Hartley v. Joyce

96 F.2d 296, 25 C.C.P.A. 1100, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 95
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1938
DocketNo. 3880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 96 F.2d 296 (Hartley v. Joyce) 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
Hartley v. Joyce, 96 F.2d 296, 25 C.C.P.A. 1100, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 95 (ccpa 1938).

Opinion

JacksoN, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal in an interference proceeding wherein the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirmed a decision of the Examiner of Interferences awarding priority of invention upon the counts here involved to appellee.

[1101]*1101The counts in issue, which originate in the application of Joyce, the senior party, are as follows:

1. A pressure gauge comprising a post formed with a longitudinally extending bore for a'portion of its length and with a transverse passage therethrough beyond the longitudinal bore, a Bourdon tube having one end connected to the transverse passage, the free end being movable in response to pressure therein, a tubular element arranged with its opposite ends connected in communication with the longitudinal bore and .the transverse passage, respectively, an intermediate portion of said tubular element being disposed in spaced relation with respect to said transverse passage and bore to provide a trap for confining liquid between the free end of said Bourdon tube and the pressure receiving end of said tubular element.
2. A pressure gauge comprising a post having a bore formed therein and a passage extending therethrough, a pressure responsive element communicating at one of its ends with said passage, the opposite end being movable in response to pressure therein, a tubular member arranged with its opposite ends in communication with said bore and passage respectively, a portion of said tubular member being disposed in spaced relation with respect to said passage to provide a trap for confining liquid between the ends of said pressure responsive element and said tubular member.

The intéreference arises between the application of appellee Joyce filed May 13, 1932, and assigned to the James P. Marsh Corporation, and an application of appellant Hartley filed April 10, 1934, and assigned to the United States Gauge Company. Appellant is the junior party and has the burden of proving priority of invention by a preponderance of the evidence.

The intereference was declared originally between the application of Joyce and a joint application of Klein and Tollefsen assigned to the United States Gauge Company. The joint application was afterwards converted to a sole application of Klein. Prior to the approval of the preliminary statements, the application of Hartley was substituted for the application of Klein at the request of the common assignee.

Neither the Klein and Tollefsen application nor the sole application of Klein is in the record. Both Klein and Hartley are employees of the United States Gauge Company, Hartley being a subordinate of Klein.

The details of the steam gauge here involved we think are clearly described by the Primary Examiner as follows:

The interfering counts involve a pressure gage of the Bourdon tube type provided with a trap for confining liquid therein to prevent steam or other heated medium from entering the pressure responsive element and affecting said'elemeht, yet will allow said pressure responsive element to .respond-'to pressure applied thereto. The pressure gauge comprises a post having an axial passageway which communicates with a short transverse passage with one end of a tube coiled to form a substantially complete convolution, the opposite end of the tube is secured to and in communication with one end of a passage which extends transversely through the post. A Bourbon tube corn-[1102]*1102municates at its open end with tlie opposite end to the transverse passage and the closed end thereof is adapted to be connected with motion transmission mechanism to actuate a pointer. The end portion of the coiled tube and the open end portion of the Bourdon tube in communication with the transverse passage together with said transverse passage form a trap for holding a quantity of liquid and thereby keep live steam or other heated medium away from the Bourdon tube while at the same time the liquid in the trap transmits applied pressure to the Bourdon tube.

The trap mentioned in the above description is also called a “syphon.”

Both parties took testimony. Appellant in his preliminary statement alleged that he conceived the invention and disclosed it to others on or about April 9, 1930, and reduced it to practice on or about April 17, 1930.

The preliminary statement of appellee alleged that he conceived the. invention, disclosed it to others, and reduced it to practice in the early part of the year 1932.

The board affirmed the holding of the Examiner of Interferences that the evidence established conception by appellee on January 13, 1932, and reduction to practice in the same month. Appellant does not challenge this holding.

The Patent Office tribunals decided that although appellant’s evidence established conception in April 1930, he had not reduced the invention to practice prior -to January 13, 1932, and that appellant was not diligent in reducing to practice from a time just prior to January 13, 1932, up to the time he filed his application, April 10, 1934.

The board also held with the Examiner of Interferences as follows :

The Hartley invention was concealed and entirely forgotten and tbe making of a similar invention by other inventors, even though assigned to the same assignee as the Hartley application was later assigned, cannot inure to Hartley’s benefit and avoid the application of the Mason and Hepburn doctrine.

• The only witnesses appearing for appellant Hartley were himself and the said Klein.

Hartley is an experimental engineer employed since 1928 by the United States Gauge Company, and engaged in developing for the company-items which are embraced in the gauge industry.- Prior to April 1930, the time when he conceived the idea of placing the trap or syphon inside the casing of the gauge, his employer company made various kinds of gauges. Among these was. a syphon steam pressure -gauge, the construction of which called for the syphon as a separate unit to be" fastened and placed externally to the gauge casing. This kind of syphon was either in pigtail or ball form-In- the month of April 1930, the witness Klein, chief engineer of the United-Sta,tes Gauge Company, under whose supervision Hartley worked, brought to Hartley a sketch of an improvement in the ball [1103]*1103syphon marked ASK-1155. This sketch gave Hartley the idea of locating the trap or syphon within the gauge casing and he made a pencil drawing of this idea, marked ASK-1155-A, which bears the date of April 9, 1930. This drawing discloses the invention in issue. On the same date Hartley made a pencil drawing of another steam pressure gauge marked ASK-1155-B. This drawing does not disclose the invention herein.

Gauge models were made from the said Hartley drawings and are known as Hartley .Exhibits Nos: 7 and 8. Evidence concerning the making of these models consists of an original and carbon duplicate shop order issued April 24, 1930, The. order reads, “Experimental work on inside syphon gauges as per sketches ASK-1155, etc.” It is signed by M. Klein and indicates the work was completed. May 20, 1930. Hartley relies upon the making and testing of the model, Exhibit No. 7, as his reduction to practice.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F.2d 296, 25 C.C.P.A. 1100, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartley-v-joyce-ccpa-1938.