Diamond v. Woodyard

186 F.2d 729, 38 C.C.P.A. 816, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 372, 1951 CCPA LEXIS 292
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1951
DocketPatent Appeal 5729
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 186 F.2d 729 (Diamond v. Woodyard) 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
Diamond v. Woodyard, 186 F.2d 729, 38 C.C.P.A. 816, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 372, 1951 CCPA LEXIS 292 (ccpa 1951).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Interference Examiners of the United States Patent Office awarding to ap-pellees priority of invention of the subject matter defined by counts 5 and 6, which read as follows:

“5. An electric discharge device comprising means for producing a stream of *730 electrical charges, a hollow-body resonator interposed in the path of said stream, a portion of said resonator being capable of change in position to vary the resonant frequency of said resonator, and thermal means connected to said portion for changing the position of said portion to vary the resonant frequency of said resonator.

“6. An electric discharge device comprising a hollow-body resonator, a cathode, and means for bunching electrons emitted from said cathode and causing the bunched electrpns to give up energy in said resonator, in combination with mechanical means for altering the distributed capacity and inductance of said resonator and elect-trically heated thermal means for actuating said mechanical means.”

The issue, as the interference was declared on May 27, 1946, consisted of counts 1-4. Appellant’s priority as to1 those four counts was admitted by appellees, who moved to amend the interference by the addition of the two counts in issue.. That motion was granted and judgment with respect to the four original counts was entered by the Board of Interference Examiners in favor of appellant. From that judgment no appeal was taken.

There was no dispute that the counts are applicable to the disclosure of each of the parties, as described by the board: “The invention here in issue pertains to the thermal tuning of klystrons, which are electronic discharge devices of the ultra-high frequency type having a beam of electrons projected by an electron gun through an evacuated hollow body resonator. Tuning, in the prior art, was effected by manually moving certain mechanical parts of the resonator or a member into and out of the resonator. The alleged improvement here is directed to thermal means for effecting a movement of an element in the resonator to produce the equivalent effect of the previously manually moved mechanical means.”

Appellant, Diamond, the senior party, filed his application July 11, 1940, and appellees, Woodyard and Varían, the junior party, filed their application December 6, 1943, as a continuation-in-part of a five-party application, No. 428,682, filed January 29, 194°. The applications were copending in the Patent Office and the board held that Woodyard and Varían, the junior party, had the burden of proving their case by a preponderance of the evidence.

The junior party, appellees, filed testimony, all of which was stipulated, and the senior party, appellant, relied on his earlier record date of filing, July 11, 1940, for conception and constructive reduction to practice. Both parties filed briefs and were represented at final hearing.

The case was submitted on the preliminary statements and evidence presented by the parties. On August 11, 1948, the board rendered its decision awarding priority to appellees. Appellant petitioned for a rehearing and also filed a supplemental petition for the alleged purpose of obtaining an amplification, correction, and reversal of the board’s decision.

The petition for correction was denied October 25, 1948, the board holding that no error in its original decision had been found which would alter the outcome of the interference. The petition for amplification was granted to the extent of explaining the degree of proof required of appellees in the establishment of their case but denied as to1 any reversal of the board’s original decision.

A review of the decision of the board and of the record on which the decision was based is required by the fifteen reasons of appeal filed by appellant.

In the first place, the record shows that the real parties in interest are the Westinghouse Electric Corporation, assignee of appellant Diamond, and the Sperry Gyroscope Company, Inc., assignee of appellees Woodyard and Varían. The record also discloses, as appellees point out in their brief, that: “An illustrative version of the claimed subject matter is a klystron tube having a ‘buncher’ resonator and a ‘catcher’ resonator with a system for projecting a stream of electrons through these resonators in succession, the thermal control system being employed in connection with the ‘catcher’ resonator.”

*731 Count 5 calls for thermal means to vary the resonant frequency of a klystron resonator; count 6 for mechanical means actuated by thermal means for altering the distributed capacity and inductance of the catcher resonator.

Woodyard and Varian alleged in their preliminary statements that during 1937, 1938, and 1939 they were engaged in the Physics Department of Stanford University in the development of microwave tubes of the klystron type; that during such period several klystron tubes of various types were there constructed and tested; that it was then noted the output frequency of such devices was temperature sensitive, so that frequency control means and temperature •compensation might be necessary; that during the period in question it occurred to Woodyard and Varian that the effect hereinbefore described could be usefully applied to deliberately vary the tuning of such a tube; that this conception was then disclosed to their co-workers, and the invention hereinbefore described was reduced to actual practice in April of 1938.

The first tube of the klystron type, Model A, was successfully tested in August of 1937 and formed the basis for the Varian patent, No. 2,242,275, issued May 20, 1941, on an application filed October 11, 1937, appellees’ Exhibit No. 1. A subsequent model incorporating various improvements was begun in early 1938 and it appears that the parts thereof were fabricated by February 25, 1938, and assembled as appellees’ “Klystron Model C” in early March of 1938, as shown by a photograph taken on March 8, 1938, appellees’ Exhibit No. 3.

The record discloses that appellees’ Model C Klystron was particularly adapted for thermal tuning and was tested by appellees for its effectiveness during April and May of 1938. Those tests and the Model C Klystron are described as follows in the narrative of the stipulated testimony:

“As related above, in the Model C Kly-stron, the resonator gap length was made adjustable, and the resonator was accordingly tunable, by adjusting the spacing between two flanges connected respectively to the two grids defining the gap therebe-tween, this adjustment being made by means of adjustable struts connected between the flanges. This tube was therefore particularly adapted for thermal tuning.

“It was early demonstrated that change in tuning of the Model C klystron could be produced by changing the temperature of or applying heat to the struts. Such thermal tuning had exactly the same effect as manual tuning. This was done either by holding one or more struts in the hand to supply heat from the hand to the strut, or by holding a match underneath a strut to heat it. Such experiments showed that the klystron resonator could be detuned enough to drive the tube completely out of oscillation from a condition of optimum oscillation.

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186 F.2d 729, 38 C.C.P.A. 816, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 372, 1951 CCPA LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-v-woodyard-ccpa-1951.