In Re Austin

40 F.2d 756, 17 C.C.P.A. 1202
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1930
DocketPatent Appeal 2328
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 40 F.2d 756 (In Re Austin) 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
In Re Austin, 40 F.2d 756, 17 C.C.P.A. 1202 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

HATFIELD, Associate Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Commissioner of Patents affirming the decision of the Examiners in Chief which, in turn, affirmed the decision of • the Primary Examiner denying claims 5, 6, 12, and 13 of appellant’s application for a patent for an alleged invention relating to a latching or locking device for automatic circuit interrupters.

Claim 5 is illustrative. It reads:

“5. In locking mechanism for switches, a moveable switch contact member, a switch-operating lever and a locking bar provided with a projection adapted to move in a curved path, in combination with a swinging lock for said operating lever adapted to move into the path of the said projection, and a latch for the lock adapted to releasably maintain it in an operative position with respect to the said projection.”

The involved claims were held unpatentable over the issue in an interference—No. 51,235—between an application of one Atwood and a joint application of Austin and MaeNeill. ” '

The involved application of Austin and the joint application of Austin and MaeNeill were owned by a common assignee—the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company.

Interference No. 51,235 was declared July 18, 1924. On September 26, 1924, the party Atwood moved to add certain claims to the interference. On May 6, 1925, the Law Examiner denied the motion as to claims 10 and 11, but “ruled that they should be ‘held subject to the issue’ of the interference.” Thereafter, on May 15, 1925, appellant copied two of the claims ineluued in the Atwood motion ■—10 and 11—and, by amendment, made them claims 12 and 13 of his application. At the same time appellant requested that the Primary Examiner “regain jurisdiction over interference 51,235, entitled Atwood vs. Austin & MaeNeill, * * * for the purpose of redeelaring that interference, or declaring such other interferences as he may deem proper, to include” the claims in appellant’s amended application. On May 21, 1925, the Primary Examiner held that he had “no authority to take the action indicated by applicant in his ‘Remarks’ accompanying the above noted amendment. Applicant’s remedy is promptly to file a motion under Rule 109 in the interference, 51,235.” On May 25, 1925, appellant requested the Primary Examiner to reconsider his holding of May 21, 1925. Thereafter, on July 25, 1925, appellant, and his assignee, the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company, filed a petition with the Commissioner of Patents asking that the Primary Examiner be instructed to reform interference No. 51,235 by. adding the amended Austin application. The petition was denied by the Commissioner.

The above-mentioned motions of appellant were made and disposed of in the ex parte proceedings relating to appellant’s application for a patent.

On May 15, 1925, counsel for appellant, who was also counsel for Austin and MaeNeill *757 in interference No. 51,235, called the attention of the Examiner of Interferences to the amendment that day made by appellant to his application for a patent, and requested that the Examiner of Interferences “remand this interference to the Primary Examiner for the purpose of considering the redeclaration thereof or the declaration of such oth-, er interferences as he may deem proper, in view of the amendment just filed in that application.”

Thereafter, on May 29, 1925, the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company, the common assignee of the Austin and the Austin and MacNeill applications, moved that interference No. 51,235, then pending between Atwood and Austin and MacNeill, be reformed by admitting appellant’s application “to the present interference as to counts 1 and 2,” together with other claims therein set forth.

The concluding paragraph of the motion reads as follows:

“This motion is accompanied by a verified showing with respect to the delay in not bringing the present motion until after the expiration of the period prescribed in Rule 109.”

Accompanying the motion was an affidavit of Jesse R. Langley, an assistant attorney in the office of Wesley G. Carr, General Patent Counsel for the common assignee. The affidavit contains, in substance, the following: That, although affiant, as counsel for 'the common assignee, “had general charge of matters connected with” interference No. 51,235, one J. H. Kendig was in direct charge thereof “during the period allowed for motions subsequent to its [the interference] declaration and for some months thereafter”; that Kendig was “relatively unfamiliar with the art relating to. circuit breakers and particularly to the subject-matter of the pending applications prepared by the Patent Department of the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company to which his attention had not been directed by the usual routine of Office actions and amendments; (4) That for substantially the past two months the said J. H. Kendig has been unable to devote his entire time to patent matters by reason of illness and that, during this time, the present interference has been in direct'charge of L. G. Budlong, who had previously been in charge of patent matters relating to circuit' breakers and was familiar with the subject-matter of pending applications relating to circuit breakers prepared by the Patent Department of the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company; (5) That, upon an inspection of the subject-matter of the several counts of the issue of the present interference, the said L. G. Budlong recognized that the application of Walter M. Austin, Serial No. 270,110 involved similar subject-matter and called the situation to the attention of deponent; (6) That the said L. G. Budlong was advised to present an amendment in the Austin application embodying such counts of the issue as read accurately upon the structure shown and described therein and, in addition, such claims of the Atwood application as embodied common subject-matter. This amendment was presented on May 15, 1925, and the Patent Office was requested to add the party Austin to the existing interference.- The Primary Examiner disclaimed jurisdiction for the purpose requested and, accordingly, the present motion has been brought for the purpose of securing the result sought by amendment; and (7) That the delay in bringing the attached motion was unavoidable by reason of the circumstances set forth above and that steps were taken immediately to notify the Patent Office and counsel for the party Atwood upon the discovery of the relation of the application of Austin to the present interference.” (Italics ours.)

The Law Examiner refused to set the motion for hearing. Thereupon, the common assignee filed a petition requesting the Commissioner to exercise the supervisory authority vested in him and to direct the Law Examiner to set for hearing the motion to amend the interference.

In his decision denying the petition, the Commissioner said:

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Bluebook (online)
40 F.2d 756, 17 C.C.P.A. 1202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-austin-ccpa-1930.