Centennial Broadcasting, LLC v. Burns , 254 F. App'x 977 ( 2007 )


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  •                             UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 06-2098
    CENTENNIAL BROADCASTING, LLC,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    versus
    GARY   E.    BURNS;    3    DAUGHTERS     MEDIA,
    INCORPORATED,
    Defendants - Appellants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western
    District of Virginia, at Lynchburg.  Norman K. Moon, District
    Judge. (6:06-cv-00006-nkm)
    Submitted:   September 19, 2007         Decided:    November 16, 2007
    Before WILLIAMS, Chief Judge, SHEDD, Circuit Judge, and Joseph F.
    ANDERSON, Jr., United States District Judge for the District of
    South Carolina, sitting by designation.
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    Mark J. Prak, Coe W. Ramsey, Charles E. Coble, BROOKS, PIERCE,
    MCLENDON, HUMPHREY & LEONARD, L.L.P., Raleigh, North Carolina, for
    Appellants. Virginia W. Hoptman, Jerry W. Boykin, Erin Roberts,
    WOMBLE, CARLYLE, SANDRIDGE & RICE, Tysons Corner, Virginia, for
    Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    PER CURIAM:
    Appellants Gary E. Burns and 3 Daughters Media, Inc. (“3
    Daughters”) (collectively “Appellants”) appeal the district court’s
    grant of a permanent injunction to Centennial Broadcasting, LLC
    (“Centennial”) enforcing a covenant not to compete between Burns
    and Centennial.     Appellants argue that the district court erred in
    concluding that the covenant’s terms are unambiguous and that Burns
    failed to comply with those terms.                 They also challenge the
    validity of the non-competition agreement on a number of grounds.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
    I.
    In   October    2004,    Centennial     and    Burns   entered    into   an
    agreement (the “Asset Purchase Agreement” or “APA”) pursuant to
    which Burns was to sell Centennial substantially all of the assets,
    property,   and   rights     of   the   radio   station     WLNI-FM   (“WLNI”),
    “licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) to
    Lynchburg, Virginia.”1        (J.A. at 10.)2         On February 28, 2005,
    Centennial closed on the purchase of WLNI for approximately $4.4
    1
    The APA initially provided for the sale of two additional
    radio stations, WMNA-FM and WMNA-AM, “licensed by the FCC to
    Gretna, VA” (the “Gretna stations”) as well. (J.A. at 10.) In
    January 2005, however, the parties amended the APA to exclude the
    Gretna stations from the transaction.
    2
    Citations to the “J.A.” refer to the contents of the joint
    appendix filed by the parties to this appeal.
    2
    million.   The parties allocated $4.135 million for WLNI’s FCC
    license, $180,000 for the broadcasting equipment, $50,000 for the
    tower antenna, and $35,000 for office and miscellaneous equipment.
    As a condition of the sale, the parties entered into an
    ancillary agreement entitled the “Non-Solicitation and Consulting
    Agreement.” Centennial paid Burns $25,000 as consideration for his
    compliance with the covenants contained in the agreement. Only one
    of the Non-Solicitation and Consulting Agreement’s three primary
    restrictions is relevant to this appeal.    Paragraph 2 (“the non-
    competition agreement”) provides that:
    Except as provided in the next sentence, Covenantor
    [Burns] further agrees that at no time during the
    Restricted Period will he directly or indirectly, whether
    as owner licensee, principal, agent, consultant,
    employee, proprietor, partner, lender, or shareholder,
    director or officer of a corporation (or similar position
    in any other entity), or in any other capacity, other
    than as employee or contractor of Buyer, engage in, own,
    manage, operate, control or otherwise participate in or
    be in any manner connected with the ownership, operation,
    management or control of any commercial AM or FM
    broadcast business at any radio broadcasting station that
    is included in the Roanoke-Lynchburg Arbitron Metro radio
    market if such station utilizes a programming format
    substantially similar to any format used by the Station
    on the date Buyer acquires the Station; provided,
    however, that ownership of less than 5% of the
    outstanding stock of any publicly traded corporation
    shall not be prohibited solely by reason thereof.
    Covenantor’s ownership and operation of Radio Stations
    WMNA-FM and WMNA(AM), Gretna, Virginia, are specifically
    excluded from the restrictions in this paragraph.3
    3
    The “Restricted Period” represents a five-year period running
    from the date the parties signed the Non-Solicitation and
    Consulting Agreement until the fifth anniversary of the closing
    under the APA.
