Akers v. Papst

113 F.2d 136, 27 C.C.P.A. 1400, 46 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 211, 1940 CCPA LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 8, 1940
DocketNo. 4342
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 113 F.2d 136 (Akers v. Papst) 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
Akers v. Papst, 113 F.2d 136, 27 C.C.P.A. 1400, 46 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 211, 1940 CCPA LEXIS 144 (ccpa 1940).

Opinion

Lenroot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an interference proceeding wherein the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirmed a decision of the Examiner of Interferences. awarding .to appellee priority of the. invention described in the single count of the interference, which count reads as follows:

A door lock including an outside handle retractable into and projectable from a recess in the outer side of a door to which said lock is applied, yieldable means exerting a constant force tending to project said outside handle from said recess, an inside handle, means for releasably holding said outside handle in retracted position against the action of said yieldable means, and means connecting said handles to retract said outside handle by operation of said inside handle and to release said holding means to permit said yieldable means to project said outside handle independently of said connecting means.

Appellant’s application was filed, on December 28,1933. Appellee’s application was filed on June 27, 1935.

It appears that in a decision of the Primary Examiner upon a motion to shift the burden of proof appellee was held to be entitled, [1401]*1401under the provisions of section 4887, R. S., to the filing date, December 16, 1982, of his German application for conception and constructive reduction to practice of the invention. This ruling is not challenged by appellant.

The subject matter of the invention involved is primarily a door lock for automobiles and is sufficiently described in the quoted count.

It appears that originally there were three other parties to the interference. Two of them seem to have been eliminated prior ro final hearing; the, reasons for their elimination do not appear in the record.

Upon final hearing before the Examiner of Interferences there were three parties, viz, the parties herein and a party Elliott and Hudson. This last named, party did not appeal to, the Board of Appeals from the decision of the Examiner of Interferences awarding priority of invention to appellee.

Of the parties involved in this appeal only the appellant took testimony, appellee relying upon his German filing date as aforesaid.

The Examiner of Interferences held that appellant had not established conception of the invention prior to appellee’s German filing date, and therefore awarded priority of invention to appellee.

' Appellant testified that he was a retired steamboat captain and had made a number of inventions prior to his' claimed conception of. the invention here involved; that in the early part of 1930 he conceived a structure that would function to retract the outside handle of a door into a recess in the face of the door and project the same from said recess, operative through a handle on the inside of the door, and that said outside handle,, when retracted into said, recess, could be projected therefrom by means of a key inserted into the lock from the outside of the door. He testified that he was then without means or income, but had a little shop in the basement of his home where he constructed by hand a model of the invention, which functioned successfully in accordance with his conception. There was introduced in evidence Akers’ Exhibit No. 2. With respect to this exhibit the Examiner of Interferences in his decision stated:

The party Akers testified that he built a lock in 1980 and identifies Ex. 2 as the frame used at that time. The frame in its present condition does not embody a complete lock, but merely has a few parts which presumably are parts of a complete lock. Akers testified that some of the parts of the original lock were used in a device built subsequently in 1983 (Akers Rec. p. 15, Q. 61) and that some of the parts were junked (Akers Rec. p. 16, Q. 66).

Regarding the operation of this exhibit as originally constructed, appellant testified as follows:

Q. 34. Captain Akers, will you please describe to us the operation of the lock which you say you built in 1930, and installed in the wooden door of your exhibit two? — A. It was manufactured and built so that the outside handle [1402]*1402on tile door, was encased in a recess in tlie face of the door, so that when the handle was enclosed into that recess, it became flush with the face of the door. The handle on the inside, by turning it in one direction it first ejected the handle on the outside, and then by the continuation of that movement of the inside handle, it released the latch bolt or lock bolt that allowed the door to be swung- open, all in one continuous movement of the handle from the inside. Then when you got in the car and closed the door from the inside, with the inside handle, it pulled that handle into the recess. The same handle had a latch on it which caused it to become locked when the door was closed. The outside handle also had a flat spring arranged so that the first movement in opening the door, the first movement released the latch.in that handle and and a flat spring which was bearing on the base end of the handle flopped the handle out. Also when you operated the inside handle to close the door, the outside handle would press that spring- and carry it in so that the handle would be in the flush position.
Q. 35. Were you able to remove the outside handle from its recess, by operation from the outside? — A. You were by the means of the key lock that was embodied in the model. In other words, when you were on the outside, the only way that handle could be opened, was by means of a key which allowed you to liberate that catch on the outside handle, and the spring1 naturally flopped it out.
Q. 36. Captain Akers, you testified that when you rotated the inside handle in one direction, you first released the outside handle so that it flopped out of its recess under the impulse of a spring? — A. Yes sir.
Q. 37. And that thereafter the latch bolt was retracted by the continuous movement of the handle. Now with the outside handle out of the recess, will-you explain more fully how the outside handle could be brought into its recess by the operation of the inside handle, in a different way? — A. Well, it was very simple in the manner that the connections on the inside of the model were such that when you turned the handle from the inside, you turned it in the opposite direction from what you did in opening the door, and detracting- the outside handle as it pulled the outside handle and latched it.
Q. 38. In other words, by a rotation of the handle in a direction reverse to that of releasing the outside handle, you pulled the outside handle in? — A. Yes sir.

Appellant further testified that he showed his model in 1930 to members of his family and to two other persons who saw the handle and lock operate. "With regard to this disclosure appellant testified:

Q. 45. Did you operate the lock and did it work properly in this year of 1930, when you showed it to these witnesses? — A. Yes sir.
Q. 46. Did you slam the door shut, and did the lock bolt operate, and did the handle function properly all this time? — A. Yes sir. The others, in each- and every case, if they wouldn’t do it of their own volition, I would request them to operate it both ways, and slam the door, and they did it many times.

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113 F.2d 136, 27 C.C.P.A. 1400, 46 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 211, 1940 CCPA LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/akers-v-papst-ccpa-1940.