Biggs v. Moody

64 F.2d 988, 20 C.C.P.A. 1071, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 1933
DocketNo. 3100
StatusPublished

This text of 64 F.2d 988 (Biggs v. Moody) 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
Biggs v. Moody, 64 F.2d 988, 20 C.C.P.A. 1071, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 78 (ccpa 1933).

Opinion

Garrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In this appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office there are involved eleven counts of an im terference upon which priority was awarded to Moody. The-interference was dissolved as to one count (No. 7) and it is not involved here. . .

The subject matter of the counts is runners for hydraulic turbines. More specifically, the issues here relate, principally, to the shape and position, with reference to each other and to the axis of the hub, of the blades or buckets on the runner, or rotor,- of turbines.

Counts 4 and 9 appear to be fairly representative and are here quoted :

Count 4. In a water wheel, a runner, a hub, a plurality of overlapping blades arranged at an increasing angle from .the periphery to the hub, the greater angle being at the hub, said angles being measured with respect to the major axis of the runner.
Count 9. In a water wheel, a runner having a hub and a plurality of blades, said blades being pitched át an angle to a horizontal plane at right angles to the major axis of the runner and being progressively pitched from the periphery to the hub and progressively pitched from the trailing edge to the leading edge, said blades partially overlapping one another to form a water eell between them, whereby the water may. pass therebetween having its angle of direction of motion gradually changed, said buckets being concave on the under surface and convex on the upper surface when viewed on a straight [1072]*1072line- parallel to the major axis of the runner and located at an angle to the radius of the runner and concave on the upper surface and convex on the lower surface when viewed in section on a cylindrical plane parallel to the axis of the runner.

The counts, in the aggregate, call for blades or buckets having what Biggs refers to in his brief as “ a reverse curvature,” the buckets to be “ progressively overlapping from periphery to hub.” It is claimed that these features result from the particular structure disclosed by the counts. Details are described in different forms of language, references being made to “ leading edges arranged with the greater angle at the leading edge with respect to the trailing edge,” and “ overlapping buckets to form a cell.”

In the oral argument it was stated that four features are called for, which, it was said, could be defined in terms as follows: (a) ut Reverse curvature ”; (h) “ Cylindrical periphery ”; (<?) “ Overlapping blades,” and (d) “ Diagonality of blades.”

All these terms, as we understand it, are deduced from the structural descriptions recited in the respective counts. The Reverse curvature ” seems to be called for in all the counts at issue, except 4, 5, and 8. “ Cylindrical periphery,” as we construe the term, seems to be required by a number of the counts; “ Overlapping blades ” are specified in counts 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9,10, 11, and 12, some of these having limitations to be later referred to, and “ diagonality of blades ” is present in counts 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 11, and 12. Certain of the counts are specific as to “ overlapping blades from periphery to hub ”; also certain of them have a limitation to blades so overlapping “ continuously ” as to “ form a water cell therebetween.”

Biggs is a patentee, having received patent No. 1613816 January 11, 1927, upon his application filed March 30, 1925. On those dates Moody had pending in the Patent Office an application, Serial No. 373545, filed April 13, 1920, for patent on hydraulic turbines. Following the issuance of the patent to Biggs, Moody made certain amendments to his specification and drawings and copied the claims which became the counts at issue. The interference was declared May 15, 1928.

The preliminary statement of Biggs alleged a date of conception later than Moody’s filing date, and Biggs was put upon notice to show cause why judgment upon the record should not be entered against him. In response Biggs moved to dissolve the interference on the ground, among others, that Moody had not the right to make the counts, because, it was alleged, his application failed to disclose the invention. The motion finally was heard by the tribunals of the Patent Office upon this one ground, and that is the sole ground presented before us.

[1073]*1073The law examiner denied the motion as to counts 1 and 2, but sustained it as to all the remainder. Moody took an interlocutory appeal and the Board of Appeals reversed the law examiner as to counts 3-6, inclusive, and 8-12, inclusive, but affirmed as to count 7. There was no interlocutory appeal by Biggs as to counts 1 and 2. Following the decision of the board, the Examiner of Interferences entered judgment upon the record, awarding priority to Moody upon all the counts, except count 7. Upon appeal the Board of Appeals affirmed the decision of the Examiner of Interferences. Thereupon the appeal to this court was prosecuted.

The Moody application was pending in the Patent Office for-almost five years before the filing of the application of Biggs and for almost seven years before the grant of the Biggs patent in which the counts originated. Because of this circumstance, counsel for Biggs, in their brief, intimate that the Moody application was kept in the Patent Office for the purpose of “ catching patentees ” and, we suppose, involving them in interferences with-a view of acquiring as extensive a monopoly as possible upon all improvements in the devices peculiar to this field, which devices, in comparatively recent years, have become matters of increased importance and concern. It is argued that for this reason appellee forfeited the right to patent.

The record, however, does not disclose anything, except the delay itself, from which any such inferences might properly be drawn, and there may be many explanations of delay which render it entirely consistent with legitimate procedure and good faith. The court does not feel justified in considering further that aspect of the case.

The subject matter to which the Biggs’ brief devotes the greater portion of its space is embraced in the limitation set forth in numerous of the counts, being expressed in count 1 as follows:

* * * a plurality of buckets which are concave on the upper surface and convex on the lower surface when viewed on a section taken on a cylindrical plane parallel to the major axis of the runner and convex on the upper surface and concave on the lower surface when viewed in a section taken on a straight plane at an angle to the radius of the runner.

This is the element so often alluded to in the brief for Biggs as “ reverse curvature ” in the blades — “ blades ” and “ buckets ” being used interchangeably in the counts.

This phraseology of the counts seems to us to be somewhat cryptic, but, as we understand it, it means that, when a blade is viewed from one angle, a section of the blade will appear to be concave on top and convex underneath, but when viewed from another angle that same section will appear to be convex on top and concave under[1074]*1074neath. The language, in our opinion, does not mean that one section of the blade is actually convex on top and another section of it convex underneath, and vice versa in each instance, but relates to the appearance of the same section of the blade when looked at from different angles.

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64 F.2d 988, 20 C.C.P.A. 1071, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biggs-v-moody-ccpa-1933.