    3
    (J.A. at 23 (emphasis added).)            At the time of the sale, WLNI’s
    programming consisted primarily of talk shows, although the station
    also sometimes broadcasted sports events.
    In November 2005, Centennial learned through a newspaper
    article that Burns, acting through 3 Daughters, a company he owns,
    had purchased the radio station WBLT-AM (“WBLT”) in Bedford,
    Virginia.    WBLT’s signal reached into the area encompassed by the
    Roanoke-Lynchburg Arbitron Metro radio market.4 And, although WBLT
    had been one of the few music stations remaining on the AM dial,
    Burns    shifted   its   programming       to   primarily   talk    radio   upon
    purchasing the station.      Burns told the article’s author that he
    instituted the format change because he had “been very successful
    with news and talk radio.”         (J.A. at 40.)
    Centennial believed that Burns’s operation of WBLT as a talk
    radio station violated the non-competition agreement. Accordingly,
    on February 17, 2006, Centennial filed a complaint for damages and
    injunctive relief against Appellants in the United States District
    Court for the Western District of Virginia, claiming diversity of
    citizenship    between    itself    and     Appellants   and   an    amount   in
    controversy over $75,000.     Centennial’s        complaint asserted claims
    4
    “‘Arbitron’ is a national radio audience measurement company”
    that relies on biannual “sweeps” of radio listeners to measure the
    market share of radio stations. (J.A. at 301.)     Arbitron defines
    the Roanoke-Lynchburg radio market “as encompassing the cities of
    Roanoke, Lynchburg, Bedford, and Salem, and six Virginia counties:
    Roanoke, Boutetourt, Bedford, Campbell, Amherst and Appomattox.”
    (J.A. at 301.)
    4
    against Burns for breaches of the non-competition agreement, the
    APA, and the APA’s implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing
    (Counts I-III) and a claim against 3 Daughters for violations of
    Centennial’s rights under the APA and the non-competition agreement
    (Count IV).     On the same day, Centennial filed a Motion for
    Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) and a Motion for Preliminary
    Injunction    enjoining   Appellants       “from   further   use   of     a    Talk
    programming format” on WBLT.         (J.A. at 28, 30.)
    On March 13, 2006, the district court conducted a hearing on
    Centennial’s motions for a TRO and for a preliminary injunction.
    Centennial provided evidence that it had monitored WBLT for 24
    hours and learned that “it ha[d] 21 hours of syndicated talk and
    three hours of music.”          (J.A. at 128.)         Moreover, WBLT was
    “duplicating a number of talk show programs broadcast on WLNI.”
    (J.A. at 35.)     Burns did not dispute that a number of the talk
    programs aired on WBLT were the same as those aired on WLNI. He
    also admitted that the bulk of WBLT’s programming on Monday through
    Friday was syndicated talk shows.            (J.A. at 240.)        Burns took
    issue, however, with Centennial’s assertion, grounded in a list of
    radio formats set forth in “Radio & Records” (which Centennial
    described as “the leading magazine in the radio industry,” (J.A. at
    138)), that there existed a single talk radio format which both
    WLNI and WBLT employed.        Burns supplied an article from “Talkers
    Magazine”    (whose   slogan    is   “the    [B]ible   of    the   talk       radio
    5
    business,” (J.A. at 207)) that “broke[] down on-air talk talent to
    nine major categories,” (J.A. at 73); he argued that each category
    represented a distinct radio format and that when these categories
    were used to define WBLT and WLNI’s respective formats, the two
    were not substantially similar. At the close of the hearing, the
    district court determined that Burns had clearly violated the non-
    competition agreement and issued a TRO.                 On March 20, 2006, the
    district    court      granted   Centennial’s       motion     for   a   preliminary
    injunction.
    Prior to the March 13, 2006 hearing, the district court had
    notified the parties that it would “be considering the possibility
    of consolidating the request for a preliminary injunction with
    trial on the merits of the request for a permanent injunction,” but
    understood that because expert witnesses might be unavailable at
    the hearing, the parties might need to submit deposition testimony
    relevant    to   the    merits   within       a   reasonable    period    after   the
    hearing.5   (J.A. at 326.)        A subsequent Opinion and Order provided
    that in considering whether consolidation was appropriate, the
    district court would consider only the evidence offered at the
    March 13, 2006 hearing, the deposition testimony of Appellants’
    expert witness, and Centennial’s rebuttal evidence, if any was
    5
    Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(a)(2), “Before or after the
    commencement of the hearing of an application for a preliminary
    injunction, the court may order the trial of the action on the
    merits to be advanced and consolidated with the hearing of the
    application.”
