Davis R. Dewey, II v. Elliott J. Lawton

347 F.2d 629, 52 C.C.P.A. 1573, 146 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 187, 1965 CCPA LEXIS 333
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1965
DocketPatent Appeal 7339
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 347 F.2d 629 (Davis R. Dewey, II v. Elliott J. Lawton) 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
Davis R. Dewey, II v. Elliott J. Lawton, 347 F.2d 629, 52 C.C.P.A. 1573, 146 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 187, 1965 CCPA LEXIS 333 (ccpa 1965).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

The question to be decided in this appeal is whether appellee Lawton unlawfully concealed his invention within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 102(g). Lawton filed his patent application 1 2on January 11, 1955, and was named junior party in an interference involving that application and a patent 2 to appellant Dewey. Dewey’s patent issued on an application 3 which was filed March 18, 1954. Dewey took no testimony and relies upon the filing date of his application as establishing a constructive reduction to practice of the subject matter de *630 fined by the counts. Lawton took testimony and introduced other evidence in an attempt to establish actual reduction to practice prior to Dewey’s filing date.

The gist of the invention of the counts was summarized as follows by the Board of Patent Interferences:

The involved invention is concerned with effective and efficient utilization of the energy of an electron beam in unformly irradiating material such as tape. Passing a single layer of tape through an electron beam was wasteful of energy because only a small portion thereof was absorbed in the material. Passing a stack of layers through the beam resulted in non-uniformity from top to bottom of the stack because of the energy field configuration. The applications of both parties show as an exemplification of the invention the directing of an electron beam at a roll of tape as the tape is drawn off the roll at a constant linear velocity. Except for the initial outer layers, to the thickness of penetration of the beam, each portion of the tape in the under-layers would come into the energization field and progress through it in the same way as every other portion.

Of the counts in interference, only 1, 2 and 3 are involved in this appeal, the ■ board having awarded priority to Dewey on the remaining counts. Count 1 seems illustrative and reads:

1. Apparatus for increasing uniformity of dose produced by electron irradiation in a product which is divisible into thin layers, comprising in combination: means for creating a stream of high energy electrons and means for conducting such a product through said stream in such a manner that, during the irradiation of any point in such product, the normalized product thickness intervening between such point and the electron source assumes a sequence of values, which sequence is substantially the same for all points in the product.

On the basis of the testimony and documentary evidence introduced on behalf of Lawton, the board held that Lawton had proved actual reduction to practice in May of 1953. Dewey does not controvert that holding, but urges that the board erred in failing to find that Law-ton had concealed the invention of the counts. Section 102(g) provides that “A person [in this case, Dewey] shall be entitled to a patent unless— * * * before the applicant’s invention thereof the invention was made in this country by another [in this case, Lawton] who had not abandoned, suppressed, or concealed it. * * * ” Thus, since the board has found that Lawton was the prior inventor of the subject matter of the counts, Dewey is manifestly not entitled to his patent as to those counts unless he can show that Lawton concealed the invention within the meaning of section 102 (g).

Resolution of the issue here requires consideration of two distinct but related questions. The first of these involves the time period during which Lawton’s activities are to be evaluated. While the board found, as we have indicated, that Lawton actually reduced to practice in May 1953, Lawton’s amended preliminary statement in the interference proceedings alleged a date of April 1951. Dewey contends that the activities of Lawton bearing on concealment must be evaluated over the period from April 1951 to Lawton’s filing date, a span of some three and one-half years. Lawton, on the other hand, argues that the pertinent period is from May 1953 to the filing date, some twenty months. The board agreed with Lawton, and so do we.

As Rivise & Caesar point out, in 1 Interference Law and Practice § 86 (1940), “The purpose of requiring preliminary statements from the parties to an interference is to obtain from them an honest statement of the essential facts and dates upon which they may have to rely to prove priority of invention.” Accordingly, the parties are estopped from proving any dates of invention which are prior to those set up in their statement. *631 Op. cit. supra, § 98. Obviously, however, the estoppel does not extend to subsequent events; the party may prove a date of actual reduction to practice which is later than the earliest date alleged in his preliminary statement. As the board in the instant case put it,

* * * the Preliminary Statement, though verified and somewhat in the nature of a pleading, is not regarded as evidence but as merely setting dates earlier than which evidence is not effective time-wise. Consequently the particular statements in the Preliminary Statement are not regarded as effective admissions except for the setting of limiting dates. * * *

We will not, therefore, in determining the question of concealment, consider activities occurring prior to the date of actual reduction to practice found by the board. Nor will we re-examine the record in an attempt to find actual reduction to practice prior to the date established by the board. As regards concealment, the time between the date alleged in the preliminary statement and the date of actual reduction to practice is immaterial. Stresau v. Ipsen, 77 F.2d 937, 22 CCPA 1352.

The second question involves the oft-repeated rule of concealment law, “that the party against whom the forfeiture is urged must have been stirred or spurred into renewed activity by the knowledge that a rival has entered the field.” 4 Rivise & Caesar, op. cit. supra, § 803. See, e. g., Mason v. Hepburn, 13 App.D.C. 86 (1898), Stresau v. Ipsen, supra. In the instant case, there is admittedly no showing that Lawton was spurred into renewed activity and filing his patent application by learning of Dewey’s entry into the field. In this regard the board commented:

There is no evidence that Lawton was spurred into activity by knowledge of Dewey’s entry into the field. This has been an express requirement or afcknowledged ingredient in the decision in all of the interference cases raising the Mason v. Hepburn doctrine of which we are aware. * * * 4

Dewey urges that the board erred in holding “that evidence that Lawton was spurred into activity by knowledge of Dewey’s entry into the field is necessary in order to prove concealment.” In our opinion, the board committed no reversible error. First, the board did not hold that spurring is essential to a finding of concealment in every case, regardless of other circumstances. The board merely stated that it knew of no case in which concealment had been found absent spurring.

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Bluebook (online)
347 F.2d 629, 52 C.C.P.A. 1573, 146 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 187, 1965 CCPA LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-r-dewey-ii-v-elliott-j-lawton-ccpa-1965.