Court Opinion

ID: 4668183
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-03-16 15:00:49.434949+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:02:59.449989
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
         FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

Argued December 16, 2020             Decided March 16, 2021

                       No. 20-1047

                  NALINI KAPUR, ET AL.,
                      APPELLANTS

                            v.

         FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION ,
                     APPELLEE

            OTA BROADCASTING (SFO), LLC,
                    INTERVENOR

                Consolidated with 20-1048

              On Appeals from Orders of the
           Federal Communications Commission

   Dennis P. Corbett argued the cause for appellants. With
him on the briefs was Jessica DeSimone Gyllstrom.

    Sarah E. Citrin, Counsel, Federal Communications
Commission, argued the cause for appellee. With her on the
brief were Ashley S. Boizelle, Acting General Counsel, and
Jacob M. Lewis, Associate General Counsel. Richard K.
Welch and Scott M. Noveck, Counsel, entered appearances.

   Beth S. Brinkmann, Mace J. Rosenstein, Andrew J. Soukup,
and Rafael Reyneri were on the brief for intervenor OTA
Broadcasting (SFO), LLC, in support of appellee.

   Before: ROGERS, PILLARD and WALKER, Circuit Judges.

   Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WALKER.

    WALKER, Circuit Judge: Nalini Kapur, Rishi Kapur, and
Ravi Kapur own part of a company that operated a California
TV station. Much to the Kapurs’ chagrin, the majority owners
of that company sold the station and its FCC license in 2013.
In 2019, the station changed hands again.

    The Kapurs have spent more than eight years trying to roll
back those sales. But they haven’t shown that what they ask
us to do — remand to the FCC to hold a hearing on the first
buyer’s character qualifications — will likely result in the
return of the station. We therefore dismiss their appeals
challenging the FCC’s orders for lack of standing.

                              I.

                             A.

     KAXT-CD is a Bay Area TV station. In 2008, it was
struggling. Its owners, Linda and Warren Trumbly, went
looking for investors. They found the Kapurs.

    Ravi Kapur, Nalini Kapur (Ravi’s mother), and Rishi
Kapur (Ravi’s brother) “jumped at the chance . . . to realize
their dream of operating a television station in Northern
California providing ethnically diverse content.” JA 255.
Together, the Kapurs invested $300,000 in exchange for 42%

                              1
ownership in the new company, called KAXT, LLC. 1 We’ll
call that company the Seller.

                                 B.

    In October 2012, the Seller’s owners met to discuss selling
the company’s assets. The Kapurs didn’t want to sell. Ravi
liked working at the station, and the Kapurs said the station and
its FCC license were worth at least double the $8.25 million
that a buyer had offered.

    The owners deadlocked with the Kapurs on one side and
the Trumblys on the other. So Warren Trumbly filed for
arbitration. He asked an arbitrator to decide whether he (and
the Trumbly-aligned members) had authority to sell the
company’s assets to OTA Broadcasting (SFO), LLC. We’ll
call that company the First Buyer.

                                 C.

    In January 2013, the Seller went ahead with a $10.1 million
sale to the First Buyer. That February, the First Buyer applied
for the station’s FCC license.

    The Kapurs opposed the First Buyer’s FCC license
assignment application. They asked the FCC to deny (or hold
off acting on) the license application because the arbitration
determining if the Trumblys could sell the company’s assets
was ongoing.

    In September 2013, the arbitrator found that the sale did not
require unanimity, and that the Trumblys, and the members
aligned with them, constituted a majority. Therefore, the

1
 In the arbitration, the Kapurs asserted that they invested $430,000,
but the arbitrator found that this “was not proved.” JA 233 n.10.
The arbitrator found the Kapurs did invest $270,225 in cash, which
was rounded up to $300,000. Id. at 222, 233 n.10.

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majority owners could sell the company’s assets over the
Kapurs’ objections. In January 2014, the arbitrator issued a
final award to that effect.

                               D.

    After their arbitration loss, the Kapurs asked a California
state court to overturn the arbitrator’s decision. When that
failed, they appealed. And again, they lost. Kapur v.
Trumbly, No. C076804, 2015 WL 2329294 (Cal. Ct. App. May
14, 2015).