    6
    offered.    If, after considering that evidence, the district court
    concluded that the language of the non-competition agreement was
    unambiguous, it would decide the merits of the request for a
    permanent injunction.     If, however, it determined that disposition
    of the merits required further development of the record, it would
    permit the parties to conduct further discovery.
    Accordingly,    Burns   submitted   the   deposition     testimony   of
    expert witness Michael Harrison, publisher of “Talkers Magazine.”
    Harrison    identified   eleven   different    talk   radio   formats,    but
    suggested that there were “probably more.”              (J.A. at 576.)
    According, to Harrison, “radio is a minute to minute competition,”
    so stations should be compared on a minute to minute basis.          (J.A.
    at 599.)     He had not, however, compared WLNI and WBLT in this
    manner.    When asked if it was “a fair statement to say that both of
    these formats for WBLT and for WLNI are general issues political
    talk even under [Harrison’s] definitions,” (J.A. at 612), Harrison
    acknowledged that “[i]t [wa]s possible,” (J.A. at 613), but stated
    that “it all depends on actually analyzing the actual number of
    hours that they do the different shows,” and that he had not
    conducted that analysis.     (J.A. at 612-13.)
    As rebuttal evidence, Centennial submitted the deposition
    testimony of Walter Sabo, CEO of Sabo Media, a programming and
    management company specializing in profitable contents solutions
    for talk-radio stations. Sabo listed five formats that he believed
    7
    existed within the talk radio format and indicated that there were
    “probably more.”   (J.A. at 733.)   Sabo opined that WLNI and WBLT
    had substantially similar formats, basing his conclusion on “[t]wo
    things” -- “that many of the[] shows cover the same subject area,
    and . . . the way the shows are scheduled.” (J.A. at 707.)         He
    described the content of both stations as being primarily political
    and the structure of the two stations as “amazingly similar.”
    (J.A. at 709.)
    After the deposition testimony was taken, Centennial filed a
    Motion for a Permanent Injunction Pursuant to [Federal Rule of
    Civil Procedure] 65(a)(2) and to Render Final Judgment in Favor of
    Plaintiffs on the Merits.    On September 29, 2006, the district
    court granted Centennial’s motion to consolidate trial on the
    merits with the preliminary injunction hearing and issued an
    opinion and order permanently enjoining Burns from “participating
    in or being in any manner connected with the ownership, operation,
    management or control of any commercial AM or FM broadcast business
    at any broadcasting station that is included in the Roanoke-
    Lynchburg Arbitron Metro radio market for a period of five years if
    that business station uses the following programming formats . . .
    : All talk, News/Talk, Full Service Talk, or Specialized Talk with
    a focus on current events and/or politics.”   (J.A. at 941-42.)6   3
    6
    In crafting the injunction, the district court sought to use
    terms that reflected Burns’s understanding of the different types
    of radio station programming formats. The district court’s Opinion
    8
    Daughters Media was permanently enjoined “from the same” so long as
    Burns remained affiliated with the company.           (J.A. at 942.)       In a
    separate order, the district court referred Centennial’s claim for
    costs and attorneys’ fees to a magistrate judge.
    Burns and 3 Daughters timely appealed the district court’s
    order     granting   Centennial    a    permanent    injunction.     We    have
    jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A § 1292(a)(1) (West 2006).
    II.
    “[W]e review the grant of a permanent injunction for abuse of
    discretion.”     Virginia Soc’y for Human Life, Inc. v. F.E.C., 
    263 F.3d 379
    , 392 (4th Cir. 2001).         In so doing, we review the district
    court’s    underlying   factual    findings    for   clear   error   and    its
    conclusions of law de novo.       
    Id.
       “[A] mistake of law by a district
    court is per se an abuse of discretion.”             Dixon v. Edwards, 
    290 F.3d 699
    , 718 (4th Cir. 2002).
