shall use and the wavelengths to
be used during the time stations are so connected and so operated,
and make all other regulations necessary in the interest of
equitable radio service to the listeners in the communities or
areas affected by chain broadcasting."
The report of the Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce, which
submitted this amendment, stated that, under the bill, the
Commission was given "complete authority . . . to control chain
broadcasting." Sen.Rep.No.772, 69th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 3. The
bill as thus amended was passed by the Senate and then sent to
conference. The bill that emerged from the conference committee,
and which became the Radio Act of 1927, phrased the amendment in
the general terms now contained in § 303(i) of the 1934 Act: the
Commission was authorized "to make special regulations applicable
to radio stations
Page 319 U. S. 221
engaged in chain broadcasting." The conference reports do not
give any explanation of this particular change in phrasing, but
they do state that the jurisdiction conferred upon the Commission
by the conference bill was substantially identical with that
conferred by the bill passed by the Senate.
See
Sen.Doc.No.200, 69th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 17; H.Rep.1886, 69th
Cong., 2d Sess., p. 17. We agree with the District Court that, in
view of this legislative history, § 303(i) cannot be construed as
no broader than the first clause of the Senate amendment, which
limited the Commission's authority to the technical and engineering
phases of chain broadcasting. There is no basis for assuming that
the conference intended to preserve the first clause, which was of
limited scope, and abandon the second clause, which was of general
scope, by agreeing upon a provision which was broader and more
comprehensive than those it supplanted. [
Footnote 5]
Page 319 U. S. 222
A totally different source of attack upon the Regulations if
found in § 311 of the Act, which authorizes the Commission to
withhold licenses from persons convicted of having violated the
antitrust laws. Two contentions are made -- first, that this
provision puts considerations relating to competition outside the
Commission's concern before an applicant has been convicted of
monopoly or other restraints of trade, and second, that, in any
event, the Commission misconceived the scope of its powers under §
311 in issuing the Regulations. Both of these contentions are
unfounded. Section 311 derives from § 13 of the Radio Act of 1927,
which expressly commanded, rather than merely authorized, the
Commission to refuse a license to any person judicially found
guilty of having violated the antitrust laws. The change in the
1934 Act was made, in the words of Senator Dill, the manager of the
legislation in the Senate, because "it seemed fair to the committee
to do that." 78 Cong.Rec. 8825. The Commission was thus permitted
to exercise its judgment as to whether violation of the antitrust
laws disqualified an applicant from operating a station in the
"public interest." We agree with the District Court that
"The necessary implication from this [amendment in 1934] was
that the Commission might infer from the fact that the applicant
had in the past tried to monopolize radio, or had engaged in unfair
methods of competition, that the disposition so manifested would
continue and that if it did it would make him an unfit
licensee."
47 F.
Supp. 940, 944.
That the Commission may refuse to grant a license to persons
adjudged guilty in a court of law of conduct in violation of the
antitrust laws certainly does not render
Page 319 U. S. 223
irrelevant consideration by the Commission of the effect of such
conduct upon the "public interest, convenience, or necessity." A
licensee charged with practices in contravention of this standard
cannot continue to hold his license merely because his conduct is
also in violation of the antitrust laws and he has not yet been
proceeded against and convicted. By clarifying in § 311 the scope
of the Commission's authority in dealing with persons convicted of
violating the antitrust laws, Congress can hardly be deemed to have
limited the concept of "public interest" so as to exclude all
considerations relating to monopoly and unreasonable restraints
upon commerce. Nothing in the provisions or history of the Act
lends support to the inference that the Commission was denied the
power to refuse a license to a station not operating in the "public
interest," merely because its misconduct happened to be an
unconvicted violation of the antitrust laws.
Alternatively, it is urged that the Regulations constitute an
ultra vires attempt by the Commission to enforce the
antitrust laws, and that the enforcement of the antitrust laws is
the province not of the Commission, but of the Attorney General and
the courts. This contention misconceives the basis of the
Commission's action. The Commission's Report indicates plainly
enough that the Commission was not attempting to administer the
antitrust laws:
"The prohibitions of the Sherman Act apply to broadcasting. This
Commission, although not charged with the duty of enforcing that
law, should administer its regulatory powers with respect to
broadcasting in the light of the purposes which the Sherman Act was
designed to achieve. . . . While many of the network practices
raise serious questions under the antitrust laws, our jurisdiction
does not depend on a showing that they do, in fact, constitute a
violation of the antitrust laws. It is not our function
Page 319 U. S. 224
to apply the antitrust laws as such. It is our duty, however, to
refuse licenses or renewals to any person who engages or proposes
to engage in practices which will prevent either himself or other
licensees or both from making the fullest use of radio facilities.
