Ericson v. Jorgensen

180 F.2d 180
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 1950
Docket13970_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 180 F.2d 180 (Ericson v. Jorgensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ericson v. Jorgensen, 180 F.2d 180 (8th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is taken from the judgment rendered by the District Court pursuant to and in accordance with its opinion which is reported at 81 F.Supp. 614 and is here referred to in entirety to avoid repetition. As stated in the opinion, the action was brought by bill in equity under Revised Statutes Sec. 4915, Title 35 U.S.C.A. § 63, to obtain a decree authorizing the Commissioner of Patents to issue a patent including a claim which was the subject matter of an interference proceeding before the Patent Office, to the General Motors Corporation, assignee of the plaintiffs Clarence H. Jorgensen and Clarence H. Jorgensen, Administrator, pursuant to an application of the Jorgensens for patent filed on January 8, 1932. A similar action was brought at the same time to authorize issuance of patent embodying other claims also in interference to the same assignee pursuant to Jorgensens’ same application. The Board of Interference Examiners had heard the two interferences together and had decided adversely to the claim of the Jorgensens in each and had awarded priority of invention to George Ericson in one and to Otto Henning in the other. As shown in the court’s opinion, above cited, the two civil actions were tried at the same time and two opinions were handed down, the other being reported at Jorgensen v. Henning, 81 F. Supp. 621. The separate judgment of the court in each case was contrary to the decision of the Board of Interference Examiners and was to the effect that the Jorgensens were first and original inventors prior to Ericson and Henning. Each judgment authorized the Commissioner of Patents to issue patent to Jorgensens’ assignee. Separate appeals on a single record are taken to reverse the judgments and we *182 consider first the judgment entered pursuant to the opinion reported at 81 F.Supp. 617. It adjudges that the Jorgensens were entitled to be awarded priority of invention against Ericson in respect to the single count which was a claim of the Ericson patent adopted for the purpose of interference under the Jorgensen Application and involved in the interference and directs decree authorizing the Commissioner of Patents to issue patent including that count to the assignee of the Jorgensens.

The trial court said 81 F.Supp. at page 616: “As the common subject matter of the claims embodied in the interference proceedings were determined by the Patent Office, I see no reason for a more detailed description of the patents or claims in controversy” and it is clear from the whole record that the sole fact question which was put in issue and tried out and adjudicated in the trial court was whether or not the Jorgensens had conceived and reduced to practice their certain identified device called an automatic choke for automobiles at a date prior to Ericson’s original application filed on November 6, 1931. The defendants’ position in that controversy was that the device produced and relied on by Jorgensens as to their prior invention was not conceived and reduced to practice prior to the date of Ericson’s application and that it was merely one of numerous experimental combinations assembled by the Jorgensens in the course of their efforts to “find means that would sense the requirements necessary to start and run an automobile engine particularly when cold, entirely automatically”, and that the Jorgensens had concluded as early as August, 1930, some eighteen months before they filed their patent application, that their device was ineffective and that it became merely an abandoned experiment 'affording no' basis for the issuance of patent. In response to that issue, after considering the device itself and all that related to the conception, construction and reduction to practice, the court declared that its careful weighing of all the evidence “carries thorough conviction which is required by law that plaintiffs conceived and reduced to practice their patent in 1928 and 1929'’ The judgment according priority to Jorgensens was rested upon the “thorough conviction” so arrived at and declared by the court. As shown in the opinion, the questions of law raised by defendants were ruled in favor of the plaintiffs.

On this appeal it is contended for appellants for reversal (1) that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the judgment; (2) that the plaintiffs failed to present to the court all the evidence that was before the Board of Interference Examiners, and introduced evidence not submitted to the Board and thereby made it impossible for the court to adjudicate priority of invention contrary to the award of priority made by the Board; (3) that the Jorgensens lost any right to patent they may have had by delay in applying for patent, and (4) that the complaint before it was amended failed to state facts necessary to confer jurisdiction, and that the amendments erroneously permitted to be made after the six month period fixed by the statute for commencement of the action did not cure the defect or confer jurisdiction.

In a reply brief for appellants a further argument is here presented to the effect that the device relied upon by the Jorgensens and claimed by them to have been reduced to practice prior to the date of Ericson’s application as found by the court was in fact merely an indefinite and unstated combination of insufficiently described elements and did not embody the subject matter of the count in interference. But it appears from the record that the issue thus sought to be raised was not presented to, tried or decided by the trial court. As hereinafter stated, we hold that the bill in equity as amended presented a case within the jurisdiction of the court brought under Section 4915 to obtain authorization for patent upon review and avoidance of the decision of the Board of Interference Examiners which determined that the Jorgensens had not reduced their identified device to practice prior to Ericson’s application date. The case in the Patent Office arising out of Jorgensens’ and Ericson’s patent applications had gone in due course of Patent Office proceedings to the Board of Interference Examiners from decisions and *183 rulings of the primary examiner by which the questions of invention, embodiment thereof in claims and the common subject matter of the claims were established for the purpose of the interference. Although the opinions of the Board do not expressly so declare, it is evident from their context that the Board accepted the rulings that preceded the interference and tried out and decided the question of priority. They show in reference to one element of “Jorgensen et al.” (a so-called “kicker”) that Ericson “moved during the motion period” “to dissolve the interference on the ground that Jorgensen et al. (1) did not disclose the subject matter of the count” but the Board agreed with the position of the primary examiner on that matter and it records no other objection raised by Ericson to any failure of “Jorgensen et al.” to embody the subject matter of the count in interference. The “kicker” was not disclosed in the device exhibited and relied on in the civil action.

In that action the plaintiffs’ evidence went to show that the Board decided erroneously and defendants sought to sustain its decision in their favor but neither party at any stage of the trial questioned the validity of the action of the patent office declaring the interference.

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Bluebook (online)
180 F.2d 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ericson-v-jorgensen-ca8-1950.