    Appellants argue that the district court abused its discretion
    in granting Centennial a permanent injunction because the district
    and Order defined, in a footnote, the formats that Burns was
    enjoined from using. It took both the format categories and their
    definitions from a website on which Burns had relied in an
    affidavit supporting his response in opposition to Centennial’s
    motion for a preliminary injunction. In the affidavit, Burns used
    the website in asserting that “All Talk” and “News Talk” were
    distinct formats and that WLNI used an “All Talk” format at the
    time that he sold it. Accordingly, the district court concluded
    that Burns “accept[ed] [the website]’s breakdown of talk
    programming formats into All Talk, News/Talk, Full Service,
    Specialized, and Sports.” (J.A. at 933.)
    9
    court’s       decision       rests     on    erroneous   legal    conclusions.
    Specifically, Appellants contend that the district court erred in
    concluding that the non-competition agreement’s reference to a
    “programming format substantially similar [to that of WLNI],” (J.A.
    at 23), was unambiguous.             The ambiguity of the contract language,
    according to Appellants, not only compels reversal of the district
    court’s conclusion that no reasonable jury could find that WLNI and
    WBLT did not have substantially similar programming formats, but
    also       renders   the    non-competition      agreement   unenforceable   as
    violative of Virginia public policy and Burns’s First Amendment
    rights. Appellants further contend that the Federal Communications
    Act (“FCA”), 
    47 U.S.C.A. § 310
    (d) (West 2001), and FCC decisions
    and policy preempt enforcement of the non-competition agreement.
    Because Appellants’ contention that the non-competition agreement
    is ambiguous permeates their arguments on appeal, we first address
    Appellant’s challenge to the district court’s conclusion to the
    contrary before considering the question of preemption.
    A.
    Because this is a diversity suit, we apply the substantive law
    of the state of Virginia.            See Wells v. Liddy, 
    186 F.3d 505
    , 527-28
    (4th Cir. 1999).7          Under Virginia law, when the terms of a contract
    are clear and unambiguous, the interpretation of those terms
    7
    The Non-Solicitation and Consulting Agreement contains a
    choice of law provision specifying that Virginia law governs the
    parties’ disputes.
    10
    presents a question of law.    Musselman v. Glass Works, L.L.C., 
    533 S.E.2d 919
    , 921 (Va. 2000).      Whether a contractual provision is
    ambiguous is also a question of law.        
    Id.
    Virginia considers the language of a contract ambiguous “if it
    may be understood in more than one way or when it refers to two or
    more things at the same time.”            Video Zone, Inc. v. KF & F
    Properties,   L.C.,   
    594 S.E.2d 921
    ,   923   (Va.   2004)   (internal
    quotation marks omitted).     “Such an ambiguity, if it exists, must
    appear on the face of the instrument.”            
    Id. at 924
    .       “Parol
    evidence cannot be used to first create an ambiguity and then
    remove it.”   Cohan v. Thurston, 
    292 S.E.2d 45
    , 46 (Va. 1982).
    Moreover, “a document is not ambiguous merely because the parties
    disagree as to the meaning of the language employed by them in
    expressing their agreement.”     Amos v. Coffey, 
    320 S.E.2d 335
    , 337
    (Va. 1984) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Appellants argue that the district court’s finding that the
    relevant sworn statements and expert testimony were “mutually
    incompatible and irreconcilable” reveals that the term “programming
    format” in the non-competition agreement is ambiguous.           (J.A. at
    939.)   For further support, they cite to F.C.C. v. WNCN Listeners
    Guild, 
    450 U.S. 582
     (1981), in which the Supreme Court upheld the
    FCC’s decision to abandon regulation of radio station formats, a
    policy change grounded in part in the difficulty the FCC had
    experienced in defining and categorizing programming formats.         See
    11
    Dev.   of   Policy    re:    Changes   in    the   Entm’t   Formats    of    Broad.
    Stations,     
    57 F.C.C.2d 580
    ,   583   ¶    12   (1976)   (concluding   that
    labeling     radio    station    formats     is    a   difficult    task    because
    “[d]istinctions in this field are extremely hazy and subjective”).
    The district court rejected Appellants’ invitation to look to
    external sources, rather than the contract itself, to resolve the
    issue.      It found that “[t]he contract refers to the programming
    format of [WLNI] on the date of transfer of ownership,” and “[o]n
    that date, [WLNI] had a programming format known to both parties.”
