Adams and Wakefield v. Wolinski

285 F.2d 133, 48 C.C.P.A. 774
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 3, 1961
DocketSpecial Patent Appeal 95
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 285 F.2d 133 (Adams and Wakefield v. Wolinski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams and Wakefield v. Wolinski, 285 F.2d 133, 48 C.C.P.A. 774 (ccpa 1961).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

The above entitled appeal arose out of a three-party interference, No. 87,508, which was entitled in the Patent Office, Keller, Garvin and McMillan v. Wolinski v. Adams and Wakefield. 1 Priority was awarded to Wolinski by the Board of Patent Interferences on July 25, I960. 2 September 20 Adams and Wakefield appealed to this court. Keller et al. did nothing until October 10 when they filed in the Patent Office their “Election Under 35 USC 141,” saying that they elected “to have all further proceedings conducted as provided in 35 USC 146.” It will be observed that this notice was filed more than the 60 days after the board’s decision allowed for taking an appeal, but within the 20 days after the taking of the appeal to this court by Adams et al., the latter period being that specified in 35 U.S.C. § 141.

In a two-party interference when the winner in the Patent Office, who is in the position of appellee in an appeal to this court by the loser, elects to go to a District Court under 35 U.S.C. §§ 141, 146, this court dismisses the appeal as a matter of course upon being advised of the filing of the notice of election. Had Wolinski, the winner in this case, elected to go to the District Court, we should no doubt have dismissed. Wolinski, however, made no such election and expressly desires that the review of the decision of priority in his favor shall be by this court.

Keller et al., who, like Adams et al., could have appealed to this court within 60 days of the board decision, did not do so. By the provisions of the statute and Patent Office rule their right to review by appeal was therefore lost. Within the *135 same 60 day period Keller et al. could have initiated an action in the District Court under 35 U.S.C. § 146. They did not do so. Had Adams et al. not appealed to this court, Keller et al. would therefore have had no right to a review of the award of priority against them, either by appeal or by civil action in a District Court. By their purported notice of election, however, they now seek to force the review, initiated by the other losing party, into the District Court against the combined opposition of appellant Adams et al. and appellee Wolinski, and to participate in that trial de novo.

The question now before us, taking one view of the matter, is whether the Adams et al. appeal to this court acted to extend, by the 20 days referred to in 35 U.S.C. § 141, the time within which the other losing party, Keller et al., could seek a review in the District Court. Taking another view, Adams et al. having appealed and Keller et al. having done nothing within the 60 day period, the question is whether Wolinski is the only one who can “elect,” under section 141, to have all further proceedings conducted under section 146, or whether Keller et al. can now force them into the District Court against their wills.

These questions are formally raised by three complementary motions in this court. The first motion is that of Adams et al., filed November 14, 1960, asking that we refuse to dismiss their appeal to us. Wolinski, by a statement filed November 18, concurred in that request. The second motion is by Wolinski, filed December 13, asking us to strike from the files of this appeal the Keller et al. election and to adjudge Keller et al. to be without standing in this appeal. The third motion, filed December 20, is by Keller et al. asking us to dismiss the appeal of Adams et al. “pursuant to the Notice of Election filed with the Commissioner of Patents on October 10, 1960, under the provisions of Section 141 of Title 35 U.S.C.” Extensive memoranda support the motions. Obviously the basic issue is whether we will dismiss the appeal to this court by Adams et al.

Keller et al. rely primarily on a literal construction of the language of 35 U.S.C. § 141 which provides for the dismissal of an appeal to this court “if any adverse party to such interference” (our emphasis) files a notice of election. Keller et al. say they are an “adverse party,” that they timely filed a notice of election and that if we do not dismiss we are legislating “contrary to the expressed purpose, intent and language of the statute.” They say that legislative history and court decisions clearly indicate the purpose of Congress to allow “any defeated applicant in an interference” to have an appeal to this court dismissed and to require his “adversary” to resort to a civil action but they refer to no history or case so indicating.

Wolinski, the winner below and appellee here, argues that the Keller et al. notice of election is “a null, void and meaningless document.” He further contends that Keller et al., as a defeated party which took no steps within 60 days to obtain review of the decision adverse to it, has no standing in these subsequent proceedings. Precedents relied on include Wheeler et al. v. Kleinsehmidt et al, 149 F.2d 161, 32 CCPA 975, Beall v. Ormsby, 154 F.2d 663, 33 CCPA 959, Thompson v. Dunn et al., 166 F.2d 443, 35 CCPA 957, and Island Road Bottling Co. v. Drink-Mor Beverage Co., 132 F.2d 129, 30 CCPA 708, all for the general proposition that defeated parties who do not appeal to this court are not parties and have no standing in this court to control its actions. The precedent principally relied on, however, is Nelson v. Berry et al., 59 F.2d 351, 352, 19 CCPA 1270.

There appears to be no prior case on all fours with this one, perhaps for the reason suggested by Wolinski that “no' defeated interferant in a three-party interference has ever been known to run the risks inherent in failing to take positive action to seek review within the limit of appeal provided by law.”

In Nelson v. Berry et al., the closest precedent we know of, one Jardine who had been a party along with Nelson and Berry et al. (in fact he seems to have *136 been the “et al.”) in two of four interferences involved in the appeal, did not appeal to this court- and the court said “he cannot be regarded as a party to the appeal before us.” Jardine had, however, brought suit under R.S. § 4915 in those two interferences and then attempted to move this court (seeking to that extent to be treated as a party) to stay its proceedings on appeal therein. Nelson and Berry both objected, as Adams et al. and Wolinski are objecting here, saying that Jardine had no right to move in this court because he was not a party to the appeals.

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Bluebook (online)
285 F.2d 133, 48 C.C.P.A. 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-and-wakefield-v-wolinski-ccpa-1961.