Cosper v. Gold

36 App. D.C. 302, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5579
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1911
DocketNos. 648 and 649
StatusPublished

This text of 36 App. D.C. 302 (Cosper v. Gold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cosper v. Gold, 36 App. D.C. 302, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5579 (D.C. Cir. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court:

These are two interference cases involving priority of invention of an improved automatic steam heating system. No. 648 was declared between applications of William P. Cosper, Egbert TI. Gold, and Edward E. Gold respectively. No. 649 was declared between applications of William P. Cosper and Egbert H. Gold.

While the issues of the two cases are not identical, the same question is involved. They have for that reason been heard together in the Patent Office and in this court.

By stipulation, the records of the two former appeals have been made a part of this record. Those appeals were dismissed because there had been no final adjudication of the controversy. (34 App. D. C. 194-198.)

Cosper’s application was filed April 1, 1901. Edward E. Gold filed July 16th, 1904; and Egbert H. Gold filed February 11, 1905. After repeated objections and amendments, the claims of Cosper, five in number, were rejected by the Primary Examiner. His decision was reversed January 8, 1908, by the Examiners-in-Chief, and the claims allowed. In March 1908, the interferences were declared between him and the two Golds respectively, on an issue in three counts. Each of the Golds filed motions to dissolve, the only ground of which that is important being that Cosper is not entitled to make the claims of the issue. The Examiner to whom the motion was referred held that Cosper was not entitled to make the claims, and the interférencé was dissolved. The decision was limited to this. Cosper appealed in turn to the Examiners-in-Ohief and the Commissioner, who affirmed that decision. No award of priority having been made, this court dismissed the appeals for want of a final adjudication as above stated.

On return to the Patent Office, Cosper, in each case, petitioned the Commissioner to reconsider and reverse his decision that Cosper had no right to make the claims. In the three party case (No. 648) he prayed that his status as a contestant in the [305]*305interference be restored, and that the interference be remanded to the Examiner of Interferences with instructions to render judgment of priority against Egbert II. Gold, and to set times for taking testimony as to priority between petitioner and Edward E. Gold. In the case in which Egbert H. Gold was his single opponent (No. 649), he prayed a reversal of the Commissioner’s decision on his right to make the claims, and that the case be referred to the Examiner of Interferences with instructions to render judgment of priority against Egbert II. Gold. The ground in each petition for asking that judgment be rendered against Egbert II. Gold was that, as the latter, being the junior party, had failed in his preliminary statement to overcome petitioner’s filing date, therefore petitioner was entitled to judgment of priority on the record.

The Commissioner’s decision contains an elaborate review of the question of the right of Cosper to make the claims. Adhering to his former opinion, he denied both petitions. He said in conclusion: “In view of the holding of the court in the present case, however, it is believed that the final action of the Commissioner in such case should be in the form of an award of priority, rather than a dissolution of the interference. * * * In view of the above decisions, it is thought that the court will entertain an appeal from a final _ order entered in this case, to the effect that Cosper is not the prior inventor of the subject-matter of the issue. Eor the reasons stated above, my decision of -Tune 1, 1909, will be modified as to the order dissolving the interference, and in place thereof a final order will be entered holding that, in view of the conclusions reached in said decision, Gosper is not the prior inventor of the subject-matter of the issue of said interference.” The same decision was made in the second case. (No. 649.)

From those decisions these appeals have been prosecuted.

A preliminary question is presented by the motions of the several appellees to dismiss each appeal for want of jurisdiction.

The grounds of the motions are: 1. The decisions appealed from are not final. 2. Because the appeal to the Commission[306]*306er was from a decision dissolving the interference, and he had no jurisdiction to render any decision as to priority. 3. The decision that the appellant was not the prior inventor is not one within the jurisdiction of the court to review. 4. The decision of the Commissioner in legal effect affirms the decision dissolving the interference, and is interlocutory only.

To determine what the decision is from which an appeal is prosecuted, the court will look to its substance, its necessary legal effect and operation, rather than to its mere form. Moore v. Heany, 34 App. D. C. 31-39.

In the two party case (No. 649), the necessary effect of the order declaring that Cosper was not the prior inventor was to award priority to his opponent, Egbert H. Gold. In that ease, if Cosper was entitled to make the claims, he was entitled to an award of priority on the record. No question of fact was put in issue. Hence, it having been decided that he was not entitled to make the claims, the resulting decision that he was not the prior inventor was, in substance and effect, a decision that Egbert H. Gold was the prior inventor. In that case the decision was necessarily final and appealable.

The three party case presents a case of greater difficulty. Three separate cases were involved in this one proceeding. There was a case between the applications of Cosper and Egbert H. Gold, another between Cosper and Edward E. Gold, and another between Egbert H. Gold and Edward E. Gold. These were separate cases and might have been so conducted; but, as the same subject-matter was in controversy in each case, they were properly consolidated, in accordance with the practice of the Patent Office, for hearing and determination as one. 2 Robinson, Patents, sec. 612; Bell v. Gray, 15 Off. Gaz. 776 (C. D. 1879, 42-45).

While the effect of the decision in this case, that Cosper was not the prior inventor, was an award of priority against him as to each separate opponent, as in No. 649, it was not a final decision of priority in favor of either opponent as against the othei*. It was, nevertheless, a final decision against Cosper. He was finally deprived of his right, though it is true that, had [307]*307he acquiesced in the decision, the question of priority would still be open between Egbert H. and Edward E. Gold. As we have seen, however, this is not an equity case involving conflicting claims of several parties, the decree in which, to be final, must make a determination of the entire controversy.

Conceding that the decision was final as to Cosper, it is contended that it was equivalent to a final rejection of his application, from which alone he could appeal according to the usual practice in the case of the rejection of an application. Re Fullagar, 32 App. D. C. 222-230. That was a case of interference between Eullagar’s reissue application and the first application of his opponent. The final decision in the case was not that Eullagar had no right to make the claims, but that his showing was not sufficient to warrant the grant of a reissue of his patent; in other words that his application was not allowable. This was the decision, and there was no award of priority to his opponent. It was held that he could only take an ex parte appeal in the ordinary way.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 App. D.C. 302, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cosper-v-gold-cadc-1911.