Lansdowne on the Potomac Homeowners Ass'n v. OpenBand at Lansdowne, LLC , 713 F.3d 187 ( 2013 )


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  •                        PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    LANSDOWNE ON THE POTOMAC              
    HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    OPENBAND AT LANSDOWNE, LLC;
    OPENBAND SPE, LLC; OPENBAND
    MULTIMEDIA, LLC; M.C. DEAN,
    INC.,
    Defendants-Appellants,
    and                           No. 12-1925
    LCD COMMUNICATIONS, LLC;
    OPENBAND OF VIRGINIA, LLC;
    WILLIAM H. DEAN; LANSDOWNE
    COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT, LLC,
    Defendants.
    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
    COMMISSION,
    Amicus Supporting Appellee.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Alexandria.
    Anthony J. Trenga, District Judge.
    (1:11-cv-00872-AJT-TCB)
    Argued: January 29, 2013
    Decided: April 5, 2013
    2                     LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    Before WILKINSON, MOTZ, and THACKER,
    Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Wilkinson wrote the
    opinion, in which Judge Motz and Judge Thacker joined.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Sanford M. Saunders, Jr., GREENBERG
    TRAURIG, LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellants. Christo-
    pher J. Wright, WILTSHIRE & GRANNIS, LLP, Washing-
    ton, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Robert P. Charrow,
    Laura Metcoff Klaus, GREENBERG TRAURIG, LLP, Wash-
    ington, D.C., for Appellants. Steven A. Fredley, Mark D.
    Davis, WILTSHIRE & GRANNIS, LLP, Washington, D.C.,
    for Appellee. Sean A. Lev, General Counsel, Peter Karanjia,
    Deputy General Counsel, Jacob M. Lewis, Associate General
    Counsel, Matthew J. Dunne, Counsel, FEDERAL COMMU-
    NICATIONS COMMISSION, Washington, D.C., for Amicus
    Supporting Appellee.
    OPINION
    WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:
    Lansdowne on the Potomac Homeowners Association sued
    OpenBand, a group of interlocking entities that provides cable
    services to the Lansdowne on the Potomac real estate develop-
    ment.1 The homeowners association alleged that OpenBand
    1
    We use the name "OpenBand" to refer collectively to all of the defen-
    dants (now appellants) in this case: OpenBand at Lansdowne, OpenBand
    Multimedia, OpenBand SPE, OpenBand of Virginia, and their common
    corporate parent, M.C. Dean, Inc.
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                      3
    entered into a series of contracts that conferred upon Open-
    Band the exclusive right to provide video services to the
    development, in violation of an order of the Federal Commu-
    nications Commission prohibiting such exclusivity arrange-
    ments. The district court agreed, declaring the challenged
    provisions null and void and permanently enjoining their
    enforcement. Because the contract provisions prohibit com-
    peting cable providers from accessing the Lansdowne devel-
    opment in patent violation of the FCC’s Order, we affirm the
    judgment of the district court.
    I.
    A.
    In 1992, Congress enacted the Cable Television Consumer
    Protection and Competition Act ("1992 Cable Act"), Pub. L.
    No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460. Congress made several findings
    in passing the Act, among them that "most cable television
    subscribers have no opportunity to select between competing
    cable systems"; that this lack of competition had led to "undue
    market power for the cable operator as compared to that of
    consumers"; and that cable prices were rising almost three
    times faster than the rate of inflation. 1992 Cable Act
    § 2(a)(2), (1), 106 Stat. at 1460. The Act accordingly made it
    unlawful for a cable operator to engage in "unfair methods of
    competition or unfair or deceptive acts or practices, the pur-
    pose or effect of which is to hinder significantly or to prevent"
    any other operator from providing services to consumers. 47
    U.S.C. § 548(b). The Act also authorized the FCC to "pre-
    scribe regulations to specify particular conduct that is prohib-
    ited by" this provision. 
    Id. § 548(c)(1). Pursuant
    to that authority, the FCC issued a notice of pro-
    posed rulemaking in March 2007 soliciting comments on the
    propriety of a practice popular among cable operators: the use
    of "exclusivity clauses" that grant the operator exclusive
    access for providing video services within a particular multi-
    4                   LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    ple dwelling unit ("MDU"). Exclusive Service Contracts for
    Provision of Video Services in Multiple Dwelling Units and
    Other Real Estate Developments, 22 FCC Rcd. 5,935 (pro-
    posed Mar. 27, 2007). In response, the FCC received com-
    ments revealing that exclusivity clauses "have the clear effect
    of barring new entry into MDUs by wire-based" video provid-
    ers and that such clauses were "widespread" and increasing in
    their use. Exclusive Service Contracts for Provision of Video
    Services in Multiple Dwelling Units and Other Real Estate
    Developments, 22 FCC Rcd. 20,235 ¶¶ 10, 15 (Nov. 27, 2007)
    ("Exclusivity Order"). Commenters also highlighted the inju-
    ries that exclusivity clauses inflict upon consumers, such as
    increased prices, lower quality, and a reduced menu of cable
    channel options. See 
    id. ¶ 17-23. The
    FCC thus concluded that
    "exclusivity clauses cause significant harm to competition and
    consumers" and that "the harms of [such] clauses outweigh
    their benefits." 
    Id. ¶ 26. Based
    on this record, the FCC unanimously adopted the
    Exclusivity Order at issue in this case. The order sets forth the
    following rule: "[N]o cable operator . . . shall enforce or exe-
    cute any provision in a contract that grants it the exclusive
    right to provide any video programming service (alone or in
    combination with other services) to a MDU. Any such exclu-
    sivity clause shall be null and void." Exclusivity Order ¶ 31
    (codified at 47 C.F.R. § 76.2000(a)).
    B.
    In 1999, a partnership of Virginia land developers created
    the Lansdowne Community Development ("LCD"), a limited
    liability company with the purpose of developing a residential
    community known as Lansdowne on the Potomac in Loudoun
    County, Virginia. The Lansdowne development comprises
    roughly 850 acres of land, upon which some 2,155 individual
    homes are built. Although Lansdowne residents own their
    own homes, all residents share an interest in common areas
    that require central management. LCD therefore created
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                             5
    appellee, the Lansdowne on the Potomac Homeowners Asso-
    ciation ("LHOA" or "the homeowners association"), to pro-
    vide for the management of the development and amenities
    such as video, phone, and internet services.
    In the process of planning the development, LCD engaged
    M.C. Dean, Inc., a Virginia technical services contractor, to
    design and install telecommunications systems in the commu-
    nity. For its part, according to M.C. Dean’s CEO, the com-
    pany sought from LCD the "exclusive right to provide . . .
    telecommunication services" to Lansdowne. M.C. Dean cre-
    ated a number of corporate entities and entered into a series
    of contemporaneous, interlocking contractual arrangements to
    achieve this end.