    (J.A. at 939.) Accordingly, the district court concluded that just
    because “the experts . . . [did] not agree on the proper pigeonhole
    into which that format should be placed d[id] not make the contract
    ambiguous.”        (J.A. at 939.)       The court reasoned that “[WLNI]’s
    format may (or may not) defy categorization, but it is possessed of
    some format which Burns is forbidden to imitate.”                  (J.A. at 939.)
    It further determined that the phrase “substantially similar” was
    unambiguous, as “[i]ts ordinary and plain meaning can be gleaned by
    resort to dictionary definitions and common usage.” (J.A. at 939.)
    We agree with the reasoning of the district court.                      The
    dictionary defines “format” in the media context as a “general plan
    of organization, arrangement, or choice of material (as for a
    television show).”          Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 492
    (11th ed. 2004).            The non-competition agreement identified a
    particular general plan of organization or choice of material –-
    12
    that of WLNI’s programming format on the date Burns sold the
    station to Centennial -- with which both parties were familiar.
    The difficulty of affixing a mutually-agreeable label to the
    programming format identified in the non-competition agreement does
    not render the agreement itself ambiguous.
    We also agree with the district court that, however the two
    stations’ formats are categorized, no reasonable jury could find
    that they are not substantially similar.       Appellants argue that,
    under Harrison’s approach to format categorization, the stations’
    programming formats could be found to differ because Harrison’s
    testimony indicates that WLNI and WBLT broadcasted substantially
    different programs during as many as eleven hours of the day.     They
    offer no basis, however, on which to refute the district court’s
    finding that because “‘programming’ is distinct from ‘programming
    format,’” different programs may share the same programming format.
    (J.A. at 933.)   That the two stations did not air the same programs
    at the same time during a substantial portion of the day does not
    demonstrate that they do not utilize the same or substantially
    similar programming formats.     The district court found that, under
    Harrison’s   approach,   “both    WLNI   and   WBLT   use   a   General
    Issues/Political Talk programming format, because each airs talk
    shows with current events and politics subject matters for a
    majority of the time and with significant hour-by-hour overlap.”
    (J.A. at 934.)    Appellants’ arguments regarding the differences
    13
    between the particular programs do not render this finding clearly
    erroneous.
    We therefore agree with the district court that Appellants
    breached the non-competition agreement, and the differences in the
    format definitions and modes of comparison advanced by the parties
    do not render the violation any less clear.               Because we conclude
    that the language of the non-competition agreement is unambiguous,
    we need not address Appellants’ argument that, under Virginia law,
    an ambiguous restrictive covenant offends public policy and cannot
    be   enforced.       For    the   same   reason,     we   decline   to   address
    Appellants’       contention      that    the     non-competition     agreement
    represents a waiver of their First Amendment rights that cannot be
    enforced because it is ambiguous.
    B.
    We   next   address    Appellants’        contention   that   federal   law
    preempts the enforcement of the non-competition agreement under
    state contract law.        Under the Supremacy Clause, federal statutes
    and regulations displace conflicting state law.                See U.S. Const.
    art. VI, cl. 2; English v. Gen. Elec. Co., 
    496 U.S. 72
    , 79 (1990)
    (explaining that “state law is pre-empted to the extent that it
    actually conflicts with federal law”).              Such a conflict exists in
    two circumstances -- where “compliance with both federal and state
    regulations is a physical impossibility,” Florida Lime & Avocado
    Growers, Inc. v. Paul, 
    373 U.S. 132
    , 142-43 (1963), and where state
    14
    law “stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of
    the full purposes and objectives of Congress,” Hines v. Davidowitz,
    
    312 U.S. 52
    , 67 (1941); Gade v. Nat’l Solid Wastes Mgmt. Ass’n, 
    505 U.S. 88
    , 103 (1992).
    Burns argues that both circumstances are present in this case
    because enforcement of the non-competition agreement would (1)
    conflict with and frustrate the purpose of § 310(d) of the FCA and
    (2) violate the FCC policy of prohibiting contractual restrictions
    on radio-formatting discretion. Section 310(d) of the FCA provides
    that “[n]o construction permit or station license, or any rights
    thereunder, shall be transferred, assigned, or disposed of in any
    manner, voluntarily or involuntarily, directly or indirectly, . .
