Capek v. Levis

55 F.2d 476, 19 C.C.P.A. 843
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 25, 1932
DocketPatent Appeal 2832
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 F.2d 476 (Capek v. Levis) 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
Capek v. Levis, 55 F.2d 476, 19 C.C.P.A. 843 (ccpa 1932).

Opinion

GRAHAM, Presiding Judge.

On September 6, 1924, the appellants Capek and Van Den Broecke filed their application in the United States Patent Office for a patent upon improvements in telephone systems. On September 4, 1925, the appellee, Levis, filed his application, which concedodly covers the same subject-matter. An interference was declared. On this interference, Levis took testimony; the appellants, in their behalf, introduced certified copies of foreign patents covering the same subject-matter. None of these are important here, except the British patent, No. 228,593, granted upon an application filed October 8, 1923, and which is relied upon by appellants as their date for conception and constructive reduction to practice.

The counts of the interference are six in number. Counts 1, 3, and 5 are given as typical:

“Count 1. In a telephone exchange system, a calling subscriber’s line, a first called subscriber’s line having a certain resistance sleeve circuit, a second called subscriber’s line having a certain other resistance sleeve circuit, a link circuit for interconnecting said ■calling line and either of said called lines, a supervisory relay in said link circuit operating when the called subscriber answers, a position meter associated with said link circuit, a marginal relay controlled over the sleeve of said link circuit and adapted to he operated when said link circuit is connected with one of said called lines and not with the other, and means jointly controlled by said supervisory relay and said marginal relay for operating said meter.

“Count 3. In a telephone system, a telephone line provided with a message-charging device, a plurality of other telephone lines, means including a cord circuit for interconnecting said first mentioned telephone line with any of said other telephone lines, an official telephone line, an operating circuit for said message-eharging device, and discriminating means including a relay controlled in one manner over a telephone line and said cord circuit and in another manner over said official line and said cord circuit, said discriminating means functioning to control the closure of said operating circuit.

“Count 5. In a telephone exchange system, a calling subscriber’s line, a first called subscriber’s line having a certain resistance sleeve circuit, a second called subscriber’s line having a certain other resistance sleeve circuit, a link-circuit for interconnecting said calling line and either of said called lines, a super-visory relay in said link circuit operating when the called subscriber answers, a meter, a marginal relay controlled over the sleeve of said link circuit and adapted to be operated when said link circuit is connected with one of said called linos and not with the other, and means jointly controlled by said supervisory relay and said marginal relay for operating said meter.”

The Examiner of Interferences held that the appellants had not sufficiently disclosed *478 the subject-matter of counts 1 and 5 in their British application, and fixed their United States filing date, September 6, 1924, as their date for conception and reduction to practice as to said counts..' As to the other eounts, he gave them the date of their British application, October 8, 1923, for sueh conception and reduction to practice. As to Levis, he found a date of conception as to counts 3, 4, 5, and 6, on September 21,1923, as to eounts 1 and 2 on March 28, 1925, and reduction to practice of all on March 28, 1925.

The Board of Appeals found a date of conception in Levis of September 21, 1923, of the invention of the issue. As to .the point raised by the Examiner of Interferences relative to eounts 1 and 2, the Board held that these counts contained nothing patentable over the other eounts, and that the date of their conception became therefore immaterial. As to reduction to practice, the Board held Levis was diligent from the date of his conception until his reduction to practice on March 28, 192-5. Priority was therefore awarded to the junior party, Lévis, on all the eounts.

The subject-matter involved in this interference relates to the metering of messages in manual telephone systems. The purpose is to meter all calls through subscribers’ lines, or other lines where tolls are to be paid, and to omit such metering when the call goes over an official line, such as information, chief operator, etc. This is done by inserting in the cord circuit a marginal relay. In the subscribers’ lines, the sleeve circuits have a low resistance, while in the official lines the resistance is high. The marginal relay, controlling the operation of the meter, transmits the calls over the low resistance lines through the meter, but prevents the calls over the high .resistance lines from being so transmitted.

It is conceded, on the oral argument, that the appellee conceived his invention on September 21, 1923, except as to said eounts 1 and 2, and that the appellants conceived and reduced to practice on October 8, 1923. No question is raised as to the operativeness of appellee’s device, and it is conceded that appellee was not spurred into activity by the entry of appellants into the field.

The first question for consideration is: Did the appellee reduce to practice on March 28, 1925, or is he, as he claims, entitled to an earlier date for sueh reduction, namely, December 27,1923, or May 1, 1924?

The record shows that in 1923, and for several years prior thereto, Levis had been employed as a telephone engineer and circuit designer by the Stromberg-Carlson Telephone Manufacturing Company of Rochester, N. Y., the assignee of Levis’ application here involved. In 1923, the Rochester Telephone Corporation was in the market for an exchange in Rochester, afterwards installed and known as the Culver office.

The Stromberg-Carlson Company had been attempting to sell a superserviee type of switchboard, designed by Levis, to the Rochester Telephone Corporation for this new exchange. At that time much public criticism had been aimed at the Rochester Corporation because of its inauguration of a system of metering messages, and it was desired to install in the new exchange devices which would obviate some of the difficulties encountered in this metering. A conference was had on September 20,1923, between some of the officers of the Rochester Corporation and of the Stromberg-Carlson Company, and at this conference Levis, speaking for his employer, called attention to the fact that automatic metering might be provided in the superserviee type of system which would meter subscribers’ calls and omit the same when the calls were on official or other noncharge lines. On this same day Levis disclosed to W. J. Vincent, consulting engineer of the Rochester Telephone Corporation, his idea of introducing a high resistance in the sleeve circuit of an official line and a relatively low resistance in the sleeve circuit of an unofficial line, and that “a marginal relay in each cord circuit would be provided to operate in series with the resistance of an unofficial line but would not operate in series with the high resistance of an official line. This margin relay in conjunction with a supervisory relay of the cord circuit controlled the opening or closing of the meter controlling circuit.”

On September 21, 1923, a sketch of this idea was prepared by Levis and exhibited to Vincent, which is in evidence and marked Exhibit No. 3. This sketch is thus explained by the witness Levis:

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Bluebook (online)
55 F.2d 476, 19 C.C.P.A. 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capek-v-levis-ccpa-1932.