    The structure of this whole enterprise was a convoluted
    one. With respect to the corporate entities, M.C. Dean formed
    OpenBand at Lansdowne ("OBL"), a limited liability com-
    pany with the purpose of developing and administering tele-
    communication services at Lansdowne. OBL had two
    members: a wholly owned subsidiary of M.C. Dean’s called
    OpenBand SPE ("OBS"), which M.C. Dean created for the
    purpose of holding its interest in OBL, and a subsidiary of
    LCD’s called LCD Communications.2 M.C. Dean also formed
    OpenBand Multimedia, LLC ("OBM"), which is an FCC-
    certified open video system operator that provides video and
    internet services to Lansdowne and other Virginia communi-
    ties. Lastly, M.C. Dean formed OpenBand of Virginia
    ("OBV"), which provides phone service to Virginia communi-
    ties, including Lansdowne. OBL, OBS, OBM, OBV, and
    M.C. Dean are all defendants and appellants in this case (col-
    lectively, "OpenBand").3
    2
    Prior to this suit, LCD Communications transferred its interest in OBL
    to OBS, leaving it the sole member of OBL.
    3
    The developer, LCD, and its subsidiary LCD Communications were
    initially named as defendants but were dismissed voluntarily under Fed-
    eral Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(1)(A)(i).
    6                      LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    With respect to the contractual arrangements, three are of
    particular relevance. First, LCD granted a deed of easement
    to OBL on May 14, 2001, entitled the "Exclusive Easement
    for Telecommunications Services at Lansdowne on the Poto-
    mac." LHOA is named as a party to the deed as the "Future
    Owner" of the Property. LHOA ratified the easement acting
    through its then-president (who was also president of LCD,
    which controlled LHOA at the time).4 By its express terms,
    the deed grants to OBL "exclusive easements for the purpose
    of constructing, operating, maintaining, adding to, altering, or
    replacing (collectively ‘Administering’ or ‘Administer’) [tele-
    communications infrastructure] for the collection, provision,
    and distribution of video, telephonic, internet, data services,
    or other communications, data or media (collectively ‘Utili-
    ties’)." The deed provides that "the exclusive easements" shall
    be "deemed to reserve solely to [OBL] the rights to Adminis-
    ter Utilities on, under and across the Property such that . . .
    no other person or entity shall be entitled to Administer any
    Utilities on, under or across the Property without the written
    consent of [OBL]." The deed also prohibits LHOA from
    "grant[ing] any easement to Administer any Utilities on,
    under or across the Property" to any other party.
    The second arrangement at issue is the Covenants, Condi-
    tions, and Restrictions for Lansdowne on the Potomac (the
    "CC&Rs"), dated June 18, 2001. The CC&Rs include a provi-
    sion expressly recognizing OBL’s "exclusive easements for
    access to and the installation, construction, [and] operation
    . . . of a private utility and telecommunication system." The
    CC&Rs refer to OBL’s exclusivity in several other places,
    including a provision declaring that OBL’s "rights with
    respect to the private utility system . . . and the services pro-
    vided through such private utility system are exclusive, and
    no other Person may provide such services to the Property."
    4
    The easement was actually granted to OBL through a two-step process
    involving an initial grant of the easement by the developer LCD to its sub-
    sidiary LCD Communications, followed by a second grant from LCD
    Communications to OBL.
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                    7
    Finally, OBL entered into a contract with the homeowners
    association on July 24, 2001, entitled the "Agreement to
    Obtain Telecommunication Services" ("TSA"). Under the
    TSA, LHOA engaged OBL to provide "platform services," or
    basic video, phone, and internet services that homeowners
    receive, as well as optional "premium services." The TSA
    grants OBL the right to "provide[ ] or arrange for the provi-
    sion of the Platform Services to Homeowners so that [LHOA]
    shall not engage any other provider of Platform services." The
    TSA also incorporates the CC&Rs (which incorporate the
    easement as described above) by prohibiting LHOA from
    "amend[ing] the CC&Rs such that the amendment would . . .
    have a materially adverse effect on OBL."
    C.
    In terms of its actual delivery of telecommunications ser-
    vices, OBL purchases services from its affiliates—video and
    internet from OBM and telephone from OBV—and resells
    them to Lansdowne homeowners. OBL also separately sells
    its services to LHOA itself for purposes of the Potomac Club,
    a community center and office space that the homeowners
    association maintains on the property. In accordance with the
    terms of the easement, CC&Rs, and TSA described above, no
    wire-based cable provider other than OBL has the infrastruc-
    ture necessary to deliver services to the development. As one
    M.C. Dean executive explained, "the entire agreement was set
    up so that we could have our infrastructure in that fashion,"
    that is, through a blanket easement over the Lansdowne com-
    munity.
    After OBL began providing cable to Lansdowne, residents
    began complaining about the quality of its service. One home-
    owner, Marvis Aleem, noted that OBL’s "picture quality was
    frequently pixilated and the channel line-up, both in terms of
    quantity and high-definition offerings—was inferior to those
    of other video providers." Another homeowner, Tim McCoy,
    complained of OBL’s "poor picture quality, channel line-up,
    8                   LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    equipment technology, and customer service." McCoy
    described a number of specific problems with OBL’s video
    service. For example, during the second half of the 2012
    Super Bowl, portions of his screen pixilated, or froze, despite
    the fact that McCoy had complained to OBL about pixilation
    problems previously. McCoy also experienced synchroniza-
    tion problems, where a particular channel would display the
    correct video feed accompanied by a different channel’s audio
    feed.
    In response to these complaints, the homeowners associa-
    tion began investigating alternative providers in 2010. One
    member of LHOA’s board of directors had discussions with
    Verizon, which demonstrated an interest in providing services
    to the development. However, a Verizon employee subse-
    quently emailed the LHOA board member expressing concern
    that OBL’s "exclusive easements" would prevent it from
    "build[ing] out on or otherwise access[ing] the property."
    Another competing video service provider, Comcast, is con-
    tractually required to make cable services available to Lans-
    downe residents under the terms of its franchise agreement
    with Loudoun County. The franchise agreement excuses this
    requirement, however, in developments like Lansdowne that
    "are subject to claimed exclusive arrangements with other
    providers." It is undisputed that neither Verizon nor Comcast
    has formally asked OBL to grant it a subeasement to build its
    own infrastructure. However, as one M.C. Dean official testi-
    fied, "would we object to [Verizon] coming into the commu-
    nity and running their infrastructure? I would say that we
    would."
    D.
    In August 2011, LHOA filed suit against OpenBand in the
    Eastern District of Virginia, alleging a variety of claims under
    federal and state law. OpenBand moved to dismiss, and the
    district court agreed as to all of the federal counts but one: the
    homeowners association’s claim that certain clauses in Open-
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                            9
    Band’s contractual arrangements provide it with the exclusive
    right to deliver video services in violation of the FCC’s 2007
    Exclusivity Order.5 Following discovery, the parties filed
    cross-motions for summary judgment on this claim. On June
    27, 2012, the district court ruled in favor of the homeowners
    association. The court thus issued an order permanently
    enjoining OBL, OBM, OBS, and M.C. Dean from enforcing
    any video service exclusivity provision against LHOA or
    Lansdowne residents, and declaring all such provisions null
    and void.
    OpenBand then filed the instant appeal. We review the
    grant of summary judgment de novo, asking whether, viewing
    the facts in the light most favorable to OpenBand, there is no
    genuine dispute as to any material fact and LHOA is entitled
    to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
    II.