This is the standard of public interest, convenience, or necessity
which we must apply to all applications for licenses and renewals.
. . . We do not predicate our jurisdiction to issue the regulations
on the ground that the network practices violate the antitrust
laws. We are issuing these regulations because we have found that
the network practices prevent the maximum utilization of radio
facilities in the public interest."
(Report, pp. 46, 83, 83n. 3.)
We conclude, therefore, that the Communications Act of 1934
authorized the Commission to promulgate regulations designed to
correct the abuses disclosed by its investigation of chain
broadcasting. There remains for consideration the claim that the
Commission's exercise of such authority was unlawful.
The Regulations are assailed as "arbitrary and capricious." If
this contention means that the Regulations are unwise, that they
are not likely to succeed in accomplishing what the Commission
intended, we can say only that the appellants have selected the
wrong forum for such a plea. What was said in
Board of Trade v.
United States, 314 U. S. 534,
314 U. S. 548,
is relevant here:
"We certainly have neither technical competence nor legal
authority to pronounce upon the wisdom of the course taken by the
Commission."
Our duty is at an end when we find that the action of the
Commission was based upon findings supported by evidence, and was
made pursuant to authority granted by Congress. It is not for us to
say that the "public interest" will be furthered or retarded by the
Chain Broadcasting Regulations. The responsibility belongs to the
Congress for the grant of valid legislative authority, and to the
Commission for its exercise.
Page 319 U. S. 225
It would be sheer dogmatism to say that the Commission made out
no case for its allowable discretion in formulating these
Regulations. Its long investigation disclosed the existences of
practices which it regarded as contrary to the "public interest."
The Commission knew that the wisdom of any action it took would
have to be tested by experience:
"We are under no illusion that the regulations we are adopting
will solve all questions of public interest with respect to the
network system of program distribution. . . . The problems in the
network field are interdependent, and the steps now taken may
perhaps operate as a partial solution of problems not directly
dealt with at this time. Such problems may be examined again at
some future time after the regulations here adopted have been given
a fair trial."
(Report, p. 88.) The problems with which the Commission
attempted to deal could not be solved at once and for all time by
rigid rules-of-thumb. The Commission therefore did not bind itself
inflexibly to the licensing policies expressed in the Regulations.
In each case that comes before it, the Commission must still
exercise an ultimate judgment whether the grant of a license would
serve the "public interest, convenience, or necessity." If time and
changing circumstances reveal that the "public interest" is not
served by application of the Regulations, it must be assumed that
the Commission will act in accordance with its statutory
obligations.
Since there is no basis for any claim that the Commission failed
to observe procedural safeguards required by law, we reach the
contention that the Regulations should be denied enforcement on
constitutional grounds. Here, as in
New York Central Securities
Corp. v. United States, 287 U. S. 12,
287 U. S. 24,
25, the claim is made that the standard of "public interest"
governing the exercise of the powers delegated to the Commission by
Congress is so vague and indefinite that, if it be construed as
comprehensively as the
Page 319 U. S. 226
words alone permit, the delegation of legislative authority is
unconstitutional. But, as we held in that case,
"It is a mistaken assumption that this is a mere general
reference to public welfare without any standard to guide
determinations. The purpose of the Act, the requirements it
imposes, and the context of the provision in question show the
contrary."
Id. See Federal Radio Comm'n v. Nelson Bros. Bond
& Mortgage Co., 289 U. S. 266,
289 U. S. 285;
Federal Communications Comm'n v. Pottsville Broadcasting
Co., 309 U. S. 134,
309 U. S.
137-138.
Compare Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan,
293 U. S. 388,
293 U. S. 428.
Intermountain Rate Cases, 234 U.
S. 476,
234 U. S.
486-489;
United States v. Lowden, 308 U.