    The Kapurs also pressed on at the FCC. Recall that they
had opposed the First Buyer’s license assignment application
because of the ongoing arbitration to determine if the Trumblys
could sell to the First Buyer. But now, rather than attacking
the Seller’s qualifications to sell the station, they attacked the
First Buyer’s qualifications to buy the FCC license.

    When faced with a petition alleging that the grant of a
license application would be prima facie inconsistent with the
public interest, the FCC “may grant the license without a
hearing, but only if it ‘finds … that there are no substantial and
material questions of fact and that a grant of the application
would be consistent with the public interest.’” California
Public Broadcasting Forum v. FCC, 752 F.2d 670, 674 (D.C.
Cir. 1985) (quoting 47 U.S.C. § 309(d)(2)) (cleaned up). In
July 2014, the FCC concluded that the Kapurs’ allegations
against the First Buyer’s qualifications did not warrant a
hearing and approved the First Buyer’s license assignment
application.

                               E.

    The Kapurs spent the next few years telling the FCC that
the First Buyer’s bad character disqualified it from holding an
FCC license. Meanwhile, in October 2017, the First Buyer

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sold the station to TV-49, Inc. for $2 million. We’ll call TV-
49, Inc. the Second Buyer.

     The Kapurs opposed the Second Buyer’s FCC license
assignment application. They said the FCC should reject it
because the First Buyer — the seller in that transaction —
“lack[ed] the basic qualifications to” buy the “license in the
first place,” though they did not challenge the Second Buyer’s
qualifications. JA 1079.

    In September 2018, the FCC approved the Second Buyer’s
license assignment application over the Kapurs’ objection.

                               F.

   Over the course of five years, the FCC issued eight
memoranda and orders rejecting the Kapurs’ arguments. 2
Now, the Kapurs challenge all eight decisions. They ask for
remand to the FCC for a hearing on the First Buyer’s
qualifications to hold an FCC license.

    “The Kapurs’ ultimate goal” is to reinstate the Seller as the
station’s license holder. JA 1022; see also Appellants’ Br. at
A-II-7.

    Speaking of the Seller, it dissolved as of January 2020,
though the Kapurs have sued in California state court to stop
that dissolution.

                               II.

    Article III limits our jurisdiction to “Cases” and
“Controversies.” U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. To invoke our
jurisdiction, the Kapurs must allege (1) an injury-in-fact, (2)

2
  JA 376-80 (July 2014); JA 589-96 (Mar. 2015); JA 716-23 (Dec.
2015); JA 836-46 (Nov. 2017); JA 932-36 (Sept. 2018); JA 1020-24
(Jan. 2020); JA 1120-23 (Sept. 2018); & JA 1137-42 (Jan. 2020).

                               4
causation, and (3) redressability for both appeals. Town of
Chester, N.Y. v. Laroe Estates, Inc., 137 S. Ct. 1645, 1650
(2017); Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 136 S. Ct. 1540, 1547 (2016).
We also assume, for the sake of this analysis, that they will win
on both appeals. Estate of Boyland v. United States
Department of Agriculture, 913 F.3d 117, 123 (D.C. Cir.
2019).

                                A.

    We begin with injury and traceability.

    In the first appeal (20-1047), the Kapurs challenge the
license transfer from the Seller to the First Buyer that the FCC
approved in July 2014 and the First Buyer’s subsequent license
renewal application that the FCC approved in March 2015.
They say the FCC’s decision to approve the First Buyer’s
license application injured them because they lost their interest
in the station, a “unique asset.” Appellants’ Br. at A-II-4.
They also say they reside in the station’s viewing area and that
Ravi was a regular viewer who is allegedly now injured as an
audience member. Id. at A-II-6. According to the Kapurs,
the FCC caused these injuries by permitting the station’s sale.
Id. at A-II-7.

    Their second appeal (20-1048) challenges the license
transfer from the First Buyer to the Second Buyer that the FCC
approved in September 2018. They again point to the alleged
loss of their “unique” investment in the station and of the
station’s benefit to them as audience members. Id. at A-II-10,
14. Traceability is analogous, too: they say the FCC caused
this injury by permitting the station’s sale to the Second Buyer.
Id. at A-II-15.

   The Kapurs acknowledge that their standing for the second
appeal depends on whether they have standing for the first.
See id. at A-II-9 (“Appellants’ injury in this case is directly tied

                                 5
to the injury they suffered in Case No. 20-1047.”). They also
acknowledge that because the Second Buyer now holds the
license, “their chances of recovering their investment [are]
more remote.” Id. at A-II-11.