    Before reaching the merits of LHOA’s claim, we must first
    address some threshold questions of justiciability. For "[i]f a
    dispute is not a proper case or controversy, the courts have no
    business deciding it, or expounding the law in the course of
    doing so." DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 
    547 U.S. 332
    , 341
    (2006). OpenBand claims both that LHOA lacks standing to
    bring this action and that the suit is not ripe for our review.
    See 
    id. at 352 (noting
    that standing and ripeness both "origi-
    nate in Article III’s ‘case’ or ‘controversy’ language").
    A.
    The "irreducible constitutional minimum of standing" con-
    sists of three requirements. Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
    
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560 (1992). First, the plaintiff must show that
    it has suffered an "injury in fact" that is concrete and immi-
    5
    The district court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over
    the state law claims, dismissing them without prejudice.
    10                  LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    nent; second, the injury must be "fairly traceable" to the
    defendant’s challenged conduct; and third, it must be likely
    that the injury will be "redressed by a favorable decision." 
    Id. at 560-61 (internal
    quotation marks and alterations omitted).
    OpenBand asserts that LHOA cannot satisfy any of these
    requirements, but for the reasons that follow, we disagree.
    1.
    With respect to the element of injury, LHOA is a direct
    consumer of OBL’s video services, which LHOA purchases
    for the Potomac Club. Although OpenBand does not dispute
    that a cognizable injury would exist if it were actually to pro-
    hibit LHOA from contracting with a competing provider,
    OpenBand contends that LHOA has suffered no injury here
    because "[n]othing in the TSA or other agreements precludes
    LHOA from" doing so. Appellants’ Br. 19.
    This contention is impossible to square with the plain terms
    of the challenged agreements. To start, OBL’s deed of ease-
    ment unambiguously bars LHOA from engaging another pro-
    vider of video services. In fact, the deed blockades other
    providers from accessing the property to build the infrastruc-
    ture necessary for delivering service in the first place. To that
    end, OBL owns "exclusive easements for the purpose of con-
    structing [or] operating" infrastructure for the "provision, and
    distribution of video [services]." The deed states that these
    "exclusive easements" shall be "deemed to reserve solely to
    [OBL] the right[ ] to" construct infrastructure for such ser-
    vices and that "no other person or entity shall be entitled to"
    do so without OBL’s consent. And the deed expressly prohib-
    its LHOA from "grant[ing] any easement" to any other party
    for the purpose of building such infrastructure.
    The CC&Rs likewise prevent LHOA from contracting with
    a competing video provider. For example, the CC&Rs state
    that OBL’s "rights with respect to the private utility system
    . . . and the services provided through such [system] are
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                    11
    exclusive, and no other Person may provide such services to
    the Property." Moreover, the exclusivity clauses in the
    CC&Rs are incorporated into the TSA, which prohibits
    LHOA from "amend[ing] the CC&Rs such that the amend-
    ment would . . . have a materially adverse effect on OBL."
    OpenBand has also admitted that the whole purpose of its
    agreements was to preclude LHOA from contracting with
    competing cable providers—the very result that OpenBand
    now seeks to disclaim. For example, OpenBand conceded in
    the district court that OBL’s easement "effectively bar[s]
    other providers of wired services from Lansdowne." Defs.’
    Br. in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss 22. M.C. Dean’s Executive
    Vice President testified that "nobody else has infrastructure
    within the community to deliver wireline service." When
    asked why that was so, the executive candidly answered,
    "[b]ecause the entire agreement was set up so that we could
    have our infrastructure in that fashion."
    Recognizing the futility of its contention that its various
    arrangements do not bar the homeowners association from
    engaging competing providers, OpenBand changes tack and
    raises a second argument as well: that "the mere existence of
    an exclusivity clause" gives rise to no injury at all unless the
    clause is actually enforced. Appellants’ Reply Br. 5-6. That
    would be surprising news to the FCC, which enacted the
    Exclusivity Order based on its express finding that "exclusiv-
    ity clauses cause significant harm," in particular that they
    deny consumers the benefits of "lower prices," "more chan-
    nels," and improved "quality of service." Exclusivity Order
    ¶ 26, 17 & n.50. Significantly, the FCC found that these inju-
    ries occur not only where exclusivity clauses are actually
    enforced, but rather by virtue of their very existence because
    such clauses "deter new entrants" from even "attempting to
    enter the market." 
    Id. ¶ 19 (emphasis
    added). As the FCC
    explained, "[a] rule that left exclusivity clauses in effect
    would allow the vast majority of the harms caused by such
    clauses to continue for years." 
    Id. ¶ 35. It
    is for this reason
    12                  LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    that the order declares "any" exclusivity clause "null and
    void" without regard for whether it has been enforced. 
    Id. ¶ 31. Because
    OpenBand’s exclusivity clauses preclude LHOA
    from engaging an alternate provider of video services for its
    club house, producing the precise injuries that the FCC identi-
    fied in enacting its Exclusivity Order, we hold that LHOA has
    suffered a cognizable injury for purposes of Article III stand-
    ing.
    2.
    The second element of standing requires a plaintiff to dem-
    onstrate that its injuries are fairly traceable to the challenged
    conduct of the defendants. 
    Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560
    . OpenBand
    argues that any injury suffered by LHOA is not caused by it,
    but rather by the independent, intervening actions of third par-
    ties not before the court—to wit, the decisions by competing
    companies not to offer video service to Lansdowne.
    This argument ignores the reason why competing cable
    providers have not offered services to LHOA: the existence of
    OpenBand’s exclusivity clauses. OpenBand’s mistake, in
    other words, is to "equate[ ] injury ‘fairly traceable’ to the
    defendant with injury as to which the defendant’s actions are
    the very last step in the chain of causation." Bennett v. Spear,
    
    520 U.S. 154
    , 168-69 (1997). But as the Supreme Court has
    explained, the causation element of standing is satisfied not
    just where the defendant’s conduct is the last link in the
    causal chain leading to an injury, but also where the plaintiff
    suffers an injury that is "produced by [the] determinative or
    coercive effect" of the defendant’s conduct "upon the action
    of someone else." 
    Id. at 169. That
    is what has occurred here. The record is replete with
    evidence that OBL’s exclusivity arrangement caused compet-
    ing cable providers not to offer LHOA their services. For
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                     13
    starters, an LHOA board member testified that during her dis-
    cussions with Verizon, the company indicated that it "wanted
    to come down into Lansdowne and lay cable and service the
    Lansdowne residents." To that end, Verizon sent the home-
    owners association a letter identifying the services it could
    offer along with pricing options. Yet after Verizon analyzed
    OBL’s exclusive easement, the CC&Rs, and the TSA, the
    company concluded that it could not provide service to Lans-
    downe because "nothing [Verizon has] seen would give us a
    green light to build out on or otherwise access the property."
