Greenwood v. Seiko Instruments & Electronics, Ltd.

711 F. Supp. 30, 13 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1245, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4560, 1989 WL 47980
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedApril 28, 1989
DocketCiv. A. 85-2812, 87-1098
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 711 F. Supp. 30 (Greenwood v. Seiko Instruments & Electronics, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenwood v. Seiko Instruments & Electronics, Ltd., 711 F. Supp. 30, 13 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1245, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4560, 1989 WL 47980 (D.D.C. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

REVERCOMB, District Judge.

The Greenwood patent relates to an apparatus for determining heartbeat rate based upon the measurement of the time interval between two consecutive heartbeats, and for immediately displaying the heart rate in beats per minute. The posture of the case is such that plaintiff loses unless his affidavits are sufficient to show that he conceived this invention and diligently put it into practice in 1970. Greenwood may well have conceived the device in December of 1969 as he states, but his affidavit derails when it comes to specifics and to diligence during the period between December 1969 and the Fall of 1970. Therefore, the judgment of the Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) is reversed.

1. Statement of the Case.

Plaintiff charged Seiko with infringement of his patent, which defendant contends is invalid and unenforceable. When suit was commenced, Seiko filed a request for reexamination of plaintiff’s patent at the PTO, alleging that the plaintiff’s claims are unpatentable. The PTO granted the request, and rejected Greenwood’s claims as unpatentable due to prior art references, including three submitted by Seiko.

In response to this PTO finding, plaintiff submitted two affidavits, one his own, one his son’s, which purport to show that Greenwood had the idea first. The PTO held that the two affidavits were sufficient to antedate the publications submitted by Seiko and therefore withdrew its rejections of plaintiff’s claims.

In its motion for summary judgment, Seiko claims that the affidavits are insufficient, and that plaintiff has misled and defrauded the PTO in using them. If the affidavits are insufficient as a matter of law, the PTO’s original finding would stand, and this Court must reverse the decision based on Greenwood’s affidavits, and reinstate the original finding that Seiko has established priority over the patent.

2. Legal Analysis.

Seiko argues the following 4 points: 1) the PTO’s original rationale means that the affidavits are the only basis for Greenwood’s claims; 2) the affidavits fail to show that Greenwood was diligent in reducing his patent to practice or that it was ever actually reduced to practice; 3) the affidavits fail to show that Greenwood had the idea for the device early enough; and 4) Greenwood has tried to “defraud” the PTO with his affidavits. There is a counterclaim charging Greenwood with bad faith in maintaining this litigation (which plaintiff has moved to dismiss) which makes this same argument.

1) The PTO decided against Greenwood on the basis of the original record, including Seiko’s submissions. In Greenwood’s affidavits and other materials on reexamination, no attempt was made to undermine the original showing made by Seiko. Instead, plaintiff’s documentation at the reexamination was meant to go behind Seiko’s evidence, to show that Greenwood had conceived of the patent and put it into workable shape before Seiko. Thus, the evidence Seiko originally offered remains unchallenged. Therefore, if the affidavits are insufficient, the PTO’s original finding in favor of Seiko should be restored, and this Court must reverse the finding based on the affidavits.

2) Seiko argues that Greenwood has failed to show that he made a diligent effort to reduce his idea to practice during the 5 month period between conception and patent filing. The PTO’s Rule 131 (37 C.F. R. 1.131) allows an affidavit of prior invention to be submitted to overcome a rejec *32 tion based on reference patents or publications. The three Seiko submissions have publication dates of January, May and July 1970. Under Rule 131, publications can be antedated and eliminated as references upon the filing of an affidavit by the inventor showing completion of the invention before the dates of the publications.

Rule 131 establishes requirements which must be met in order to antedate a reference publication. The two ways to do so are to (1) show “reduction to practice” 1 of the invention prior to the date of the reference, or (2) show conception of the invention prior to the date and due diligence from the date of the reference to a subsequent reduction to practice or to the filing of a patent application. Greenwood’s affidavits proceed under alternative (2). A filing under this alternative is required to be very fact based and detailed, to prevent would-be patent holders from coming in with vague evidence that they had a totally unworkable but similar idea to the patented one. In patent caselaw, this means that the affidavit must show specific features with “proof of the most convincing character.” In re Noxon, 201 F.2d 835, 41 CCPA 803, 101 USPQ 72, 76 (CCPA 1954). The affidavits must show diligence, and affidavits are to be rejected for non-compliance if they do not show facts to support diligence. In re Harry, 333 F.2d 920, 51 CCPA 1541, 142 USPQ 164, 165-6 (1964).

The PTO failed to consider this prong of the test. Seiko points out that Greenwood’s affidavits fail even to allege, let alone show, diligence. To antedate the publication dated January, 1970, the plaintiff’s affidavits must contain a sufficient showing of facts to establish conception of the invention prior to this date coupled with due diligence from the publication date to a subsequent reduction to practice or to the filing of an application for a patent. Greenwood’s affidavit alleges a date of conception in the 13-day period from December 21, 1969 to January 2, 1970, and alleges a reduction to practice of the invention in July, 1970 2 . Thus, to antedate the January, 1970 publication, the affidavit must contain facts sufficient to show diligence for either the 5-month period between the conception date to the May, 1970 publication date, or the 11-month period from conception to the date of filing of the patent application.

With regard to the 5-month diligence period, the affidavits are silent. There is no showing of any activity at all. The first mention of any activity is the May, 1970 letter Greenwood sent to a potential manufacturer. There is caselaw holding that a two month delay is sufficient to find lack of diligence. In re Nelson, 420 F.2d 1079, 57 CCPA 893, 164 USPQ 458 (1970). In that case, the PTO stated that “[wjhile constant effort is not required, the record before us does not give any reason whatever to explain the delay, and we will not speculate on possible explanations.”

It appears that when the PTO acted on plaintiff’s request for reexamination, including the affidavits, the PTO did not consider the diligence question. The Examiner considered only the issue of conception date. At any rate, Greenwood has failed to show diligence to the required standard of “proof of the most convincing character” under Noxon.

As to the 11 month period prior to filing for the patent, Seiko argues that since plaintiff was only able to get his model to work 50% of the time, there was never

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711 F. Supp. 30, 13 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1245, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4560, 1989 WL 47980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwood-v-seiko-instruments-electronics-ltd-dcd-1989.