Hugh S. Knowles v. George C. Tibbetts

347 F.2d 591, 52 C.C.P.A. 1800
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedOctober 12, 1965
DocketPatent Appeal 7377
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 347 F.2d 591 (Hugh S. Knowles v. George C. Tibbetts) 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
Hugh S. Knowles v. George C. Tibbetts, 347 F.2d 591, 52 C.C.P.A. 1800 (ccpa 1965).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

Hugh S. Knowles appeals from a decision of the Board of Patent Interferences awarding priority of invention to George C. Tibbetts. The interference is between two applications. 1 The board based its award of priority on its holding that the junior party, Knowles, had failed to prove a reduction to practice prior to the senior party’s filing date.

There are three counts in the interference. At oral hearing, Knowles’ attorney abandoned the appeal as to count 1. We thus are concerned only with counts 2 and 3 which read as follows :

2. An electromagnetic transducer comprising a magnet, a pole piece fluxconductively engaging each pole of the magnet, said pole pieces extending laterally of the magnet to form a non-magnetic gap therebetween, an elongated flux-conductive, elastic armature, means clamping one end of said armature in non-magnetic, spaced relationship to the pole pieces in fixed position in said gap so that the other end of said armature may vibrate in another portion of said gap, there being a bending line between the clamped end and the vibratable end of the armature, and means for varying the reluctance between the pole pieces in the air gap at the fixed end of the armature.
3. The electromagnetic transducer of count 2 wherein the reluctance varying means is a T-shaped armature with the clamped portion between the arms of the T which project laterally on both sides into the gap.

It is clear from the applications in interference that the invention relates to a transducer of the type shown in Figure 2 of the Knowles application:

A reed 27 is clamped between washers 28W at one end and is free to vibrate at its other end. When used in a microphone to convert acoustic energy into mechanical energy, the reed is made to vibrate by diaphragm 31 and drive link 32. Vibration of the reed between magnetic poles 22 and 23 causes a variable magnetic flux in the reed. The variable flux causes a current to be set up in coil 20. This output electrical current from the coil varies with the input acoustical energy.

Reduction to Practice

An understanding of the problem solved by the invention is important in *593 determining whether there was a reduction to practice. Both applications in interference indicate that two kind of flux are normally present in the vibrating reed. There is a steady polarizing flux in the region of the gaps between the magnetic poles and a variable signal flux in other regions of the reed. It is desirable that the reed carry as little steady flux as possible in regions outside the gaps. Knowles’ Figure 4 represents a reed positioned between pole pieces:

According to Knowles, circulation of polarizing flux through the reed can be prevented by magnetically balancing the reed. Magnetic balance is obtained when the reluctance across each of the air gaps Gi, G2, G3, and G<t, represented as Ri, R2, R3 and R4, is in the relationship R1/R2 = R3/R4. A reed may be balanced by simple mechanical centering or by bending adjustments which produce strains in the reed. The invention described by the applications in interference is another method for magnetically balancing the reed. Adjustable tabs 19 and 20 are provided to the fixed end of the reed as indicated by Tibbetts’ Figure 5:

Magnetic balance is obtained by bending the tabs. An important feature of the invention is that it allows adjustment of the transducer after it has been assembled in a casing if a small hole is placed in the casing to allow bending of the tabs.

Knowles’ Exhibit 3 dated “3-18-53” is a drawing of a T-reed having bendable tabs. Herbert G. Zapfe, a model maker employed by Knowles’ company, Industrial Research Products, Inc., testified that he had made several reeds in accordance with Exhibit 3 and probably turned them over to Knowles about April 30, 1953. Edward R. Cronk, an engineer employed by Industrial, testified that the T-reeds were placed in magnetic armature type motors designated as model AH. The parties appear to be in agreement that these AH motors “incorporating the T-reed” satisfy counts 2 and 3. 2 There was testimony that these AH motors were tested to determine whether magnetic centering could be obtained by bending the tabs on the T-reeds and that the motors were assembled in microphones and tested acoustically by an engineer, Paul Ulrich. The board held that this activity carried out in 1953 established conception by Knowles but that it did not establish reduction to practice. Conception is the formation in the inventor’s mind of the complete operative invention, Townsend v. Smith, 36 F.2d 292, 17 CCPA 647. Here the concept was not *594 only in JKnowles’ mind, it was actually incorporated into a motor. Thus, it appears that the board considered the AH motor containing the T-reed to be a complete and operative embodiment of the invention in counts 2 and 3. The board’s finding that reduction to practice had not been attained was expressed as follows:

As to the activity in 1953, we are of the opinion that the record does not demonstrate an actual reduction to practice although we believe that it established conception by Knowles in that year. Under the circumstances of this case a more specific finding is unnecessary. Here, while there is no evidence directly indicating lack of success, Ulrich’s notebook did not include any factual data or statement as to results obtained and we are left to the inference suggested orally by Ulrich that the results must have been satisfactory or some contrary note would have been made. We decline to draw that inference where other circumstances pointing in that direction are absent and where the failure to adopt the proposal or to file an application are circumstances which tend to indicate the contrary.

This vague statement by the board appears to indicate that only the acoustical tests by Ulrich were considered in determining reduction to practice. This brings us to the nub of the problem. We find, as apparently the board did, that an operable transducer satisfying the counts was made in 1953. The legal question we must determine is, what proof of testing of this motor is required to establish reduction to practice?

Although tests under actual conditions of use are not necessarily a requirement for reduction to practice, the tests must prove that the invention will perform satisfactorily in the intended functional setting, White v. Lemmerman, 341 F.2d 110, 52 CCPA 968, and Paivinen v. Sands, 339 F.2d 217, 52 CCPA 906. Before considering Knowles’ proofs regarding reduction to practice, we must scrutinize the technical aspects to determine just exactly what the intended functional setting of the invention is.

There is some dispute over the actual nature and purpose of the invention. Knowles contends that the invention is a transducer or in simpler terms merely a motor which has a wide variety of applications and need only run to prove reduction to practice.

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Bluebook (online)
347 F.2d 591, 52 C.C.P.A. 1800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hugh-s-knowles-v-george-c-tibbetts-ccpa-1965.