    Similarly, LHOA produced the franchise agreement
    between Loudoun County and Comcast. Under that agree-
    ment, Comcast is required to make service available to "all
    residential dwelling units" in the county, with the exception
    that it "shall not be required to serve potential Subscribers in
    developments" like Lansdowne that "are subject to claimed
    exclusive arrangements with other providers." Thus, as with
    Verizon, Comcast’s decision not to offer video to Lansdowne
    is fairly traceable to OpenBand’s challenged exclusivity
    arrangements. And although it took place before the FCC
    issued the Exclusivity Order, we also note that when Adelphia
    sought to provide service to Lansdowne in 2001, OBL denied
    its request, citing its exclusive easement. See UCA, LLC v.
    Lansdowne Cmty. Dev., LLC, 
    215 F. Supp. 2d 742
    , 747 (E.D.
    Va. 2002). We therefore hold that LHOA has established the
    second element of the Article III standing inquiry.
    3.
    Turning to the third standing requirement of redressability,
    our task is to determine if it is "‘likely,’ as opposed to merely
    ‘speculative,’ that the injury will be ‘redressed by a favorable
    decision.’" 
    Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561
    (quoting Simon v. E. Ky.
    Welfare Rights Org., 
    426 U.S. 26
    , 38, 43 (1976)). OpenBand
    contends that it is "entirely speculative" whether an order nul-
    lifying OBL’s exclusivity clauses will redress LHOA’s inju-
    ries because the courts cannot "order any alternative provider
    14                      LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    to provide service or even negotiate with LHOA." Appellants’
    Br. 21, 20.
    We do not agree. The record reveals that an order declaring
    OBL’s exclusivity clauses null and void and enjoining OBL
    from enforcing them would indeed be likely to redress the
    lack of competition and accompanying quality, price, and
    menu of channel harms that LHOA currently suffers. As dis-
    cussed above, Comcast’s franchise agreement with Loudoun
    County requires it to "make Cable Service available to all res-
    idential dwelling units" in the county. Comcast has not ful-
    filled this obligation because its franchise agreement excuses
    the requirement in cases where a development is "subject to
    claimed exclusive arrangements with other providers." Thus,
    once OBL’s exclusivity arrangement is eliminated, so too will
    be Comcast’s reason for declining to provide service to Lans-
    downe. A favorable court ruling here is therefore not only
    "likely" to redress LHOA’s injuries, but will necessarily do
    so. Having successfully established injury-in-fact, causation,
    and redressability, LHOA has standing in this case.6
    B.
    We turn next to a second Article III threshold question:
    whether this dispute is ripe for adjudication. "The doctrine of
    ripeness prevents judicial consideration of issues until a con-
    troversy is presented in clean-cut and concrete form." Miller
    v. Brown, 
    462 F.3d 312
    , 318-19 (4th Cir. 2006) (internal quo-
    6
    LHOA also has associational standing to sue on behalf of its members
    because it introduced at the summary judgment stage two affidavits from
    individual members demonstrating that they suffered injuries in their own
    right. That fact differentiates this case from our decision in Southern Walk
    at Broadlands Homeowner’s Ass’n v. OpenBand at Broadlands, LLC, No.
    12-1331, at *11-13 (4th Cir. Apr. 5, 2013), where we found associational
    standing lacking at the motion to dismiss stage because the complaint did
    not allege any such individual injuries, much less include affidavits to that
    effect. LHOA thus enjoys standing both directly and on behalf of its mem-
    bers.
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                       15
    tation marks omitted). To determine if a case is ripe, we "bal-
    ance the fitness of the issues for judicial decision with the
    hardship to the parties of withholding court consideration." 
    Id. at 319 (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    With respect to the fitness criterion, it is settled that a case
    is "fit for judicial decision when the issues are purely legal
    and when the action in controversy is final and not dependent
    on future uncertainties." 
    Id. OpenBand protests that
    this case
    is not fit for resolution because "there is no proof that OBL
    denied access to its easement or refused to grant a subease-
    ment to anyone." Appellants’ Br. 16. OpenBand asks this
    court to wait to decide this case because OpenBand might yet
    decide in the future to relinquish its claim to the exclusive
    right to provide video services at Lansdowne.
    This argument fails for two reasons. To begin, OpenBand’s
    position is unsupported by the record. The homeowners asso-
    ciation has produced evidence that OpenBand has no intention
    of voluntarily abandoning its exclusivity. As already men-
    tioned, an M.C. Dean executive stated on the record twice that
    OBL would, if asked, deny Verizon access to its easement.
    Another executive testified that the entire purpose of OBL’s
    contractual arrangements was so that "nobody else [would
    have] infrastructure within the community to deliver wireline
    service." Eliminating the exclusive easement, the executive
    stated, would place "our entire business model . . . at risk."
    In the face of these undisputed statements, we find Open-
    Band’s claim of factual uncertainty completely untenable.
    OpenBand’s argument amounts to little more than a formalis-
    tic contrivance. The case is not ripe, it complains, because it
    may at some point in the future gratuitously renounce its
    claim of exclusive access to the development. Yet OpenBand
    has fought this entire litigation to preserve that very exclusiv-
    ity, stating repeatedly on the record that it has no intention of
    giving it up.
    16                  LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    Moreover, even if there were some reason to think that
    OBL might abandon its exclusivity and allow competitors to
    access Lansdowne, that future prospect "would not assist our
    resolution of the" actual issue before this court. Babbitt v.
    United Farm Workers Nat’l Union, 
    442 U.S. 289
    , 301 (1979).
    As noted earlier, the question here is whether OBL’s exclusiv-
    ity clauses, as written, violate the Exclusivity Order. Whether
    OBL enforces those clauses in the future is of no consequence
    because the order declares "any provision in a contract that
    grants [a cable operator] the exclusive right to provide any"
    video service "null and void." Exclusivity Order ¶ 31. Thus,
    whether OBL’s clauses unlawfully grant it the exclusive right
    to provide video service is a legal question that is, in a sense,
    frozen in time: the answer does not change no matter how
    actively or passively OBL chooses to exercise that right.
    Turning to the hardship prong of the ripeness inquiry, we
    find this to be a straightforward case. "The hardship prong is
    measured by the immediacy of the threat and the burden
    imposed on the [plaintiff]." Charter Fed. Sav. Bank v. Office
    of Thrift Supervision, 
    976 F.2d 203
    , 208-09 (4th Cir. 1992).
    Here, the hardship could not be any more immediate: because
    of OBL’s exclusivity, LHOA and its residents are presently
    unable to avail themselves of the quality, price, and menu of
    channel advantages of a competing provider. See 
    Miller, 462 F.3d at 321
    (finding hardship prong satisfied where chal-
    lenged action of the defendants had already caused "immedi-
    ate harm" to plaintiffs).
    So too is the burden imposed substantial. Each day that
    passes without judicial resolution is another day that LHOA
    and its homeowners go without the opportunity to obtain ser-
    vice from a competitor, despite the fact that the Exclusivity
    Order declares that any exclusivity clause "shall be null and
    void." While cable service may not be a matter of life and
    death, it is an important aspect of life for many Americans.
    Consider the plight of Lansdowne homeowner Tim McCoy,
    who, unable to contract with a competing provider and having
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                     17
    already paid OBL for his service, watched the second half of
    the 2012 Super Bowl in a state of apprehension that the video
    feed would freeze at any moment, as had happened before.
