Angell v. Angell

69 F.2d 646, 21 C.C.P.A. 1018
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1934
DocketNo. 3276; No. 3277
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 69 F.2d 646 (Angell v. Angell) 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
Angell v. Angell, 69 F.2d 646, 21 C.C.P.A. 1018 (ccpa 1934).

Opinion

LenRoot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

These are cross-appeals in an interference proceeding involving-four counts. The interference is between an application of the party Morin, filed December 7, 1928, and the application of the party Angelí, filed December 10, 1928. Morin is, therefore, the senior party, and the burden was upon Angelí to establish priority' of invention by a preponderance of evidence.

The claim corresponding to count 1 is for an apparatus, and the claims corresponding to counts 2, 3, and 4 are process claims.

The Board of Appeals affirmed the decision of the Examiner of Interferences, awarding priority of invention to Morin as to count 1 and to Angelí as to counts 2, 3, and 4. Angelí has appealed from so much of the decision of the board as awards priority to Morin upon count 1, and Morin has appealed from so much of said decision as awards priority of invention to Angelí upon counts 2, 3, and 4.

The invention in issue relates to the production of flexible shafting, which is usually composed of a plurality of layers of wire strands helically wound about a central straight wire known as a mandrel or core. In shafting having more than one layer, the wire strands of succeeding layers are wound in opposite directions. The component wires of the shafting are spring wire, and, when the finished shafting is cut for use, the resiliency of the wires, especially the [1020]*1020outer layer, creates a tendency of the helices to unwind and separate ''longitudinally of the shaft. Several means to overcome,this tendency were known to the prior art, but the particular means which is the subject of the invention here involved is the passing of the fabricated shafting through a rotary swager and swaging it through its entire length, these swaging blows, when applied with proper force, having the effect of setting the outer layer so that it will not open up when cut.

Both parties took testimony. The preliminary statements of both parties treated all the counts as covering a single invention. Morin alleged conception of the invention during the month of December 1926, disclosure of the invention to others during the same month, and reduction to practice on November 8, 1928. Angelí alleged conception of the invention on or about April 10, 1923, disclosure of the invention to others on or about the same day, and reduction to practice on or about April 24, 1923.

Morin is in the employ of the American Flexible Shaft Manufacturing Corporation, and Angelí is in the employ of the S. S. White Dental Manufacturing Company, both of which concerns manufacture flexible shafting.

The foregoing is applicable to all of the counts, but the issues relative to count 1 differ from the issues relating to the other counts, and we will therefore consider the cross-appeals separately.

Affeal No. S£76

This appeal involves count 1 only, and Angelí has appealed from the decision of the Board of Appeals awarding priority of invention thereon to Morin. The count reads as follows:

1. In a machine for the manufacture of flexible shafting the combination of core pay out means, strand feeding and winding mechanism, and a swaging device disposed beyond the winding mechanism, said swaging device comprising opposed dies embracing the fabricated shaft as it progresses, and means surrounding said dies for rapidly reciprocating them and effecting a hammering action on the coils of said shaft.

The first question arising upon this count is the construction thereof. Angelí contends that the words “ disposed beyond the winding mechanism ” should be interpreted in their broadest sense as meaning outside of the capacity or outside of the limits or sphere of the winding mechanism. Interpreted in this sense, Angelí contends that he was the first to conceive the invention embraced in the count and the first to reduce it to practice. The testimony shows Angell’s claimed reduction to practice ivas obtained with a winding machine and a swaging machine, which were in separate rooms.

[1021]*1021Upon, tlie question of the construction of the count the Board of Appeals in its decision said:

It appears that the party Angelí was not the first to assemble a swaging means with a shaft-winding means, but this party contends that since he was the first to swage a previously wound flexible shafting made on another machine, count 1 reads upon his operation because of the limitation that the swaging device is disposed Veyo-ncl the winding mechanism. The claim clearly calls for a machine and we consider that the use of separate machines does not respond to the terms of the claim and that the ruling of the Examiner of Interferences with respect to this claim was correct.

The party Angelí contends that the board erred in so limiting the count, and invokes the rule that counts in interference should be given the broadest construction that their language will reasonably permit. This is an apparatus count, and it describes a machine having certain specified elements, among them “a swaging device disposed beyond the winding mechanism.” It would be most unreasonable to hold that a swaging machine in another room, wholly separate and apart from the winding machine, is within the meaning of the count. It is conceded by both parties that winding machines were old, and that swaging machines were old, and it is clear that, under the broad construction given the count by Angelí, the count would not be patentable. Both the Examiner of Interferences and the Board of Appeals construed the count to mean that the swaging device must be combined with the winding mechanism in a machine. In other words, they gave to the count its narrower construction, and properly so.

We would observe that count 1 was suggested by the Primary Examiner for purposes of interference, and, as construed by the board and the Examiner of Interferences, it clearly reads upon the applications of both parties.

The examiner found that Angelí was the first to conceive the invention embraced in the count, but that he did not actually reduce it to practice, and that he was entitled to his filing date of December 10, 1928, for a constructive reduction to practice. He further found that Angelí was not diligent in reducing the invention to practice.

As to Morin, the examiner found that he conceived the invention involved in count 1 early in 1927, and was the first to reduce it to practice.

The Board of Appeals, without discussion, affirmed the findings of the Examiner of Interferences, for the reasons stated by him.

Angelí contends that there is no corroboration of Morin’s testimony that he conceived the invention embraced in this count early in 1927, and that the earliest date to which he is entitled is October 15, 1928, which was after Angell’s attorney had been directed to pre[1022]*1022pare the application here in issue. It is established that Morin did conceive and disclose to others the idea of swaging flexible shafting by means of a machine. While there is no direct testimony that Morin disclosed to others the idea of combining a swaging machine with a.winding machine, the examiner held that this combination would be obvious, especially as both parties had so testified. We are in accord with this finding, and are of the opinion that Morin was entitled to the early part of 1927 for conception of the invention embraced in the count.

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Bluebook (online)
69 F.2d 646, 21 C.C.P.A. 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angell-v-angell-ccpa-1934.