S. 225.
We come, finally, to an appeal to the First Amendment. The
Regulations, even if valid in all other respects, must fall because
they abridge, say the appellants, their right of free speech. If
that be so, it would follow that every person whose application for
a license to operate a station is denied by the Commission is
thereby denied his constitutional right of free speech. Freedom of
utterance is abridged to many who wish to use the limited
facilities of radio. Unlike other modes of expression, radio
inherently is not available to all. That is its unique
characteristic, and that is why, unlike other modes of expression,
it is subject to governmental regulation. Because it cannot be used
by all, some who wish to use it must be denied. But Congress did
not authorize the Commission to choose among applicants upon the
basis of their political, economic or social views, or upon any
other capricious basis. If it did, or if the Commission, by these
Regulations, proposed a choice among applicants upon some such
basis, the issue before us would be wholly different. The question
here is simply whether the Commission, by announcing that it will
refuse licenses to persons who engage in specified network
practices (a basis for choice which we hold is comprehended within
the statutory criterion of
Page 319 U. S. 227
"public interest"), is thereby denying such persons the
constitutional right of free speech. The right of free speech does
not include, however, the right to use the facilities of radio
without a license. The licensing system established by Congress in
the Communications Act of 1934 was a proper exercise of its power
over commerce. The standard it provided for the licensing of
stations was the "public interest, convenience, or necessity."
Denial of a station license on that ground, if valid under the Act,
is not a denial of free speech.
A procedural point calls for just a word. The District Court, by
granting the Government's motion for summary judgment, disposed of
the case upon the pleadings and upon the record made before the
Commission. The court below correctly held that its inquiry was
limited to review of the evidence before the Commission. Trial
de novo of the matters heard by the Commission and dealt
with in its Report would have been improper.
See Tagg Bros. v.
United States, 280 U. S. 420;
Acker v. United States, 298 U. S. 426.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE took no part in the
consideration or decision of these cases.
* Together with No. 555,
Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.
v. United States et al., also on appeal from the District
Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York,
argued February 11, 1943.
[
Footnote 1]
Chain broadcasting is defined in § 3(p) of the Communications
Act of 1934 as the "simultaneous broadcasting of an identical
program by two or more connected stations." In actual practice,
programs are transmitted by wire, usually leased telephone lines,
from their point of origination to each station in the network for
simultaneous broadcast over the air.
[
Footnote 2]
Station licenses issued by the Commission normally last two
years. Section 3.34 of the Commission's Rules and Regulations
governing Standard and High-Frequency Broadcast Stations, as
amended October 14, 1941.
[
Footnote 3]
The history of federal regulation of radio communication is
summarized in Herring and Gross, Telecommunications (1936) 239-86;
Administrative Procedure in Government Agencies, Monograph of the
Attorney General's Committee on Administrative Procedure, Sen.Doc.
No. 186, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., Part 3, dealing with the Federal
Communications Commission, pp. 82-84; 1 Socolow, Law of Radio
Broadcasting (1939) 38-61; Donovan, Origin and Development of Radio
Law (1930).
[
Footnote 4]
See Morecroft, Principles of Radio Communication (3d
ed. 1933) 355-402; Terman, Radio Engineering (2d ed. 1937)
593-645.
[
Footnote 5]
In the course of the Senate debates on the conference report
upon the bill that became the Radio Act of 1927, Senator Dill, who
was in charge of the bill, said:
"While the commission would have the power under the general
terms of the bill, the bill specifically sets out as one of the
special powers of the commission the right to make specific
regulations for governing chain broadcasting. As to creating a
monopoly of radio in this country, let me say that this bill
absolutely protects the public, so far as it can protect them, by
giving the commission full power to refuse a license to anyone who
it believes will not serve the public interest, convenience, or
necessity. It specifically provides that any corporation guilty of
monopoly shall not only not receive a license, but that its license
may be revoked; and if, after a corporation has received its
license for a period of three years, it is then discovered and
found to be guilty of monopoly, its license will be revoked. . . .
In addition to that, the bill contains a provision that no license
may be transferred from one owner to another without the written
consent of the commission, and the commission, of course, having
the power to protect against a monopoly, must give such protection.
