Greene v. Beidler

47 F.2d 927, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1202
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedMarch 17, 1931
DocketNo. 1450-H
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 F.2d 927 (Greene v. Beidler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greene v. Beidler, 47 F.2d 927, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1202 (W.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

GALSTON, District Judge.

This is an action brought under section 4915 of the Revised Statutes (as amended [35 USCA § 63]) to have the plaintiff John S. Greene decreed the inventor of the subject-matter of an interference proceeding in the United States Patent Office, in which the parties were the plaintiff Greene and the defendant Beidler.

Both Greene and Beidler claimed the same invention of an improvement in a camera mechanism for producing photographic copies of documents on opposite sides of a single •sheet of film or paper which had been coated on both sides.

Greene’s application for' letters patent was filed August 20,1924, Serial No. 733,062; Beidler’s application was filed April 4, 1924, Serial No. 704,275. The interference proceeding was declared between these two applications on March 20, 1925. The count in the interference proceedings was:

“In a camera having an exposing chamber and light admitting means, a film holder ro-tatably mounted in the camera and operative to present two sides of film to light successively, film drawing means and film severing means associated and movable with the film holder, and operative means stationed in locations with relation to which the film holder is movable for imparting motion to the film drawing means and film severing means when the said film holder is in a predetermined position.”

The Examiner of Interferences found in favor of Beidler, establishing the priority of invention in him; and on appeal the Board of Appeals of the Patent Office affirmed the decision of the Examiner of Interferences. Instead of appealing from that decision, the plaintiffs elected to pursue their remedy under section 4915 of the Revised Statutes.

By stipulation of the parties, certain portions of the record of the interference proceeding, No. 52166, consisting of specified testimony and exhibits, were made part of the record in this suit; the stipulation covered also certain parts of the record in another interference proceeding, No. 52165, in which Beidler was a party and which interference involved a broader conception than is set forth in the interference count in No. 52166. That record discloses that Beidler established a conception of the subject-matter of the count in issue as early as the spring of 1923, when an experimental model of the camera was made. Thereafter he ceased to be active, in actual reduction to practice, until some time in January, 1924, when he started work on the machine, in evidence as Defendants’ Exhibit 3 in the interference proceeding. The. Examiner of Interferences found that this machine was completed and satisfactorily demonstrated as early as the end of March, 1924; but since Beidler in his preliminary statement in the interference proceeding set forth his date of reduction as April 11,1924, he was restricted to that showing. Nevertheless, since he filed his application for letters patent on April 4, 1924, he was permitted properly to rely on that filing date as establishing his reduction to practice.

■On the other hand, while Greene, in November, 1923, entered the field by considering the possibility of making a so-called duplex machine, there was no conception by him of the device defined in the interference count until a drawing had been made for him by Landrock on January 12, 1924. The examiner found that from January 12, 1924, until April 19, 1924, Greene was diligent in building a full-size machine, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 8, and that this machine was a complete reduction to practice. The examiner held that the testimony adduced on the part of Greene was not sufficient to warrant a finding that Greene had reduced to practice prior to Beidler’s established date of April 4,1924.

In the interference proceeding both'parties moved to amend their preliminary statements. Beidler in his original statement set up April 11, 1924, as the date on which he first successfully operated his photographic machine. Greene in his preliminary statement set the date of reduction to practice as of April 1, 1924. Both motions to amend these preliminary statements were denied. In addition, Greene made a motion to reopen the case after the adverse decision of the Examiner of Interferences, on the ground of newly discovered evidence, which was denied. By the newly discovered evidence he sought to establish March 22, 1924, as the actual date of reduction to practice.

The opportunity to establish March 22, 1924, was, of course, afforded him in the present cause, and through the testimony of [929]*929a number of witnesses, most of whom had not testified before the Patent Office, the plaintiffs sought to prove that on March 22, 1924, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 8, the machine made by Greene and the Photostat Corporation, was tested in the plant of the Photostat Corporation.

Witnesses Schu and Demler of the Demler Art Corporation, whose hoot entry in respect to an estimate for enameling work on the machine, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 8, fixes March 22, 1924, as the day on which they saw Exhibit 8 in the plant of the plaintiff corporation, testified that they visited the plant of the Photostat Corporation that day and saw the machine.

Landrock, of the plaintiff company, testified to the receipt on March 22, 1924, from the Auburn Ball-Bearing Company of Rochester, of the ball-hearing ring for supporting the turntable. The receipt slip is Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 12.

Meyer, of the Liberty Tool & Die Corporation, testified that on a certain Saturday in the spring of 1924, he called at the plant of the Photostat Corporation and assisted in fitting the bearing rings in the grooves provided for them in the turntable castings. This witness said that when ho arrived at the Photostat plant, the paper magazine and the upper turntable base were out of the machine for the purpose of fitting in the bearings. He said that he had machined the aluminum easting portion of the turntable some ten days before this visit. He recalled that the machine was turned by hand at the test made that day.

Butz, another of plaintiffs’ witnesses who did not testify in the interference proceeding, testified that he saw the machine assembled outside the dark room, and that Landrock asked him to stay that Saturday afternoon to help test the machine by making a number of prints. With respect to the operation he said:

“Mr. Landrock took care of the revolving end of the machine and I took care of the lights. Every time ho made an exposure on one side of the paper I would turn the lights off and Mr. Landrock would revolve the paper magazine and then again close the door whereby I would turn the lights on and he would take the second exposure.”

The resulting prints, he testified, were good. Butz testified that Meyer of the Liberty Tool & Die Corporation was present that Saturday morning in the experimental room where the machine stood, and that Schu and Demler were in the plant that afternoon. Butz fixes the date of the test as that of March 22, 1923, becaüse that was the birthday of his infant child.

The witness Ulrech corroborated Butz in his statement that the test was made on a Saturday afternoon and on the birthday of Butz’s infant son. He likewise testifies to the visit of Schu and Demler and to having seen the wet prints from the hypo tray, which Landrock hung on the edge of the bench next to where the witness was working. That was the only occasion on which he saw Schu and Demler at the plant together.

The date March 22d is again indicated as the date of test by the witness Kimmel.

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Bluebook (online)
47 F.2d 927, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greene-v-beidler-nywd-1931.