Creed v. Potts

96 F.2d 317, 25 C.C.P.A. 1084
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1938
DocketPatent Appeals 3955-3958
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 96 F.2d 317 (Creed v. Potts) 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
Creed v. Potts, 96 F.2d 317, 25 C.C.P.A. 1084 (ccpa 1938).

Opinion

LENROOT, Associate Judge.

These appeals involve four interference proceedings in the United States Patent Office. Each of the interferences involves a reissue application of appellee, filed April 10, 1931, for the reissue of a patent, No. 1,708,954, issued to appellee on April 16, 1929, upon an application filed September 17, 1925.

In appeal No. 3955 the interference arises between said reissue application and a patent,' No. 1,827,460, issued to appellants Creed and Salmon on October 13, 1931, upon an application filed on December 22, 1928. The interference was declared as of June 12, 1934, and embraces five counts, the same corresponding to claims copied by appellee from appellants’ said patent.

In appeal No. 3956 the interference is between said reissue application and a patent, No. 1,895,107, issued to appellant Salmon on January 24, 1933, upon an application filed on September 24, 1930. The interference was declared as of September 19, 1934. One count is involved, the same corresponding to a claim in appellant’s patent, copied by appellee.

In appeal No. 3957, the interference arises between said reissue application and a patent, No. 1,931,099, issued to appellant Bancroft on October 17, 1933, upon an application filed on February 26, 1932. The interference was declared as of September 19, 1934. Two counts are involved; they correspond to claims of appellant’s patent, copied by appellee.

In appeal No. 3958 the interference is between said reissue application and a patent No. 1,924,357, issued to appellant Griffith on August 29, 1933, upon an application filed on April 30, 1932. The interference was declared as of September 19, 1934, and involves four counts, corresponding to claims of appellant’s patent, copied by appellee.

After the declarations of the interferences, the appellants Creed and Salmon in appeal No. 3955 filed a preliminary statement. The appellants in the other three cases filed no preliminary statements. Appellee filed preliminary statements in all of the cases.

In appeal No. 3955, the preliminary statement of the appellants alleged conception of the involved invention subsequent to the filing date of the application upon which appellee’s said patent was issued, and appellants in that case were, on August 7, 1934, required to show cause why judgment upon the record should not be entered against them. Like orders were subsequently made in the other three cases.

Within the motion period, motions to dissolve were made by the several appellants in each of the interférences. The same general grounds for dissolution were set up in each of said motions, the same being that appellee had no right to make the counts, that the disclosure of appellee is inoperative, and that appellee is estopped from making the counts.

Each of said motions to dissolve was denied by the Primary Examiner.

After said decisions denying the motions were entered, the appellants in each of the four cases filed requests to take testimony with respect to the meaning of the terms used in the counts and in the patents where they originated, and for the purpose of establishing by expert testimony that the structure disclosed in appellee’s patent is inoperative. The particular points of alleged inoperativeness were set out in two affidavits by Bancroft, the appellant in appeal No. 3957.

The Examiner of Interferences denied the motions in so far as they related to the meaning of the terms used in the counts, but granted the motions to take testimony with respect to the inoperativeness of appellee’s structure, but only in so far as specific features of such alleged inoperativeness were set out in said motions and in the affidavits of said Bancroft.

The motions to take testimony, and the decisions thereon, in appeals Nos. 3956, 3957, and 3958, are not contained in the record, but are referred to in the decisions of the Patent Office tribunals.

Subsequent to the granting of such motions, testimony was taken applicable to the four interferences in behalf of all the *320 •appellants, and testimony was also taken in ■behalf of appellee.

. It appears from the record that, after such testimony was taken, appellee moved in each of the interferences to strike out •certain portions thereof upon the ground that they related to matters outside the ■scope of the issues fixed by the Examiner ■of Interferences in his decision granting the motions to take testimony.

All of the appellants are represented "before us by the same counsel. The testimony taken applies to all of the appeals. By stipulation, the records in the four appeals were consolidated and, inasmuch as the issues before us are for the most part •common to all of the appeals, we shall ■dispose of the four cases in a single opinion. For the sake of brevity, and to avoid repetition, we have stated the foregoing facts with reference to all of the appeals; from this point, however, we sha.ll. proceed to consider the appeals separately.

Appeal No. 3955 — Interference No. 68,621.

In this appeal count 1 is illustrative and reads as follows: “1. Telegraph reproducing apparatus' comprising signal reproducing means adapted to remain in the position into which it was last moved, independent means positioned in accordance with received signals, and means subsequently acting once in each signal period to cause the said independent means to act on the signal reproducing means.”

The subject matter of the interference is stated by the Examiner of Interferences as follows: “The subject matter of ■the interference relates to telegraphic reproducing apparatus whereim mechanical means acted upon by the signal responsive means actuates the, signal reproducing means. The mechanical means comprises a series of elements which are positioned in accordance with the pulses of a five unit code and during each signal period these elements act on a reproducer in accordance with their position.”

Upon final hearing, the Examiner of Interferences granted appellee’s motion to strike out testimony in so far as the same related to features of alleged inoperativeness not set forth in the motion papers or supporting affidavits upon which leave to take testimony was granted.

The Examiner of Interferences then proceeded to analyze the testimony with respect to the features of alleged inoperativeness which, he held, were within the issues upon which the taking of testimony was allowed. While he found that, as disclosed, certain features of appellee’s structure were inoperative, he invoked the well-established rule that an invention disclosed will not be held to be inoperative if it may be rendered operative by a skilled mechanic, without the exercise of invention. Applying this rule, he held that appellants had failed to establish by a preponderance of evidence the inoperativeness of the device disclosed by appellee.

In appellants’ motion to dissolve, in addition to the allegation of inoperativeness, it was contended that appellee had no right to make the counts and that appellee was estopped from making the counts by reason of laches, and by reason of the alleged fact that the invention defined in appellee’s reissue application is for a different invention than that claimed in appellee’s original patent.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F.2d 317, 25 C.C.P.A. 1084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creed-v-potts-ccpa-1938.