    Such homeowner concerns, especially in the absence of any
    need to await further factual developments, render this case
    ripe for our review.
    III.
    Satisfied that Article III poses no obstacle to suit, we next
    consider OpenBand’s argument that LHOA’s claim falls out-
    side the scope of the private right of action conferred by 47
    U.S.C. § 401(b). That provision states: "[i]f any person fails
    or neglects to obey any order of the Commission . . . any party
    injured thereby . . . may apply to the appropriate district court
    of the United States for the enforcement of such order." 47
    U.S.C. § 401(b) (emphasis added).
    The district court held that LHOA may sue under this pro-
    vision, reasoning that the Exclusivity Order qualifies as an
    "order of the Commission" because it "specifically defines the
    rights and obligations that a litigant can enforce." OpenBand
    argues that this was error for two reasons. First, it contends
    that § 401(b) permits enforcement of only adjudicatory
    orders, not rulemaking orders. In the alternative, OpenBand
    asserts that even if § 401(b) permits enforcement of some
    rulemaking orders—viz., those that define the rights and obli-
    gations of litigants—the Exclusivity Order is not such an
    order. Again, however, we find OpenBand’s arguments
    unpersuasive.
    A.
    We begin with the question of whether § 401(b) ever per-
    mits parties to sue for enforcement of FCC rulemaking, as
    opposed to adjudicatory orders. OpenBand suggests that the
    answer is "no" because while the plain terms of § 401(b)
    authorize enforcement of "any order of the Commission," the
    18                 LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    Administrative Procedure Act defines the term "order" to
    mean "the whole or a part of a final disposition . . . of any
    agency in a matter other than rule making," 5 U.S.C. § 551(6)
    (emphasis added).
    We are not persuaded. To begin, the APA’s definition of an
    "order" does not control in this context because § 401(b) pre-
    dates the APA by nearly twelve years, and the APA’s defini-
    tions are only mandatory in the context of the APA itself. See
    5 U.S.C. § 551 (definitions apply "[f]or the purpose of this
    subchapter"). Moreover, as the Ninth Circuit explained in
    Hawaiian 
    Telephone, 827 F.2d at 1271
    , when Congress
    wanted to incorporate APA definitions into the Communica-
    tions Act, it did so expressly—for example, explicitly defin-
    ing the term "adjudication" by reference to the APA three
    times in 47 U.S.C. § 409(a)-(c). That Congress did not do so
    with regard to the term "order" in § 401(b) shows that it did
    not intend for the APA’s limited definition of that term to
    apply here.
    Interpreting the phrase "any order of the Commission" in
    § 401(b) to encompass rulemaking orders also respects the
    venerable principle of statutory construction that "identical
    words and phrases within the same statute should normally be
    given the same meaning." Powerex Corp. v. Reliant Energy
    Servs., Inc., 
    551 U.S. 224
    , 232 (2007). In CBS, Inc. v. United
    States, the Supreme Court construed the exact phrase at issue
    here, "any order of the Commission," to include some FCC
    rulemaking orders in the context of 47 U.S.C. § 402(a), which
    provides a right of action for setting aside an FCC order. 
    316 U.S. 407
    , 416-19 (1942). OpenBand has offered no persuasive
    explanation for why this interpretation of "any order of the
    Commission" should not also apply in the context of § 401(b),
    the immediately prior provision. We thus hold that § 401(b)’s
    right of action to enforce "any order of the Commission" can
    encompass both FCC adjudicatory and rulemaking orders. In
    so holding, we align ourselves with a majority of circuits to
    consider the question. See, e.g., Alltel Tenn., Inc. v. Tenn.
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                    19
    Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 
    913 F.2d 305
    , 308 (6th Cir. 1990);
    Hawaiian Tel. Co. v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 
    827 F.2d 1264
    ,
    1270-72 (9th Cir. 1987). But see New England Tel. & Tel. Co.
    v. Public Utils. Comm’n, 
    742 F.2d 1
    , 4-7 (1st Cir. 1984).
    B.
    Our holding that § 401(b) can extend to rulemaking orders
    does not, however, end the analysis. As we explained in
    CGM, LLC v. Bellsouth Telecommunications, Inc., not all
    rulemaking orders are created equal for purposes of
    § 401(b)’s private right of action; only those that "require[ ]
    a defendant to take concrete actions" may be enforced. 
    664 F.3d 46
    , 53 (4th Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omit-
    ted). The reason for this rule is self-evident: if a rulemaking
    order merely announces agency findings or broad policy con-
    siderations without actually imposing specific obligations on
    identifiable entities, a § 401(b) action to enforce that order
    would present a court with nothing but generic abstractions to
    enforce.
    Thus, for example, in CGM, we rejected a plaintiff’s
    attempt to enforce under § 401(b) a rulemaking order that laid
    out "policy considerations [and] public feedback." 
    Id. at 54. In
    fact, the order at issue in CGM made clear that parties were
    free to voluntarily contract around the relevant FCC rules and
    that state regulatory commissions (not the FCC) had the final
    authority to create binding obligations on the parties. 
    Id. In light of
    these facts, we had no choice but to conclude that the
    plaintiff in CGM had "no rights" and the defendant "no
    duties" under the FCC order involved in that case. 
    Id. at 55. OpenBand
    contends that the same result should obtain here
    because the Exclusivity Order "impose[s] no obligation on
    any named party, confer[s] no rights to any named party, and,
    in fact, name[s] no parties or entities at all." Appellants’ Br.
    25. This argument misses the mark. For one, OpenBand badly
    misconstrues the controlling legal principle by focusing on
    20                      LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    whether the order expressly names the precise parties
    involved in this litigation. No court has taken such a crabbed
    view of the rulemaking orders subject to § 401(b). And for
    good reason. The crucial distinction between adjudication and
    rulemaking is that "adjudications resolve disputes among spe-
    cific individuals in specific cases, whereas rulemaking affects
    the rights of broad classes of unspecified individuals." Yesler
    Terrace Cmty. Council v. Cisneros, 
    37 F.3d 442
    , 448 (9th Cir.
    1994). To require a rulemaking order to expressly (and pre-
    sciently) name the parties in advance would fatally undercut
    the FCC’s power to regulate via general and prospective rules,
    47 U.S.C. § 154(i).
    Consequently, as we explained in CGM, the ultimate test is
    simply whether the FCC order in question sets forth "specific
    rights and obligations of the[ ] 
    litigants." 664 F.3d at 54
    . The
    Exclusivity Order satisfies this test. The order identifies the
    precise actions that OpenBand is prohibited from taking: no
    "operator of an open video system" may "enforce or execute
    any provision in a contract" granting it the "exclusive right to
    provide any video programming service." Exclusivity Order
    ¶ 51, 31. It defines OpenBand’s rights in such exclusivity
    clauses accordingly: "[a]ny such exclusivity clause shall be
    null and void." 
    Id. ¶ 31. The
    order likewise identifies the
    rights of LHOA and homeowners as part of a "centrally man-
    aged residential real estate development[ ]" that shall not be
    the subject of any exclusivity clause. 
    Id. ¶ 7, 31.
