Donna L. Jones (Kratz), of the Estate of James J. Jones, Deceased v. Arthur E. Kuprion

225 F.2d 485, 42 C.C.P.A. 1095
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1955
DocketPatent Appeal 6077
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 225 F.2d 485 (Donna L. Jones (Kratz), of the Estate of James J. Jones, Deceased v. Arthur E. Kuprion) 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
Donna L. Jones (Kratz), of the Estate of James J. Jones, Deceased v. Arthur E. Kuprion, 225 F.2d 485, 42 C.C.P.A. 1095 (ccpa 1955).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Interference Examiners of the United States Patent Office awarding priority of invention as to the single count in issue to appellee Arthur E. Kuprion.

The interference is between appellee’s application, Serial No. 602,201, filed June 29, 1945, and Patent No. 2,482,621 issued to James J. Jones, now deceased, September 20, 1949, on his application, Serial No. 791,847, filed December 15, 1947. Thus, appellee is the senior party. Both the Primary Examiner and the Board of Interference Examiners held that Kuprion was entitled to an award of priority.

The single count in issue originated in a claim of Jones’ patent which was copied by Kuprion for the purpose of this interference proceeding.

The count reads as follows:

“A camera for photographically recording the order in which a plurality of contestants cross the finish line of a race course comprising selectively operable means for continuously moving a film through a camera; an exposure slot adapted to cover a narrow field of view containing the finish line of the race course; lens means associated with said slot for forming an image of said field of view on the central area of the film; and means carried in fixed predetermined relation to said camera and arranged in predetermined relation to said lens means for simultaneously imposing respectively aligned and identified reference markings at spaced intervals along the opposite longitudinal marginal edges of the film in parallel relation to the image of the finish line formed by said lens means to provide aligned axially spaced pairs of respectively identified reference markings adapted for use in constructing a determinative finish line parallel to said image of said finish line and tangent to the leading portion of the images of the contestants photographed on the central area of the film.” (Italics added.)

Jones moved to dissolve the interference on the ground that Kuprion “has no right to make the count of the interference because the application Serial No. 602,201 of Kuprion involved in this interference:

“(a) Discloses an inoperative structure.
“(b) Fails to disclose a structure upon which the count of the interference can be read.
“(c) As originally filed, did not disclose the invention set forth in the count in the ‘full, clear concise and exact terms’ required by R.S. 4888 (U.S.C. Title 35, Sec. 33) 1 and was amended on October 19, 1948, (Amendment C, paper No. 9) after knowledge of the Jones invention was obtained by Kuprion, who there *487 after entered into an operational and license agreement under the Jones application and patent as shown by the attached copy of the agreement marked Exhibit 1 for identification.”

The examiner dismissed the motion to dissolve and stated:

“The party Jones’ contention that the invention set forth in the count is not sufficiently disclosed in the Kuprion application as originally filed, is closely related to the question of the operativeness of the Ku-prion apparatus. As has been indicated above, no conclusive showing has been made demonstrating that the Kuprion apparatus is incapable of producing a record such as shown in Figure 8 of Kuprion. The Ku-prion apparatus, as originally disclosed, fully supports the count of the interference, it being obvious that the record produced by said apparatus is ‘adapted’ for use in the same manner and for the same purpose as the record obtained by the Jones apparatus. Since testimony on the matter may be useful in resolving any doubts which may exist as to whether or not the Kuprion application discloses the subject matter in issue or is operative, it is deemed advisable to continue the Interference at this time, to permit the taking and proper consideration of such testimony.”

Both parties took testimony, filed briefs and were represented at final hearing. However, Jones died on April 10, 1951 which was several months before the taking of testimony in his behalf.

It is stated by Jones that cameras of the type here involved have previously been proposed for producing a photo-finish of a race but that the finish line, which is superimposed on the resulting photograph, cannot be accurately positioned under the prior art methods and with prior art apparatus, and, that as a consequence, much litigation has arisen in which the promoters of the contests have been successfully sued because of improperly positioned finish lines which show the wrong contestant as the winner.

The involved invention as set forth in the count may be briefly described as relating to continuous flow, strip film cameras and means for photographically recording on a film images of the contestants in a race as they cross the finish line, and simultaneously imposing on the film, aligned and identified markings related to the finish line in such a way as to permit accurate determination of the order in which the contestants pass the finish line.

Jones has contended most vigorously before the court, and before the board, that Kuprion’s disclosure does not read on the count here in issue, and does not establish either conception or reduction to practice of the issue count.

In the brief for Jones it is stated that the single question raised by this appeal is “Does Kuprion in his application show conception and reduction to practice of the invention of the interference count entitling him to an award of priority or the right to contest inventorship with Jones?”

We think appellant has correctly stated the issue before us. If Kuprion’s disclosure reads on the count he is entitled to an award of priority of the invention, otherwise Jones should prevail. Therefore we deem it unnecessary to discuss the many other issues presented to the board.

The count in issue provides for “ * * means carried in fixed predetermined relation to said camera and arranged in predetermined relation to said lens means for simultaneously imposing respectively aligned and identified reference markings at spaced intervals along the opposite longitudinal edges of the film in parallel relation to the image of the finish line formed by said lens means to provide aligned spaced pairs of respectively identified reference markings adapted for use in constructing a determinative finish line parallel to said image of said finish line * *

*488 It seems to us that both Kuprion and Jones have means for spacing aligned marks at intervals along the opposite longitudinal edges of the film in parallel relation to the image of the finish line. The camera shown by Kuprion’s application photographs the moving contestants on the main central portion of a continuously moving film in a manner similar to that shown by Jones. To provide corresponding markings on the edges of the film Kuprion proposes to photograph the end portions of the actual finish line so that the photographically recorded images of the end portions of the finish line are alternately long and short.

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225 F.2d 485, 42 C.C.P.A. 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donna-l-jones-kratz-of-the-estate-of-james-j-jones-deceased-v-arthur-ccpa-1955.