Herthel v. Dubbs

65 F.2d 138, 20 C.C.P.A. 1128, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1933
DocketPatent Appeal 3132
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 138 (Herthel v. Dubbs) 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
Herthel v. Dubbs, 65 F.2d 138, 20 C.C.P.A. 1128, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 91 (ccpa 1933).

Opinion

GARRETT, Associate Judge.

This is an interference proceeding, arising in the United States Patent Office, between an application of the senior party, Dubbs, and a patent issued to the junior parties, Herthel and Tifft, which patent bears the broad title, “Art of Cracking Hydrocarbon Oils.” It is before us upon appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals affirming that of the Examiner- of Interferences awarding priority upon three counts to the party Dubbs, it being a judgment upon the record.

We are confronted at the outset with the insistence by Dubbs that, in view of the state of the record, this court is without jurisdiction to entertain the appeal, because no question of priority, or any issue directly ancillary thereto, is properly before us. However, no formal motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction was made.

The proceedings in the Patent Office relating to the controversy, first and last, presented various issues, and were somewhat complex in their ramifications.

An application of Dubbs for alleged improvements in process and apparatus for converting oil, relating, according to the specification, “particularly to a process for treating oils in successive stages of distillation,” was filed in the United States Patent Office June 22-, 1921, being serial No. 479,445. After various amendments, the application seems to have been allowed April 14, 1925, .but Dubbs failed to make payment of the final *139 fee within the time fixed by law and the patent was never issued.

On June 22, 1926, the Herthel and Tifft application was filed, the specification of which recites that: “This invention relates particularly to improvements in operations in which hydrocarbon oils are cracked by distillation under pressure and in which residual oil withdrawn undistilled from the pressure distillation is expanded at a lower pressure for the further separation of oil constituents as vapors therefrom.”

On March 10, 1927, Dubbs, approximately twenty-three months after his application bad received favorable action, and seventeen months after expiration of the time for the payment of the final fee, made application for renewal of his forfeited patent, and offered amended claims, some of which are alleged to be broader than were his original claims.

While this renewal application was in process of prosecution in the Patent Office, the patent to Herthel and Tifft was issued on July 17, 1928, being No. 1,677,773. Thereupon Dubbs, on August 3, 1928, copied certain of the claims of the patent into his renewal application and requested that interference be declared.

Interference No. 57,387, embracing three counts, Nos. 1, 2, and 3, was declared October 26, 1928, and on January 8, 1929, there was added thereto count No. 4, which corresponded to a claim copied by Dubbs from another patent to Herthel and Tifft. Later count No. 3 was transferred from interference No. 57,-387 to another interference on account of a third party becoming involved. Upon the elimination of the third party from that contest, count 3 was restored to the original interference, No. 57,387, by consent of the parties, and the decision brought before us for review was rendered by the Board of Appeals in the case so consolidated, dissolution having been previously ordered as to count 4, as hereinafter recited.

The preliminary statement of Herthel and Tifft, covering all four counts, disclosed dates of conception long subsequent to the filing date of the original application of Dubbs. Hence they were placed under order to show cause why judgment of priority should not be entéred against them upon the record.

. Thereupon,' on March 14, 19291, the parties Herthel and Tifft moved to dissolve the interference. Because of the apparent importance of the jurisdictional issue raised by appellee, it is deemed proper to set out the grounds of the motion verbatim:

“I. (a) The party Dubbs has no right to make the claims constituting Counts 1, 2 and 3 of the interference issue because the delay of the party Dubbs in presenting claims as broad as the counts of the interference issue is so unreasonably great as to amount to abandonment of .the subject matter thereof (Webster Electric Co. v. Splitdorf Electrical Co., 264 U. S. 463—471, 44 S. Ct. 342, 68 L. Ed. 792-796). The Dubbs application was filed June 22,1921, but no claims as broad as the claims constituting Counts 1, 2 and 3 of the interference issue were introduced to the Dubbs Application until August 3, 1928, more than seven years after the filing of the Dubbs application and more than two years after operations involving the subject matter of Counts 1, 2 and 3 of the interference issue had been carried out commercially.

“(b) The party Dubbs has no right to make the claims constituting Counts 1, 2 and 3 of the interference issue for the reason that the delay of party Dubbs in presenting claims as broad as Counts 1, 2 and 3 of the interference issue is so unreasonably great as to estop the party Dubbs from now asserting his right to claim the subject matter thereof to the detriment of the intervening rights of the parties Herthel and Tifft. The application of Herthel and Tifft on which patent 1,677,-773 issued July 17, 1928, was filed June 22, 1926, at a time when the Dubbs application had been forfeited and prior to its renewal. During that interval, abandonment is a question of fact (R. S. § 4897 [35 USCA § 38]), and on that question Herthel and Tifft are entitled to submit proofs and to a hearing on such proofs. At the time of the filing of the application of Herthel and Tifft, above identified, no claim as broad as Counts 1, 2 and 3 of the interference issue had been presented' by the party Dubbs, notwithstanding the fact that the Dubbs application then forfeited had been filed five years prior to that time. Furthermore, no claim as broad as Counts 1, 2 and 3 of the interference issue was presented by the party Dubbs for more than two years after the parties Herthel and Tifft had conceived and promptly reduced to practice the subject matter thereof and for more than two years after the filing of the application of Herthel and Tifft. ■

“II. The party Dubbs has no right to make the claim constituting Count 4 of the interference issue for the reason that Dubbs application Serial No. 479,445 fails to disclose the subject matter of Count 4 of the interference issue. More- particularly the Dubbs application 479,445 fails to disclose a *140 process in which higher boiling hydroeaxbon oils are cracked by distillation under pressure, in which unvaporized oil is withdrawn from the pressure distillation during operation and subjected, to further vaporization by its self-contained heat through reduction in pressure, and in which the vapors separated from the unvaporized oil withdrawn from the pressure distillation are subjected to a fractionating operation controlled T>y supplying thereto a fraction the constituents of which correspond to the components of the desired distillate product’ in sueh a manner as ‘to take off as vapors from the fractionating operation a fraction the constituents of which correspond to the components of the pressure distillate.’ ”

The distinction between grounds I and II of the motion are obvious.

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Bluebook (online)
65 F.2d 138, 20 C.C.P.A. 1128, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herthel-v-dubbs-ccpa-1933.