    . to any person except upon application to the Commission and upon
    finding by the Commission that the public interest, convenience,
    and necessity will be served thereby.”               47 U.S.C.A § 310(d).
    Further, the FCC has a longstanding policy of requiring that a
    licensee “retain control over programming content at all times.”
    In re Cosmopolitan Broadcasting Corp., 
    59 F.C.C.2d 558
    , 561 (1976).
    Accordingly,   it    will   not   grant   licenses   to   applicants    whose
    contractual obligations limit their ability to maintain ultimate
    control over programming decisions.         See Cumulus Licensing L.L.C.,
    21 F.C.C.R. 2998, 3005 (2006) (finding that a contractual provision
    prohibiting a buyer of a radio station (and any successor in
    interest)   from    “instituting    an    adult   contemporary   or   country
    15
    program format, or any similar or derivative format . . . for a
    period   of   five   years”   improperly    infringed     upon   the   buyer’s
    programming    responsibilities    and     conditioning    approval    of   the
    parties’ application to transfer the station’s license on the
    deletion of the restriction).
    The district court rejected both arguments. It concluded that
    neither the FCA nor FCC policy preempts the enforcement of the non-
    competition agreement, because although the FCC will not approve
    license applications from or transfers to would-be licensees whose
    programming discretion is unduly inhibited by contractual terms, no
    FCC rules or decisions purport to alter state contract law or to
    bind the courts.      (J.A. at 937.)       To the contrary, the FCC has
    stated that “there is no conflict between State and Federal policy
    as to the covenant not to compete.”          (J.A. at 937 (quoting In re
    Roman, 
    38 F.C.C. 290
     (1965)); see also In re Cmty. Broad. of
    Coastal Bend, Inc., 4 F.C.C.R. 3619, 3621 (1989) (stating that
    “there is no conflict between state and federal policy as to a
    covenant not to compete”).
    Again, we agree with the reasoning of the district court.               As
    the district court explained, the FCC has conditioned approval of
    license transfers on the transferee’s ability to extract himself
    from non-competition agreements that limit programming discretion
    precisely because these types of agreements are enforceable.                See
    Regents of Univ. Sys. of Ga. v. Carroll, 
    338 U.S. 586
    , 600 (1950)
    16
    (stating that “[t]he [FCC] may impose on an applicant conditions
    which it must meet before it will be granted a license, but the
    imposition of the conditions cannot directly affect the applicant’s
    responsibilities to a third party dealing with the applicant”).8
    Thus,    whether      the   non-competition    agreement        would     unduly
    infringe upon Appellants’ ability to program WBLT was a question
    for the FCC to resolve in determining whether to approve the
    transfer   of      the   station’s   license.      It   is    not    a   ground   to
    invalidate the non-competition agreement.                    We agree with the
    district court that any conflict between 3 Daughters’s duties as a
    licensee     and    Burns’s      contractual    obligations         resulted     from
    Appellants’ failure to inform the FCC of the non-competition
    agreement’s restrictions and is thus of their own making.                         We
    8
    Appellants rely heavily on In re Citicasters Co., 16 F.C.C.R.
    3415 (2001). Citicasters, however, is not contrary to Regents of
    University System of Georgia v. Carroll, 
    338 U.S. 586
     (1950). In
    Citicasters, the FCC stated that
    Where a contractual dispute is before a court, the
    licensee must retain actual control of essential station
    functions unless the Commission gives prior consent to
    the assignment or transfer of control of the station.
    Thus, it is a violation of the Communications Act to
    invoke remedies for breach, including injunctive or other
    equitable relief, that impinge on such control, without
    obtaining prior Commission consent.
    16 F.C.C.R. at 3420. That a party may violate the FCA by invoking
    equitable remedies for breach of contract without obtaining the
    FCC’s consent has no bearing on the enforceability of the
    underlying contract.
    17
    therefore conclude that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in granting Centennial a permanent injunction.
    III.
    In sum, we conclude that the non-competition agreement’s
    reference to a “programming format substantially similar to [that
    of WLNI on the date of its sale to Centennial],” (J.A. at 23), was
    unambiguous.    We further conclude that no reasonable jury could
    find that WBLT’s format was not substantially similar to WLNI’s
    programming    format,   and   that    federal   law   does   not     preempt
    enforcement of the non-competition agreement.           Accordingly, the
    judgment of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.
    18