I wish to state further that the only way by which monopolies in
the radio business can secure control of radio here, even for a
limited period of time, will be by the commission's becoming
servile to them. Power must be lodged somewhere, and I myself am
unwilling to assume in advance that the commission proposed to be
created will be servile to the desires and demands of great
corporations of this country."
68 Cong.Rec. 2881.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY, dissenting.
I do not question the objectives of the proposed regulations,
and it is not my desire by narrow statutory interpretation to
weaken the authority of government agencies to deal efficiently
with matters committed to their jurisdiction by the Congress.
Statutes of this kind should be construed so that the agency
concerned may be able to cope effectively with problems which the
Congress intended to correct, or may otherwise perform the
functions given to it. But we exceed our competence when we
gratuitously bestow upon an agency power which the
Page 319 U. S. 228
Congress has not granted. Since that is what the Court in
substance does today, I dissent.
In the present case, we are dealing with a subject of extreme
importance in the life of the nation. Although radio broadcasting,
like the press, is generally conducted on a commercial basis, it is
not an ordinary business activity, like the selling of securities
or the marketing of electrical power. In the dissemination of
information and opinion, radio has assumed a position of commanding
importance, rivaling the press and the pulpit. Owing to its
physical characteristics, radio, unlike the other methods of
conveying information, must be regulated and rationed by the
government. Otherwise there would be chaos, and radio's usefulness
would be largely destroyed. But because of its vast potentialities
as a medium of communication, discussion and propaganda, the
character and extent of control that should be exercised over it by
the government is a matter of deep and vital concern. Events in
Europe show that radio may readily be a weapon of authority and
misrepresentation, instead of a means of entertainment and
enlightenment. It may even be an instrument of oppression. In
pointing out these possibilities I do not mean to intimate in the
slightest that they are imminent or probable in this country, but
they do suggest that the construction of the instant statute should
be approached with more than ordinary restraint and caution, to
avoid an interpretation that is not clearly justified by the
conditions that brought about its enactment, or that would give the
Commission greater powers than the Congress intended to confer.
The Communications Act of 1934 does not in terms give the
Commission power to regulate the contractual relations between the
stations and the networks.
Columbia Broadcasting System v.
United States, 316 U. S. 407,
316 U. S. 416.
It is only as an incident of the power to grant or withhold
licenses to individual stations under §§ 307, 308, 309 and 310 that
this
Page 319 U. S. 229
authority is claimed,* except as it may have been provided by
subdivisions (g), (i) and (r) of § 303, and by §§ 311 and 313. But
nowhere in these sections, taken singly or collectively, is there
to be found by reasonable construction or necessary inference,
authority to regulate the broadcasting industry as such, or to
control the complex operations of the national networks.
In providing for regulation of the radio, the Congress was under
the necessity of vesting a considerable amount of discretionary
authority in the Commission. The task of choosing between various
claimants for the privilege of using the airwaves is essentially an
administrative one. Nevertheless, in specifying with some degree of
particularity the kind of information to be included in an
application for a license, the Congress has indicated what general
conditions and considerations are to govern the granting and
withholding of station licenses. Thus, an applicant is required by
§ 308(b) to submit information bearing upon his citizenship,
character, and technical, financial and other qualifications to
operate the proposed station, as well as data relating to the
ownership and location of the proposed station, the power and
frequencies desired, operating periods, intended use, and such
other information as the Commission may require. Licenses,
frequencies, hours of operation, and power are to be fairly
distributed among the several States and communities to provide
efficient service to each. § 307(b). Explicit provision is made for
dealing with applicants and licensees
Page 319 U. S. 230
who are found guilty, or who are under the control of persons
found guilty of violating the federal antitrust laws. §§ 311 and
313. Subject to the limitations defined in the Act, the Commission
is required to grant a station license to any applicant "if public
convenience, interest, or necessity will be served thereby." §
307(a). Nothing is said in any of these sections about network
contracts, affiliations, or business arrangements.
The power to control network contracts and affiliations by means
of the Commission's licensing powers cannot be derived from
implication out of the standard of "public convenience, interest,
or necessity." We have held that:
"the Act does not essay to regulate the business of the
licensee. The Commission is given no supervisory control of the
programs, of business management or of policy. In short, the
broadcasting field is open to anyone, provided there be an
available frequency over which he can broadcast without
interference to others, if he shows his competency, the adequacy of
his equipment, and financial ability to make good use of the
assigned channel."