    We therefore
    hold that the Exclusivity Order is sufficiently specific in
    defining the "rights and obligations of these litigants" to be
    enforceable under § 401(b). 
    CGM, 664 F.3d at 54.7
      7
    We also find OpenBand’s statute of limitations argument to be without
    merit, as "[s]tatutes of limitations are not controlling measures of equitable
    relief." Holmberg v. Armbrecht, 
    327 U.S. 392
    , 396 (1946). In this case,
    equitable relief is all that the homeowners association has sought.
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                    21
    IV.
    We arrive at last at the question of whether the challenged
    clauses in the easement, CC&Rs, and TSA actually run afoul
    of the FCC’s order. Resolving this question involves two-
    steps. First, we must decide whether OBL is an "open video
    system operator" such that its agreements are subject to the
    order to begin with. Exclusivity Order ¶ 51. If it is, we must
    then ask whether the challenged clauses are "provision[s] in
    a contract" granting OBL an "exclusive right to provide"
    video service in violation of the order. 
    Id. ¶ 31. OpenBand
    asserts that the answer to both of these questions
    is "no," but its arguments as to why ring hollow. OBL seeks
    first to evade the FCC’s definition of an "open video system
    operator" by structuring its business operations among several
    related, interlocking entities in a kind of elaborate corporate
    shell game. OBL likewise seeks to avoid the Exclusivity
    Order’s flat prohibition on exclusivity clauses in any contract
    by splitting up its exclusive arrangement into an assortment of
    interconnected sub-agreements and placing its critical exclu-
    sivity provisions in a deed of easement that it contends is not
    a "contract" reached by the FCC’s proscription. For the rea-
    sons that follow, we reject both of these efforts to circumvent
    the plain terms of the Exclusivity Order.
    A.
    We start with the question of whether OBL is an operator
    of an "open video system," or "OVS," within the meaning of
    the FCC’s order. The answer matters because the order ren-
    ders null and void exclusivity clauses that are entered into by
    "entities that are subject to [47 U.S.C. § 548]," among which
    OVS operators are included. Exclusivity Order ¶ 30, 51; 47
    U.S.C. § 573(c)(1)(A) (stating that OVS operators are subject
    to § 548). Our inquiry is limited to whether OBL satisfies the
    definition of an OVS operator because OBL is the only
    defendant-appellant that is party to the agreements at issue.
    22                  LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    To decide whether OBL is an OVS operator, we begin with
    the applicable regulatory definition. The FCC has defined an
    "[o]pen video system operator" to include:
    Any person [defined by 47 U.S.C. § 522(15) to
    include corporations] or group of persons who pro-
    vides cable service over an open video system and
    directly or through one or more affiliates owns a sig-
    nificant interest in such open video system, or other-
    wise controls or is responsible for the management
    and operation of such an open video system.
    47 C.F.R. § 76.1500(b). Openband does not dispute that OBL
    satisfies most of this definition. Its sole contention is that
    OBL cannot be said to "provide[ ] cable service" either as a
    "person" in its own right or as part of a "group of persons."
    47 C.F.R. § 76.1500(b). The district court ruled against OBL
    in both respects, and we agree for the reasons below.
    1.
    OpenBand argues first that OBL is not itself a "person"
    who "provides cable service" because the cable service in
    question is actually that of its affiliate, OpenBand Multime-
    dia, or "OBM", who OpenBand concedes is an FCC-certified
    OVS operator. OpenBand therefore contends that it is only
    OBM who "provides" cable service to LHOA and the home-
    owners; OBL merely "arranged for the provision of" that ser-
    vice by purchasing it from OBM and reselling it to Lans-
    downe. Appellants’ Br. 8.
    We cannot accept OpenBand’s argument. To start, because
    neither Congress nor the FCC have defined the term "pro-
    vide," we give the term its ordinary meaning. See Schindler
    Elevator Corp. v. United States ex rel. Kirk, 
    131 S. Ct. 1885
    ,
    1891 (2011). The ordinary meaning of "provide" is "to make
    available" or to "furnish." Random House Dictionary of the
    English Language 1556 (2d ed. 1987). OBL satisfies this defi-
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                      23
    nition because it is undisputed that OBM sells video service
    to OBL, which then uses its own connection lines, cables, and
    other infrastructure to transmit that video into Lansdowne,
    thereby "making available" or "furnishing" it to homeowners.
    OpenBand’s argument to the contrary is premised on the
    misguided view that the entity that is the initial link in a chain
    of delivery is the only one that can be said to "provide" the
    thing delivered. But that is not what "provide" means: if
    Angela tells Bob how to drive to the park, and Bob relays
    those instructions to Carmen, all would agree that Bob, no
    less than Angela (and perhaps more) has "provided" instruc-
    tions to Carmen. Furthermore, OpenBand’s argument refutes
    itself, since OBM (who OpenBand admits provides cable ser-
    vice) is not actually the initial link in the delivery chain—
    OBM instead contracts with video content providers who
    deliver programming that OBM in turn transmits to OBL. We
    therefore hold that OBL qualifies as an OVS operator under
    47 C.F.R. § 76.1500(b) because it is itself an entity that "pro-
    vides" cable service.
    2.
    Alternatively, even if OBL is not itself a person that "pro-
    vides" cable service, it is undoubtedly part of a "group of per-
    sons" that does. 47 C.F.R. § 76.1500(b). In defining an OVS
    operator to include not just individual entities, but also groups
    of entities that provide cable service, the FCC’s definition
    appears to envision precisely this type of scenario, where a
    corporate parent like M.C. Dean divides up the functions of
    an OVS operator across its subsidiaries such as OBM and
    OBL. Thus, as already described, OBM is able to deliver
    video to OBL’s end customers in Lansdowne only by using
    OBL’s physical infrastructure. OBM also has no direct con-
    tact with those customers; it is instead OBL who has con-
    tracted with customers to resell OBM’s services. OBL and
    OBM thus operate together, functionally and contractually, in
    an integrated manner as a "group of persons who provides
    24                  LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    cable service over an open video system," 47 C.F.R.
    § 76.1500(b).
    OpenBand responds that treating OBL and OBM together
    as an OVS operator under the "group of persons" prong of the
    FCC’s definition proves too much because under such an
    approach, "LHOA and its members also are OVS operators."
    Appellants’ Reply Br. 19. OpenBand is mistaken. For one
    thing, LHOA and its homeowners are not a part of the same
    "group of persons" as OBM and OBL because unlike OBM
    and OBL, LHOA and the homeowners are not affiliated sub-
    sidiaries of M.C. Dean. For another, there is no evidence that
    LHOA or its homeowners satisfy the definitional requirement
    of "own[ing] a significant interest" in the OVS. 47 C.F.R.
    § 76.1500(b). Nor is there any evidence that LHOA or the
    homeowners somehow "control[ ]" or are "responsible for the
    management and operation" of the OVS. 
    Id. Put simply, there
    is no reason to read the FCC’s "group of persons" definition
    of an OVS operator so broadly as to sweep up individual
    homeowners; the definition is instead designed to fit exactly
    the kind of division of labor that exists here between corpo-
    rate affiliates like OBL and OBM.
