Davis v. Reddy

620 F.2d 885, 205 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1065, 1980 CCPA LEXIS 246
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 15, 1980
DocketAppeal No. 80-506
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 620 F.2d 885 (Davis v. Reddy) 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 v. Reddy, 620 F.2d 885, 205 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1065, 1980 CCPA LEXIS 246 (ccpa 1980).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent and Trademark Office Board of Patent Interferences (board) awarding priority of counts 1-6, 8, and 9 in interference No. 98,661 to the junior party Reddy.1 We reverse.

[886]*886 Background

The real parties in interest are Motorola, Inc., assignee of the senior party Davis et al., and the Bendix Corporation, assignee of the junior party Reddy.

The nine counts in the interference were copied by junior party Reddy into his patent application, serial No. 226,498, filed February 15, 1972, from the senior-party Davis et al. patent, No. 3,727,081, issued April 10, 1973, on an application filed October 15, 1971. Counts 1-9 correspond to claims 1-5, 7-9, and 12, respectively, of the Davis et al. patent.

The subject matter of the interference is an electronic circuit for producing a precision multi-level waveform across a capacitor. The circuit is used in fuel injection systems for internal combustion engines to control the amount of fuel delivered to the intake manifold of the engine. Count 1, in independent form, is illustrative of the invention of the counts:

A circuit for developing across a capacitor a waveform having a plurality of different voltage levels at least one of which is greater than the preceding level and at least one of which is less than the preceding level, such circuit including in combination,
reference means providing a plurality of reference voltages representing the different voltage levels of the waveform, regulator means coupled to said reference means and to the capacitor for selectively holding the voltage thereacross at a value associated with one of the reference voltages,
discharge circuit means connected to the capacitor and to said regulator means and adapted to be rendered operative by said regulator means to discharge the capacitor and reduce the voltage thereac-ross until a selected one of the voltage levels is reached, and
current source means connected to the capacitor and adapted to operate to supply current thereto to increase the voltage thereacross until another one of the voltage levels is reached.

Prior to the times hereinafter discussed, Bendix had been working on development of a circuit for use in fuel injection systems. It was working with Motorola under a proposed arrangement whereby Motorola was to integrate (put in integrated circuited form) whatever circuit was developed by Bendix prior to the circuit being marketed as part of a fuel injection system.

Reddy began working for Bendix in May of 1970.. He was assigned to the fuel injection project. There had already been considerable contact between Bendix and Motorola with regard thereto, and Motorola had submitted to Bendix a technical proposal for the system which contained several of its own circuit concepts which were thought to be of use.

Reddy conceived of a modified approach to the circuit and system design problem sometime prior to October 1970 and continued the development of the concept beyond that time. The conception of the invention of the counts was alleged to have occurred out of this modified proposal.

The system design had been formulated to the extent that both Bendix and Motorola had been working on a circuit to provide a two-level waveform across a capacitor. The crucial concept here at issue is the provision of a third level of the waveform to accommodate the requirement that an engine running at slow or idle speeds must be supplied with a richer fuel mixture than is required at high speeds. The parties have referred to this concept as the “idle upturn function” and we shall do likewise.

Reddy claimed to have actually reduced such a circuit to practice and successfully tested it in an automobile by October 10, 1970.

A two-day meeting was held at a Motorola facility to discuss the design progress on October 20-21, 1970. The meeting was attended by Reddy and senior party co-inventors Davis and Frederiksen. Reddy contends that he disclosed a circuit which embodied the invention of the counts to those present at the meeting, and that the senior party derived the invention from him at the meeting.

[887]*887When the senior party’s patent issued, Reddy copied from it the counts on appeal, together with count 7 awarded to Davis et al., in order to provoke this interference.

The Evidence in Brief

To meet his burden of overcoming the filing date of the senior party, Reddy presented testimony accompanied by numerous exhibits. The record in this intér-ference was consolidated with that of related interference No. 98,681, and evidence from both proceedings has been relied on by both parties.

Reddy exhibit RX32 is a schematic drawing of a circuit identified as ECU IIA and was drawn in preparation for Reddy’s trip to Motorola in October of 1970. RX36, dated October 5, 1970, shows a drawing of a reset pulse generator with two comparators. It was drawn for the purpose of including an additional comparator for use in implementing the idle upturn function in circuitry such as that of RX32.

RX38 is a circuit drawing dated October 19, 1970. It was disclosed by Reddy to those at the meeting. It does not include circuitry for implementing the idle upturn function.

RX128 is a sketch identified by Reddy as one prepared in the early morning hours of the second day of the meeting. It provides comparator circuitry to provide for the constant current discharge of the capacitor to implement the idle upturn function. Testimony on behalf of Reddy sought to establish that it was disclosed at the meeting later that day.

From the related interference, Frederik-sen exhibit 4 illustrates the circuit which Reddy disclosed at the meeting. It is the same circuit as the one illustrated in RX38. Frederiksen exhibit 20 from that interference comprises notes taken by Frederiksen during the meeting. The fifth page from the end of the exhibit illustrates means disclosed by Reddy for implementing the idle upturn function; a portion of a waveform depicting a downward sloping voltage is circled and labeled “idle upturn.” In addition, an arrow points from the box containing the above words to a box labeled “comp.” which refers to a comparator provided for the purpose of determining the timing of the beginning of the downward sloping portion of the waveform, which the exhibit notes as being 60 milliseconds from the start of the waveform.

Reddy exhibit RX39 shows a sketch of a waveform which sketch Reddy alleges was present at the meeting and depicts the waveform produced by the circuit of RX38. It is relied upon to show that the circuit of RX38 meets all of the limitations of the counts.

Portions of the testimony taken in both interferences are relied upon by both parties to corroborate assertions made with respect to the exhibit evidence. We shall refer to them as necessary.

The Board

The board concluded that the single issue involved in the interference was that of derivation. Its conclusion was based on the following analysis.

Reddy had alleged conception and actual reduction to practice prior to the date of the October 20-21, 1970, meeting. The board held that Reddy had conceived the invention prior to that date.

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Bluebook (online)
620 F.2d 885, 205 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1065, 1980 CCPA LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-reddy-ccpa-1980.