Federal Communications Comm'n v. Sanders Bros. Radio
Station, 309 U. S. 470,
309 U. S. 475.
The criterion of "public convenience, interest, or necessity" is
not an indefinite standard, but one 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. Nelson Bros. Bond & Mortgage Co., 289 U.
S. 266,
289 U. S. 285.
Nothing in the context of which the standard is a part refers to
network contracts. It is evident from the record that the
Commission is making its determination of whether the public
interest would be served by renewal of an existing license or
licenses, not upon an examination of written applications presented
to it, as required by §§ 308 and 309, but upon an investigation of
the broadcasting industry as a whole, and general findings made in
pursuance thereof which relate to the business methods of the
network companies, rather than
Page 319 U. S. 231
the characteristics of the individual stations and the peculiar
needs of the areas served by them. If it had been the intention of
the Congress to invest the Commission with the responsibility,
through its licensing authority, of exercising far-reaching control
-- as exemplified by the proposed regulations -- over the business
operations of chain broadcasting and radio networks as they were
then or are now organized and established, it is not likely that
the Congress would have left it to mere inference or implication
from the test of "public convenience, interest, or necessity," or
that Congress would have neglected to include it among the
considerations expressly made relevant to license applications by §
308(b). The subject is one of such scope and importance as to
warrant explicit mention. To construe the licensing sections (§§
307, 308, 309, 310) as granting authority to require fundamental
and revolutionary changes in the business methods of the
broadcasting networks -- methods which have been in existence for
several years and which have not been adjudged unlawful -- would
inflate and distort their true meaning and extend them beyond the
limited purposes which they were intended to serve.
It is quite possible, of course, that maximum utilization of the
radio as an instrument of culture, entertainment, and the diffusion
of ideas is inhibited by existing network arrangements. Some of the
conditions imposed by the broadcasting chains are possibly not
conducive to a freer use of radio facilities, however essential
they may be to the maintenance of sustaining programs and the
operation of the chain broadcasting business as it is now
conducted. But I am unable to agree that it is within the present
authority of the Commission to prescribe the remedy for such
conditions. It is evident that a correction of these conditions in
the manner proposed by the regulations will involve drastic changes
in the business of radio broadcasting which the Congress has
not
Page 319 U. S. 232
clearly and definitely empowered the Commission to
undertake.
If this were a case in which a station license had been withheld
from an individual applicant or licensee because of special
relations or commitments that would seriously compromise or limit
his ability to provide adequate service to the listening public, I
should be less inclined to make any objection. As an incident of
its authority to determine the eligibility of an individual
applicant in an isolated case, the Commission might possibly
consider such factors. In the present case, however, the Commission
has reversed the order of things. Its real objective is to regulate
the business practices of the major networks, thus bringing within
the range of its regulatory power the chain broadcasting industry
as a whole. By means of these regulations and the enforcement
program, the Commission would not only extend its authority over
business activities which represent interests and investments of a
very substantial character, which have not been put under its
jurisdiction by the Act, but would greatly enlarge its control over
an institution that has now become a rival of the press and pulpit
as a purveyor of news and entertainment and a medium of public
discussion. To assume a function and responsibility of such wide
reach and importance in the life of the nation, as a mere incident
of its duty to pass on individual applications for permission to
operate a radio station and use a specific wave length, is an
assumption of authority to which I am not willing to lend my
assent.
Again, I do not question the need of regulation in this field,
or the authority of the Congress to enact legislation that would
vest in the Commission such power as it requires to deal with the
problem, which it has defined and analyzed in its report with
admirable lucidity. It is possible that the remedy indicated by the
proposed regulations is the appropriate one, whatever its effect
may be on
Page 319 U. S. 233
the sustaining programs, advertising contracts, and other
characteristics of chain broadcasting as it is now conducted in
this country. I do not believe, however, that the Commission was
justified in claiming the responsibility and authority it has
assumed to exercise without a clear mandate from the Congress.
An examination of the history of this legislation convinces me
that the Congress did not intend by anything in § 303, or any other
provision of the Act to confer on the Commission the authority it
has assumed to exercise by the issuance of these regulations.