    3.
    OpenBand tosses up one final contention as to why OBL
    should not be bound by the Exclusivity Order: that the regula-
    tory definition of an OVS operator in 47 C.F.R. § 76.1500(b)
    does not matter anyway. This is so, OpenBand suggests,
    because 47 U.S.C. § 573(a)(1) directs OVS operators to
    obtain certification from the FCC. Thus, in OpenBand’s view,
    "only an entity that has received [such] certification can be an
    open video system operator." Appellants’ Br. 34 n.14.
    Yet again, OpenBand is mistaken. Its error this time is to
    ignore the obvious difference between a definition and a duty.
    The statutory obligation that an entity should certify with the
    FCC as an OVS operator is plainly the latter: 47 U.S.C.
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                    25
    § 573(a)(1) does not purport to define what an OVS operator
    is, but rather identifies something that an OVS operator
    should do. Thus, § 573(a)(1) states that "[a]n operator of an
    open video system shall qualify for reduced regulatory bur-
    dens . . . if the operator of such system certifies to the Com-
    mission that [it] complies with the Commission’s
    regulations."
    Moreover, to read § 573(a)(1)’s certification requirement as
    somehow delimiting the kinds of entities that constitute an
    OVS operator would lead to absurd results. It would permit,
    for example, an entity to avoid all regulations applicable to
    OVS operators simply by refusing to certify with the FCC. In
    addition to defying logic, such a result cannot be squared with
    the text of the very statute that OpenBand relies on, which
    entitles an "operator of an open video system" to "qualify for
    reduced regulatory burdens" if it certifies with the FCC, not
    more. 47 U.S.C. § 573(a)(1) (emphasis added).
    In sum, we reject OpenBand’s attempt to circumvent the
    FCC’s definition of an OVS operator. OpenBand’s arguments
    hinge, at bottom, on the belief that it can evade unambiguous
    federal regulations by playing a shell game in which it divides
    up corporate functions so that one entity obtains certification
    from the FCC as an OVS operator, while a separate entity
    enters into otherwise-unlawful exclusivity agreements. We
    reject the notion that the Exclusivity Order may be defeated
    through such a meaningless expedient. To allow that outcome
    would create a blueprint for regulatory circumvention, effec-
    tively enabling every OVS operator to engage in exactly the
    kind of exclusive access arrangement that the FCC found to
    deter competition and cause consumers considerable harm.
    We decline OpenBand’s invitation to be a party to that result.
    B.
    Having decided that OBL is an OVS operator bound by the
    FCC order, we consider finally whether OBL’s arrangements
    26                  LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    contravene that order. We start with the language of the order,
    which states that no OVS operator "shall enforce or execute
    any provision in a contract that grants it the exclusive right to
    provide any video programming service (alone or in combina-
    tion with other services) to a MDU. Any such exclusivity
    clause shall be null and void." Exclusivity Order ¶ 31. Open-
    Band has conceded, at various points, that most of this defini-
    tion is satisfied. OpenBand does not dispute, for instance, that
    Lansdowne is an MDU protected by the order. OpenBand also
    admitted before the district court that its easement (though not
    the TSA) "effectively bar[s] other providers of wired services
    from Lansdowne." Defs.’ Br. in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss 22.
    Notwithstanding these concessions, OpenBand claims that
    it has not violated the Exclusivity Order. Its argument
    involves two steps. First, OpenBand asserts that each of the
    challenged arrangements—the TSA, CC&Rs, and easement—
    should be segregated and considered separately from one
    another before determining whether any of them actually vio-
    lates the order. Second, OpenBand contends that none of the
    individual agreements actually does so. As we explain further
    below, OpenBand is incorrect at both steps of its reasoning.
    1.
    We shall first consider whether the TSA, CC&Rs, and
    easement should be considered separately for the purpose of
    determining whether the agreements include exclusivity
    clauses that run afoul of the order. OpenBand argues that we
    must consider these arrangements in isolation. This is because
    the order applies to exclusivity provisions contained in a
    "contract," and, by evaluating each agreement separately,
    OpenBand hopes to cordon off the exclusivity clauses in the
    easement (which it claims is not a contract), and focus the
    court’s attention instead on the TSA (which it concedes is a
    contract, only one that it says contains no exclusivity clause).
    OpenBand’s divide-and-conquer approach must be exposed
    for what it really is: a sleight of hand designed to preserve
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                    27
    precisely the type of anti-competitive video monopoly that the
    FCC sought to prohibit. We decline to permit this machina-
    tion for a straightforward reason: under Virginia law, "con-
    temporaneous written agreements executed as part of the
    same transaction will be construed together as forming one
    contract." Va. Hous. Dev. Auth. v. Fox Run Ltd., 
    497 S.E.2d 747
    , 752 (Va. 1998) (internal quotation mark omitted); see
    James v. Circuit City Stores, Inc., 
    370 F.3d 417
    , 421-22 (4th
    Cir. 2004) ("[I]nterpretation of private contracts is a question
    of state law."). The TSA, CC&Rs, and easement easily satisfy
    this standard because they were each entered into within a
    short window of time in 2001, and each concerns the same
    basic transaction: OBL’s agreement to provide telecommuni-
    cations services to Lansdowne.
    That the documents were designed to function together as
    a single agreement is further confirmed by the fact that the
    terms of each document "clearly contemplate the application
    of terms in the other[s]," such that the terms "may be viewed
    together as representing the complete agreement of the par-
    ties." Va. Hous. Dev. 
    Auth., 497 S.E.2d at 752-53
    . Indeed, the
    very thing that ties the agreements together is OpenBand’s
    unabashed desire to secure exclusive access to the develop-
    ment. For example, the CC&Rs incorporate the terms of the
    easement, confirming that OBL enjoys "exclusive easements
    for access to and the installation [and] operation" of telecom-
    munications systems. As discussed, the easement promises
    OBL the sole right to build and operate video infrastructure
    in Lansdowne such that "no other person or entity shall be
    entitled to" do the same. And tying together the entire
    arrangement, the TSA explicitly incorporates the terms of the
    CC&Rs by forbidding LHOA to "amend the CC&Rs such that
    the amendment would . . . have a materially adverse effect on
    OBL." Significantly, it is undisputed that if LHOA were to
    amend its CC&Rs to permit it to grant an easement to another
    video provider, that would have a "materially adverse effect"
    on OBL and therefore breach the TSA.
    28                  LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    Thus, considering the TSA, CC&Rs, and easement together
    as the single, intertwining contract that it actually is, we have
    no difficulty concluding that it contains provisions granting
    OBL the "exclusive right to provide" video service to Lans-
    downe, in violation of the order. Exclusivity Order ¶ 31. As
    noted earlier, the purpose and effect of the agreement is to bar
    competing cable video providers from delivering service to
    the development by preventing them from ever building the
    infrastructure necessary to reach Lansdowne in the first place.
    See ante at 10-11. Thus, the provisions are among the type
    that the FCC identified as the "most exclusionary exclusivity
    clauses," as they "prohibit any other [provider] from any
    access whatsoever to the premises." 
    Id. ¶ 1 n.2.
