Hedenskoog v. Backus

48 F.2d 408, 18 C.C.P.A. 1065, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1931
DocketNo. 2642
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 48 F.2d 408 (Hedenskoog v. Backus) 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
Hedenskoog v. Backus, 48 F.2d 408, 18 C.C.P.A. 1065, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 108 (ccpa 1931).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court: •

This is an interference case in which appeal is taken from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office, reversing the decision of the examiner of interferences, and awarding priority of invention of the subject matter in issue to appellee.

The application relates to apparatus for automatically setting tenpins on the beds of bowling alleys and includes a frame which is elevated about 2 feet above the bed of the alley and into which the pins are placed by an attendant. The frame is then caused to descend and set the pins on the alley in correct position. The pins are then released and the frame automatically moves upward to its original position.

Five counts were under consideration by the examiner of interferences and the Board of Appeals, and priority in counts 1 and 3 was awarded to Hedenskoog on the ground that the counts did not read on the Backus construction. No appeal was taken by Backus. The counts in issue in wdiich priority was awarded to Backus by the Board of Appeals are three in number and follow:

2. A pin-setting machine for bowling alleys, comprising a frame movable toward and from the alley bed, bottom rests carried by the frame, slides for receiving the pins and directing the bottoms thereof onto said bottom rests, and means for depositing the pins on the alley bed.
4. A pin-setting machine for bowling alleys, comprising a frame suspended Tor vertical movement above the alley bed and having pockets therein for receiving pins to be positioned, and setting means carried by said frame for •engaging said pins bodily at points remote from the greatest diameter of their body portions, said pin-engaging- means being further adapted to position said pins on said alley bed.
5. A frame for' receiving pins and positioning the same on a bowling alley, comprising a plurality of pin-receiving pockets, pin-engaging and positioning means mounted on said frame, means for normally holding said pin-engaging means out of engagement with said pins, and means carried by said- frame for actuating said pin-engaging means to engage the pins and position the same upon the alley bed, said holding means being automatically actuated to disengage said pin-engaging means after'the pins have been positioned. •

The counts are. taken from the Hedenskoog patent which had been inadvertently issued, because the Backus application involved herein was copending with the Hedenskoog application.

The subject matter of the counts at issue, according to the decision of the board, was discovered by Backus in a machine built in 1920. The examiner of interferences found that the 1920 Backus structure was a full conception but not a reduction to practice of the subject matter of the counts and held that Backus was not diligent from the [1067]*1067date of his conception during the period from 1920 to the time when Hedenskoog entered the field, and found that the 1920 structure was an abandoned experiment.

The Board of Appeals in a well-considered and well-written decision, deserving of special mention, held that the 1920 structure was not only sufficient evidence of conception but was a reduction to practice of the subject matter of the counts and found that it was not an abandoned experiment. Having found that Backus was the first to conceive and the first to reduce to practice arid that he had -not concealed his invention, he was held to be entitled to priority.

Appellant here contends that the board erred in finding that the 1920 structure was a reduction to practice and not an abandoned experiment. While there are various minor questions discussed other than the question of reduction to practice by the construction of the 1920 machine, we think it is correct to say that the sole controlling issue, in the case at bar is whether or not appellee’s 1920 machine was a reduction to practice or an abandoned experiment. Concerning this issue the Board of Appeals said:

Tlie examiner of interferences seems to have been influenced somewhat by Backus’s subsequent actions, or lack of action, in his holding that the 1920 device was merely an experiment and an abondoned one. We do not consider the subsequent actions on that point as particularly important. If the device was reduced to practice it is immaterial what was done afterward if it was not concealed, and the inventor was not stirred to activity by his opponent entering the field. We do not consider it necessary to discuss the question of concealment as we find no substantial evidence showing this fact nor is there any evidence that Backus was stirred into activity by Hedenskoog; however, it will not be amiss to refer briefly to the actions of Backus between 1920 and 1926. The evidence clearly shows that the party Backus was suffering-under severe physical disability — that it was substantially impossible for him to go into the shop and construct the machine himself. It would appear that it was necessary for him to rely upon others to work out the mechanical details when he had devised the general means and described the manner in which he desired them to function. Various witnesses have testified that this matter was more or less constantly in Buckus’s mind and that he was attempting to get others to make an improved model of the 1920 machine. It is shown that he advertised and made other efforts to secure a proper mechanic, and that during part of the period he was waiting for others, of whose skill he had knowledge, to reach a point where they would have time and opportunity to lake up the work for him. We consider that this shows that while his efforts were not very effective, still he had no idea of abandoning the invention and was striving to have it converted into a commercially successful form.

The facts and the law as affecting this issue are so aptly and correctly expressed in the opinion of the Board of Appeals that an extended statement of facts and discussion of applicable law is deemed unnecessary.

[1068]*1068The 1920 structure was later dismantled and parts of'it were used in making a new machine in 1926. For the purposes of prosecuting the interference, appellee has reconstructed the 1920 machine and has brought the same before the patent tribunals and this court as “ Backus Exhibit No. 5 operative illustration of 1920 machine.” The 1926 machine is also before us as Exhibit No. 6.

The 1920 machine after construction was operated to set pins in the presence of witnesses who testified that the machine made a great deal of noise but that it operated to set the pins. Backus testified that he was satisfied with the operation except as to the noise and that he determined to work out a means for eliminating the same. This machine was never placed on a bowling alley, but its operable parts and mode of operation, according to the testimony, were, with the exception of the foot or tripping device, which was located under the frame, substantially the same as those of the 1926 device. The projecting member which struck the floor and actuated the mechanism was later located in a different position and this fact is clearly immaterial to the issue here. The 1920 structure was not a complete machine. It was complete to the extent that all the operable parts for setting one or possibly two pins, in accordance with the terms of the counts at issue, were present. No attempt was ever made to complete this particular machine so that it would set the full complement of pins.

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Bluebook (online)
48 F.2d 408, 18 C.C.P.A. 1065, 1931 CCPA LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hedenskoog-v-backus-ccpa-1931.