Section 303 is concerned primarily with technical matters, and the
subjects of regulation authorized by most of its subdivisions are
exceedingly specific -- so specific, in fact, that it is reasonable
to infer that, if Congress had intended to cover the subject of
network contracts and affiliations, it would not have left it to
dubious implications from general clauses, lifted out of context,
in subdivisions (g), (i) and (r). I am unable to agree that, in
authorizing the Commission in § 303(g) to study new uses for radio,
provide for experimental use of frequencies, and "generally
encourage the larger and more effective use of radio in the public
interest," it was the intention or the purpose of the Congress to
confer on the Commission the regulatory powers now being asserted.
Manifestly that subdivision dealt with experimental and development
work -- technical and scientific matters -- and the construction of
its concluding clause should be accordingly limited to those
considerations. Nothing in its legislative history suggests that it
had any broader purpose.
It was clearly not the intention of the Congress by the
enactment of § 303(i), authorizing the Commission "to make special
regulations applicable to radio stations engaged in chain
broadcasting," to invest the Commission with the authority now
claimed over network contracts. This section is a verbatim
reenactment of § 4(h) of the
Page 319 U. S. 234
Radio Act of 1927, and had its origin in a Senate amendment to
the bill which became that Act. In its original form, it provided
that the Commission, from time to time, as public convenience,
interest, or necessity required, should:
"When stations are connected by wire for chain broadcasting,
[the Commission should] determine the power each station shall use
and the wavelengths to be used during the time stations are so
connected and so operated, and make all other regulations necessary
in the interest of equitable radio service to the listeners in the
communities or areas affected by chain broadcasting."
It was evidently the purpose of this provision to remedy a
situation that was described as follows by Senator Dill (who was in
charge of the bill in the Senate) in questioning a witness at the
hearings of the Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce:
". . . During the past few months, there has grown up a system
of chain broadcasting, extending over the United States a great
deal of the time. I say a great deal of the time -- many nights a
month -- and the stations that are connected are of such widely
varying meter lengths that the ordinary radio set that reaches out
any distance is unable to get anything but that one program, and
so, in effect, that one program monopolizes the air. I realize it
is somewhat of a technical engineering problem, but it has seemed
to many people, at least many who have written to me, that when
stations are carrying on chain programs that they might be limited
to the use of wavelengths adjoining or near enough to one another
that they would not cover the entire dial. I do not know whether
legislation ought to restrict that, or whether it had better be
done by regulations of the department. I want to get your opinion
as to the advisability in some way protecting people who want to
hear some other program than the one being broadcasted by chain
broadcast."
Report of Hearings Before
Page 319 U. S. 235
Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce on S. 1 and S. 1754,
69th Cong., 1st Sess. (1926) p. 123.
In other words, when the same program was simultaneously
broadcast by chain stations, the weaker independent stations were
drowned out because of the high power of the chain stations. With
the receiving sets then commonly in use, listeners were unable to
get any program except the chain program. It was essentially an
interference problem. In addition to determining power and wave
length for chain stations, it would have been the duty of the
Commission, under the amendment, to make other regulations
necessary for "equitable radio service to the listeners in the
communities or areas affected by chain broadcasting." The last
clause should not be interpreted out of context and without
relation to the problem at which the amendment was aimed. It is
reasonably construed as simply authorizing the Commission to remedy
other technical problems of interference involved in chain
broadcasting in addition to power and wavelength by requiring
special types of equipment, controlling locations, etc. The
statement in the Senate Committee Report that this provision gave
the Commission "complete authority . . . to control chain
broadcasting" (S.Rep. No. 772, 69th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 3) must be
taken as meaning that the provision gave complete authority with
respect to the specific problem which the Senate intended to meet,
a problem of technical interference.
While the form of the amendment was simplified in the Conference
Committee so as to authorize the Commission "to make special
regulations applicable to radio stations engaged in chain
broadcasting," both Houses were assured in the report of the
Conference Committee that
"the jurisdiction conferred in this paragraph is substantially
the same as the jurisdiction conferred upon the Commission by . . .
the Senate amendment."
(Sen.Doc. No. 200, 69th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 17; H.Rep. No.
