Eugene O. Keizer v. William E. Bradley

270 F.2d 396, 47 C.C.P.A. 709
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1959
DocketPatent Appeal 6399
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 270 F.2d 396 (Eugene O. Keizer v. William E. Bradley) 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
Eugene O. Keizer v. William E. Bradley, 270 F.2d 396, 47 C.C.P.A. 709 (ccpa 1959).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is in an interference between a patent application of William E. Bradley, Serial Number 208,993, filed February 2, 1951, assigned to Philco Corporation, and an application of Eugene 0. Keizer, Serial Number 204,110, filed January 3, 1951, assigned to Radio Corporation of America. The Board of Patent Interferences awarded priority to Bradley, the junior party, basing its decision on a finding that Bradley had proved conception prior to Keizer and had maintained reasonable diligence throughout the critical period to the date of Bradley’s constructive reduction to practice by filing his application. Appellant’s sole contention here is that the board erred in holding that the junior party Bradley had been diligent.

Bradley introduced evidence to establish a conception date of December 13, 1949, Keizer indicating a conception date of March 16, 1950. Because of his one month later filing date, Bradley had the burden of proving diligence from just before Keizer’s entry into the field, March 16,1950, to Bradley’s constructive reduction to practice, February 2, 1951, a ten and one-half month critical period.

The invention involves color television receivers and relates to means for reduc *398 ing the adverse effects on color reproduction of frequency-selective fading that sometimes occurs during signal transmission between transmitter and receiver. It is termed an automatic chroma control. In plain terms, the transmitted composite color television signal includes both a brightness component which operates over a given frequency range and a color component which operates over a different frequency range. Due to the fact that signals of different frequency often assume different transmission paths, interference may alter one component while the other is unaffected thereby. 1 This results in variations in the relative amplitude of the two components at the point of reception which cause defects in the color intensity of the reproduced television picture. The invention described by the count restores, in the receiver, the proper relative amplitude of these signal components.

This is accomplished in the following manner. In addition to the brightness and color components, the transmitted composite color signal includes deflection synchronizing and color synchronizing signals broadcast at frequencies corresponding to the brightness and color components respectively. These signals are in the form of pulses fixed in a known amplitude relationship at the transmitter. The automatic chroma control of the invention compares the relative amplitude of these pulses at the receiver to the ratio as transmitted to determine the extent of compensation needed to correct the brightness and color component relationship. It then controls the gain of the receiver in such manner that the proper balance is restored.

Appellant Keizer’s contention that Bradley failed to prove the requisite diligence during the critical period is based upon three arguments: 1) since the major effort during the critical period was to perfect a complete color television receiver, diligence in this effort was not directed to the instant invention, 2) there was a lack of proof of intent to reduce the invention to practice with reasonable promptness, and 3) there was no excuse for the delay in preparing and filing a patent application.

Two kinds of diligence are involved in this controversy. Appellant has dubbed them “attorney-diligence” and “engineering-diligence” and we will use these terms. We will first discuss engineering diligence, which refers to the Philco research and development work.

The record shows that the Philco research department worked continuously throughout the critical period on the construction of a complete color television receiver while little was done specifically regarding the automatic chroma control. Appellant asserts that this activity did not constitute the requisite diligence. Bradley, on the other hand, contends, and the board held, that he is excused from the usual requirement that the activity must be directed toward the invention per se because little could be done until a medium was provided for field testing the invention, such medium being an operative receiver. Bradley reasons that anything short of a test under actual operating conditions was inadequate to produce an actual reduction to practice due to the necessary interrelationship between the circuits of the invention and those of the rest of the receiver in which it was to operate. The record indicates that this was in the early period of development of a highly complex art. A great deal was unknown and there were many difficulties which could not be anticipated. The circumstances of this case, we feel, justified Bradley, who was Philco’s Director of Research, in postponing the building and testing of his automatic chroma control until completion of a color television receiver in which it could be incorporated and tested. And since the record tends strongly to show that there was no other way to get such a receiver and that the work on the receiver was carried on with diligence, *399 that work can be relied on as showing diligence in reducing the invention to practice over the ten and a half month period here involved. We agree with Bradley and the board and find that the emphasis on the complete receiver development program during this period was not fatal to his claim of diligence.

Keizer’s second argument is that even assuming, arguendo, that a field test was necessary to permit an actual reduction to practice, Bradley did not prove the existence of an intent promptly to reduce the invention to practice when the receiver reached a suitable stage of development.

Two witnesses, Bingley and Creamer, employees of Philco and both responsible to Bradley, testified to the effect that Bradley did have the continuing intention to embody the invention in the receiver upon completion and test thereof and then to field test it under normal operating conditions, although he was pressed with many other problems at the time. The record demonstrates, and we are cognizant of, the difficulties involved in bringing many parts together to create a new complex device such as a color television receiver. It is a formidable task requiring careful organization of research teams and delegation of authority. There are inevitable disagreements as to priority of projects. Under these conditions we cannot, as a matter of law, say that the same fixed and continuous intent is needed as may be required with an invention of a less complex nature.

It is true, as appellant points out, that the witnesses Bingley and Creamer were somewhat interested, and that close scrutiny should be exercised in examining testimony in such cases. However, we feel that this testimony, along with the corroborating recorded minutes of planning meetings, is sufficient to show a continuing intent to reduce to practice on the part of Bradley. In view of the type of problem that was involved, we hold that sufficient intent was established.

Appellant argues in the alternative that Bradley’s intent as such has no bearing on the issue because the record fails to show that he exercised direct control over the receiver development program.

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Bluebook (online)
270 F.2d 396, 47 C.C.P.A. 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eugene-o-keizer-v-william-e-bradley-ccpa-1959.