     We note our skepticism in view of the affidavit on which
the Kapurs rely for their audience standing theory, which does
not appear sufficiently concrete or particularized. See, e.g.,
Rainbow/PUSH Coalition v. FCC, 330 F.3d 539, 546 (D.C.
Cir. 2003). Nonetheless, we assume, without deciding, that
the Kapurs’ alleged injuries are cognizable, and that the FCC’s
orders caused them. But even with these assumptions, they
still don’t have standing.

                               B.

   Next, we address redressability.

    The Kapurs must allege “a likelihood that the requested
relief will redress the alleged injury.” Steel Co. v. Citizens for
a Better Environment, 523 U.S. 83, 103 (1998). The “psychic
satisfaction” of winning doesn’t cut it. Id. at 107. Rather,
what plaintiffs ask for must be “likely, as opposed to merely
speculative,” to right the wrong they have suffered. Lujan v.
Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 561 (1992) (cleaned up).
We also bear in mind “our long-standing principle that ‘the
breadth of agency discretion is, if anything, at zenith when the
action assailed relates primarily not to the issue of ascertaining
whether conduct violates the statute, or regulations, but rather
to the fashioning of . . . remedies and sanctions.’” AT&T Co.
v. FCC, 454 F.3d 329, 334 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (quoting Niagara
Mohawk Power Corp. v. Federal Power Commission, 379 F.2d
153, 159 (D.C. Cir. 1967)).

    The Kapurs want us to order the FCC to hold a hearing on
their character attacks against the First Buyer. From there,
they want the FCC to unwind the sale of the Second Buyer’s

                                6
license to the First Buyer. Then, they want the FCC to unwind
the sale of the First Buyer’s license so that the license goes
back to the Seller. They note that both sales were subject to
unwind provisions.

    The Kapurs also want the California state court to stop the
Seller’s dissolution. After all that, they will have their
“unique investment” in the station back. Appellants’ Br. at A-
II-7. And those actions, they claim, will restore viewers’
access to the “diverse set of multiple channels” offered by the
Seller. See id. at A-II-6.

    To get there, the following must occur:

        •   The Kapurs prove their bad character allegations
            against the First Buyer at the character hearing.

        •   The Kapurs convince the FCC that the First Buyer’s
            character flaws disqualified it from selling the
            license to the Second Buyer.

        •   The Kapurs convince the FCC that the First Buyer’s
            character flaws disqualified it from buying the
            license from the Seller.

        •   The FCC rolls back the two sales, and the Seller
            gets the license back.

        •   The Kapurs successfully stop the Seller from
            dissolving.

     To begin, we doubt the Kapurs have shown they are entitled
to a hearing on the First Buyer’s character or that they are likely
to prevail at the hearing. We also doubt they’ve shown the
FCC is likely to roll back not one, but two license transfers,
including one it approved six years ago. Thus, even assuming
that the Kapurs prevailed on their legal claim of entitlement to

                                7
a character hearing, they have not shown any likelihood that
the FCC would find the First Buyer was of bad character or,
even if it did, that the Commission would order as a remedy the
unwinding of the sales to both the First Buyer and the Second
Buyer and return of the station to the Kapurs and Trumblys.

    But let’s assume the Kapurs succeed at the FCC and
convince the California state courts to stop the Seller from
dissolving. (Otherwise, the license goes back to a company
that doesn’t exist.)

     Even then, they haven’t pointed us to anything that would
stop the Seller from turning around and selling the company’s
assets to someone else. So, even giving the Kapurs the benefit
of all these doubts, they still end up in the same place they were
in 2013: minority shareholders of a company whose controlling
owners (a) want to sell, (b) have the authority to sell, and
(c) likely have an interested buyer (the Second Buyer, who
currently owns and runs the station and whose character the
Kapurs have never questioned).

   As the arbitrator ruled eight years ago, and as the California
courts confirmed, if the majority decides to sell, the Kapurs
can’t stop them. No amount of complaining about the First
Buyer’s character to the FCC will change that.

                        *       *       *

    The Kapurs have not shown it is likely they would get the
station back, even if we were to award the relief they ask from
us.

   We therefore dismiss their appeals for lack of standing.

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