1886,
Page 319 U. S. 236
69th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 17). This is further borne out by a
statement of Senator Dill in discussing the conference report on
the Senate floor:
"What is happening today is that the National Broadcasting Co.,
which is a part of the great Radio Trust, to say the least, if not
a monopoly, is looking up stations in every community on their
various wave lengths with high powered stations and sending one
program out, and they are forcing the little stations off the board
so that the people cannot hear anything except the one
program."
"There is no power today in the hands of the Department of
Commerce to stop that practice. The radio commission will have the
power to regulate and prevent it and give the independents a
chance."
(68 Cong.Rec. 3031.)
Section 303(r) is certainly no basis for inferring that the
Commission is empowered to issue the challenged regulations. This
subdivision is not an independent grant of power, but only an
authorization to:
"Make such rules and regulations and prescribe such restrictions
and conditions, not inconsistent with law, as may be necessary to
carry out the provisions of this Act."
There is no provision in the Act for the control of network
contractual arrangements by the Commission, and consequently §
303(r) is of no consequence here.
To the extent that existing network practices may have run
counter to the antitrust laws, the Congress has expressly provided
the means of dealing with the problem. The enforcement of those
laws has been committed to the courts and other law enforcement
agencies. In addition to the usual penalties prescribed by statute
for their violation, however, the Commission has been expressly
authorized by § 311 to refuse a station license to any person
Page 319 U. S. 237
"finally adjudged guilty by a Federal court" of attempting
unlawfully to monopolize radio communication. Anyone under the
control of such a person may also be refused a license. And
whenever a court has ordered the revocation of an existing license,
as expressly provided in § 313, a new license may not be granted by
the Commission to the guilty party or to any person under his
control. In my opinion, these provisions (§§ 311 and 313) clearly
do not and were not intended to confer independent authority on the
Commission to supervise network contracts or to enforce competition
between radio networks by withholding licenses from stations, and
do not justify the Commission in refusing a license to an applicant
otherwise qualified, because of business arrangements that may
constitute an unlawful restraint of trade, when the applicant has
not been finally adjudged guilty of violating the antitrust laws,
and is not controlled by one so adjudged.
The conditions disclosed by the Commission's investigation, if
they require correction, should be met not by the invention of
authority where none is available or by diverting existing powers
out of their true channels and using them for purposes to which
they were not addressed, but by invoking the aid of the Congress or
the service of agencies that have been entrusted with the
enforcement of the antitrust laws. In other fields of regulation,
the Congress has made clear its intentions. It has not left to mere
inference and guesswork the existence of authority to order broad
changes and reforms in the national economy or the structure of
business arrangements in the Public Utility Holding Company Act, 49
Stat. 803, the Securities Act of 1933, 48 Stat. 74, the Federal
Power Act, 49 Stat. 838, and other measures of similar character.
Indeed, the Communications Act itself contains cogent internal
evidence that Congress did not intend
Page 319 U. S. 238
to grant power over network contractual arrangements to the
Commission. In § 215(c) of Title II, dealing with common carriers
by wire and radio, Congress provided:
"The Commission shall examine all contracts of common carriers
subject to this Act which prevent the other party thereto from
dealing with another common carrier subject to this Act, and shall
report its findings to Congress, together with its recommendations
as to whether additional legislation on this subject is
desirable."
Congress had no difficulty here in expressing the possible
desirability of regulating a type of contract roughly similar to
the ones with which we are now concerned, and in reserving to
itself the ultimate decision upon the matters of policy involved.
Insofar as the Congress deemed it necessary in this legislation to
safeguard radio broadcasting against arrangements that are
offensive to the antitrust laws or monopolistic in nature, it made
specific provision in §§ 311 and 313. If the existing network
contracts are deemed objectionable because of monopolistic or other
features, and no remedy is presently available under these
provisions, the proper course is to seek amendatory legislation
from the Congress, not to fabricate authority by ingenious
reasoning based upon provisions that have no true relation to the
specific problem.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS agrees with these views.
* The regulations as first proposed were not connected with
denial of applications for initial or renewal station licenses, but
provided instead that: "No licensee of a standard broadcast station
shall enter into any contractual arrangement, express or implied,
with a network organization," which contained any of the
disapproved provisions. After a short time, however, the
regulations were cast in their present form, making station
licensing depend upon conformity with the regulations.