    All of the
    clauses effectuating this exclusive video arrangement are
    therefore "null and void." 
    Id. ¶ 31. 2.
    Even if we were to agree with OpenBand that the easement,
    CC&Rs, and TSA should be evaluated separately under the
    Exclusivity Order, we would nevertheless conclude that each
    agreement is independently a contract containing exclusivity
    provisions prohibited under the order.
    With regard to the easement at the crux of this dispute,
    OpenBand raises a variety of arguments for why it does not
    violate the Exclusivity Order when considered in isolation.
    First, OpenBand argues that the order does not apply to exclu-
    sivity clauses in easements because easements are not con-
    tracts. As an initial matter, this argument is forfeited because
    OpenBand failed to argue it in the district court. Muth v.
    United States, 
    1 F.3d 246
    , 250 (4th Cir. 1993). In fact, Open-
    Band actually conceded the opposite before the district court,
    admitting that it is "undisputed" that "easements are con-
    tracts." Defs.’ Reply in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss 18; see also
    Tr. of Summ. J. Hr’g 26 (admitting that OpenBand "ha[s] a
    contractual provision in the form of a real property agreement
    that provides an exclusive right of enjoyment of the prop-
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                      29
    erty"). Moreover, even if we were to consider the argument
    on appeal, we would find OpenBand’s initial concession cor-
    rect: a deed of easement is a contract. See Cantrell v. Appala-
    chian Power Co., 
    139 S.E. 247
    , 248-49 (Va. 1927)
    (describing document granting an easement as a "contract");
    see also, e.g., United States v. Sea Gate, Inc., 
    397 F. Supp. 1351
    , 1360 (E.D.N.C. 1975) ("[A] deed creating an easement
    by express reservation is a contract.").
    Undeterred, OpenBand next argues that the Exclusivity
    Order is not meant to interfere with easements because the
    order is "explicit in limiting its reach to exclusivity clauses in
    contracts for video services, not real property rights." Appel-
    lants’ Br. 31. Specifically, OpenBand points to Paragraph 37
    of the Exclusivity Order, which states that "the rule we adopt
    today does not require that any new entrant be given access
    to any MDU. A MDU owner still retains the rights it has
    under relevant state law to deny [access to] a particular pro-
    vider." But this paragraph quite obviously does not assist
    OpenBand’s position because it protects the right of property
    owners to deny a cable provider access to their property, not
    the right of a cable provider to exclude its competitors. Nor
    is OpenBand aided by its reliance on Paragraphs 55 and 57 of
    the order, which state that the order "does not involve the per-
    manent condemnation of physical property" and that video
    providers need not "jettison" use of their existing wires. Those
    provisions simply make clear that video providers are not
    required to give up or affirmatively share their existing infra-
    structure; the provisions in no way permit providers to com-
    pletely exclude their competitors from accessing a property.
    OpenBand’s contention that the FCC’s order does not
    extend to easements is also considerably undermined by the
    fact that the order specifically references two easements,
    attached to comments filed by AT&T, as "examples of exclu-
    sion." Exclusivity Order ¶ 10 & n.27. It would have been odd
    —to say the least—for the FCC to refer to two exclusive ease-
    30                  LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    ments as illustrations of exclusivity clauses if, as OpenBand
    asserts, the FCC in fact intended not to reach such easements.
    Nor can OpenBand defend the illogical result that would
    arise were we to accept its position that easements are exempt
    from the order. If OpenBand is correct, any cable provider
    would be able to frustrate the FCC’s unequivocal prohibition
    on exclusivity clauses simply by structuring its exclusive
    arrangement in the form of an easement. An exception of such
    huge proportions would render the FCC’s order nugatory, the
    dangers of which this very case makes clear.
    OpenBand makes one last argument for why the easement
    does not violate the FCC’s order. Retreating from its prior
    admission that the easement bars access by other cable pro-
    viders, OpenBand argues now on appeal that the easement
    does not "absolutely" bar access to Lansdowne after all
    because "OBL has the right to grant subeasements." Appel-
    lants’ Br. 30. To begin, this argument is also forfeited because
    OpenBand never raised it in the district court. 
    Muth, 1 F.3d at 250
    . Moreover, even if not forfeited, the argument is belied
    by the record, for OpenBand has never represented that it
    would grant a subeasement to a competitor of its own good
    will. In point of fact, as already mentioned, an M.C. Dean
    executive testified in a deposition that, "would we object to
    [Verizon] coming into the community and running their infra-
    structure? I would say that we would."
    Finally, even if the argument were not forfeited, and even
    if it were supported by the record, we would reject it in any
    event. The mere fact that OBL may voluntarily relinquish its
    exclusivity by granting a subeasement cannot mean that the
    easement is untouched by the FCC order. If that were so, the
    FCC order would never render any exclusivity clause null and
    void, since a party could always theoretically give up its claim
    of exclusivity. But that is not how the FCC order is written:
    the order instead prohibits "any provision in a contract that
    grants it the exclusive right to provide" video services to an
    LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND                            31
    MDU. Exclusivity Order ¶ 31 (emphasis added). The ease-
    ment grants OBL exactly that right, regardless of its future
    intentions. All provisions in the easement granting OBL the
    exclusive right to provide video services are therefore null
    and void, as are any such clauses in the TSA and CC&Rs.8
    V.
    In seeking to defend its exclusive access arrangement,
    OpenBand has engaged in what amounts to an elaborate game
    of regulatory subterfuge featuring an array of procedural
    defenses, the use of various corporate entities to escape the
    definition of an OVS operator, and an artifice to evade the
    FCC order by structuring its exclusive arrangement using a
    web of sub-agreements. The district court correctly pierced
    these arguments to recognize that OpenBand had set up just
    the kind of non-competitive video service monopoly—with
    all the attendant dangers of high prices and poor service—that
    the FCC banned in the Exclusivity Order. We accordingly
    affirm the grant of summary judgment in LHOA’s favor.
    Furthermore, lest there be any doubt, we underscore that in
    declaring null and void and enjoining enforcement of all
    exclusivity clauses in the challenged agreements as those
    clauses relate to the provision of wire-based cable services,
    the district court’s order renders the clauses unenforceable
    against the homeowners association and individual homeown-
    ers alike. To endorse a contrary result would be to foster the
    very anti-competitive injuries in terms of price, quality, and
    8
    Thus, for example, the TSA expressly provides that LHOA "shall not
    engage any other provider of Platform services." In addition, as explained
    above, the TSA contains a clause that guarantees OBL exclusive access to
    Lansdowne by preventing LHOA from amending its CC&Rs to permit
    other cable providers from building infrastructure in the development. The
    CC&Rs similarly provide that OBL’s "rights with respect to the private
    utility system . . . and the services provided through such private utility
    system are exclusive, and no other Person may provide such services to
    the Property."
    32                  LANSDOWNE v. OPENBAND
    choice of service that prompted the FCC to enact the Exclu-
    sivity Order in the first place.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court
    is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12-1925

Citation Numbers: 713 F.3d 187

Judges: Motz, Thacker, Wilkinson

Filed Date: 4/5/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023

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